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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51981 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51981)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sandburrs and Other, by Alfred Henry Lewis
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Sandburrs and Others
-
-Author: Alfred Henry Lewis
-
-Illustrator: Horace Taylor and George B. Luks
-
-Release Date: May 3, 2016 [EBook #51981]
-Last Updated: March 12, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SANDBURRS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SANDBURRS
-
-By Alfred Henry Lewis
-
-Author of “Wolfville,” etc.
-
-Illustrated by Horace Taylor and George B. Luks
-
-Second Edition
-
-New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company
-
-1898
-
-[Illustration: 0001]
-
-[Illustration: 0008]
-
-[Illustration: 0009]
-
-TO
-
-JAMES ROBERT KEENE
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-A SANDBURR is a foolish, small vegetable, irritating and grievously
-useless. Therefore this volume of sketches is named Sandburrs. Some folk
-there be who apologize for the birth of a book. There's scant propriety
-of it. A book is but a legless, dormant creature. The public has but to
-let it alone to be safe. And a book, withal! is its own punishment. Is
-it a bad book? the author loses. Is it very bad? the publisher loses.
-In any case the public is preserved. For all of which there will be no
-apology for SAND-BURRS. Nor will I tell what I think of it. No; this
-volume may make its own running, without the handicap of my apology, or
-the hamstringing of my criticism. There should be more than one to
-do the latter with the least of luck. The Bowery dialect--if it be
-a dialect--employed in sundry of these sketches is not an exalted
-literature. The stories told are true, however; so much may they have
-defence.
-
-A. H. L.
-
-New York, Nov. 15, 1899.
-
-
-
-
-SANDBURRS
-
-
-
-
-SPOT AND PINCHER.
-
-Martin is the barkeeper of an East Side hotel--not a good hotel at
-all--and flourishes as a sporting person of much emphasis. Martin, in
-passing, is at the head of the dog-fighting brotherhood. I often talk
-with Martin and love him very much.
-
-Last week I visited Martin's bar. There was “nothin' doin',” to quote
-from Martin. We talked of fighting men, a subject near to Martin, he
-having fought three prize-fights himself. Martin boasted himself as
-still being “an even break wit' any rough-and-tumble scrapper in d'
-bunch.”
-
-“Come here,” said Martin, in course of converse; “come here; I'll show
-you a bute.”
-
-Martin opened a door to the room back of the bar. As we entered a
-pink-white bull terrier, with black spots about the eyes, raced across
-to fawn on Martin. The terrier's black toe-nails, bright and hard as
-agate, made a vast clatter on the ash floor.
-
-“This is Spot,” said Martin. “Weighs thirty-three pounds, and he's a
-hully terror! I'm goin' to fight him to-night for five hundred dollars.”
-
-I stooped to express with a pat on his smooth white head my approbation
-of Spot.
-
-“Pick him up, and heft him,” said Martin. “He won't nip you,” 'he
-continued, as I hesitated; “bulls is; d' most manful dogs there bees.
-Bulls won't bite nobody.”
-
-Thereupon I picked up Spot “to heft him.” Spot smiled widely, wagged
-his stumpy tail, tried to lick my face, and felt like a bundle of live
-steel.
-
-“Spot's goin' to fight McDermott's Pincher,” said Martin. “And,”
- addressing this to Spot, “you want to watch out, old boy! Pincher is
-as hard as a hod of brick. And you want to look out for your Trilbys;
-Pincher'll fight for your feet and legs. He's d' limit, Spot, Pincher
-is! and you must tend to business when you're in d' pit wit' Pincher, or
-he'll do you. Then McDermott would win me money, an' you an' me, Spot,
-would look like a couple of suckers.”
-
-Spot listened with a pleased air, as if drinking in every word, and
-wagged his stump reassuringly. He would remember Pincher's genius for
-crunching feet and legs, and see to it fully in a general way that
-Pincher did not “do” him.
-
-“Spot knows he's goin' to fight to-night as well as you and me,” said
-Martin, as we returned to the bar. “Be d' way! don't you want to go?”
-
-* * * * *
-
-It was nine o'clock that evening. The pit, sixteen feet square, with
-board walls three feet high, was built in the centre of an empty loft on
-Bleecker street. Directly over the pit was a bunch of electric lights.
-All about, raised six inches one above the other, were a dozen rows of
-board seats like a circus. These were crowded with perhaps two hundred
-sports. They sat close, and in the vague, smoky atmosphere, their faces,
-row on row, tier above tier, put me in mind of potatoes in a bin.
-
-Fincher was a bull terrier, the counterpart of Spot, save for the
-markings about the face which gave Spot his name. Pincher seemed very
-sanguine and full of eager hope; and as he and Spot, held in the arms of
-their handlers, lolled at each other across the pit, it was plain they
-languished to begin. Neither, however, made yelp or cry or bark. Bull
-terriers of true worth on the battle-field were, I learned, a tacit,
-wordless brood, making no sound.
-
-Martin “handled” Spot and McDermott did kindly office for Pincher in
-the same behalf. Martin and McDermott “tasted” Spot and Pincher
-respectively; smelled and mouthed them for snuffs and poisons. Spot and
-Pincher submitted to these examinations in a gentlemanly way, but were
-glad when they ended.
-
-At the word of the referee, Spot and Pincher were loosed, each in his
-corner. They went straight at each other's throats. They met in the
-exact centre of the pit like two milk-white thunderbolts, and the battle
-began.
-
-Spot and Pincher moiled and toiled bloodily for forty-five minutes
-without halt or pause or space to breathe. Their handlers, who were
-confined to their corners by quarter circles drawn in chalk so as to hem
-them in, leaned forward toward the fray and breathed encouragement.
-
-What struck me as wonderful, withal, was a lack of angry ferocity on
-the parts of Spot and Pincher. There was naught of growl, naught of
-rage-born cry or comment. They simply blazed with a zeal for blood;
-burned with a blind death-ardour.
-
-When Spot and Pincher began, all was so flash-like in their motions, I
-could hardly tell what went on. They were in and out, down and up,
-over and under, writhing like two serpents. Now and then a pair of jaws
-clicked like castanets as they came together with a trap-like snap,
-missing their hold. Now and then one or the other would get a half-grip
-that would tear out. Then the blood flowed, painting both Spot and
-Pincher crimson.
-
-As time went on my eyes began to follow better, and I noted some amazing
-matters. It was plain, for one thing, that both Spot and Pincher were as
-wise and expert as two boxers. They fought intelligently, and each had
-a system. As Martin had said, Pincher fought “under,” in never-ending
-efforts to seize Spot's feet and legs. Spot was perfectly aware of this,
-and never failed to keep his fore legs well back and beneath him, out of
-Pinchers reach.
-
-Spot, on his part, set his whole effort to the enterprise of getting
-Pincher by the throat. A dog without breath means a dead dog, and Spot
-knew this. Pincher appeared clear on the point, too; and would hold his
-chin close to his breast, and shrug his head and shoulders well together
-whenever Spot tried to work for a throat hold.
-
-Now and then Spot and Pincher stood up to each other like wrestlers, and
-fenced with their muzzles for “holds” as might two Frenchmen with foils.
-In the wrestling Spot proved himself a perfect Whistler, and never
-failed to throw Pincher heavily. And, as I stated, from the beginning,
-the two warriors battled on without cry. Silent, sedulous, indomitable;
-both were the sublimation of courage and fell purpose. They were
-fighting to the death; they knew it, joyed in it, and gave themselves to
-their destiny without reserve. Each was eager only to kill, willing only
-to die. It was a lesson to men. And, as I looked, I realised that both
-were two of the happiest of created things. In the very heat of the
-encounter, with throbbing hearts and heaving sides, and rending fangs
-and flowing blood, they found a great content.
-
-All at once Spot and Pincher stood motionless. Their eyes were like
-coals, and their respective stump tails stood stiffly, as indicating no
-abatement of heart or courage. What was it that brought the halt? Spot
-had set his long fangs through the side of Pinchers head in such fashion
-that Pincher couldn't reach him nor retaliate with his teeth. Pincher,
-discovering this, ceased to try, and stood there unconquered, resting
-and awaiting developments. Spot, after the manner of his breed, kept his
-grip like Death. They stood silent, motionless, while the blood dripped
-from their gashes; a grim picture! They had fought, as I learned later,
-to what is known in the great sport of dog fighting as “a turn.”
-
-“It's a turn!” decided the referee.
-
-At this Martin and McDermot seized each his dog and parted them
-scientifically. Spot and Pincher were carried to their corners and
-refreshed and sponged with cold water. At the end of one minute the
-referee called:
-
-“Time!”
-
-At this point I further added to my learning touching the kingly pastime
-of dog-fighting. When two dogs have “fought to a turn,” that is, locked
-themselves in a grip, not deadly to either if persisted in, and which
-still prevents further fighting,--as in the case of Spot and Pincher,--a
-responsibility rests with the call of “Time” on the dog that “turns.” In
-this instance, Pincher. At the call of “Time” Spot would be held by his
-handler, standing in plain view of Pincher, but in his corner. It was
-incumbent on Pincher--as a proof of good faith--to cross the pit to
-get at him. If Pincher failed when released on call of “Time” to come
-straight across to Spot, and come at once; if he looked to right or left
-or hesitated even for the splinter of a second, he was a beaten dog. The
-battle was against him.
-
-“Time!” called the referee.
-
-Just prior to the call I heard Martin whisper huskily over his shoulder
-to a rough customer who sat just back of and above him, at Spot's corner
-of the pit:
-
-“Stand by wit' that glim now!” Martin muttered without turning his head.
-
-At the call “Time!” McDermot released Pincher across in his corner.
-Pincher's eyes were riveted on Spot, just over the way, and there's no
-doubt of Pincher's full purpose to close with him at once. There was no
-more of hesitation in his stout heart than in Spot's, who stood mouth
-open and fire-eyed, waiting.
-
-But a strange interference occurred. At the word “Time!” the rough
-customer chronicled slipped the slide of a dark lantern and threw the
-small glare of it squarely in Pincher's eyes. It dazed Pincher; he lost
-sight of Spot; forgot for a moment his great purpose. There stood poor
-Pincher, irresolute, not knowing where to find his enemy; thrall to the
-glare of the dark lantern.
-
-“Spot win!” declared the referee.
-
-At that moment the dark-lantern rough-customer closed the slide and
-disappeared.
-
-Few saw the trick or its effects. Certainly the referee was guiltless.
-But McDermot, who had had the same view of the dark lantern Pincher had,
-and on whom for a moment it had similar effect, raised a great clamour.
-But it was too late; Martin had claimed the thousand dollars from
-the stake-holder, and with it in his pocket was already in a carriage
-driving away, with Spot wrapped up in a lap robe occupying the front
-seat.
-
-“Let McDermot holler!” said Martin, with much heat, when I mentioned
-the subject the next day. “Am I goin' to lose a fight and five hundred
-dollars, just because some bloke brings a dark lantern to d' pit and
-takes to monkeyin' wit' it? Not on your life!”
-
-
-
-
-MULBERRY MARY
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Chucky d' Turk” was the _nom de guerre_ of my friend. Under this title
-he fought the battles of life. If he had another name he never made me
-his confidant concerning it. We had many talks, Chucky and I; generally
-in a dingy little bar on Baxter Street, where, when I wearied of uptown
-sights and smells, I was wont to meet with Chucky. Never did Chucky call
-on me nor seek me. From first to last he failed not to conduct himself
-towards me with an air of tolerant patronage. When together I did the
-buying and the listening, and Chucky did the drinking and the talking.
-It was on such occasion when Chucky told me the story of Mulberry Mary.
-
-“Mary was born in Kelly's Alley,” remarked Chucky, examining in a
-thoughtful way his mug of mixed ale; “Mary was born in Kelly's Alley,
-an' say! she wasn't no squealer, I don't t'ink.
-
-“When Mary grows up an' can chase about an' chin, she toins out a dead
-good kid an' goes to d' Sisters' School. At this time I don't spot Mary
-in p'ticler; she's nothin' but a sawed-off kid, an' I'm busy wit' me
-graft.
-
-“D' foist I really knows of Mary is when she gets married. She hooks up
-wit' Billy, d' moll-buzzard; an' say! he's bad.
-
-“He gets his lamps on Mary at Connorses spiel, Billy does; an' he's
-stuck on her in a hully secont. It's no wonder; Mary's a peach. She's d'
-belle of d' Bend, make no doubt.
-
-“Billy's graft is hangin' round d' Bowery bars, layin' for suckers. An'
-he used to get in his hooks deep an' clever now an' then, an' most times
-Billy could, if it's a case of crowd, flash quite a bit of dough.
-
-“So when Billy sees Mary at Connorses spiel, like I says, she's such a
-bute he loses his nut. You needn't give it d' laugh! Say! I sees d' map
-of a skirt--a goil, I means--on a drop curtain at a swell t'eatre onct,
-an' it says under it she's Cleopatra. D' mark nex' me says, when I taps
-for a tip, this Cleopatra's from Egypt, an' makes a hit in d' coochee
-coochee line, wit' d' high push of d' old times, see! An' says this
-gezeybo for a finish: 'This Cleopatra was a wonder for looks. She was d'
-high-roller tart of her time, an' d' beauti-fulest.'
-
-“Now, all I got to say is,” continued Chucky, regarding me with a
-challenging air of decision the while; “all I has to utter is, Mary
-could make this Cleopatra look like seven cents!
-
-“Well,” resumed Chucky, as I made no comment, “Billy chases up to Mary
-an' goes in to give her d' jolly of her life. An', say! she's pleased
-all right, all right; I can see it be her mug.
-
-“An' Billy goes d' limit. He orders d' beers; an' when he pays, Billy
-springs his wad on Mary an' counts d' bills off slow, Linkin' it'll
-razzle-dazzle her. Then Billy tells Mary he's out to be her steady.
-
-“'I've got money to boin,' says Billy, 'an' what you wants you gets,
-see!' An' Billy pulls d' long green ag'in to show Mary he's dead strong,
-an 'd' money aint no dream.
-
-“But Mary says 'Nit! couple of times nit!' She says she's on d' level,
-an' no steady goes wit' her. It's either march or marry wit' Mary. An'
-so she lays it down.
-
-“That's how it stands, when d' nex' news we hears Billy an' she don't do
-a t'ing but chase off to a w'ite-choker; followin' which dey grabs off a
-garret in d' Astorbilt tenement, an' goes to keepin' house.
-
-“But Mary breaks in on Billy's graft. She says he's got to go to woik;
-he'll get lagged if he don't; an' she won't stand for no husband who
-spends half d' time wit' her an 'd' rest on d' Island. So he cuts
-loose from d' fly mob an' leaves d' suckers alone, an' hires out for a
-tinsmith, see!
-
-“An' here's d' luck Billy has. It's d' secont day an' he's fittin' in
-d' tin flashin' round a chimbley on a five-story roof; an' mebby it's
-because he aint used to woik, or mebby he gets funny in his cupolo,
-bein' up so high; anyhow he dives down to d' pavement, an' when he
-lands, you bet your life! Billy's d' deadest t'ing that ever happened.
-
-“Mary goes wild an' wrong after that. In half of no time Mary takes to
-chasin' up to Mott Street an' hittin' d' pipe. There's a Chink up
-there who can cook d' hop out o' sight, an' it aint long before Mary
-is hangin' 'round his joint for good. It's then dey quits callin' her
-Mulberry Mary, an' she goes be d' name of Mollie d' Dope.
-
-“Mary don't last in d' Chink swim more'n a year before there's bats in
-her belfry for fair; any old stiff wit' lamps could see it; an' so folks
-gets leary of Mary.
-
-[Illustration: 0027]
-
-“It runs on mebby two years after Billy does that stunt from d' roof,
-see! when there's a fire an' all d' kids run an' screeched, an' all d'
-folks hollered, an' all d' engines comes an' lams loose to put it out.
-D' fire's in a tenement, an 'd' folks who was in it has skipped, so it's
-just d' joint itself is boinin'.
-
-“All at onct a kid looks out d' fort' story window wit 'd' fire shinin'
-behint him. You can see be d' little mark's mug he's got an awful scare
-t'run into him, t'inkin' he's out to boin in d' buildin*.
-
-“'It's McManuses' Chamsey!' says one old Tommy, lettin' her hair down
-her back an' givin' a yell, 'Somebody save McManuses' Chamsey!'
-
-“'Let me save him!' says Mary, at d' same time laughin' wild. 'Let me
-save him; I want to save him! I'm only Mollie d' Dope--Mollie d' hop
-fiend--an' if I gets it in d' neck it don't count, see!'
-
-“Mary goes up in d' smoke an 'd' fire, no one knows how, wit' d' water
-pourin' from d' hose, an 'd' boards an' glass a-fallin' an' a-crashin',
-an' she brings out McManuses' Chamsey, Saves him; on d' dead! she does;
-an' boins all d' hair off her cocoa doin' it.
-
-“Well, of course d' fire push stan's in an' gives Mary all sorts of guff
-an' praise. Mary only laughs an' says, while d' amb'lance guy is doin'
-up her head, that folks ain't onto her racket; that she d' soonest frail
-that ever walks in d' Bend.”
-
-At this juncture Chucky desired another mixed ale. He got it, and after
-a long, damp pause he resumed his thread.
-
-“Now what do youse t'ink of this for a finish? It's weeks ago d' fire
-is. Mary meets up wit' McManuses' Chamsey to-day--she's been followin'
-him a good deal since she saves him--an' as Chamsey is only six years
-old, he don't know nothin', an' falls to Mary's lead. It's an easy case
-of bunk, an' Chamsey only six years old like that!
-
-“Mary gives Chamsey d' gay face an' wins him right off. She buys him
-posies of one Dago an' sugar candy of another; an' then she passes
-Chamsey a strong tip, he's missin' d' sights be not goin' down to d'
-East River.
-
-“Here's what Mary does--she takes Chamsey down be d' docks--a
-longshoreman loafin' hears what she says. Mary tells Chamsey to look at
-all d' chimbleys an 'd' smoke comin' out!
-
-“'An' in every one there's fire makin 'd' smoke,' says Mary. 'T'ink of
-all d' fires there must be, Chamsey! I'll bet Hell ain't got any more
-fires in it than d' woild! Do youse remember, Chamsey, how d' fire was
-goin' to boin you? Now, I'll tell you what we'll do, so d' fire never
-will boin us; we'll jump in,--you an' me!'
-
-“An' wit' that, so d' longshoreman says, Mary nails Chamsey be d' neck
-wit' her left hook an' hops into d' drink. Yes, dey was drowned--d'
-brace of 'em. Dey's over to d' dead house now on a slab--Mary an'
-McManuses' Chamsey.
-
-“What makes me so wet? I gets to d' dock a minute too late to save 'em,
-but I'm right in time to dive up d' stiffs. So I dives 'em up. It's easy
-money. That's what makes me cuffs look like ruffles an' me collar like a
-corset string.” And here Chucky called for a third mixed ale, as a sign
-that his talk was done.
-
-
-
-
-SINGLETREE JENNINGS
-
-
-It was evening in Jordan Hollow, and Singletree Jennings stood leaning
-on his street gate. Singletree Jennings was a coloured man, and, to
-win his bread, played many parts in life. He was a whitewasher; he sold
-fish; he made gardens; and during the social season he was frequently
-the “old family butler,” in white cotton gloves, at the receptions of
-divers families.
-
-“I'm a pore man, honey!” Singletree Jennings was wont to say; “but dar
-was a time when me an' my ole Delia was wuf $1,800. Kase why? Kase we
-brought it at auction, when Marse Roundtree died--didn't we, Delia?”
-
-This was one of Singletree Jennings's jokes.
-
-“But pore man or no!” Singletree Jennings would conclude, “as de
-Lamb looks down an' sees me, I never wronged a man outen so much as a
-blue-laiged chicken in my life.”
-
-This evening Singletree Jennings was a prey to dejection. Nor could he
-account for his gloom. His son opened the gate and went whistling up the
-street.
-
-“Clambake Jennings, whar yo' gwine?” asked Singletree Jennings.
-
-“Gwine ter shoot craps.”
-
-“Have yo' got yer rabbit's foot?
-
-“Yassir.”
-
-“An' de snake's head outen de clock?”
-
-“Yassir.”
-
-Singletree Jennings relapsed into moody silence, and Clambake passed on
-and away.
-
-The shouts and cries of some storm-rocked multitude was heard up the
-street. The Columbia College boys were taking home their new eight-oared
-boat. The shouts settled into something like the barking of a dog. It
-was the crew emitting the college cry.
-
-“What's dat?” demanded Delia Jennings, coming to the door.
-
-“De Lawd save us ef I knows!” said Singletree Jennings; “onless it's one
-of dem yar bond issues dey's so 'fraid'll happen.”
-
-The tones of Singletree Jennings showed that he was ill at ease.
-
-“What's de matter, Daddy Singletree?” demanded the observant Delia.
-
-“I've got a present'ment, I reckon!” said Singletree Jennings. “I'm
-pow'ful feard dar'll somethin' bust loose wrong about dat Andrew Jackson
-goat.”
-
-Singletree Jennings was the owner and business manager of a goat named
-Andrew Jackson. In the winter Singletree Jennings never came home
-without an armful of straw for Andrew Jackson. In the summer there was
-no need of straw. Andrew Jackson then ate the shirts off the neighbour's
-clothes-lines. Andrew Jackson had been known to eat the raiment off a
-screaming child, and then lower his frontlet at the rescue party. Andrew
-Jackson was a large, impressive goat; yet he never joked nor gave way to
-mirth. Ordinarily, Andrew Jackson was a calm, placid goat; aroused, he
-was an engine of destruction.
-
-All of these peculiarities were explained by Singletree Jennings when
-Sam Hardtack and Backfence Randolph, a committee acting on behalf of the
-Othello Dramatic Club, desired the loan of Andrew Jackson. The church
-to which Singletree Jennings belonged was programming a social this
-very night, and divers and sundry tableaux, under the direction of the
-Othello Dramatic Club, were on the card. It was esteemed necessary by
-those in control to present as a tableau Abraham slaying Isaac. There
-was a paucity of sheep about, and Andrew Jackson, in this dearth of the
-real thing, was cast to play the character of the Ram in the Bush.
-
-“An' Andrew Jackson is boun' to fetch loose,” reflected Singletree
-Jennings, with a shake of his head; “an' when he does, he'll jes' go
-knockin' 'round among de congregashun like a blind dog in a meat shop!”
- *****
-
-Singletree Jennings's worst fears were realised. It was nine o'clock
-now, and he and Delia had come down to the social. Andrew Jackson had
-been restrained of his liberty for the previous four hours and held
-captive in a drygoods' box. He was now in a state of frenzy. When the
-curtain went up on Abraham and Isaac, Andrew Jackson burst his bonds at
-the rear of the stage and bore down on the Hebrew father and son like
-the breath of destiny. Andrew Jackson came, dragging his bush with him.
-The bush was, of course, a welcome addition. Abraham saw him coming, and
-fled into the lap of a fiddler. Isaac, however, wasn't faced that way.
-Andrew Jackson smote Isaac upon the starboard quarter. It was a follow
-shot, rather than a carom, and Andrew Jackson and his prey landed in the
-middle of the audience together. For two minutes Andrew Jackson mingled
-freely with the people present, and then retired by the back door.
-
-“I knowed destrucshun was a-comin'!” murmured Singletree Jennings. “I
-ain't felt dat pestered, Delia, since de day I concealed my 'dentity in
-Marse Roundtree's smokehouse, an' dey cotched me at it.”
-
-“Singletree Jennings!” observed the Reverend Handout F. Johnson, in a
-tone of solemn anger, while his pistol pocket still throbbed from the
-visitation of Andrew Jackson, “Elder Shakedown Bixby is in pursuit of
-dat goat of your'n with a razor. He has orders to immolate when cotched.
-At de nex' conference dar'll be charges ag'in you for substitutin' a
-deboshed goat for de Ram of Holy Writ. I keers nothin' for my pussonel
-sufferin's, but de purity of de Word mus' be protected. De congregashun
-will now join in singin' de pestilential Psalms, after which de social
-will disperse.”
-
-
-
-
-JESS
-
-
-It was sunset at the Cross-K ranch. Four or five cowboys were gloomily
-about outside the adobe ranch house, awaiting supper. The Mexican cook
-had just begun his fragrant task, so a half hour would elapse before
-these Arabs were fed. Their ponies were “turned” into the wire pasture,
-their big Colorado saddles reposed astride the low pole fence which
-surrounded the house, and it was evident their riding was over for the
-day.
-
-Why were they gloomy? Not a boy of them could tell. They had been
-partners and _campaneros_, and “worked” the Cross-K cattle together for
-months, and nothing had come in misunderstanding or cloud. The ranch
-house was their home, and theirs had been the unity of brothers.
-
-The week before, a pretty girl--the daughter she was of a statesman of
-national repute--had come to the ranch from the East. Her name was Jess.
-
-Jess, the pretty girl, was protected in this venture by an old and
-gnarled aunt, watchful as a ferret, sour as a lime. Not that Jess, the
-pretty girl, needed watching; she was, indeed! propriety's climax.
-
-No soft nor dulcet reason wooed Jess, the pretty girl, to the West; she
-came on no love errand. The visitor was elegantly tired of the East,
-that was all; and longed for western air and western panorama.
-
-Jess, the pretty girl, had been at the Cross-K ranch a week, and the
-boys had met her, everyone. The meeting or meetings were marked by
-awkwardness as to the boys, indifference as to Jess, the pretty girl.
-She encountered them as she did the ponies, cows, horned-toads and other
-animals, domestic and _fero naturo_, indigenous to eastern Arizona.
-While every cowboy was blushingly conscious of Jess, the pretty girl,
-she was serenely guiltless of giving him a thought.
-
-Before Jess, the pretty girl, arrived, the cowboys were friends and the
-tenor of their calm relations was rippleless as a mirror. Jess was not
-there a day, before each drew himself insensibly from the others, while
-a vague hostility shone dimly in his eyes. It was the instinct of the
-fighting male animal aroused by the presence of Jess, the pretty girl.
-Jess, however, proceeded on her dainty way, sweetly ignorant of the
-sentiments she awakened.
-
-Men are mere animals. Women are, too, for that matter. But the latter
-are different animals from men. The effort the race makes to be other,
-better or different than the mere animal fails under pressure. It always
-failed; it will always fail. Civilisation is the veriest veneer and
-famously thin. A year on the plains cracks this veneer--this shell--and
-the animal issues visibly forth. This shell-cracking comes by the
-expanding growth of all that is animalish in man--attributes of the
-physical being, fed and pampered by a plains' existence.
-
-To recur to the boys of the Cross-K. The dark, vague, impalpable
-differences which cut off each of these creatures from his fellows, and
-inspired him with an unreasoning hate, had flourished with the brief
-week of their existence. A philosopher would have looked for near
-trouble on the Cross-K.
-
-“Whatever did you take my saddle for, Bill?” said Jack Cook to one Bill
-Watkins.
-
-“Which I allows I'll ride it some,” replied Watkins; “thought it might
-like to pack a sure-'nough long-horn jest once for luck!”
-
-“Well, don't maverick it no more,” retorted Cook, moodily, and ignoring
-the gay insolence of the other. “Leastwise, don't come a-takin' of it,
-an' sayin' nothin'. You can _palaver Americano_, can't you? When you
-aims to ride my saddle ag'in, ask for it; if you can't talk, make signs,
-an' if you can't make signs, shake a bush; but don't go romancin' off in
-silence with no saddle of mine no more.”
-
-“Whatever do you reckon is liable to happen if I pulls it ag'in
-to-morry?” inquired Bill in high scorn.
-
-Watkins was of a more vivacious temper than the gloomy Cook.
-
-“Which if you takes it ag'in, I'll shorely come among you a whole lot.
-An' some prompt!” replied Cook, in a tone of obstinate injury.
-
-These boys were brothers before Jess, the pretty girl, appeared. Either
-would have gone afoot all day for the other. Going afoot, too, is the
-last thing a cowboy will consent to.
-
-“Don't you-all fail to come among me none,” said Bill with cheerful
-ferocity, “on account of it's bein' me. I crosses the trail of a hold-up
-like you over in the Panhandle once, an' makes him dance, an' has a
-chuck-waggon full of fun with him.”
-
-“Stop your millin' now, right yere!” said Tom Rawlins, the Cross-K range
-boss, who was sitting close at hand. “You-alls spring trouble 'round
-yere, an' you can gamble I'll be in it! Whatever's the matter with
-you-alls anyway? Looks like you've been as _locoed_ as a passel of
-sore-head dogs for more'n a week now. Which you're shorely too many for
-me, an' I plumb gives you up!” And Rawlins shook his sage head foggily.
-
-The boys started some grumbling reply, but the cook called them to
-supper just then, and, one animalism becoming overshadowed by another,
-they forgot their rancour in thoughts of supplying their hunger. Towards
-the last of the repast, Rawlins arose, and going to another room, began
-overlooking some entries in the ranch books.
-
-Jess, the pretty girl, did not sit at the ranch table. She had small
-banquets in her own room. Just then she was heard singing some tender
-little song that seemed born of a sigh and a tear. The boys' resentment
-of each other began again to burn in their eyes. None of these savages
-was in the least degree in love with Jess, the pretty girl.
-
-The singing went on in a cooing, soft way that did not bring you the
-words; only the music.
-
-“What I says about my saddle a while back, goes as it lays!” said Jack
-Cook.
-
-The song had ceased.
-
-As Cook spoke he turned a dark look on Watkins.
-
-“See yere!” replied Watkins in an exasperated tone--he was as vicious as
-Cook--“if you're p'intin' out for a war-jig with me, don't go stampin'
-'round none for reasons. Let her roll! Come a-runnin' an' don't pester
-none with ceremony.”
-
-“Which a gent don't have to have no reason for crawlin' you!” said Cook.
-“Anyone's licenced to chase you 'round jest for exercise!”
-
-“You can gamble,” said Watkins, confidently, “any party as chases me
-'round much, will regyard it as a thrillin' pastime. Which it won't grow
-on him none as a habit.”
-
-“As you-all seem to feel that a-way,” said the darkly wrathful Cook,
-“I'll sorter step out an' shoot with you right now!”
-
-“An' I'll shorely go you!” said Watkins.
-
-They arose and walked to the door. It was gathering dark, but it was
-light enough to shoot by. The other cowboys followed in a kind of savage
-silence. Not one word was said in comment or objection. They were grave,
-but passive like Indians. It is not good form to interfere with other
-people's affairs in Arizona.
-
-Jess, the pretty girl, began singing again. The strains fell softly
-on the ears of the cowboys. Each, as he listened, whether onlooker or
-principal, felt a licking, pleased anticipation of the blood to be soon
-set flowing.
-
-Nothing was said of distance. Cook and Watkins separated to twenty paces
-and turned to face each other. Each wore his six-shooter, the loose
-pistol belt letting it rest low on his hip. Each threw down his big hat
-and stood at apparent ease, with his thumbs caught in his belt.
-
-“Shall you give the word, or me?” asked Cook.
-
-“You says when!” retorted Watkins. “It'll be a funny passage in American
-history if you-all gets your gun to the front any sooner than I do.”
-
-“Be you ready?” asked Cook.
-
-“Which I'm shorely ready!”
-
-“Then, go!”
-
-“Bang! Bang!! Bang!!!” went both pistols together.
-
-The reports came with a rapidity not to be counted. Cook got a crease
-in the face--a mere wound of the flesh. Watkins blundered forward with a
-bullet in his side.
-
-[Illustration: 0041]
-
-Rawlins ran out. His experience taught him all at a look. Hastily
-examining Cook, he discovered that his hurt was nothing serious. The
-others carried Watkins into the house.
-
-“Take my pony saddled at the fence, Jack,” said Rawlins, “an' pull your
-freight. This yere Watkins is goin' to die. You've planted him.”
-
-“Which I shorely hopes I has!” said Cook, with bitter cheerfulness. “I
-ain't got no use for cattle of his brand; none whatever!”
-
-Cook took Rawlins's pony. When he paused, the pony hung his head while
-his flanks steamed and quivered. And no marvel! That pony was one
-hundred miles from the last corn, as he cooled his nervous muzzle in the
-Rio San Simon.
-
-“Some deviltry about their saddles, Miss; that's all!” reported Rawlins
-to Jess, the pretty girl.
-
-“Isn't it horrible!” shuddered Jess, the pretty girl.
-
-The next morning Jess and the gnarled aunt paid the injured Watkins a
-visit. This civility affected the other three cowboys invidiously. They
-at once departed to a line of Cross-K camps in the Northwest. This on a
-pretence of working cattle over on the Cochise Mesa. They looked black
-enough as they galloped away.
-
-“Which it's shore a sin Jack Cook ain't no better pistol shot!” observed
-one, as the acrid picture of Jess, the pretty girl, sympathising above
-the wounded Watkins, arose before him.
-
-“That's whatever!” assented the others.
-
-Then, in moods of grim hatefulness, they bled their tired ponies with
-the spur by way of emphasis.
-
-
-
-
-THE HUMMING BIRD
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-NIT; I'm in a hurry to chase meself to-night,” quoth Chucky, having
-first, however, taken his drink. “I'd like to stay an' chin wit' youse,
-but I can't. D' fact is I've got company over be me joint; he's a dead
-good fr'end of mine, see! Leastwise he has been; an' more'n onct, when
-I'm in d' hole, he's reached me his mit an' pulled me out. Now he's
-down on his luck I'm goin' to make good, an' for an even break on past
-favours, see if I can't straighten up _his_ game.”
-
-“Who is your friend?” I asked. “Does he live here?”
-
-“Naw,” retorted Chucky; “he's a crook, an' don't live nowhere.
-His name's Mollie Matches, an 'd' day was when Mollie's d' flyest
-fine-woiker on Byrnes's books. An' say! that ain't no fake neither.”
-
-“What did he do?” I inquired.
-
-“Leathers, supers an' rocks,” replied Chucky. “Of course, d' supers has
-to be yellow; d' w'ite kind don't pay; an' d' rocks has to be d' real
-t'ing. In d' old day, Mollie was d' king of d' dips, for fair! Of all
-d' crooks he was d' nob, an' many's d' time I've seen him come into d'
-Gran' Central wit' his t'ree stalls an' a Sheeny kid to carry d' swag,
-an' all as swell a mob as ever does time.
-
-“But he's fell be d' wayside now, an' don't youse forget it! Not only is
-he broke for dough, but his healt' is busted, too.”
-
-“That's one of the strange things to me, Chucky,” I said, for I was
-disposed to detain him if I could, and hear a bit more of his devious
-friend; “one of the very strange things! Here's your friend Mollie,
-who has done nothing, so you say, but steal watches, diamonds and
-pocket-books all his life, and yet to-day he is without a dollar.”
-
-“Oh! as for that,” returned Chucky wisely, “a crook don't make so much.
-In d' foist place, if he's nippin' leathers, nine out of ten of 'em's
-bound to be readers--no long green in 'em at all; nothin' but poi-pers,
-see! An' if he's pinchin' tickers an' sparks, a fence won't pay more'n
-a fort' what dey's wort'--an' there you be, see! Then ag'in, it costs a
-hundred plunks a day to keep a mob on d' road; an' what wit' puttin' up
-to d' p'lice for protection, an' what wit' squarin' a con or brakey if
-youse are graftin' on a train, there ain't, after his stalls has their
-bits, much left for Mollie. Takin' it over all, Mollie's dead lucky to
-get a hundred out of a t'ousand plunks; an' yet he's d' mug who has to
-put his hooks on d' stuff every time; do d' woik an' take d' chances,
-see!
-
-“But I'll tip it off to youse,” continued Chucky, at the same time
-lowering his tone confidentially; “I'll put you on to what knocks
-Mollie's eye out just now. He's only a week ago toined out of one of de
-western pens, an' I reckon he was bad wit' 'em at d' finish--givin'
-'em a racket. Anyhow, dey confers on Mollie d' Hummin' Boid, an dey
-overplays. Mollie's gettin' old, and can't stand for what he could onct;
-an', as I says, these prison marks gives him too much of 'd Hummin' Boid
-and it breaks his noive.
-
-“Sure! Mollie's now what youse call hyster'cal; got bats in his steeple
-half d' time. If it wasn't for d' hop I shoots into him wit' a dandy
-little hypodermic gun me Rag's got, he'd be in d' booby house. An' all
-for too much Hummin' Boid! Say! on d' level! there ought to be a law
-ag'inst it.”
-
-“What in heaven's name is the Humming Bird?” I queried.
-
-“It's d' prison punishment,” replied Chucky. “Youse see, every pen has
-its punishment. In some, it's d' paddles, an' some ag'in don't do a
-t'ing but hang a guy up be a pair of handcuffs to his cell door so his
-toes just scrapes d' floor. In others dey starves you; an' in others
-still, dey slams you in d' dark hole.
-
-“Say! if youse are out to make some poor mark nutty for fair, just give
-him d' dark hole for a week. There he is wit' nothin' in d' cell but
-himself, see! an* all as black as ink. Mebby if d' guards is out to
-keep him movin', dey toins d' hose in an' wets down d' floor before dey
-leaves him. But honest to God! youse put a poor sucker in d' dark hole,
-an' be d' end of ten hours it's apples to ashes he ain't onto it whether
-he's been in a day or a week. Keep him there a week, an' away goes his
-cupolo--he ain't onto nothin'. On d' square! at d' end of a week in d'
-dark, a mut don't know lie's livin'.
-
-“D' cat-o'nine-tails, which dey has at Jeff City, ain't a marker to d'
-dark hole! D' cat'll crack d' skin all right, all right, but d' dark
-hole cracks a sucker's nut, see! His cocoa never is on straight ag'in,
-after he's done a stunt or two in d' dark hole.”
-
-“But the Humming Bird?” I persisted. “What is it like?”
-
-“Why! as I relates,” retorted Chucky, “d' Hummin Boid is what dey does
-to a guy in d' pen where Mollie was to teach him not to be too gay. It's
-like this: Here's a gezebo doin' time, see! Well, he gets funny. Mebby
-he soaks some other pris'ner; or mebby he toins loose and gives it to
-some guard in d' neck; or mebby ag'in he kicks on d' lock-step. I've
-seen a heap of mugs who does d' last.
-
-“Anyhow, whatever he does, it gets to be a case of Hummin' Boid, an' dey
-brings me gay scrapper or kicker, whichever he is, out for punishment.
-An' this is what he gets ag'inst:
-
-“Dey sets him in a high trough, same as dey waters a horse wit', see!
-Foist dey shucks d' mark--peels off his make-up down to d' buff. An'
-then dey sets him in d' trough, like I says, wit' mebby its eight inches
-of water in it.
-
-“Then he's strapped be d' ankles, an' d' fins, and about his waist,
-so he can't do nothin' but stay where he is. A sawbones gets him be d'
-pulse, an' one of them 'lectrical stiffs t'rows a wire, which is one end
-of d' battery, in d' water. D' wire, which is d' other end, finishes in
-a wet sponge. An' say! hully hell! when dey touches a poor mark wit' d'
-sponge end on d' shoulder, or mebby d' elbow, it completes d' circuit,
-see! an' it'll fetch such a glory hallelujah yelp out of him as would
-bring a deef an' dumb asylum into d' front yard to find out what d'
-row's about.
-
-“It's d' same t'ing as d' chair at Sing Sing, only not so warm. It's
-enough, though, to make d' toughest mug t'row a fit. No one stands for
-a secont trip; one touch of d' Hummin' Boid! an' a duck'll welch on
-anyt'ing you says--do anyt'ing, be anyt'ing; only so youse let up and
-don't give him no more. D' mere name of Hummin' Boid's good enough to
-t'run a scare into d' hardest an' d' woist of 'em, onct dey's had a
-piece.
-
-“As I says about Mollie: it seems them Indians gives him d' Hummin'
-Boid; an' dey gives him d' gaff too deep. But I've got to chase meself
-now, and pump some dope into him. I ought to land Mollie right side up
-in a week. An' then I'll bring him over to this boozin' ken of ours, an'
-cap youse a knock-down to him. Ta! ta!”
-
-
-
-
-GASSY THOMPSON, VILLAIN
-
-
-WESTERN humour is being severely spoken of by the close personal
-friends of Peter Dean. Less than a year ago, Peter Dean left the
-paternal roof on Madison Avenue and plunged into the glowing West. On
-the day of his departure he was twenty-three; not a ripe age. He had
-studied mining and engineering, and knew in those matters all that
-science could tell. His purpose in going West was to acquire the
-practical part of his chosen profession. Peter Dean believed in knowing
-it all; knowing it with the hands as well as with the head.
-
-Thus it befell that young Peter Dean, on a day to be remembered, tossed
-a careless kiss to his companions and fled away into the heart of
-the continent. Then his hair was raven black. Months later, when he
-returned, it was silver white. Western humour had worked the change;
-therefore the criticism chronicled. Peter Dean tells the following story
-of the bleaching:
-
-“At Creede I met a person named Thompson; 'Gassy' Thompson he was called
-by those about him, in testimony to his powers as a conversationist.
-A barkeeper, who seemed the best-informed and most gentlemanly soul in
-town, told me that Gassy Thompson was a miner full of practical skill,
-and that he was then engaged in sinking a shaft. I might arrange with
-Gassy and learn the business. At the barkeeper's hint, I proposed as
-much to Gassy Thompson.
-
-“'All right!' said Gassy; 'come out to the shaft to-morrow.'
-
-“The next day I was at the place appointed. The shaft was already fifty
-feet deep. Besides myself and this person, Gassy, who was to tutor me,
-there was a creature named Jim. This made three of us.
-
-“At the suggestion of Gassy, he and I descended into the shaft; Jim was
-left on the surface. We went down by means of a bucket, Jim unwinding us
-from a rickety old windlass.
-
-“Once down, Gassy and I, with sledge and drill, perpetrated a hole in
-the bottom of the shaft. I held the drill, Gassy wielding the sledge.
-When the hole met the worshipful taste of my tutor, he put in a dynamite
-cartridge, connected a long, five-minute fuse therewith, and carefully
-thumbed it about and packed it in with wet clay.
-
-“At Gassy's word, I was then hauled up from the shaft by Jim. I added
-my strength to the windlass, Gassy climbed into the bucket, lighted the
-fuse, and was then swiftly wound to the surface by Jim and myself. We
-then dragged the windlass aside, covered the mouth of the shaft, and
-quickly scampered to a distance, to be out of harm's reach.
-
-“At the end of five minutes from the time that Gassy lighted the fuse,
-and perhaps three minutes after we had cleared away, the shot exploded
-with a deafening report. Tons of rock were shot up from the mouth of the
-shaft, full fifty feet in the air. It was all very impressive, and gave
-me a lesson in the tremendous power of dynamite. I was much pleased, and
-felt as if I were learning.
-
-“Following the explosion Gassy and I again repaired to the bottom of the
-shaft. After clearing away the débris and sending it up and out by the
-bucket, we resumed the sledge and drill. We completed another hole and
-were ready for a second shot. This was about noon.
-
-“It was at this point that the miscreant, Gassy, began to put into
-action a plot he had formed against me, and to carry out which the
-murderer, Jim, lent ready aid. You must remember that I had perfect
-confidence in these two villains.
-
-“'I never seed no tenderfoot go along like you do at this business,'
-said Gassy Thompson to me.
-
-“This was flattery. The miscreant was fattening me for the sacrifice.
-
-“'Looks like you was born to be a miner,' he went on. 'Now, I'm goin' to
-let you fire the next shot. Usual, I wouldn't feel jestified in allowin'
-a tenderfoot to fire a shot for plumb three months. But you has a genius
-for minin'; it comes as easy to you as robbin' a bird's nest. I'd be
-doin' wrong to hold you back.'
-
-“Of course, I naturally felt pleased. To be allowed to fire a dynamite
-shot on my first day in the shaft I felt and knew to be an honour. I
-determined to write home to my friends of this triumph.
-
-“Gassy said he'd put in the shot, and he selected one of giant size.
-I saw the herculean explosive placed in the hole; then he attached the
-fuse and thumbed the clay about it as before. He gave me a few last
-words.
-
-“'After I gets up,' he said, 'an' me an' Jim's all ready, you climb into
-the bucket an' light the fuse. Then raise the long yell to me an' Jim,
-an' we'll yank ye out. But be shore an' light the fuse. There's
-nothin' more discouragin' than for to wait half an* hour outside an' no
-cartridge goin' off. Especial when it goes off after you comes back to
-see what's the matter with her. So be shore an' light the fuse, an' then
-Jim an' me'll run you up the second follerin'. This oughter be a great
-day for you, young man! firin' a shot this away, the first six hours
-you're a miner!'
-
-“Jim and Gassy were at the windlass and yelled:
-
-“'All ready below?'
-
-“I was in the bucket and at the word scratched a match and lit the fuse.
-It sputtered with alarming ardour, and threw off a shower of sparks.
-
-“'Hoist away!' I called.
-
-“The villains ran me up about twenty-five feet, and came to a dead halt.
-At this they seemed to get into an altercation. They both abandoned
-the windlass, and I could hear them cursing, threatening, and shooting;
-presumably at each other.
-
-“'I'll blow your heart out!' I heard Gassy say.
-
-“My alarm was without a limit. I'd seen one dynamite cartridge go off.
-Here I was, swinging some twenty-five feet over a still heavier charge,
-and about to be blown into eternity! Meanwhile the caitiffs, on whom my
-life depended, were sacrificing me to settle some accursed feud of their
-own.
-
-“I cannot tell you of my agony. The fuse was spitting fire like forty
-fiends; the narrow shaft was choked with smoke. I swung helpless,
-awaiting death, while the two monsters, Gassy and Jim, were trying to
-murder each other above. Either from the smoke or the excitement, I
-fainted.
-
-“When I came to myself I was outside the shaft, safe and sound, while
-Gassy and his disreputable assistant were laughing at their joke. There
-had been no shot placed in the drill-hole; the heartless Gassy had
-palmed it and carried it with him to the surface.
-
-“At my very natural inquiry, made in a weak voice--for I was still sick
-and broken--as to what it all meant, they said it was merely a Colorado
-jest, and intended for the initiation of a tenderfoot.
-
-“'It gives 'em nerve!' said Gassy; 'it puts heart into 'em an' does 'em
-good!'
-
-“As soon as I could walk I severed my relations with Gassy Thompson and
-his outlaw adherent, Jim. The next morning my hair had turned the milky
-sort you see. The Creede people with whom I discussed the crime, laughed
-and said the drinks were on me. That was all the sympathy, all the
-redress, I got.
-
-“After that I came East without delay. When I leave the city of New York
-again it will not be for Creede. Nor will my next mining connection be
-formed with such abandoned barbarians as Gassy Thompson and Jim.”
-
-
-
-
-ONE MOUNTAIN LION
-
-
-Pard! would you like to shoot at that lion?”
-
-Bob usually gave me no title at all. But when in any stress of our
-companionship he was driven to it, I was hailed as “pard!” Once or twice
-on some lighter occasion he had addressed me by the Spanish “_Amigo_.”
- In business hours, however, my rank was “pard!”
-
-*****
-
-Sundown in the hills. The scene was a southeast spur of the Rockies;
-call the region the Upper Red River or the Vermejo, whichever you will
-for a name. Forty miles due west from the Spanish Peaks would stand one
-on the very spot.
-
-I had been out all day, ransacking the canyons, taking a Winter's look
-at the cattle to note how they were meeting the rigours of a season not
-yet half over. I had witnessed nothing alarming; my horned folk of the
-hills still made a smooth display as to ribs, and wore the air of cattle
-who had prudently stored up tallow enough the autumn before to carry
-them into the April grass.
-
-“Many a day have I dwelt in a wet saddle, only to crawl into a wetter
-blanket at night; and all for cows!” It was Bob Ellis who fathered this
-rather irrelevant observation. I had cut his trail an hour before,
-and we were making company for each other back to camp. I put forth no
-retort. Bob and I abode in the same small log hut, and I saw much of
-him, and didn't feel obliged to reply to those random utterances which
-fluttered from him like birds from a bush.
-
-It had been snowing for three days. This afternoon, however, had shaken
-off the storm. It is worth while to see the snow come down in the hills;
-flakes soft and clinging and silently cold; big as a baby's hand. Out in
-the flat valleys free of the trees the snow was deep enough to jade and
-distress our ponies. Therefore Bob and I were creeping home among the
-thick sown pines which bristled on the Divide like spines on a pig's
-back. There was very little snow under the trees. What would have made
-an easy depth of two feet had it been evenly spread on the ground over
-which our broncos picked their tired way, was above our heads in the
-pines. That was the reason why the trees were so still and silent.
-Your pine is a most garrulous vegetable in a sighing fashion, and its
-complaining notes sing for ever in your ears; sometimes like a roar,
-sometimes like a wail. But the three-days' snow in their green mouths
-gagged them; and never a tree of them all drew so much as a breath as we
-pushed on through their ranks.
-
-“Like the Winchester you're packin?” asked Bob.
-
-I confessed a weakness for the gun.
-
-“Had one of them magazine guns once myse'f,” Bob remarked. “Model of
-'78. Never liked it, though; always shootin' over. As you pump the loads
-outen 'em and empty the magazine, the weight shifts till toward the last
-the muzzle's as light as a feather. Thar you be! shootin' over and still
-over, every pull.”
-
-Having no interest in magazine guns beyond the act of firing them, I
-paid no heed to Bob's assault on their merits.
-
-“Now a single-shot gun,” continued Bob, as he rode an oak shrub
-underfoot to come abreast of me, “is the weepon for me. Never mind about
-thar bein' jest one shot in her! Show me somethin' to shoot, an' I'll
-sling the cartridges into her frequent enough for the most impatient
-gent on earth. This rifle I'm packin' is all right--all except the hind
-sight. That's too coarse; you could drag a dog through it.”
-
-Bob's dissertation on rifles was entertaining enough. My mood was
-indifferent, and his wisdom ran through my wits like water through a
-funnel, keeping them employed without filling them up. Bob had just
-begun again--all about a day far away when muzzle loaders were many in
-the hills--when my pony made sudden shy at something in the bushes. The
-muzzle of my gun instantly pointed to it, as if by an instinct of its
-own. Even as it did I became aware of the harmless cause of my pony's
-devout breathings--one of those million tragedies of nature which makes
-the wilderness a daily slaughter pen. It was the carcass of a blacktail
-deer. Its torn throat and shoulders, as well as the tracks of the giant
-cat in the snow, told how it died. The panther had leaped from the big
-bough of that yellow pine.
-
-“Mountain lion!” observed Bob, sagely, as he con templated the torn
-deer. “The deer come sa'nterin' down the slope yere, an' the lion jest
-naturally jumps his game from that tree. This deer was a bigger fool
-than most. You wouldn't ketch many of 'em as could come walkin' down the
-wind where the brush and bushes is rank, and gives the cats a chance to
-lay for 'em and bushwhack 'em!”
-
-It was becoming shadowy in among the pines by this time, and, having
-enough of Bob's defence of the dead buck and apology for its errors, I
-pushed on through the bushes for the camp. As we crossed a burnt strip
-where the fires had made a meal of the trees, the sun was reluctantly
-blinking his last before going to bed in the Sangre de Christo Range,
-which rolled upward like some tremendous billow in an ocean of milk full
-five scores of miles to the west.
-
-Bob and I were smoking our pipes in our log home that evening. Perhaps
-it was nine o'clock. A pitch-pine fire--billets set up endwise in the
-fireplace--roared in one corner. Our chimney was a vast success. Out
-back of our log habitat the surveyors had peeled the base of a pine and
-made a red-paint statement to the effect that even in the bottom of
-our little valley we were over 8,000 feet above the sea. This rather
-derogated from the pride of our chimney's performance; because, as Bob
-with justice urged, “a chimney not to 'draw' at an altitude of 8,000
-feet would have to be flat on the ground.”
-
-I was sprawled on a blanket, softly taking in the smoke of a meerschaum.
-My eyes, fascinated by the glaring, pitch-pine blaze, were boring away
-at the fire as if it guarded a treasure. But neither the tobacco smoke
-nor the flames were in my thoughts; the latter were idly going back to
-the torn deer.
-
-As if in deference to a fashion of telepathy, Bob would have been
-thinking of the deer, also. It's possible, however, he had the cat in
-his meditations.
-
-Suddenly he broke into my quiet with the remark which opens this yarn.
-Then he proceeded.
-
-“Because,” Bob continued, as I turned an eye on him through my tobacco
-smoke, “you might get it easy. He's shorely due to go back to-night an'
-eat up some of that black-tail, unless he's got an engagement. It's even
-money he's right thar now.”
-
-I stepped to the door and looked out. The roundest of moons in the
-clearest of skies shone down. Then there was the snow; altogether, one
-might have read agate print by the light. I picked up my rifle and sent
-my eye through the sights.
-
-“But how about it when we push in among the pines; it'll be darker in
-there?”
-
-“Thar'll be plenty of light,” declared Bob. “You don't have to make a
-tack-head shot. It ain't goin' to be like splittin' a bullet on a bowie.
-This mountain lion will be as big as you or me. Thar'll be light enough
-to hit a mark the size of him.”
-
-Our ponies were heartily scandalised at being resaddled so soon; but
-they were powerless to enforce their views, and away we went, Indian
-file, with souls bent to slay the lion.
-
-“Which I shorely undertakes the view that we'll get him,” observed Bob
-as we rode along.
-
-“Did you ever hear the Eastern proverb which says, 'The man who sold
-the lion's hide while yet upon the beast was killed in hunting him'?” I
-asked banteringly.
-
-“Who says so?” demanded Bob, defiantly.
-
-“It is an Eastern proverb.”
-
-“Well, it may do for the East,” responded Bob, “but you can gamble it
-ain't had no run west of the Mississippi. Why! I wouldn't be afraid to
-bet that one of these panthers never killed a human in the world. They
-do it in stories, but never in the hills. Why, shore! if you went right
-up an' got one by his two y'ears an' wrastled him, he'd have to fight.
-You could get a row out of a house cat, an' play that system. But you
-can write alongside of the Eastern proverb, that 'Bob Ellis says that
-the lion them parties complain of as killin' their friend, must have
-been plumb _locoed_, an' it oughtn't to count.'”
-
-At the edge of the trees we left the ponies standing. They pointed
-their ears forward as if wondering what all this mysterious night's work
-meant. It was entirely beside their experience. We left them to unravel
-the puzzle and passed as quietly among the trees as needles into cloth.
-
-Both Bob and I had served our apprenticeship at being noiseless, and
-brought the noble trade of silence to a science. It wasn't distant now
-to the field of the deer's death. Soon Bob pointed out the yellow pine.
-Bob was a better woodsman than I. Even in the daylight I would have
-owned trouble in picking out the tree at that distance among such a
-piney throng.
-
-What little wind we had was breathing in our faces. Bob hadn't made the
-black-tail's blunder of giving the lion the better of the breeze. Bob
-took the lead after he pointed out the yellow pine. Perhaps it was
-150 yards away when he identified it. We didn't cover five yards in
-a minute. Bob was resolutely deliberate. Still, I had no thought of
-complaint. I would have managed the case the same way had I been in the
-lead.
-
-Every ten feet Bob would pause and listen. There was now and then the
-sound of a clot of snow falling in the tops of the pines, as some bough
-surrendered its burden to the influence of the slight breeze. That was
-all my ears could detect of voices in the woods.
-
-We were within forty yards of the yellow pine, when Bob, after lingering
-a moment, turned his face toward me and made a motion of caution. I bent
-my ear to a profound effort. At last I heard it; the unctuous sound of
-feeding jaws!
-
-The oak bushes grew thick in among the pine trees. It did not seem
-possible to make out our game on account of this shrub-screen. At this
-point, instead of going any nearer the yellow pine, Bob bore off to
-the left. This flank movement not only held our title to the wind,
-but brought the moon behind us. After each fresh step Bob turned for a
-further survey of that region at the base of the yellow pine, where our
-lion, or some one of his relatives, was busy at his new repast.
-
-Then the climax of search arrived. To give myself due credit, I saw
-the panther as soon as did Bob. A fallen pine tree opened a lane in the
-bushes. Along this aisle I could dimly make out the body of the beast.
-His head and shoulders were protected by the trunk of the yellow pine,
-from the limb of which he had ambuscaded the black-tail. A cat's mouth
-serves vilely as a knife; the teeth are not arranged to cut well. His
-inability to sever a morsel left nothing for our lion to do, but gnaw at
-the carcass much as a dog might at a bone. This managed to keep his head
-out of harm's way behind the tree.
-
-Nothing better was likely to offer, and I concluded to try what a bullet
-would bring, on that part of the panther we could see. I found as I
-raised my Winchester that there was to be a strong element of faith in
-the shot. It was dim and shadowy in the woods, conditions which appeared
-to increase the moment you tried to point a gun. The aid my aim received
-from the gun-sights was of the vaguest. Indeed, for that one occasion
-they might as well have been left off the rifle. But as I was as
-familiar with the weapon as with the words I write, and could tell to
-the breadth of a hair where to lay it against my face to make it point
-directly at an object, there was nothing to gain by any elaboration
-of aim. As if to speed my impulse in the matter, a far-off crashing
-occurred in the bushes to the rear. A word suffices to read the riddle
-of the interruption. Our ponies, tired of being left to themselves, were
-coming sapiently forward to join us.
-
-With the first blundering rush of the ponies I unhooked my Winchester.
-The panther had no chance to take stock of the ponies' careless
-approach. If they had started five minutes earlier he might have owed
-them something.
-
-With the crack of the Winchester, the panther gave such a scream as,
-added to the jar of the gun--I was burning 120 grains of powder--served
-to make my ears sing. There were fear, amazement and pain all braided
-together in that yell. The flash of the discharge and the night shadows
-so blinded me that I did not make a second shot. I pumped in the
-cartridge with the instinct of precedent, but it was of no use. On
-the heels of it, our ponies, as if taking the shot to be an urgent
-invitation to make haste, came up on a canter, tearing through the
-bushes in a way to lose a stirrup if persisted in.
-
-Bob had run forward. There was blood on the snow to a praiseworthy
-extent. As we gazed along the wounded animal's line of flight there was
-more of it.
-
-“He's too hard hit to go far,” said Bob. “We'll find him in the next
-canyon, or that blood's a joke.” Bob walked along, looking at the
-blood-stained snow as if it were a lesson. Suddenly he halted, where the
-moonlight fell across it through the trees.
-
-“You uncoupled him,” he said. “Broke his back plumb in two. See where he
-dragged his hind legs!”
-
-“He can't run far on those terms,” I suggested.
-
-“I don't know,” said Bob, doubtfully. “A mountain lion don't die easy.
-Mountain lions is what an insurance sharp would call a good resk. But
-I'll tell you how to carry on this campaign: I'll take the horses and
-scout over to the left until I get into the canyon yonder. Then I'll
-bear off up the canyon. If he crosses it--an' goin' on two legs that
-away, I don't look for it--I'll signal with a yell. If he don't, I'll
-circle him till I find the trail. Meanwhile you go straight ahead on
-his track afoot. Take it slow an' easy, for he's likely to be layin'
-somewhere.”
-
-The trail carried me a quarter of a mile. As nearly as I might infer
-from the story the panther's passage had written in the snow, his speed
-held out. This last didn't look much like weakness. Still, the course
-was a splash of blood in red contradiction. The direction he took was
-slightly uphill.
-
-The trail ended sharp at the edge of a wide canyon. There was a shelf of
-scaly rock about twelve feet down the side. This had been protected from
-the storm by the overhanging brink of the canyon, and there was no snow
-on the shelf. That and the twelve feet of canyon side above it were the
-yellow colour of the earth.
-
-Below the shelf the snow again was deep, as the sides took an easier
-slope toward the bottom of the canyon. The panther had evidently
-scrambled down to the shelf. It took me less than a second to follow his
-wounded example. Once down I looked over the edge at the snow a few feet
-below to catch the trail again. The unmarred snow voiced no report of
-the game I hunted. I stepped to the left a few paces, still looking over
-for signs in the snow. There were none. As the shelf came to an end in
-this direction, I returned along the ledge, still keeping a hawk's eye
-on the snow below for the trail. I heard Bob riding in the canyon.
-
-“Have you struck his trail?” I shouted.
-
-“Thar's been nothin' down yere!” shouted Bob in reply. “The snow's as
-unbroken as the cream-cap on a pan of milk.”
-
-Where was my panther? I had begun to regard him as a chattel. As my eye
-journeyed along the ledge the mystery cleared up. There lay my yellow
-friend close in against the wall. I had walked within a yard of him,
-looking the other way while earnestly reading the snow.
-
-The panther was sprawled flat like a rug, staring at me with green eyes.
-I had broken his back, as Bob said. As I brought the Winchester to my
-face, his gaze gave way. He turned his head as if to hide it between his
-shoulder and the wall. I was too near to talk of missing, even in the
-dim light, and the next instant he was hiccoughing with a bullet in
-his brain. Six and one-half feet from nose to tip was the measurement;
-whereof the tail, which these creatures grow foolishly long, furnished
-almost one-half.
-
-
-
-
-MOLLIE MATCHES
-
-(Annals of the Bend)
-
-
-It was clear and cold and dry--excellent weather, indeed, for a
-snowless Christmas. Everywhere one witnessed evidences of the season.
-One met more gay clothes than usual, with less of anxiety and an
-increase of smiling peace in the faces. Each window had its wreath of
-glistening green, whereof the red ribbon bow, that set off the garland,
-seemed than common a deeper and more ardent red. Or was the elevation in
-the faces, and the greenness of the wreaths, and the vivid sort of
-the ribbon, due to impressions, impalpable yet positive, of Christmas
-everywhere?
-
-All about was Christmas. Even our Baxter Street doggery had attempted
-something in the nature of a bowl of dark, suspicious drink, to
-which the barkeeper--he was a careless man of his nomenclature, this
-barkeeper--gave the name of “apple toddy.” Apple toddy it might have
-been.
-
-When Chucky came in, an uncertain shuffle which was company to
-his rather solid tread showed he was not alone. I looked up. Our
-acquaintance, Mollie Matches, expert pickpocket,--now helpless and
-broken, all his one time jauntiness of successful crime gone,--was with
-him.
-
-“It was lonesome over be me joint,” vouchsafed Chucky, “wit' me Bundle
-chased over to do her reg'lar anyooal confession to d' priest, see! an'
-so I fought youse wouldn't mind an' I bring Mollie along. Me old pal is
-still a bit shaky as to his hooks,” remarked Chucky, as he surveyed his
-tremulous companion, “an' a sip of d' booze wouldn't do him no harm.
-It ain't age; Mollie's only come sixty spaces; it's that Hum-min' Boid
-about which I tells youse, that's knocked his noive.”
-
-Drinks were ordered; whiskey strong and straight for Matches. No; I've
-no apology for buying these folk drink. “Drink,” observed Johnson to the
-worthy Boswell, “drink, for one thing, makes a man pleased with himself,
-which is no small matter.” Heaven knows! my shady companions, for the
-reason announced by the sagacious doctor, needed something of the
-sort. Besides, I never molest my fellows in their drinking. I've slight
-personal use for breweries, distilleries, or wine presses; and gin
-mills in any form or phase woo me not; yet I would have nothing of
-interference with the cups of other men. In such behalf, I feel not
-unlike that fat, well-living bishop of Westminster who refused to sign
-a memorial to Parliament craving strict laws in behalf of total
-abstinence. “No,” said that sound priest, stoutly, “I will sign no
-such petition to Parliament. I want no such law. I would rather see
-Englishmen free than sober.”
-
-It took five deep draughts of liquor, ardently raw, to put Matches in
-half control of his hands. What with the chill of the day, and what with
-the torn condition of his nerves, they shook like the oft-named aspen.
-
-“Them don't remind a guy,” said Matches, as he held up his quivering
-fingers, “of a day, twenty-five years ago, when I was d' pick of d'
-swell mob, an 'd' steadiest grafter that ever ringed a watch or weeded a
-leather! It would be safe for d' Chief to take me mug out of d' gallery
-now, an' rub d' name of Mollie Matches off d' books. Me day is done, an'
-I'll graft no more.”
-
-There was plaintiveness in the man's tones as if he were mourning some
-virtue, departed with his age and weakness. Clearly Matches, off his
-guard and normal, found no peculiar fault with his past.
-
-“How came you to be a thief?” I asked Matches bluntly. I had counted the
-sixth drink down his throat, which meant that he wouldn't be sensitive.
-
-“It's too far off to say,” retorted Matches. “I can't t'row back to
-d' time when I wasn't a crook. Do youse want to know d' foist trick I
-loined? Well, it wasn't t'ree blocks from here, over be d' Bowery. I
-couldn't be more'n five. There was a fakir, sellin' soap. There was
-spec'ments of d' long green all over his stand, wit' cakes of soap on
-'em, to draw d' suckers. Standin' be me side was a kid; Danny d' Face
-dey called him. He was bigger than me, an' so I falls to his tips, see!”
-
-“'When you see him toin round,' said Danny d' Face, 'swipe a bill, an'
-chase yourself up d' alley wit' it.'
-
-“Danny goes behint, an' does a sneak on d' fakir's leg wit' a pin. Of
-course, he toins an' cuts loose a bluff at Danny, who's ducked out
-of reach. As he toins, up goes me small mit, an' d' nex' secont I'm
-sprintin' up d' alley wit 'd' swag.
-
-“Nit; d' mug wit' d' soap don't chase. He never even makes a holler; I
-don't t'ink he caught on. But Danny cuts in after me, an 'd' minute he
-sees we ain't bein' followed, or piped, he gives me d' foot, t'rows me
-in a heap, an' grabs off d' bill. I don't get a smell of it. An 'd' toad
-skin's a fiver at that!
-
-“D' foist real graft I recalls,” continued Matches, as he took a
-meditative sip of the grog, “I'm goin' along wit' an old fat skirt,
-called Mother Worden, to Barnum's Museum down be Ann Street an'
-Broadway. Mebbe I'm seven or eight then. Mother Worden used to make up
-for d' respectable, see! an' our togs was out of sight. There was no
-flies on us when me an' Mother Worden went fort' to graft. What was d'
-racket? Pickin' women's pockets. Mother Worden would go to d' museum, or
-wherever there was a crush, an' lead me about be me mit. She'd steer me
-up to some loidy, an' let on she's lookin' at whatever d' other party
-has her lamps on. Meanwhile, I'm shoved in between d' brace of 'em,
-an' that's me cue to dip in wit' me free hook an' toin out d' loidy's
-pocket, see! An' say! it was a peach of a play; an' a winner. We used to
-take in funerals, an' theaytres, an' wherever there was a gang. Me an'
-Mother Worden was d' whole t'ing; there was nobody's bit to split out;
-just us. We was d' complete woiks.
-
-“Now an' then there was a squeal. Once in a while I'd bungle me stunt,
-an' d' loidy I was friskin' would tumble an' raise d' yell. But Mother
-Worden always 'pologised, an' acted like she's shocked, an' cuffed me
-an' t'umped me, see! an' so she'd woik us free. I stood for d' t'umpin',
-an' never knocked. Mother Worden always told me that if we was lagged,
-d' p'lice guys would croak me. An' as d' wallopin's she gives me was d'
-real t'ing,--bein' she was hot under d' collar for me failin' down wit'
-me graft,--d' folks used to believe her, an' look on me fin in their
-pocket, that way, as d' caper of a kid. Oh, d' old woman Worden was dead
-flossy in her day, an' stood d' acid all right, all right, every time.
-
-“But like it always toins out, she finds her finish. One day she makes a
-side-play on her own account, somethin' in d' shopliftin' line, I t'ink;
-an' she's pinched, an' takes six mont's on d' Island. I never sees her
-ag'in; at which I don't break no record for weeps. She's a boid, was
-Mother Worden; an' dead tough at that. She don't give me none d' best of
-it when I'm wit' her, an' I'm glad, in a kid fashion, when she gets put
-away.
-
-“That's d' start I gets. Some other time I'll unfold to youse how I
-takes me name of Mollie Matches. Youse can hock your socks! I've seen d'
-hot end of many an alley! I never chases be Trinity buryin' ground, but
-I t'inks of a day when I pitched coppers on one of d' tombstones, heads
-or tails, for a saw-buck, wit' a party grown, before I was old enough
-an' fly enough to count d' dough we was tossin' for. But we'll pass all
-that up to-night. It's gettin' late an' I'll just put me frame outside
-another hooker an' then I'll hunt me bunk. I can't set up, an' booze an'
-gab like I onct could; I ain't neither d' owl nor d' tank I was.”
-
-
-
-
-THE ST. CYRS
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-François St. Cyr is a Frenchman. He is absent two years from La Belle
-France. He and his little wife, Bebe, live not far from Washington
-Square. They love each other like birds. Yet François St. Cyr is gay,
-and little Bebe is jealous. Once a year the Ball of France is held at
-the Garden. Bebe turns up a nose and will not so belittle herself. So
-François St. Cyr attends the Ball of France alone. However, he does not
-repine. François St. Cyr is permitted to be more _de gage_; the ladies
-more _abandon_. At least that is the way François St. Cyr explains it.
-
-It is the night of the Ball of France. François St. Cyr is there. The
-Garden lights shine on fair women and brave men. It is a masque. The
-costumes are fancy, some of them feverishly so. A railroad person
-present says there isn't enough costume on some of the participants to
-flag a hand-car. No one has any purpose, however, to flag a hand-car;
-the deficiency passes unnoticed. Had the railroader spoken of flagging a
-beer waggon--_mon Dieu!_ that would have been another thing!
-
-A prize, a casket of jewels, is to be given to the best dressed lady. A
-bacchante in white satin trimmed with swans' down and diamonds the
-size and lustre of salt-cellars is appointed the beneficiary by popular
-acclaim. François St. Cyr, as one of the directors of the ball, presents
-the jewels in a fiery speech. The music crashes, the mad whirl proceeds.
-A supple young woman, whose trousseau would have looked lonely in a
-collar-box, kicks off the hat of François St. Cyr. _Sapriste!_ how she
-charms him! He drinks wine from her little shoe!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-The morning papers told of the beauty in swans' down; the casket of
-jewels, and the presentation rhetoric of François St. Cyr, flowing
-like a river of oral fire. Bebe read it with the first light of dawn.
-_Peste!_ Later, when François St. Cyr came home, Bebe hurled the clock
-at him from an upper window. Bebe followed it with other implements of
-light housekeeping. François St. Cyr fled wildly. Then he wept and drank
-beer and talked of his honour.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-The supple person who kicked the hat of François St. Cyr was a chorus
-girl. The troop in whose outrages she assisted was billed to infuriate
-Newark that evening. François St. Cyr would seek surcease in Newark.
-He would bind a new love on the heart bruised and broken by the jealous
-Bebe. _Mon Dieu!_ yes!
-
-The curtain went up. François St. Cyr inhabited a box. He was very
-still; no mouse was more so. No one noticed François St. Cyr. At last
-the chorus folk appeared.
-
-“Brava! mam'selle, brava!” shouted François St. Cyr, springing to his
-feet, and performing with his hands as with cymbals.
-
-What merited this outburst? The chorus folk had done nothing; hadn't
-slain a note, nor murdered a melody. The audience stared at the shouting
-François St. Cyr. What ailed the man? At last the audience admonished
-François St. Cyr.
-
-“Sit down! Shut up!”
-
-Those were the directions the public gave François St. Cyr.
-
-“I weel not sit down! I weel not close up!” shouted François St. Cyr,
-bending over the box-rail and gesticulating like a monkey whose reason
-was suffering a strain. Then again to the chorus girl:
-
-“Brava! mam'selle, brava!”
-
-The other chorus girls looked disdainfully at the chorus girl whom
-François St. Cyr honoured, so as to identify her to the contempt of the
-public.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-Francois St. Cyr suddenly discharged a bouquet at the stage. It was the
-size of a butter tub. It mowed a swath through the chorus like a chain
-shot.
-
-“Put him out!” commanded the public.
-
-“Poot heem out!” repeated François St. Cyr with a shriek of sneering
-contempt. “_Canaille!_ I def-fy you! I am a Frenchman; I do not fee-ar
-to die!”
-
-Wafted to his duty on the breath of general opinion, a _gend'arme_ of
-Newark acquired François St. Cyr, and bore him vociferating from the
-scene of his triumph.
-
-As he was carried through the foyer, he raised his voice heroically:
-
-“_Vive le Boulanger!_”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-The next public appearance of François St. Cyr was in the Newark Police
-Court. He was pale and limp, and had thoughts of suicide. He was still
-clothed in his dress suit, which clung to him as if it, too, felt
-“_des-pond_.”
-
-François St. Cyr was fined $20.
-
-Bebe, the jealous, the faithful little Bebe, was there to pay the money.
-_Mon Dieu!_ how he loved her! He would be her bird and sing to her all
-her life! Never would he leave his Bebe more! As for the false one of
-the chorus: François St. Cyr “des-spised” her.
-
-Also Bebe had brought the week-day suit of François St. Cyr. Could an
-angel have had more forethought? François St. Cyr changed his clothes in
-a jury room, and Bebe and he came home cooing like turtle doves.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-By virtue of the every-day suit, the St. Cyrs were home by 4 o'clock
-in the afternoon. Otherwise, under the rules, being habited in a dress
-suit, François St. Cyr could not have returned until 6,
-
-And they were happy!
-
-
-
-
-McBRIDE'S DANDY
-
-Albert Edward Murphy is a high officer in one of the departments of the
-city. He holds his position with credit to the administration, and to
-his own celebration and renown. He has a wife and a family of children;
-and sets up his Lares and Penates in a home of his own in Greenwich
-Village.
-
-Among other possessions of a household sort, Albert Edward Murphy, until
-lately, numbered one pug dog. It was a dog of vast spirit and but little
-wit. Yet the children loved it, and its puggish imbecility only seemed
-to draw it closer to their baby hearts.
-
-The pug's main delusion went to the effect that he could fight. Good
-judges say that there wasn't a dog on earth the pug could whip. But he
-didn't know this and held other views. As a result, he assailed every
-dog he met, and got thrashed. The pug had taken a whirl at all the
-canines in the neighbourhood, and been wickedly trounced in every
-instance. This only made him dearer, and the children loved him for the
-enemies he made.
-
-*****
-
-The pug's name was John.
-
-One day, John, the pug, fell heir to a frightful beating at the paws and
-jaws of the dog next door. All that saved the life of John, the pug, on
-this awful occasion, was the lucky fact that he could get between
-the pickets of the line fence, and the neighbour's dog could not. The
-neighbour's dog was many times the size and weight of John, the pug;
-but, as has been suggested, what John didn't know about other dogs would
-fill a book; and he had gone upon the neighbour's premises and pulled
-off a fight.
-
-Now these divers sporting events in which John, the pug, took disastrous
-part worried Albert Edward Murphy. They worried him because the children
-took them to heart, and wept over the wounds of John, the pug, as they
-bound them with tar and other medicaments. At last Albert Edward Murphy
-resolved upon a campaign in favour of John, the pug. His future should
-have a protector; his past should be avenged.
-
-*****
-
-There was a forty-pound bulldog resident of Philadelphia. He whipped
-every dog to whom he was introduced. His name was Alexander McBride.
-He was referred to as “McBride's Dandy” in his set, whenever his
-identification became a conversational necessity. Of the many dogs he
-had met and conquered, Alexander McBride had killed twenty-three.
-
-Albert Edward Murphy resolved to import Alexander McBride. He knew
-the latter's owner. A letter adjusted the details. The proprietor of
-Alexander McBride was willing his pet should come to the metropolis on
-a visit. Alexander McBride had fought Philadelphia to a standstill, and
-his owner's idea was that, if Alexander McBride were to go on a visit
-and remain away for a few months, Philadelphia would forget him, and
-on his return he might ring Alexander in on the town as a stranger, and
-kill another dog with him. *****
-
-Alexander McBride got off the cars in a chicken crate. The expressmen
-were afraid of him. Albert Edward Murphy was notified. He hired a
-coloured person, who looked on life as a failure, to convey Alexander
-McBride to his new home. They tied him to a bureau when they got him
-there.
-
-Alexander McBride was a gruesome-looking dog, with a wide, vacant head,
-when his mouth was open, like unto an empty coal scuttle. Albert Edward
-Murphy looked at Alexander McBride, and after saying that he “would do,”
- went to dinner. During the prandial meal he explained to his family
-the properties and attributes of Alexander McBride; and then he and the
-children went over the long list of neighbour dogs who had oppressed
-John, the pug, and settled which dog Alexander McBride should chew up
-first. Alexander McBride should begin on the morrow to rend and destroy
-the adjacent dogs, and assume toward John, the pug, the rôle of guide,
-philosopher and friend. Albert Edward Murphy and his children were very
-happy.
-
-After dinner they went back to take another look at Alexander McBride.
-As they stood about that hero in an awed but admiring circle, John, the
-pug, rushed wildly into the ring, and tackled Alexander McBride. The
-coal-scuttle head opened and closed on John, the Pug.
-
-There was a moment of frozen horror, and then Albert Edward Murphy and
-his household fell upon Alexander McBride in a body.
-
-It was too late. It took thirteen minutes and the family poker to open
-the jaws of Alexander McBride. Then John, the pug, fell to the floor,
-dead and limp as a wet bath towel.
-
-*****
-
-Alexander McBride had slain his twenty-fourth dog, and John, the pug, is
-only a memory now.
-
-
-
-
-RED MIKE
-
-(Annals of the Bend)
-
-
-Say!” remarked Chucky as he squared himself before the greasy doggery
-table, “I'm goin' to make it whiskey to-day, 'cause I ain't feelin' a
-t'ing but good, see!”
-
-I asked the cause of Chucky's exaltation. Chucky's reason as given for
-his high spirits was unusual.
-
-“Red Mike gets ten spaces in Sing Sing,” he said; “an' he does a dead
-short stretch at that. He oughter get d' chair--that bloke had.
-
-“Red Mike croaks his kid,” vouchsafed Chucky in further elucidation.
-“Say! it makes me tired to t'ink! She was as good a kid, this little
-Emmer which Mike does up, as ever comes down d' Bend. An' only 'leven!”
-
-“Tell me the story,” I urged.
-
-“This Red Mike's a hod carrier,” continued Chucky, thus moved, “but
-ain't out to hoit himself be hard woik at it; he don't woik overtime.
-Hit! Not on your life insurance!
-
-“What Red Mike sooner do is bum Mulberry Street for drinks, an' hang
-'round s'loons an' sling guff about d' wrongs of d' woikin'man. Then
-he'd chase home, an' bein' loaded, he'd wallop his family.
-
-“On d' level! I ain't got no use ford' sort of a phylanthrofist who
-goes chinnin' all night about d' wrongs of d' labour element an 'd'
-oppressions of d* rich an' then goes home an' slugs his wife. Say! I
-t'ink a bloke who'd soak a skirt, no matter what she does--no matter if
-she is his wife! on d' square! I t'ink he's rotten.” And Chucky imbibed
-deeply, looking virtuous.
-
-“Well, at last,” said Chucky, resuming his narrative, “Mike puts a crimp
-too many in his Norah--that's his wife--an' d' city 'torities plants her
-in Potters' Field.”
-
-“Did Mike kill her?” I queried, a bit horrified at this murderous
-development of Chucky's tale.
-
-“Sure!” assented Chucky, “Mike kills her.”
-
-“Shoot her?” I suggested.
-
-“Nit!” retorted Chucky disgustedly. “Shoot her! Mike ain't got no gun.
-If he had, he'd hocked it long before he got to croak anybody wit' it.
-Naw, Mike does Norah be his constant abuse, see! Beats d' life out of
-her be degrees.
-
-“When Norah's gone,” resumed Chucky, “Emmer, who's d' oldest of d' t'ree
-kids, does d' mudder act for d' others. She's 'leven, like I says. An'
-little!--she ain't bigger'n a drink of whiskey, Emmer ain't.
-
-“But youse should oughter see her hustle to line up an' take care of
-them two young-ones. Only eight an' five dey be. Emmer washes d' duds
-for 'em, and does all sorts of stunts to get grub, an' tries like an old
-woman, night an' day, to bring 'em up.
-
-“D' neighbours helps, of course, like neighbours do when it's a case of
-dead hard luck; an' I meself has t'run a quarter or two in Emmer's lap
-when I'm a bit lushy. Say! I'm d' easiest mark when I've been hit-tin'
-d' bottle!--I'd give d' nose off me face!
-
-“If d' neighbours don't chip in, Emmer an' them kids would lots of times
-have had a hard graft; for mostly there ain't enough dough about d'
-joint from one week's end to another to flag a bread waggon.
-
-“Finally Red Mike gets woise. After Norah goes flutterin' that time,
-Mike's been goin' along as usual, talkin' about d' woikin'man, an' doin'
-up Emmer an 'd' kids for a finish before he rolls in to pound his ear.
-
-“At foist it ain't so bad. He simply fetches one of d' young ones a
-back-handed swipe across d' map wit' his mit to see it swap ends wit'
-itself; or mebbe he soaks Emmer in d' lamp an' blacks it, 'cause she's
-older. But never no woise. At least, not for long.
-
-“But as I says, finally Red Mike gets bad for fair. He lams loose
-oftener, an' he licks Emmer an 'd' kids more to d' Queen's taste--more
-like dey's grown-up folks an' can stan' for it.
-
-“Emmer, day after day chases 'round quiet as a rabbit, washin' d' kids
-an' feedin' 'em when there's any-t'ing, an' she don't make no holler
-about Mike's jumpin' on 'em for fear if she squeals d' cops'll pinch
-Mike an' give him d' Island.
-
-“Yes, Emmer was a dead game all right. Not only she don't raise d' roar
-on Mike about his soakin' 'em, but more'n onct she cuts in an' takes d'
-smash Mike means for one of d' others.
-
-“But, of course, you can see poor Emmer's finish. She's little, an'
-weak, an' t'in, not gettin' enough to chew--for she saws d' food off on
-d' others as long as dey makes d' hungry front--an 'd' night Mike puts
-d' boots to her an' breaks t'ree of her slats, that lets her out! She
-croaks in four hours, be d' watch.
-
-“W'at does Red Mike do it for? Well, he never needs, much of a hunch to
-pitch into Emmer an' d' rest. But I hears from me Rag who lives on d'
-same floor that it's all 'cause Mike gets d' tip that Emmer's got two
-bits, an' he wants it for booze. Mike comes in wit' a t'irst an' he
-ain't got d' price, an' he puts it to Emmer she's got stuff. Mike wants
-her to spring her plant an' chase d' duck.
-
-“But Emmer welched an' won't have it. She's dead stubborn an' says d'
-kids must eat d' nex' day; and so Mike can't have d' money. Mike says
-he'll kick d' heart out of her if he don't get it. Emmer stan's pat, an'
-so Mike starts in.
-
-“It's 'most an hour before I gets there. D' poor baby--for that's all
-Emmer is, even if she was dealin' d' game for d' joint--looks awful, all
-battered to bits. One of d' city's jackleg sawbones is there, mendin'
-Emmer wit' bandages. But he says himself he's on a dead card, an' that
-Emmer's going to die. Mike is settin' on a stool keepin' mum an' lookin'
-w'ite an' dopey, an' a cop is wit' him. Oh, yes! he gets d' collar long
-before I shows up.
-
-“Say! d' scene ain't solemn, oh, no! nit! Emmer lays back on d' bed--she
-twigs she's goin' to die; d' doctor puts her on. Emmer lays back an' as
-good as she can, for her valves don't woik easy an' she breathes hard,
-she tells 'em what to do. She says there's d' washboiler she borry's
-from d' Meyers's family, an' to send it back.
-
-“'An' I owes Mrs. Lynch,' says Emmer--she's talkin' dead faint--'a dime
-for sewin' me skirt, an' I ain't got d' dough. But when dey takes dad
-to d' coop, tell her to run her lamps over d' plunder, an' she has her
-pick, see! An' when I'm gone,' goes on Emmer, 'ast d' Gerries to take d'
-kids. Dey tries to get their hooks on 'em before, but I wanted to keep
-'em. Now I can't, an' d' Gerries is d' best I can do. D' Gerries ain't
-so warm, but dey can lose nothin' in a walk. An' wit' dad pinched an' me
-dead, poor Danny an' Jennie is up ag'inst it for fair.'
-
-“Nit; Emmer never sheds a weep. But say! you should a seen me Rag! She
-was d' terror for tears! She does d' sob act for two, an' don't you
-forget it.
-
-“Emmer just lays there when she's quit chinnin' an' gives Mike d' icy
-eye. If ever a bloke goes unforgiven, it's Red Mike.
-
-“'Don't youse want d' priest, or mebby a preacher?' asts me Rag of Emmer
-between sobs. Emmer's voice is most played when she comes back at her.
-
-“'W'at's d' use?' says Emmer.
-
-“Then she toins to d' two kids who's be d' bed cryin', an' tries to kiss
-'em, but it's a move too many for her. She twists back wit 'd' pain, an'
-bridges herself like you see a wrestler, an' when she sinks straight wit
-'d' bed ag'in, d' red blood is comin' out of her face. Emmer's light is
-out.
-
-“I tumbles to it d' foist. As I leads me Rag back to our room--for I can
-see she's out to t'row a fit--d' cop takes Red Mike down be d' stairs.”
-
-
-
-
-HAMILTON FINNERTY'S HEART
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-Far up in Harlem, on a dead swell street, the chance pedestrian as
-he chases himself by the Ville Finnerty, may see a pale, wrung face
-pressing itself against the pane. It is the map of Hamilton Finnerty.
-
-“W'at's d' matter wit' d' bloke?” whispered Kid Dugan, the gasman's son,
-to his young companion, as they stood furtively piping off the Ville
-Finnerty. “Is it 'D' Pris'ner of Zenda' down to date?”
-
-“Stash!” said his chum in a low tone. “Don't say a woid. That guy was
-goin' to be hitched to a soubrette. At d' las' minute d' skirt goes back
-on him--won't stan' for it; see! Now d' sucker's nutty. Dey's thrunning
-dice for him at Bloomin'dale right now!”
-
-It was a sad, sad story of how two loving hearts were made to break
-away; of how in their ignorance the police declared themselves in on a
-play of which they wotted nit, and queered it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-When the betrothal of Isabelle Imogene McSween to Hamilton Finnerty was
-tipped off to their set, the élite of Harlem fairly quivered with the
-glow and glory of it. The Four Hundred were agog.
-
-“It's d' swiftest deal of d' season!” said De Pygstyster.
-
-“Hammy won't do a t'ing to McSween's millions, I don't t'ink!” said Von
-Pretselbok.
-
-“Hammy'll boin a wet dog. An' don't youse forget it, I'll be in on d'
-incineration!” said Goosevelt.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-Hamilton Finnerty embarked for England. The beautiful Isabelle Imogene
-McSween had been plunging on raiment in Paree. The wedding was to be
-pulled off in two weeks at St. Paul's, London. It was to be a corker;
-for the McSweens were hot potatoes and rolled high. Nor were the
-Finnerties listed under the head of Has-beens. It is but justice to both
-families to say, they were in it with both feet.
-
-When Hamilton Finnerty went ashore at Liverpool he communed with
-himself.
-
-“It's five days ere dey spring d' weddin' march in me young affairs,”
- soliloquised Hamilton Finnerty, “an' I might as well toin in an' do
-d' village of Liverpool while I waits. A good toot will be d' t'ing to
-allay me natural uneasiness.”
-
-Thus it was that Hamilton Finnerty went forth to tank, and spread red
-paint, and plough a furrow through the hamlet of Liverpool. But Hamilton
-was a dead wise fowl. He had been on bats before, and was aware that
-they didn't do a thing to money.
-
-“For fear I'll blow me dough,” said Hamilton, still communing with
-himself, “I'll buy meself an' chip d' retoin tickets, see! It's a
-lead-pipe cinch then, we goes back.”
-
-And the forethoughtful Hamilton sprung his roll and went against the
-agent, for return tickets. They were to be good on the very steamer
-he chased over in. They were for him and the winsome Isabelle Imogene
-McSween, soon to be Mrs. Finnerty. The paste-boards called for the
-steamer's trip three weeks away.
-
-“There!” quoth Hamilton Finnerty, as he concealed the tickets in his
-trousseau, “I've sewed buttons on the future. We don't walk back, see! I
-can now relax an' toin meself to Gin, Dog's Head and a general whizz. I
-won't have no picnic,--oh, no! not on your eyes!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-It was early darkness on the second day. One after another the windows
-were showing a glim. Liverpool was lighting up for the evening. A
-limp figure stood holding to a lamp-post. The figure was loaded to the
-guards. It was Hamilton Finnerty, and his light was out. He had just
-been fired from that hostelry known as The Swan with the Four Legs.
-
-“I 'opes th' duffer won't croak on me doorstep,” said the blooming
-barmaid, as she cast her lamps on Hamilton Finnerty from the safe
-vantage of a window of The Swan with the Four Legs.
-
-There was no danger of Hamilton Finnerty dying, not in a thousand years.
-But he was woozy and tumbled not to events about him. He knew neither
-his name, nor his nativity, Nor could he speak, for his tongue was on a
-spree with the Gin and the Dog's Head.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-As Hamilton Finnerty stood holding the lamp-post, and deeming it his
-“only own,” two of the Queen's constabulary approached.
-
-[Illustration: 0085]
-
-“'Ere's a bloomin' gow, Jem!” said the one born in London. “Now '00 d'
-ye tyke the gent to be?”
-
-They were good police people, ignorant but innocent; and disinclined to
-give Hamilton Finnerty the collar.
-
-“Frisk 'un, Bill,” advised the one from Yorkshire; “it's loike th' naime
-bees in 'uns pawkets.”
-
-The two went through the make-up of Hamilton Finnerty. Jagged as he
-was, he heeded them not. They struck the steamer tickets and noted the
-steamer's name, but not the day of sailing.
-
-As if anxious to aid in the overthrow of Hamilton Finnerty, the steamer
-was still at her dock, with preparations all but complete for the return
-slide to New York.
-
-“Now 'ere's a luvely mess!” said London Bill, looking at the tickets.
-“The bloody bowt gows in twenty minutes, an' 'ere's this gent a-gettin'
-'eeself left! An' th' tickets for 'ees missus, too! It's punds t'
-peanuts, th' loidy's aboard th' bowt tearin' 'er blessed heyes out for
-'im. Hy, say there, kebby! bear a 'and! This gent's got to catch a
-bowt!”
-
-Hamilton Finnerty, dumb with Gin and Dog's Head, was tumbled into the
-cab, and the vehicle, taking its hunch from the excited officers, made
-the run of its life to the docks. They were in time.
-
-“It tak's th' droonken 'uns t'av th' loock!” remarked Yorkshire Jem
-cheerfully to London Bill, as they stood wiping their honest faces on
-the dock, while the majestic steamer, with Hamilton Finnerty aboard,
-worked slowly out.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-When Hamilton Finnerty came to his senses he was one hundred miles on
-his way to New York. For an hour he was off his trolley. It was six days
-before he landed, and during that period he did naught but chew the rag.
-
-Hamilton Finnerty chased straight for Harlem and sought refuge in the
-Ville Finnerty. He must think; he must reorganise his play! He would
-compile a fake calculated to make a hit as an excuse with Isabelle
-Imogene McSween, and cable it. All might yet be well.
-
-But alas! As Hamilton Finnerty opened the door of the Ville Finnerty
-the butler sawed off a cablegram upon him. It was from Isabelle Imogene
-McSween to Hamilton Finnerty's cable address of “Hamfinny.”
-
-As Hamilton Finnerty read the fatal words, he fell all over himself with
-a dull, sickening thud. And well he might! The message threw the boots
-into the last hope of Hamilton Finnerty. It read as follows:
-
-_Hamfinny:--Miscreant! Villain! A friend put me onto your skip from
-Liverpool. It was a hobo trick. But I broke even with you. I was dead
-aware that you might do a sneak at the last minute, and was organised
-with a French Count up me sleeve; see! Me wedding came off just the
-same. Me hubby's a bute! I call him Papa, and he's easy money. Hoping to
-see you on me return, nit, and renew our acquaintance, nit, I am yours,
-nit._
-
-_Isabelle Imogene McSween-Marat de Rochetwister._
-
-Outside the Ville Finnerty swept the moaning winds, dismal with
-November's prophecy of snow. At intervals the election idiot blew his
-proud horn in the neighbouring thoroughfare. It was nearly morning when
-the doctor said, that, while Hamilton Finnerty's life would be spared,
-he would be mentally dopey the balance of his blighted days.
-
-
-
-
-SHORT CREEK DAVE
-
-(Wolfville)
-
-
-Short Creek Dave was one of Wolfville's leading citizens. In fact his
-friends would not have scrupled at the claim that Short Creek Dave was
-a leading citizen of Arizona. Therefore when the news came over from
-Tucson that Short Creek Dave, who had been paying that metropolis a
-breezy visit, had, in an advertant moment, strolled within the radius
-of a gospel meeting then and there prevailing, and suffered conversion,
-Wolfville became spoil and prey to some excitement.
-
-“I tells him,” said Tutt, who brought the tidings, “not to go tamperin'
-'round this yere meetin'. But he would have it. He simply keeps
-pervadin' about the 'go-in' place, an' it looks like I can't herd him
-away. Says I: 'Dave, you don't onderstand this yere game they're turnin'
-inside. Which you keep out a whole lot, you'll be safer!' But warnin's
-ain't no good; Short Creek don't regard 'em a little bit.”
-
-“This yere Short Creek is always speshul obstinate that a-way,” said Dan
-Boggs, “an' he gets moods frequent when he jest won't stay where he
-is nor go anywhere else. I don't marvel none you don't do nothin' with
-him.”
-
-“Let it go as it lays!” observed Cherokee Hall, “I reckons Short Creek
-knows his business, an* can protect himse'f in any game they opens on
-him. I ain't my-se'f none astonished by these yere news. I knows him
-to do some mighty _locoed_ things, sech as breakin' a pair to draw to
-a three-flush; an' it seems like he's merely a pursooin' of his usual
-system in this relig'ous lunge. However, he'll be in Wolfville to-morry,
-an' then we'll know a mighty sight more about it; pendin' of which let's
-irrigate. Barkeep, please inquire out the beverages for the band!”
-
-Those of Wolfville there present knew no cause to pursue the discussion
-so pleasantly ended, and drew near the bar. The debate took place in the
-Red Light, so, as one observed on the issuance of Cherokee's invitation:
-“They weren't far from centres.”
-
-Cherokee himself was a suave suitor of fortune who presided behind his
-own faro game. Reputed to possess a “straight” deal box, he held high
-place in the Wolfville breast.
-
-Next day; and Wolfville began to suffer an increased exaltation. Feeling
-grew nervous as the time for the coming of the Tucson stage approached.
-An outsider might not have detected this fever. It found its evidence in
-the unusual activity of monte, high ball, stud and kindred relaxations.
-Faro, too, displayed some madness of spirit.
-
-At last out of the grey and heat-shimmer of the plains a cloud of dust
-announced the coming of the stage. Chips were cashed and games cleaned
-up, and presently the population of Wolfville stood in the street to
-catch as early a glimpse as might be of the converted one.
-
-“I don't reckon now he's goin' to look sech a whole lot different
-neither!” observed Faro Nell. She stood near Cherokee Hall, awaiting the
-coming stage.
-
-“I wonder would it 'go' to ask Dave for to drink?” said Tutt, in a tone
-of general inquiry.
-
-“Shore!” argued Dan Boggs; “an' why not?”
-
-“Oh, nothin' why not!” replied Tutt, as he watched the stage come up;
-“only Dave's nacherally a peevish person that a-way, an' I don't
-reckon now his enterin' the fold has redooced the restlessness of that
-six-shooter of his'n, none whatever.”
-
-“All the same,” said Cherokee Hall, “p'litenes 'mong gents should be
-observed. I asks this yere Short Creek to drink so soon as ever
-he arrives; an' I ain't lookin' to see him take it none invidious,
-neither.” With a rattle of chains and a creaking of straps the stage and
-its six high-headed horses pulled up at the postoffice door. The mail
-bags were kicked off, the express boxes tumbled into the street, and
-in the general rattle and crash the eagerly expected Short Creek Dave
-stepped upon the sidewalk.
-
-There was possibly a more eager scanning of his person in the thought
-that the great inward change might have its outward evidences; a
-more vigorous shaking of his hand, perhaps; but beyond these, curious
-interest did not go. Not a word nor a look touching Short Creek's
-religious exploits betrayed the question tugging at the Wolfville heart.
-Wolfville was too polite. And, again, Wolfville was too cautious. Next
-to horse-stealing, curiosity is the greatest crime. It's worse
-than crime, it's a blunder. Wolfville merely expressed its polite
-satisfaction in Short Creek Dave's return, and took it out in
-handshaking. The only incident worth record was when Cherokee Hall
-observed in a spirit of bland but experimental friendship:
-
-“I don't reckon, Dave, you-all is objectin' to whiskey none after your
-ride?”
-
-“Which I ain't done so usual,” observed Dave cheerfully, “but this yere
-time, Cherokee, I'll have to pass. Confidin' the trooth to you-all, I'm
-some off on nose-paint now. I'm allowin' to tell you the win-an'-lose
-tharof later on. Now, if you-alls will excuse me, I'll go wanderin' over
-to the O. K. House an' feed myse'f a whole lot.”
-
-“I shore reckons he's converted!” said Tutt, and he shook his head
-gloomily. “I wouldn't care none, only it's me as prevails on Dave to go
-over to Tucson that time; an' so I feels responsible.”
-
-“Whatever of it?” responded Dan Boggs, with a burst of energy, “I don't
-see no reecriminations comin', nor why this yere's to be regarded. If
-Dave wants to be relig'ous an' sing them hymns a heap, you bet! that's
-his American right! I'll gamble a hundred dollars, Dave splits even with
-every deal, or beats it. I'm with Dave; his system does for me, every
-time!”
-
-The next day the excitement began to subside. Late in the afternoon a
-notice posted on the postoffice door caused it to rise again. The
-notice announced that Short Creek Dave would preach that evening in the
-warehouse of the New York Store.
-
-“I reckons we-alls better go!” said Cherokee Hall. “I'm goin' to turn up
-my box an' close the game at first drink time this evenin', an' Hamilton
-says he's out to shut up the dance hall, seein' as how several of the
-ladies is due to sing a lot in the choir. We-alls might as well turn
-loose an' give Short Creek the best whirl in the wheel--might as well
-make the play to win, an* start him straight along the new trail.”
-
-“That's whatever!” agreed Dan Boggs. He had recovered from his first
-amazement, and now entered into the affair with spirit.
-
-That evening the New York Store's warehouse was as brilliantly a-light
-as a mad abundance of candles could make it. All Wolfville was there.
-As a result of conferences held in private with Short Creek Dave, and by
-that convert's request, Old Man Enright took a seat by the drygoods box
-which was to serve as a pulpit. Doc Peets, also, was asked to assume a
-place at the Evangelist's left. The congregation disposed itself about
-on the improvised benches which the ardour of Boggs had provided.
-
-At 8 o'clock Short Creek Dave walked up the space in the centre reserved
-as an aisle, carrying a giant Bible. This latter he placed on the
-drygoods box. Old Man Enright, at a nod from Short Creek Dave, called
-gently for attention, and addressed the meeting briefly.
-
-“This yere is a prayer meetin' of the camp,” said Enright, “an' I'm
-asked by Dave to preside, which I accordin' do. No one need make any
-mistake about the character of this gatherin', or its brand. This yere
-is a relig'ous meetin'. I am not myse'f given that a-way, but I'm allers
-glad to meet up with folks who be, an' see that they have a chance in
-for their ante, an' their game is preserved. I'm one, too, who believes
-a little religion wouldn't hurt this yere camp much. Next to a lynchin',
-I don't know of a more excellent inflooence in a western camp than these
-meetin's. I ain't expectin' to cut in on this play none myse'f, an'
-only set yere, as does Peets, in the name of order, an' for the purposes
-of a squar' deal. Which I now introdooces to you a gent who is liable to
-be as good a preacher as ever thumps a Bible--your old pard, Short Creek
-Dave.”
-
-“Mr. Pres'dent!” said Short Creek Dave, turning to Enright.
-
-“Short Creek Dave!” replied Enright sententiously, bowing gravely in
-recognition.
-
-“An' ladies an' gents of Wolfville!” continued Dave, “I opens this
-racket with a prayer.”
-
-The prayer proceeded. It was fervent and earnest; replete with unique
-expression and personal allusion. In the last, the congregation took a
-warm interest.
-
-Towards the close, Dave bent his energies in supplication for the
-regeneration of Texas Thompson, whom he represented in his orisons as by
-nature good, but living a misguided and vicious life. The audience was
-listening with approving attention, when there came an interruption. It
-was from Texas Thompson.
-
-“Mr. Pres'dent,” said Texas Thompson, “I rises to ask a question an' put
-for'ard a protest.”
-
-“The gent will state his p'int,” responded Enright, rapping on the
-drygoods box.
-
-“Which the same is this,” resumed Texas Thompson, drawing a long breath.
-“I objects to Dave a-tacklin' the Redeemer for me. I protests ag'in him
-makin' statements that I'm ornery enough to pillage a stage. This yere
-talk is liable to queer me on High. I objects to it!”
-
-“Prayer is a device without rools or limit,” responded Enright. “Dave
-makes his runnin' with the bridle off; an* the chair, tharfore, decides
-ag'in the p'int of order.”
-
-“An' the same bein' the case,” rejoined Texas Thompson with heat,
-“a-waivin' of the usual appeal to the house, all I've got to say is, I'm
-a peaceful gent; I has allers been the friend of Short Creek Dave. Which
-I even assists an' abets Boggs in packin' in these yere benches, an'
-aids to promote this meetin'. But I gives notice now, if Short Creek
-Dave persists in malignin' of me to the Great White Throne, as
-yeretofore, I'll shore call on him to make them statements good with his
-gun as soon as ever the contreebution box is passed.”
-
-“The chair informs the gent,” said Enright with cold dignity, “that
-Dave, bein' now a Evangelist, can't make no gun plays, nor go canterin'
-out to shoot as of a former day. However, the chair recognises the
-rights of the gent, an', standin' as the chair does in the position of
-lookout to this game, the chair nom'nates Dan'l Boggs, who's officiatin'
-as deacon hereof, to back these yere orisons with his six-shooter as
-soon as ever church is out, in person.”
-
-“It goes!” responded Boggs. “I proudly assoomes Dave's place.”
-
-[Illustration: 0097]
-
-“Mr. Pres'dent,” interrupted Short Creek Dave, “jest let me get my views
-in yere. It's my turn all right, as I makes clear, easy. I've looked up
-things some, an* I finds that the Apostle Peter, who was a great range
-boss of them days, scroopled not to fight. Which I trails out after
-Peter in this. I might add, too, that while it gives me pain to be
-obleeged to shoot up brother Texas Thompson in the first half of the
-first meetin' we holds in Wolfville, still the path of dooty is plain,
-an' I shall shorely walk tharin, fearin' nothin'. I tharfore moves we
-adjourn ten minutes, an' as thar is plenty of moon outside, if the
-chair will lend me its gun--I'm not packin' of sech frivolities no more,
-regyardin' of 'em in the light of sinful bluffs--I trusts to Providence
-to convince brother Texas Thompson that he's followed off the wrong
-waggon track. You-alls can gamble! I knows my business. I ain't
-4-flushin' none when I lines out to pray!”
-
-“Onless objection is heard, this meetin' will stand adjourned for ten
-minutes,” said Enright, at the same time passing Short Creek Dave his
-pistol.
-
-Fifteen paces were stepped off, and the opponents faced up in the
-moonlit street. Enright, Peets, Hall, Boggs, Tutt, Moore and the rest of
-the congregation made a line of admiration on the sidewalk.
-
-“I counts one! two! three! an' then I drops the contreebution box,” said
-Enright, “whereupon you-alls fires an' advances at will. Be you ready?”
-
-The shooting began on the word. When the smoke blew away, Texas Thompson
-staggered to the sidewalk and sat down. There was a bullet in his hip,
-and the wound, for the moment, brought a feeling of sickness.
-
-“The congregation will now take its seats in the sanctooary,” remarked
-Enright, “an' play will be re-soomed. Tutt, two of you-alls carry Texas
-over to the hotel, an' fix him up all right. Yereafter, I'll visit him
-an' p'int out his errors. This shows concloosive that Short Creek Dave
-is licensed from Above to pray any gait for whoever he deems meet, an'
-I'm mighty pleased it occurs. It's shore goin' to promote confidence in
-Dave's ministrations.”
-
-The concourse was duly in its seats when Short Creek Dave again reached
-the pulpit.
-
-“I will now resoome my intercessions for our onfortunate brother, Texas
-Thompson,” said Short Creek Dave.
-
-“I know'd he would,” commented Dan Boggs, as twenty dollars came over
-addressed by the wounded Thompson to the contribution box. “Texas
-Thompson is one of the reasonablest sports in Wolfville. Also you can
-bet! relig'ous trooths allers assert themse'ves.”
-
-
-
-
-CRIME THAT FAILED
-
-(Annals of the Bend)
-
-
-Say! Matches,” said Chucky, removing his nose from his glass, “youse
-remember d' Jersey Bank? I means d' time youse has to go to cover an
-'d' whole mob is pinched in d' hole. Tell us d' story; it's dead
-int'restin'.”
-
-This last was to me in a husky whisper.
-
-“That play was a case of fail,” remarked Mollie Matches thoughtfully.
-Then turning to me as chief auditor, he continued. “It's over twenty
-years ago; just on d' heels of d' Centenyul at Phil'delfy. D' graft was
-fairly flossy durin 'd' Centenyul, an' I had quite a pot of dough.
-
-“One day a guy comes to me; he's a bank woiker, what d' fly people calls
-'a gopher man'; he's a mug who's onto all d' points about safes an'
-such. Well, as I says, this soon guy comes chasin' to me.
-
-“'Matches,' he says, 'don't say a woid; I'll put youse onto an easy
-trick. Come wit' me to Jersey, an' I'll show you a bin what's all
-organised to be cracked. Any old hobo could toin off d' play; it's a
-walk-over.'
-
-“Wit' that, for I had confidence in this mark, see! We skins over to
-Jersey, an' he steers me out to a nearby town an' points me out a bank.
-What makes it a good t'ing is a vacant joint, wit' a 'To Rent' sign in
-d' window, built dost ag'inst d' side of d' bank.
-
-“'Are youse on?' says d' goph, pointin' his main hook at d' empty house,
-an' then at d' bank.
-
-“Bein' I'm no farmer meself, I takes no time to tumble. We screws our
-nuts, me an' d' goph, to d' duck who owns d' house, an 'd' nex' news
-is we rents it. D' duck who does d' rentin' says he can see we're on d'
-level d' moment we floats in; but all d' same, if we can bring him a
-tip or two on d' point of our bein' square people from one or two high
-rollers whose names goes, he'll take it kindly. We says, suttenly; we
-fills him to d' chin wit' all d' ref-runces he needs.
-
-“'We won't do a t'ing but send our pastor to youse,' puts in d' goph.
-
-“Good man, me pal was, as ever draws slide on a dark lantern, but always
-out to be funny.
-
-“We rents d' joint, as I states, an' no more is said about refrunces.
-Now, when it comes to d' real woik, I ain't goin' to do none, see! I
-ain't down to dig an' pick; it spoils me hooks for dippin'. What I does
-is furnish d' tools an 'd' dough.
-
-“I goes back an' gets a whole kit of bank tools--drills, centre-bits,
-cold-chisels, jointed-jimmies, wedges, pullers, spreaders, fuse, powder,
-mauls an' mufflers--I gets d' whole t'ing, see! Me pal knows a brace
-of pards who'll stand in on d' play. He calls 'em in, an' one night
-d' entire squeeze, wit 'd' tools, goes over an' plants themselfs in d
-'empty house. Yes; dey takes grub an' blankets an' all dey needs.
-
-“Before this I goes ag'inst d' bank janitor; an' while he's a fairly
-downy party, I wins him. D' janitor of d' bank gets a hundred bones, an'
-I gets a map of d' bank, which shows where d* money is planted an' all
-about it.
-
-“What's d' idee? Our racket is to tunnel from d' cellar of d' joint we
-rents, under d' sidewall of d' bank, an' keep on until we reaches
-d' stuff, see! We're out to do all d' woik we can wit'out lettin' d'
-bank-crush twig d' graft. Then we waits till Saturday noon. D' bank
-shuts up on Saturday noon, understan'! An' then we has till Monday at 9
-o'clock to finish d' woik. An' say! it's time plenty! It gives us time
-to boin!
-
-“As I states, I don't do any of d' woik. D' gopher an' his two pals is
-all d' job calls for. So I lays dead in d' town, ready to split out me
-piece of d' plunder, an' waits results.
-
-“To hurry me yarn, everyt'ing woiks like it's greased to fit d' play. D'
-mob gets d' tunnel as far as it'll go. Saturday noon comes an 'd' last
-sucker who belongs to d' bank skips out. It's then me gopher an' his two
-pals t'rows themselfs.
-
-“All t'rough Saturday afternoon an' all d' night till daylight Sunday
-mornin', them gezebos woiks away like dogs. An' say! don't youse ever
-doubt it! dey was winnin' in a walk.
-
-“But all this time d' pins was set up to do 'em. It was d' same
-old story. There's always some little nogood bet a crook is sure to
-overlook, an' it goes d' wrong way an' downs him. Here's what happens:
-
-“In d' foist place, we forgets to take d' 'To Rent' sign out of d'
-window, see! That's d' beginnin'. Nex,' me goph an' his side-partners
-digs so much dirt out of d' tunnel it fills d' cellar. Honest! it won't
-hold no more.
-
-“At this last, dey takes to shovelin 'd' dirt into a bushel basket. Then
-dey carries it up d' back stairs and dumps it on d' floor of a summer
-kitchen. Be 7 o'clock Sunday, mebby dey dumps as many as six basketfuls;
-dumps it, as I tells youse, in this lean-to, which is built on d' rear.
-
-“Now, right at this time there's an old Irish Moll who keeps a boardin'
-house not far away who is flyin' along to early Mass, bein' dead
-religious an' leary about her soul, see! This old goil, as she comes
-sprintin' along, gets her bleary old lamps on d' 'To Rent' card. All at
-onct d' idee fetches her a t'ump in d' cocoa that d' house would be out
-of sight for a boardin' joint. Wit' that she steers herself in to take a
-squint an' size up d' crib.
-
-“D' door is locked, so d' old goil can't come in. Wit' that she leads d'
-nex' best card an' goes galumpin' round, pipin' off d' place t'rough d'
-windows. An' say! she gets stuck on it. She t'inks if she can rent it,
-she can run d' dandy boardin' house of d' ward in it.
-
-“As d' old frail goes round d' place, among all d' rest, she looks
-t'rough d' windows into d' summer kitchen. She gets onto d' dirt that's
-dumped, as I states, in one corner. But she don't see none of d' gang,
-bein' dey's down in d' hole at d' time, so she don't fasten to nothin'.
-
-“At last she's seen enough an' sherries her nibs to d' cat'edral.
-
-“That's all right if it's only d' end; but it ain't. When it gets to
-about 2 o'clock, this old skate in petticoats goes toinin' nutty ag'in
-about d' empty house. Over she spins to grab another glimpse, see! When
-she strikes d' summer kitchen she comes near to throwin' a faint. D'
-pile of rubbidge is twenty times as big!
-
-“That settles it! d' joint is ha'nted! an' wit' that notion all tangled
-up in her frizzes d' old mut makes a straight wake for d' priest.
-
-“'D' empty house nex' to d' bank is full of ghosts!' she shouts, an'
-then she flings her apron over her nut an' comes a fit.
-
-“Now, this priest is about as sudden a party as ever comes over d'
-ocean. Youse can't give him no stiff about spooks, see! Bein' nex' to d'
-bank is a hot tip, an' he takes it.
-
-“Nit! he don't go surgin' round for his prayer-books an d' hully water.
-It would have been a dead good t'ing if he had. Nixie weedin'! D'
-long-coat sucker don't even come over to d' house.
-
-“What does he do? He sprints for d' nearest p'lice station at a 40 clip,
-an' fills up d' captain in charge wit 'd' story till youse can't rest.
-After that, it takes' d' p'lice captain about ten seconts to line up
-his push; an' be coppin' a sneak, he pinches me gopher an' his two pals
-right in d' hole. Dey was gettin' along beautiful at d' time, an' in ten
-hours more dey would have had that bank on d' hog for fair.
-
-Dey was dead games at that. While dey gets d' collar, not one of 'em
-coughs on me, an' me name ain't never in it from start to finish. Dey
-was game, true pals from bell to bell, an' stayed d' distance.
-
-“It was d' bummest finish, all d' same, for what looked like d' biggest
-trick, an' d' surest big money, that I ever goes near. Youse may well
-peel your peeps! If it wasn't for that old Irish keener an' her ghost
-stories, in less than ten hours more we wouldn't have got a t'ing but
-complete action on more'n a million plunks! There was a hay-mow full of
-money in that bin!
-
-“That's d' last round an' wind-up, as d' pugs puts it. Me gopher an' his
-pals is handed out ten spaces each, an' I lose me kit of tools. Take it
-over all, I'm out some four t'ousand dollars on d' deal. A tidy lump
-of dough to be done out of be a priest, a p'liceman an' an old Irish
-boardin' boss! D' old loidy lands wit' bot' her trilbys, though; d' bank
-chucks her a bundle of fly-paper big enough to stan' for all her needs
-until she croaks, forcuttin' in on our play, see!”
-
-
-
-
-THE BETRAYAL
-
-The boys had resolved on revenge, and nothing could turn them from
-their purpose. The trouble was this: Some one not otherwise engaged had
-fed the furnace an overshoe which it did not need. As incident to its
-consumption the overshoe had filled the building with an odour of
-which nothing favourable could be said. The professor afterwards, in
-denouncing the author of the outrage, had referred to it as “effluvia.”
- It had as a perfume much force of character, and was stronger and more
-devastating than the odour which goes with an egg in its old age, when
-it has begun to hate the world and the future holds nothing but gloom.
-
-As stated, the schoolhouse reeked and reeled with this sublimated
-overshoe. It all pleased the boys excessively. They made as much as
-possible of the odour; they coughed, and sneezed, and worried the
-professor by holding up their hands one after the other with the remark:
-
-“Teacher, may I go out?”
-
-The professor, after several destructive whiffs of the overshoe, made
-a fiery speech. He said that could he once locate the boy who lavished
-this overshoe on mankind in a gaseous form, that boy's person would
-experience a rear-end collision. He would be so badly telescoped that
-weeks would elapse before the boy could regard himself as being in
-old-time form. The professor said the boy who founded the overshoe
-odour was a “miscreant” and a “vandal.” He demanded his name of the boys
-collectively; and failing to get it, the professor said they were all
-miscreants and vandals, and that it would be as balm to his spirits were
-he to wade in and larrup the entire outfit.
-
-After school the boys held a meeting.
-
-Frank Payne, aged fourteen, the boy who could lick any boy in school,
-denounced the professor. He referred to the fact that his father was a
-school trustee; and that under the rules the professor had no right to
-bestow upon them the epithets of miscreants and vandals. Frank Payne
-advised that they whip the professor; who must, he said, while a large,
-muscular man, yield to mob violence.
-
-The proposition to whip the professor was carried unanimously under a
-suspension of the rules.
-
-In the ardour of this crusade for their rights the boys did not feel as
-if they could await the slow approach of trouble in the natural way. It
-was decided by them to bring matters to a focus. It was planned to have
-Tony Sanford stick a pin in John Dayton. That would be a splendid start!
-John Dayton, thus stuck, would yell; and when the professor asked the
-cause of his lamentations, John Dayton would point to Tony Sanford as
-his assassin. When the professor laid corrective hands on Tony all of
-the conspirators were to rush upon the professor and give him such a
-rough-and-tumble experience that succeeding ages would date time from
-the emeute. The boys were filled with glee; they regarded the business,
-so they said, as “a pushover.”
-
-The hour for action had arrived.
-
-Tony Sanford had no pin. But Tony was a fertile boy; if there was a
-picket off Tony's mental fence at all, it was his foresight. Lacking
-a pin, the ingenious Tony stuck the small blade of his knife into John
-Dayton. The victim howled like a dog at night.
-
-“Please, sir, Tony Sanford's stabbed me,” was John Dayton's explanation
-of his shrieks.
-
-Tony Sanford was paraded for punishment. The cold-blooded enormity of
-the crime seemed to strike the professor dumb. He did not know how to
-take hold of the situation. But Tony pursued a course which not only
-invited but suggested action. As Tony approached, he dealt the professor
-an uppercut in the bread-basket, and with the cry, “Come on, boys!”
- closed doughtily with the foe.
-
-The boys beheld the deeds of the intrepid Tony; they heard his cry and
-knew it for their cue. Nevertheless, notwithstanding, not a boy moved.
-They sat in their seats and gazed fixedly at Tony and the professor.
-With the call of Tony to his fellow-conspirators the professor saw it
-all.
-
-“Tony Sanford,” quoth the professor, “we will adjourn to the library.
-When I get through, you will be of no further use to science.”
-
-The door closed on Tony Sanford, and a professor weighing 211 pounds.
-The sounds which came welling from the library showed that some strong,
-emotional work was being done within. Tony and the professor sounded
-at times like a curlew at night, and anon like unto a man falling
-downstairs with a stove. Tony Sanford said afterward that he would never
-again attach himself to a plot which did not show two green lights on
-the rear platform of its caboose.
-
-
-
-
-FOILED
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-DARLING, I fear that man! The cruel guy can from his place as umpire do
-you up.”
-
-It was Gwendolin O'Toole who spoke. She was a beautiful blonde angel,
-and as she clung to her lover, Marty O'Malley, they were a picture from
-which a painter would have drawn an inspiration.
-
-“Take courage, love!” said Marty O'Malley tenderly; “I'm too swift for
-the duck.”
-
-“I know, dearest,” murmured the fair Gwendolin, “but think what's up
-on the game! Me brother, you know him well! the rooter prince, the
-bleachers' uncrowned king! he is the guardian of me vast estates. If I
-do not marry as he directs, me lands and houses go to found an asylum
-for decrepit ball tossers. And to-day me brother Godfrey swore by the
-Banshee of the O'Tooles that me hand should belong to the man who made
-the best average in to-morrow's game. Can you win me, love?”
-
-“I will win you or break the bat!” said Marty O'Malley, as he folded his
-dear one in his arms.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-WHEN that villain, O'Malley, goes to bat to-morrow, pitch the ball ten
-feet over his head. No matter where it goes I'll call a 'strike.'”
-
-It was Dennis Mulcahey who spoke; the man most feared by Gwendolin
-O'Toole. He was to be the next day's umpire, and as he considered how
-securely his rival was in his grasp, he laughed the laugh of a fiend.
-
-Dennis Mulcahey, too, loved the fair Gwendolin, but the dear girl
-scorned his addresses. His heart was bitter; he would be revenged on his
-rival.
-
-“You've got it in for the mug!” replied Terry Devine, to whom Dennis
-Mulcahey had spoken. Devine was the pitcher of the opposition, and like
-many of his class, a low, murdering scoundrel. “But, say! Denny, if
-you wants to do the sucker, why don't youse give him a poke in d' face?
-See!”
-
-“Such suggestions are veriest guff,” retorted Dennis Mulcahey. “Do as I
-bid you, caitiff, an' presume not to give d' hunch to such as I! A wild
-pitch is what I want whenever Marty O'Malley steps to the plate. I'll do
-the rest.”
-
-“I'll t'row d' pigskin over d' grand stand,” said Terry Devine as he and
-his fellow-plotter walked away.
-
-As the conspirators drifted into the darkness a dim form arose from
-behind a shrub. It was Marty O'Malley.
-
-“Ah! I'll fool you yet!” he hissed between his clinched teeth, and
-turning in the opposite direction he was soon swallowed by the darkness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-You'll not fail me, Jack!” said Marty O'Malley to Jack, the barkeeper
-of the Fielders' Rest.
-
-“Not on your sweater!” said Jack, “Leave it to me. If that snoozer
-pitches this afternoon I hopes d' boss'll put in a cash-register!”
-
-Marty O'Malley hastened to the side of his love. Jack, the faithful
-barkeeper, went on cleaning his glasses.
-
-“That hobo, Devine, will be here in a minute,” said Jack at last, “an' I
-must organise for him.”
-
-Jack took a shell glass and dipped it in the tank behind the bar. Taking
-his cigar from between his finely chiselled lips, he blew the smoke into
-the moistened interior of the glass. This he did several times.
-
-“I'll smoke a glass on d' stiff,” said Jack softly. “It's better than a
-knockout drop.”
-
-It was a moment later when Terry Devine came in. With a gleam of almost
-human intelligence in his eye Jack, the barkeeper, set up the smoked
-glass. Terry Devine tossed off the fiery potation, staggered to a chair,
-and sat there glaring. A moment later his head fell on the table, while
-a stertorous snore proclaimed him unconscious.
-
-“That fetched d' sucker,” murmured Jack, the barkeeper, and he went on
-cleaning his glasses. “His light's gone out for fourteen hours, an' he
-don't make no wild pitches at Marty O'Malley to-day, see!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-Ten thousand people gathered to witness the last great contest between
-the Shamrocks and the Shantytowns.
-
-Gwendolin O'Toole, pale but resolute, occupied her accustomed seat in
-the grand stand. Far away, and high above the tumult of the bleachers
-she heard the hoarse shouts of her brother, Godfrey O'Toole, the
-bleachers' king.
-
-“Remember, Gwendolin!” he had said, as they parted just before the game,
-“the mug who-makes the best average to-day wins your hand. I've sworn
-it, and the word of an O'Toole is never broken.”
-
-“Make it the best fielding average, oh, me brother!” pleaded Gwendolin,
-while the tears welled to her glorious eyes.
-
-“Never!” retorted Godfrey O'Toole, with a scowl; “I'm on to your
-curves! You want to give Marty O'Malley a better show. But if the
-butter-fingered muffer wants you, he must not only win you with his
-fielding, but with the stick.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-Terry Devine wasn't in the box for the Shantytowns. With his head on
-the seven-up table, he snored on, watched over by the faithful barboy
-Jack. He still yielded to smoked glass and gave no sign of life.
-
-“Curse him!” growled Umpire Mulcahey hoarsely beneath his breath “has he
-t'run me down? If I thought so, the world is not wide enough to save him
-from me vengeance.”
-
-And the change pitcher took the box for the Shantytowns.
-
-Marty O'Malley, the great catcher of the Shamrocks, stepped to the
-plate. Dennis Mulcahey girded up his false heart, and registered a
-black, hellish oath to call everything a strike.
-
-“Never! never shall he win Gwendolin O'Toole while I am umpire!” he
-whispered, and his face was dark as a cloud.
-
-It was the last word that issued from the clam-shell of Dennis Mulcahey
-for many a long and bitter hour; the last crack he made. Just as he
-offered his bluff, the first ball was pitched. It was as wild and high
-as a bird, as most first balls are. But Marty O'Malley was ready. He,
-too, had been plotting; he would fight Satan with fire!
-
-As the ball sped by, far above his head, Marty O'Malley leaped twenty
-feet in the air. As he did this he swung his unerring timber. Just as
-he had planned, the flying, whizzing sphere struck the under side of his
-bat, and glancing downward with fearful force, went crashing into the
-dark, malignant visage of Dennis Mulcahey, upturned to mark its flight.
-The fragile mask was broken; the features were crushed into complete
-confusion with the awful inveteracy of the ball.
-
-Dennis Mulcahey fell as one dead. As he was borne away another umpire
-was sent to his post. Marty O'Malley bent a glance of intelligence on
-the change pitcher of the Shantytowns, who had taken the place of the
-miscreant Dermis, and whispered loud enough to resell from plate to box:
-
-“Now, gimme a fair ball!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-And so the day was won; the Shamrocks basted the Shantytowns by the
-score of 15 to 2. As for Marty O'Malley, his score stood:
-
- Ab. R. H. Po. A. E.
-
- O'Malley, c,....4 4 4 10 14 0
-
-No such record had ever been made on the grounds. With four times at
-bat, Marty O'Malley did so well, withal, that he scored a base hit, two
-three-baggers and a home-run.
-
-That night Marty O'Malley wedded the rich and beautiful Gwendolin
-O'Toole. Jack, the faithful bar-boy of the Fielders' Rest, officiated as
-groomsman. Godfrey O'Toole, haughty and proud, was yet a square sport,
-and gave the bride away.
-
-The rich notes of the wedding bells, welling and swelling, drifted
-into the open windows of the Charity Hospital, and smote on the ears of
-Dennis Mulcahey, where he lay with his face.
-
-“Curse 'em!” he moaned.
-
-Then came a horrible rattle in his throat, and the guilty spirit of
-Dennis Mulcahey passed away.
-
-Death caught him off his base.
-
-
-
-
-POLITICS
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Nixie! I ain't did nothin', but all de same I'm feelin' like a mut,
-see!”
-
-Chucky was displeased with some chapter in his recent past. I could tell
-as much by the shifty, deprecatory way in which he twiddled and fiddled
-with his beer-stein.
-
-“This is d' way it all happens,” exclaimed Chucky. “Over be Washin'ton
-Square there's an old soak, an' he's out to go into pol'tics--wants to
-hold office; Congress, I t'inks, is what this gezeybo is after. Anyhow
-he's nutty to hold office.
-
-“Of course, I figgers that a guy who wants to hold office is a sucker;
-for meself, I'd sooner hold a baby. Still, when some such duck comes
-chasin' into pol'tics, I'm out for his dough like all d' rest of d'
-gang.
-
-“So I goes an' gets nex' to this mucker an' jollies his game. I tells
-him all he's got to do is to fix his lamps on d' perch that pleases him,
-blow in his stuff an' me push'll toin loose, an' we'll win out d' whole
-box of tricks in a walk, see!
-
-“That's all right; d' Washin'ton Square duck is of d' same views.
-An' some of it ain't no foolish talk at that. I'm dead strong wit' d'
-Dagoes, an' d' push about d' Bend, an' me old chum--if he starts--is
-goin' to get a run for his money.
-
-“It ain t this, however, what wilts me d' way you sees to-night. It's
-that I'm 'shamed, see! In d' foist place, I'm bashful. That's
-straight stuff; I'm so bashful that if I'm in some other geezer's
-joint--par-tic'ler if he's a high roller an' t'rowin' on social lugs,
-like this Washin'ton Square party--I feels like creep-in' under d' door
-mat.
-
-“D' other night this can'date for office says, says he, 'Chucky, I'm
-goin to begin my money-boinin' be givin' a dinner over be me house, an'
-youse are in it, see! in it wit' bot' feet.*
-
-“'Be I comin' to chew at your joint?' I asts; 'is that d' bright idee?'
-
-“'That's d' stuff,' he says; 'youse are comin' to eat wit' me an' me
-friends. An' you can gamble your socks me friends is a flossy bunch at
-that.'
-
-“I says I'll assemble wit' 'em.
-
-“Nit, I ain't stuck on d' play. I'd sooner eat be meself. But if I'm
-goin' to catch up wit' his Whiskers an' sep'rate him from some of d'
-long green, I've got to stay dost to his game, see!
-
-“It's at d' table me troubles begins. I does d' social double-shuffle in
-d' hall all right. D' crush parts to let me t'rough, an' I woiks me
-way up to me can'date--who, of course, is d' main hobo, bein' he's d'
-architect of d' blowout--an' gives him d' joyful mit; what you calls d'
-glad hand.
-
-“'Glad to see youse, Chucky,' says d' old mark. 'Tummas, steer Chucky to
-his stool be d' table.'
-
-“It's at d' table I'm rattled, wit' all d' glasses an' dishes an 'd'
-lights overhead. But I'm cooney all d' same. I ain't onto d' graft
-meself, but I puts it up on d' quiet I'll pick out some student who
-knows d' ropes an' string me bets wit' his.
-
-“As I sets there, I flashes me lamps along d' line, an' sort o' stacks
-up d' blokes, for to pick out d' fly guys from d' lobsters, see!
-
-“Over'cross'd table I lights on an old stiff who looks like he could
-teach d' game. T'inks I to meself, 'There's a mut who's been t'rough d'
-mill many a time an' oft. All I got to do now is to pipe his play an'
-never let him out o' me sight. If I follows his smoke, I'll finish in d'
-front somewheres, an' none of these mugs 'll tumble to me ignorance.'
-
-“Say! on d' level! there was no flies on that for a scheme, was there?
-An' it would have been all right, me system would; only this old galoot
-I goes nex' to don't have no more sense than me. Why! he was d' ass of
-d' evening! d' prize pig of d' play, he was! Let me tell youse.
-
-“D' foist move, he spreads a little table clot' across his legs. I ain't
-missin' no tricks, so I gets me hooks on me own little table clot' and
-spreads it over me legs also.
-
-“'This is good enough for a dog, I t'inks, an' easy money! Be keepin' me
-eye on Mr. Goodplayer over there I can do this stunt all right.'
-
-“An' so I does. I never lets him lose me onct.
-
-“'How be youse makin' it, Chucky?' shouts me can'date from up be d' end
-of d' room.
-
-“'Out o' sight!' I says. 'I'm winner from d' jump; I'm on velvet.'
-
-“'Play ball!' me can'date shouts back to encourage me, I suppose because
-he's dead on I ain't no Foxy Quiller at d' racket we're at; 'play ball,
-Chucky, an' don't let 'em fan youse out. When you can't bat d' ball,
-bunt it,' says me can'date.
-
-“Of course gettin 'd' gay face that way from d' boss gives me
-confidence, an' as a result it ain't two seconts before I'm all but
-caught off me base. It's in d' soup innin's an 'd' flunk slams down d'
-consomme in a tea cup. It's a new one on me for fair! I don't at d'
-time have me lamps on d' mark 'cross d' way, who I'm understudyin', bein'
-busy, as I says, slingin 'd' bit of guff I tells of wit' me can'date.
-An' bein' off me guard, I takes d' soup for tea or some such dope, an'
-is layin' out to sugar it.
-
-“'Stan' your hand!' says a dub who's organised be me right elbow, an'
-who's feedin' his face wit' both mits; 'set a brake!' he says. 'That's
-soup. Did youse t'ink it was booze?'
-
-“After that I fastens to d' old skate across d' table to note where he's
-at wit' his game. He's doin' his toin on d' consomme wit' a spoon, so I
-gets a spoon in me hooks, goes to mixin' it up wit 'd' soup as fast as
-ever, an' follows him out.
-
-“An' say! I'm feelin' dead grateful to this snoozer, see! He was d'
-ugliest mug I ever meets, at that. Say! he was d' limit for looks, an'
-don't youse doubt it. As I sizes him up I was t'inking to meself, what
-a wonder he is! Honest! if I was a lion an' that old party comes into
-me cage, do youse know what I'd do? Nit; you don't. Well, I'll tip it to
-youse straight. If any such lookin' monster showed up in me cage, if d'
-door was open, I'd get out. That's on d' square, I'd simply give him
-d' cage an' go an' board in d' woods. An' if d' door was locked an' I
-couldn't get out, I'd t'row a fit from d' scare. Oh! he was a dream!
-He's one of them t'ings a mark sees after he's been hittin' it up wit
-'d' lush for a mont'.
-
-“'But simply because he looks like a murderer,' I reflects, 'that's no
-reason why he ain't wise. He knows his way t'rough this dinner like a
-p'liceman does his beat, an' I'll go wit' him.'
-
-“It's a go! When he plays a fork, I plays a fork; when he boards a
-shave, I'm only a neck behint him. When he shifts his brush an' tucks
-his little table clot' over his t'ree-sheet, I'm wit' him. I plays nex'
-to him from soda to hock.
-
-“An' every secont I'm gettin' more confidence in this gezebo, an' more
-an' more stuck on meself. On d' dead! I was farmer enough to t'ink I'd
-t'ank him for bein' me guide before I shook d' push an' quit. Say! he'd
-be a nice old dub for me to be t'ankin 'd' way it toins out. I was a
-good t'ing to follow him, I don't t'ink.
-
-“If I was onto it early that me old friend across d' table had w'eels
-an' was wrong in his cocoa, I wouldn't have felt so bad, see! But I'd
-been playin' him to win, an' followin' his lead for two hours. An' I was
-so sure I was trottin' in front, that all d' time I was jollyin' meself,
-an' pattin' meself on d' back, an' tellin' meself I was a corker to
-be gettin' an even run wit 'd' 400 d' way I was, d' foist time I enter
-s'ciety. An' of course, lettin' me nut swell that way makes it all d'
-harder when I gets d' jolt.
-
-“It's at d' finish. I'd gone down d' line wit' this sucker, when one of
-them waiter touts, who's cappin' d' play for d' kitchen, shoves a bowl
-of water in front of him. Now, what do youse t'ink he does? Drink it?
-Nit; that's what he ought to have done. I'm Dutch if he don't up an'
-sink his hooks in it. An' then he swabs off his mits wit' d' little
-table clot'. Say! an' to t'ink I'd been takin' his steer t'rough d'
-whole racket! It makes me tired to tell it!
-
-“'W'at th' 'ell!' I says to meself; 'I've been on a dead one from d'
-start. This stiff is a bigger mut than I be.'
-
-“It let me out. Me heart was broke, an' I ain't had d' gall to hunt
-up me can'date since. Nit; I don't stay to say no 'good-byes.' I'm too
-bashful, as I tells you at d' beginnin'. As it is, I cops a sneak on
-d' door, side-steps d' outfit, an' screws me nut. The can'date sees me
-oozin' out, however, an' sends a chaser after me in d' shape of one
-of his flunks. He wants me to come back. He says me can'date wants to
-present me to his friends. I couldn't stan' for it d' way I felt, an' as
-d' flunk shows fight an' is goin' to take me back be force, I soaks him
-one an' comes away. On d' dead! I feels as'shamed of d' entire racket as
-if some sucker had pushed in me face.”
-
-
-
-
-ESSLEIN GAMES
-
-
-For generations the Essleins have been fanciers of game chickens. The
-name “Esslein” for a century and a half has had honourable place among
-Virginians. In his day, they, the Essleins, were as well known as Thomas
-Jefferson. As this is written they have equal Old Dominion fame with
-either the Conways, the Fairfaxes, the McCarthys or the Lees. And all
-because of the purity and staunch worth of the “Esslein Games.”
-
-It was the broad Esslein boast that no man had chickens of such feather
-or strain. And this was accepted popularly as truth. The Essleins never
-loaned, sold, nor gave away egg or chicken. No one could produce the
-counterpart of the Esslein chickens for looks or warlike heart; no one
-ever won a main from the Essleins. So at last it was agreed generally,
-that no one save the Essleins did have the “Esslein Games;” and this
-belief went unchallenged while years added themselves to years.
-
-But there came a day when a certain one named Smith, who dwelt in the
-region round about the Essleins, and who also had note for his fighting
-cocks, whispered to a neighbour that he, as well as the Essleins, had
-the “Esslein Games.” The whisper spread into talk, and the talk into
-general clamour; everywhere one heard that the long monopoly was broken,
-and that Smith had the “Esslein Games.”
-
-This startling story had half confirmation by visitors to the Smith
-walks. Undoubtedly Smith had chickens, feather for feather, twins of the
-famous Essleins. That much at least was true. The rest of the question
-might have evidence pro or con some day, should Smith and the Essleins
-make a main.
-
-But this great day seemed slow, uncertain of approach. Smith would not
-divulge the genesis of his fowls, nor tell how he came to be possessed
-of the Esslein chickens. Smith confined himself to the bluff claim:
-
-“I've got 'em, and there they be.”
-
-Beyond this Smith wouldn't go. On' their parts, the Essleins, at first
-maintained themselves in silent dignity. They said nothing; treating the
-Smith claim as beneath contempt.
-
-As man after man, however, went over to the Smith side, the Essleins so
-far unbent from their pose of tongue-tied hauteur as to call Smith “a
-liar!”
-
-Still this failed of full effect; the talk went on, the subject was in
-mighty dispute, and the Essleins at last, to settle discussion, defied
-Smith to a main.
-
-But Smith refused to fight his chickens against the Essleins. Smith said
-it was conscience, but failed to go into details. This was damaging.
-Meanwhile, however, as Smith challenged the world of fighting cocks,
-and, moreover, won every match he ever made, and barred only the
-Essleins in his campaigning, there arose, in spite of his steady
-objection to fighting the Essleins, many who believed Smith and stood
-forth for it that Smith did have the far-famed “Esslein Games.” It is to
-the credit of the Essleins that they did all that was in their power to
-bring Smith and his chickens to the battlefield. They offered him every
-inducement known in chicken war, and tendered him a duel for his cocks
-to be fought for anything from love to money.
-
-Firm to the last, Smith wouldn't have it; and so, discouraged, the
-Essleins, failing action, nailed as it were their gauntlet to Smith's
-hen-coop door, and thus the business stood for months.
-
-It came about one day that a stranger from Baltimore accepted Smith's
-standing challenge to fight anybody save the Essleins. The stranger
-proposed and made a match with Smith to fight him nine battles, $500
-on each couple and $2,500 on the general main. And then the news went
-'round.
-
-There was high excitement in chicken circles. The day came and the
-sides of the pit were crowded. Smith was in his corner with his handler,
-getting the first of his champions ready for the struggle. As Smith was
-holding the chicken for the handler to fasten on the gaffs--drop-socket,
-they were, and keen as little scimetars--he chanced to glance across the
-pit.
-
-There stood John, chief of the Essleins.
-
-Smith saw it in a moment; he had been trapped. But it was too late. The
-match was made and the money was up; there was no chance to retrace,
-even if Smith had wanted. As a fact to his glory, however, he had no
-desire so to do.
-
-“We're up against the Essleins, Bill,” Smith said to his trainer; “and
-it's all right. I didn't want to make a match with them, because I got
-their chickens queer. And if I'd fought them and won, I'd felt like I'd
-got their money queer; and that I couldn't stand. But this is different.
-We'll fight the Essleins now they're here, and 'if they can win over me,
-they're welcome.”
-
-Then the main began. The first battle was short, sharp, deadly; and
-glorious for Smith. The Esslein chicken got a stab in the heart the
-first buckle. Smith smiled as his handler pulled his chicken's gaff out
-of its dead victim, and set it free.
-
-The Smith entries won the second and third battle. Triumph rode on the
-glance of Smith, while the Esslein brows were bleak and dark.
-
-“Smith's got the 'Esslein Games,' sure!” was whispered about the pit.
-
-In the fourth and fifth battles the tide ran the other way, the Esslein
-chickens killing their rivals. Each battle, for that matter, had so far
-been to the death.
-
-The sixth battle went to Smith and the seventh to the Essleins. Thus it
-stood four for Smith to three for the Essleins, just before the eighth
-battle. It didn't look as if Smith could lose.
-
-It was at this juncture so hopeful for the coops of Smith, that Smith
-did a foolish thing. Yielding to the appeals of his trainer, Smith let
-that worthy man put up a chicken of his own to face the Esslein entry
-for the eighth duel. It was a gorgeous shawl-neck that Smith's trainer
-produced; eye bright as a diamond, and beak like some arrow-head of jet.
-His legs looked as strong as a hod-carrier's. It was a horse to a hen,
-so everybody said, that the Esslein chicken,--which was but a small,
-indifferent bird,--would lose its life, the battle, and the main at one
-and the same time.
-
-Popular conjecture was wrong, as popular conjecture often is. The
-Esslein chicken locked both gaffs through the shawl-neck's brain in the
-second buckle.
-
-“That teaches me a lesson,” said Smith. “Hereafter should an angel come
-down from heaven and beg me to let him fight a chicken in a main of
-mine, I'll turn him down!”
-
-It was the ninth battle and the score stood four for Smith and four
-for the Essleins. As the slim gaffs, grey and cruelly sharp, were being
-placed on the feathered gladiators for the last deadly joust, Smith
-called across the pit to John Esslein:
-
-“Esslein,” he said, “no matter how this last battle may fall, I reckon
-I've convinced you and everybody looking on, that, just as I said, I've
-got the 'Esslein Games.' To show you that I know I have, and give you
-a chance for revenge as well, I'll make this last fight for $10,000 a
-cock. The main so far has been an even break, and neither of us has won
-or lost. The last battle decides the tie and wins or loses me $3,000. To
-make it interesting, I'll raise the risk both ways, if you're willing,
-just $7,000, and call the bundle ten. And,” concluded Smith, as he
-glanced around the pit, “there isn't a sport here but will believe in
-his heart, when I, a poor man, offer to make this last battle one for
-$20,000, that I know that, even if I'm against, I'm at least behind an
-'Esslein Game.'”
-
-“Make it for $10,000 a cock, then!” said John Esslein bitterly. “Whether
-I win or lose main and money too, I've already lost much more than both
-to-day.”
-
-Then the fight began. The chickens were big and strong and quick and as
-dauntlessly savage as ospreys. And feather and size, eye, and beak and
-leg, they were the absolute counterparts of each other.
-
-For ten minutes the battle raged. Either the spurred fencers had more of
-luck or more of caution than the others. Buckle after buckle occurred,
-and after ten minutes' fighting the two enemies still faced each other
-with angry, bead-like eyes, and without so much as a drop of blood
-spilled.
-
-[Illustration: 0127]
-
-They fronted each other balefully while one might count seven. Their
-beaks travelled up and down as evenly as if moved by the same impulse.
-Then they clashed together.
-
-This time,-as they drew apart, Smith's chicken fell upon its side, its
-right leg cut and broken well up toward the hip, with the bone pushing
-upward and outward through the slash of the gaff.
-
-“Get your chicken and wring its neck, Smith,” said someone. “It's all
-over!”
-
-“Let them fight!” responded Smith. “It's not 'all over!' That chicken of
-Esslein's has a long row to hoe to kill that bird of mine.”
-
-Hardly were the words uttered when a strange chance befell. Smith's
-prostrate cripple reached up as its foe approached, seized it with its
-beak, and struggled to its one good foot. In the buckle that followed,
-the one gaff by some sleight of the cripple slashed the Esslein chicken
-over the eyes and blinded it. The muscles closed down and covered the
-eyes. Otherwise the Esslein cock was unhurt.
-
-Then began a long, fierce, yet feeble fight. One chicken couldn't stand
-and the other couldn't see. The Smith chicken would lie on its side and
-watch its rival with eyes blazing hate, while the Esslein chicken, blind
-as a bat, would grope for him. When he came within reach of Smith's
-chicken, that indomitable bird would seize him with his bill; there
-would be some weak, aimless clashing, and again they'd be separated, the
-blind one to grope, the cripple to lie and wait.
-
-The war limped on in this fashion for almost two hours. But the end
-came. As the Esslein chicken strayed blindly within reach, its enemy
-got a strong, sudden grip, and in the collision that was the sequel, the
-Esslein chicken had its head half slashed from its body. It staggered a
-step with blood spurting, tottered and fell dead.
-
-Smith said never a word, but from first to last his face had been cold
-and grimly indifferent. His heart was fire, but no one could see it in
-his face. Evidently the man was as clean-strain as his chickens.
-
-That's all there is to the story. What became of the victor with the
-broken leg? Smith looked him over, decided it was “no use,” and wrung
-his dauntless neck. The great main was over. Smith had won, everybody
-knew, as Smith went home that night, that he wras $10,000 better off,
-and that fast and sure, beyond denial or doubt, Smith had the “Esslein
-Games.”
-
-
-
-
-THE PAINFUL ERROR
-
-
-This is a tale of school life. Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin
-Clayton are scholars in the same school. The name of this seminary
-is withheld by particular request. Suffice it that all three of these
-youths come and go and have their bright young beings within the
-neighbourhood of Newark. The age of each is thirteen years. Thirteen is
-a sinister number. They are all jocund, merry-hearted boys, and put in
-many hours each day thinking up a good time.
-
-One day during the noon hour the school building was all but deserted.
-Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Benjamin Clayton, however, were there. They
-had formed plans for their entertainment which demanded the desertion
-of the school building as chronicled. The coast being fairly clear, the
-conspiring three proceeded to one of the upper recitation rooms of the
-building. This room did not appertain to the particular school favoured
-by the attendance of Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton as
-scholars. This, however, only added zest to the adventure.
-
-The room to which our heroes repaired was the recitation stamping ground
-of a high school class in physiology. The better to know anatomy, the
-class was furnished with the skeleton of some dead gentleman, all nicely
-hung and arranged with wires so as to look as much like former days as
-possible. During class hours the framework of the dead person stood in
-a corner of the room, and the students learned things from it that were
-useful to know. When off duty it reposed in a box.
-
-Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton had heard of deceased.
-Their purpose this noon was to call on him. They gained entrance to the
-room by the burglarious method of picking the lock. Once within they
-took the skeleton from its box home and stood it in the window where the
-public might revel in the spectacle. To take off any grimness of effect
-they fixed a cob pipe in its bony jaws and clothed the skull in a
-bad hat, pulled much over the left eye, the whole conferring upon the
-remains a highly gala, joyous air indeed.
-
-Then Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Benjamin Clayton withdrew from the
-scene.
-
-The skeleton in the window was very popular. Countless folk had
-assembled to gaze upon it at the end of the first ten minutes, and
-armies were on their way.
-
-The principal of the school as he came from lunch saw it and was much
-vexed. He put the skeleton back in its box, and the hydra-headed public
-slowly dispersed.
-
-Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton secretly gloated over the
-transaction in detail and entirety. But the principal began to make
-inquiries; the avenger was on the track of the criminal three. Some big
-girls had witnessed the felonious entrance of the guilty ones into
-the den of the skeleton. The big girls imparted their knowledge to the
-principal, hunting these felons of the school. But the big girls slipped
-a cog on one important point. They did not know the recreant Benjamin
-Clayton. After arguing it all over they decided that “the third boy” was
-a very innocent young person named Albert Weed, and so gave in the names
-of the guerillas as:
-
-“Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Albert Weed!” That afternoon the indignant
-principal demanded that Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Albert Weed attend
-him to the study. They were there charged with the atrocity of the
-skeleton in the window. Charles Roy and Fred Avery confessed and asked
-for mercy. Albert Weed denied having art, part or lot in the outrage.
-The principal was much shocked at his prompt depravity in trying to lie
-himself clear. The principal, in order to be exactly just, and evenly
-fair, craved to know of Charles Roy and Fred Avery:
-
-“Was Albert Weed with you?”
-
-“Please, sir, we would rather be excused from answering,” they said,
-hanging down their heads.
-
-Then the principal knew that Albert Weed was guilty. Fred Avery
-and Charles Roy were forgiven, and were complimented on their
-straightforward, manly course in refusing to tell a lie to shield
-themselves.
-
-“As for you, Albert,” observed the principal, as he seized Albert Weed
-by the top of his head, “as for you, Albert, I do not punish you for
-being roguish with the skeleton, but for telling me a lie.”
-
-* * * * *
-
-The principal thereupon lambasted the daylights out of Albert Weed.
-
-
-
-
-THE RAT
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Be d' cops at d' Central office fly?” Chucky buried his face in his
-tankard in a polite effort to hide his contempt for the question. “Be
-dey fly! Say! make no mistake! d' Central Office mugs is as soon a set
-of geezers as ever looked over d' hill. Dey're d' swiftest ever. On d'
-level! I t'ink t'ree out of every four of them gezebos could loin to
-play d' pianny in one lesson.
-
-“Just to put youse onto how quick dey be, an' to give you some idee of
-their curves, let me tell you what dey does to Billy d' Rat.
-
-“Youse never chases up on d' Rat? Nit! Well, Cully, you don't miss much.
-Yes, d' Rat's a crook all right. He's a nipper, but a dead queer one,
-see! He always woiks alone, an' his lay is diamonds.
-
-“'I don't want no pals or stalls in mine,” says d' Rat. “I can toin
-all needful tricks be me lonesome. Stalls is a give-away, see! Let some
-sucker holler, an' let one of your mob get pinched, an' what then? Why,
-about d' time he's stood up an' given d' secont degree be Mc-Clusky,
-he coughs. That's it! he squeals, an' d' nex' dash out o' d' box youse
-don't get a t'ing but d' collar. Nine out o' ten of d' good people doin'
-time to-day, was t'rown into soak be some pal knockin'. I passes all
-that up! I goes it alone! If I nips a rock it's mine; I don't split out
-no bits for no snoozer, see! I'm d' entire woiks, an' if I stumbles an'
-falls be d' wayside, it's me's to blame. Which last makes it easier to
-stan' for.'
-
-“That's d' way d' Rat lays out d' ground for me one day,” continued
-Chucky, “an' he ain't slingin' no guff at that. It's d' way he always
-woiked.
-
-“But to skin back to d' Central Office cops an' how flydey be: One of d'
-Rat's favourite stunts is dampin' a diamond. What's that? Youse'll catch
-on as me tale unfolds, as d' nov'lists puts it.
-
-“Here's how d' Rat would graft. Foist he'd rub up his two lamps wit'
-pepper till dey looks red an', out of line. When he'd got t'rough doin'
-d' pepper act to 'em, d' Rat's peeps, for fair! would do to understudy
-two fried eggs.
-
-“Then d' Rat would pull on a w'ite wig, like he's some old stuff; an'
-wit' that an' some black goggles over his peeps, his own Rag wouldn't
-have known him. To t'row 'em down for sure, d' Rat would wear a
-cork-sole shoe,--one of these 6-inch soles,--like he's got a game
-trilby. Then when he's all made up in black togs, d' Rat is ready.
-
-“Bein' organised, d' Rat hobbles into a cab an' drives to a diamond
-shop. D' racket is this: Of course it takes a bit of dough, but that's
-no drawback, for d' Rat is always on velvet an' dead strong. As I
-say, d' play is this: D' Rat being well dressed an' fitted up wit' his
-cork-soles, his goggles an' his wig, comes hobblin' into d' diamond
-joint an' gives d' impression he's some rich old mark who ain't got
-a t'ing but money, an' that he's out to boin a small bundle be way
-of matchin' a spark which he has wit' him in his mit. D' Rat fills d'
-diamond man up wit' a yarn, how he's goin' to saw a brace of ear-rings
-off on his daughter an' needs d' secont rock, see! Of course it's a dead
-case of string. D' Rat ain't got no kid, an' would be d' last bloke to
-go festoonin' her wit' diamonds if he had.
-
-“Naturally, d' mut who owns d' store is out an' eager to do business.
-D' Rat won't let d' diamond man do d' matchin'; not on your life! he's
-goin' to mate them sparks himself. So he gives d' stiff wit' d' store
-d' tip to spread a handful of stones, say about d' size of d' one he's
-holdin' in his hooks--which mebby is a 2-carat--on some black velvet for
-him to pick from. D' diamond party ain't lookin' for no t'row down
-from an old sore-eyed, cork-sole hobo like d' Rat, so he lays out a
-sprinklin' of stones. D' Rat, who all this time is starring his bum
-lamps, an' tellin' how bad an' weak dey be, an' how he can hardly see,
-gets his map down dost to d' lay-out of sparks, so as he can get onto em
-an' make d' match.
-
-“It's now d' touch comes in. When d' Rat's got his smeller right
-among d' diamonds, he sticks out his tongue, quick like a toad for a
-honey-bee, an' nails a gem. That's what dey calls 'dampin' a diamond.'
-Yes, mebby if there's so many of 'em laid out, he t'inks d' mark behint
-d' show case will stan' for it wit'out missin' 'em, d' Rat gets two.
-Then d' Rat goes on jollyin' an' chinnin' wit' d' sparks in his face;
-an' mebby for a finish an' to put a cover on d' play, he buys one an'
-screws his nut.
-
-“Wit' his cab, as I says, d' Rat is miles away, an' has time to shed his
-wig an' goggles an' cork-sole before d' guy wit' d' diamonds tumbles
-to it he's been done. That's how d' Rat gets in his woik. Now I'll tell
-youse how d' Central Office people t'run d' harpoon into him.
-
-“One day d' Rat makes a play an' gets two butes. He tucks 'em away in
-back of his teet', an' is just raisin' his nut to say somethin', when
-d' store duck grabs him an' raises a roar. Two or t'ree cloiks an' a cop
-off d' street comes sprintin' up, an' away goes d' Rat to d' coop.
-
-“Wit 'd' foist yell of d' sucker who makes d' front for d' store--naw,
-he ain't d' owner, he's one of d' cloiks--d' Rat goes clean outside of
-d' sparks at a gulp; swallows 'em; that's what he does. There bein' no
-diamond toined up, an' no one at headquarters bein' onto him--for he's
-always laid low an' kept out of sight of d' p'lice--d' Rat makes sure
-dey'll have to t'run him loose.
-
-“But d' boss cop is pretty cooney. He figgers it all out, how d' Rat's
-a crook, an' how he's eat d' diamonds, just as I says. So he cons d' Rat
-an' t'rows a dream into him. He tells him there'll be no trouble, but
-he'll have to keep him for an hour or two until his 'sooperior off'cer,'
-as he calls him, gets there. He's d' main squeeze, this p'lice dub
-dey're waitin' for, an' as soon as he shows up an' goes over d' play, d'
-Rat can screw out.
-
-“That's d' sort of song an' dance d' high cop gives d' Rat; an' say! I'm
-a lobster if d' Rat don't fall to it, at that. On d' dead! this p'lice
-duck is so smooth an' flossy d' Rat believes him.
-
-“Just for appearances d' Rat registers a big kick; an' then--for dey
-don't lock him up at all--he plants himself in a easy chair to do a toin
-of wait. D' Rat couldn't have broke an' run for it, even if he'd took d'
-scare, for d' cops is all over d' place. But he ain't lookin' for d'
-woist of it nohow. He t'inks it's all as d' boss cop has told him; he'll
-wait there an hour or two for d' main guy an' then dey'll cut him free.
-
-“After a half hour d' boss cop says: 'It's no use you bein' hungry, me
-frien', an' as I'm goin' to chew, come wit' me an' feed your face. D'
-treat's on me, anyhow, bein' obliged to detain a respect'ble old mucker
-like you. So come along.'
-
-“Wit' that d' Rat goes along wit 'd' boss cop, an' all d' time he's
-t'inkin' what a Stoughton bottle d' cop is.
-
-“It's nex' door, d' chop-house is. D' cop an 'd' Rat sets down an'
-breasts up to d' table. Dey gives d' orders all right, all right. But
-say! d' grub never gets to 'em. D' nex' move after d' orders, d' Rat,
-who's got a t'irst on from d' worry of bein' lagged, takes a drink out
-of a glass.
-
-“'I'm poisoned!' yells d' Rat as he slams down d' tumbler; 'somebody's
-doped me!' an' wit' that d' Rat toins in, t'rows a fit, an' is seasick
-to d' limit.
-
-“That's what that boss cop does. He sends over an' doctors a glass while
-d' Rat is settin' in his office waitin', an' then gives him a bluff
-about chewin' an' steers d' Rat ag'inst it. Say! it was a dandy play. D'
-dope or whatever it was, toins me poor friend d' Rat inside out, like an
-old woman's pocket.
-
-“An' them sparks is recovered.
-
-“Yes, d' Rat does a stretch. As d' judge sentences him, d' Rat gives d'
-cop who downs him his mit. 'You're a wonder,' says d' Rat to d' cop;
-'there's no flies baskin' in d' sun on you. When I reflects on d' way
-you sneaks d' chaser after them sparks, an' lands 'em, I'm bound to say
-d' Central Office mugs are onto their job.'”
-
-
-
-
-CHEYENNE BILL
-
-(Wolfville)
-
-
-Cheyenne Bill is out of luck. Ordinarily his vagaries are not regarded
-in Wolfville. His occasional appearance in its single street in a
-voluntary of nice feats of horsemanship, coupled with an exhibition of
-pistol shooting, in which old tomato cans and passé beer bottles perform
-as targets, has hitherto excited no more baleful sentiment in the
-Wolfville bosom than disgust.
-
-“Shootin' up the town a whole lot!” is the name for this engaging
-pastime, as given by Cheyenne Bill, and up to date the exercise has
-passed unchallenged.
-
-But to-day it is different. Camps like individuals have moods, now
-light, now dark; and so it is with Wolfville. At this time Wolfville
-is experiencing a wave of virtue. This may have come spontaneously from
-those seeds of order which, after all, dwell sturdily in the Wolfville
-breast. It may have been excited by the presence of a pale party of
-Eastern tourists, just now abiding at the O. K. Hotel; persons whom
-the rather sanguine sentiment of Wolfville credits with meditating an
-investment of treasure in her rocks and rills. But whatever the reason,
-Wolfville virtue is aroused; a condition of the public mind which makes
-it a bad day for Cheyenne Bill.
-
-The angry sun smites hotly in the deserted causeway of Wolfville. The
-public is within doors. The Red Light Saloon is thriving mightily. Those
-games which generally engross public thought are drowsy enough; but
-the counter whereat the citizen of Wolfville gathers with his peers in
-absorption of the incautious compounds of the place, is fairly sloppy
-from excess of trade. Notwithstanding the torrid heat this need not
-sound strangely; Wolfville leaning is strongly homoeopathic. “_Similia
-similibus curantur_,” says Wolfville; and when it is blazing hot, drinks
-whiskey.
-
-But to-day there is further reason for this consumption. Wolfville is
-excited, and this provokes a thirst. Cheyenne Bill, rendering himself
-prisoner to Jack Moore, rescue or no rescue, has by order of that
-sagacious body been conveyed by his captor before the vigilance
-committee, and is about to be tried for his life.
-
-What was Cheyenne Bill's immediate crime? Certainly not a grave one. Ten
-days before it would have hardly earned a comment. But now in its spasm
-of virtue, and sensitive in its memories of the erratic courses of
-Cheyenne Bill aforetime, Wolfville has grimly taken possession of that
-volatile gentleman for punishment. He has killed a Chinaman. Here is the
-story:
-
-“Yere comes that prairie dog, Cheyenne Bill, all spraddled out,” says
-Dave Tutt.
-
-Dave Tutt is peering from the window of the Red Light, to which lattice
-he has been carried by the noise of hoofs. There is a sense of injury
-disclosed in Dave Tutt's tone, born of the awakened virtue of Wolfville.
-
-“It looks like this camp never can assoome no airs,” remarks Cherokee
-Hall in a distempered way, “but this yere miser'ble Cheyenne comes
-chargin' up to queer it.”
-
-[Illustration: 0141]
-
-As he speaks, that offending personage, unconscious of the great change
-in Wolf ville morals, sweeps up the street, expressing gladsome and
-ecstatic whoops, and whirling his pistol on his forefinger like a thing
-of light. One of the tourists stands in the door of the hotel smoking
-a pipe in short, brief puffs of astonishment, and reviews the
-amazing performance. Cheyenne Bill at once and abruptly halts. Gazing
-for a disgruntled moment on the man from the East, he takes the pipe
-from its owner's amazed mouth and places it in his own “smokin' of
-pipes,” he vouchsafes in condemnatory explanation, “is onelegant an'
-degradin'; an' don't you do it no more in my presence. I'm mighty
-sensitive that a-way about pipes, an' I don't aim to tolerate 'em none
-whatever.”
-
-This solution of his motives seems satisfactory to Cheyenne Bill. He
-sits puffing and gazing at the tourist, while the latter stands dumbly
-staring, with a morsel of the ravished meerschaum still between his
-lips.
-
-What further might have followed in the way of oratory or overt acts
-cannot be stated, for the thoughts of the guileless Cheyenne suddenly
-receive a new direction. A Chinaman, voluminously robed, emerges from
-the New York store, whither he has been drawn by dint of soap.
-
-“Whatever is this Mongol doin' in camp, I'd like for to know?” inquires
-Cheyenne Bill disdainfully. “I shore leaves orders when I'm yere last,
-for the immejit removal of all sech. I wouldn't mind it, but with
-strangers visitin' Wolf ville this a-way, it plumb mortifies me to
-death.”
-
-“Oh well!” he continues in tones of weary, bitter reflection, “I'm the
-only public-sperited gent in this yere outfit, so all reforms falls
-nacheral to me. Still, I plays my hand! I'm simply a pore, lonely white,
-but jest the same, I makes an example of this speciment of a sudsmonger
-to let 'em know whatever a white man is, anyhow.”
-
-Then comes the short, emphatic utterance of a six-shooter. A puff of
-smoke lifts and vanishes in the hot air, and the next census will be
-short one Asiatic.
-
-In a moment arrives a brief order from Enright, the chief of the
-vigilance committee, to Jack Moore. The last-named official proffers a
-Winchester and a request to surrender simultaneously, and Cheyenne Bill,
-realizing fate, at once accedes.
-
-“Of course, gents,” says Enright, apologetically, as he convenes the
-committee in the Red Light bar; “I don't say this Cheyenne is held for
-beefin' the Chinaman sole an' alone. The fact is, he's been havin' a
-mighty sight too gay a time of late, an' so I thinks it's a good, safe
-play, bein' as it's a hot day an' we has the time, to sorter call the
-committee together an' ask its views, whether we better hang this yere
-Cheyenne yet or not?”
-
-“Mr. Pres'dent,” responds Dave Tutt, “if I'm in order, an' to get the
-feelin' of the meetin' to flowin' smooth, I moves we takes this Cheyenne
-an' proceeds with his immolation. I ain't basin' it on nothin' in
-partic'lar, but lettin' her slide as fulfillin' a long-felt want.”
-
-“Do I note any remarks?” asks Enright. “If not, I takes Mr. Tutt's very
-excellent motion as the census of this meetin', an' it's hang she is.”
-
-“Not intendin' of no interruption,” remarks Texas Thompson, “I wants to
-say this: I'm a quiet gent my-se'f, an' nacheral aims to keep Wolfville
-a quiet place likewise. For which-all I shorely favours a-hangin' of
-Cheyenne. He's given us a heap of trouble. Like Tutt I don't make no
-p'int on the Chinaman; we spares the Chink too easy. But this Cheyenne
-is allers a-ridin', an' a-yellin', an' a-shootin' up this camp till I'm
-plumb tired out. So I says let's hang him, an' su'gests as a eligible,
-as well as usual nook tharfore, the windmill back of the dance hall.”
-
-“Yes,” says Enright, “the windmill is, as experience has showed, amply
-upholstered for sech plays; an' as delays is aggravatin', the committee
-might as well go wanderin' over now, an' get this yere ceremony off its
-mind.”
-
-“See yere, Mr. Pres'dent!” interrupts Cheyenne Bill in tones of one
-ill-used, “what for a deal is this I rises to ask?”
-
-“You can gamble this is a squar' game,” replies Enright confidently.
-“You're entitled to your say when the committee is done. Jest figure out
-what kyards you needs, an' we deals to you in a minute.”
-
-“I solely wants to know if my voice is to be regarded in this yere play,
-that's all,” retorts Cheyenne Bill.
-
-“Gents,” says Doc Peets, who has been silently listening. “I'm with
-you on this hangin'. These Eastern sharps is here in our midst. It'll
-impress 'em that Wolfville means business, an' it's a good, safe, quiet
-place. They'll carry reports East as will do us credit, an' thar you be.
-As to the propriety of stringin' Cheyenne, little need be said. If the
-Chinaman ain't enough, if assaultin' of an innocent tenderfoot ain't
-enough, you can bet he's done plenty besides as merits a lariat. He
-wouldn't deny it himse'f if you asks him.”
-
-There is a silence succeeding the rather spirited address of Doc Peets,
-on whose judgment Wolfville has been taught to lean. At last Enright
-breaks it by inquiring of Cheyenne Bill if he has anything to offer.
-
-“I reckons it's your play now, Cheyenne,” he says, “so come a-runnin.'”
-
-“Why!” urges Cheyenne Bill, disgustedly, “these proceedin's is ornery
-an' makes me sick. I shore objects to this hangin'; an' all for a measly
-Chinaman too! This yere Wolfville outfit is gettin' a mighty sight too
-stylish for me. It's growin' that per-dad-binged-'tic'lar it can't take
-its reg'lar drinks, an'----”
-
-“Stop right thar!” says Enright, with dignity, rapping a shoe-box with
-his six-shooter; “don't you cuss the chair none, 'cause the chair won't
-have it. It's parliamentary law, if any gent cusses the chair he's
-out of order, same as it's law that all chips on the floor goes to the
-house. When a gent's out of order once, that settles it. He can't talk
-no more that meetin'. Seein' we're aimin' to eliminate you, we won't
-claim nothin' on you this time. But be careful how you come trackin'
-'round ag'in, an' don't fret us! _Sabe?_ Don't you-all go an' fret us
-none!”
-
-“I ain't allowin' to fret you,” retorts Cheyenne Bill. “I don't have to
-fret you. What I says is this: I s'pose, I sees fifty gents stretched
-by one passel of Stranglers or another between yere an' The Dalis, an' I
-never does know a party who's roped yet on account of no Chinaman. An'
-I offers a side bet of a blue stack, it ain't law to hang people on
-account of downin' no Chinaman. But you-alls seems sot on this, an' so I
-tells you what I'll do. I'm a plain gent an' thar's no filigree work on
-me. If it's all congenial to the boys yere assembled--not puttin' it on
-the grounds of no miser'ble hop slave, but jest to meet public sentiment
-half way--I'll gamble my life, hang or no hang, on the first ace turned
-from the box, Cherokee deal. Does it go?”
-
-Wolfville tastes are bizarre. A proposition original and new finds
-in its very novelty an argument for Wolfville favour. It befalls,
-therefore, that the unusual offer of Cheyenne Bill to stake his neck on
-a turn at faro is approvingly criticised. The general disposition agrees
-to it; even the resolute Enright sees no reason to object.
-
-“Cheyenne,” says Enright, “we don't have to take this chance, an' it's
-a-makin' of a bad preceedent which the same may tangle us yereafter; but
-Wolfville goes you this time, an' may Heaven have mercy on your soul.
-Cherokee, turn the kyards for the ace.”
-
-“Turn squar', Cherokee!” remarks Cheyenne Bill with an air of interest.
-“You wouldn't go to sand no deck, nor deal two kyards at a clatter,
-ag'in perishin' flesh an' blood?”
-
-“I should say, no!” replies Cherokee. “I wouldn't turn queer for money,
-an' you can gamble! I don't do it none when the epeesode comes more
-onder the head of reelaxation.”
-
-“Which the same bein' satisfact'ry,” says Cheyenne Bill, “roll your
-game. I'm eager for action; also, I plays it open.”
-
-“I dunno!” observes Dan Boggs, meditatively caressing his chin; “I'm
-thinkin' I'd a-coppered;--that's whatever!”
-
-The deal proceeds in silence, and as may happen in that interesting
-sport called faro, a split falls out. Two aces appear in succession.
-
-“Ace lose, ace win!” says Cherokee, pausing. “Whatever be we goin' to do
-now, I'd like to know?” There is a pause.
-
-“Gents,” announces Enright, with dignity, “a split like this yere
-creates a doubt; an' all doubts goes to the pris'ner, same as a maverick
-goes to the first rider as ties it down, an' runs his brand onto it.
-This camp of Wolfville abides by law, an' blow though it be, this yere
-Cheyenne Bill, temp'rarily at least, goes free. However, he should
-remember this yere graze an' restrain his methods yereafter. Some of
-them ways of his is onhealthful, an' if he's wise he'll shorely alter
-his system from now on.”
-
-“Which the camp really lose! an' this person Bill goes free!” says Jack
-Moore, dejectedly. “I allers was ag'in faro as a game. Where we-all
-misses it egreegious, is we don't play him freeze-out.”
-
-“Do you know, Cherokee,” whispers Faro Nell, as her eyes turn softly to
-that personage of the deal box, “I don't like killin's none! I'd sooner
-Cheyenne goes loose, than two bonnets from Tucson!”
-
-At this Cherokee Hall pinches the cheek of Faro Nell with a delicate
-accuracy born of his profession, and smiles approval.
-
-
-
-
-BLIGHTED
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-Is it hauteur, or is it a maiden's coyness which causes you to turn
-away your head, love?”
-
-George D'Orsey stood with his arm about the willowy form of Imogene
-O'Sullivan. The scene was the ancestral halls of the O'Sullivans in
-the fashionable north-west quarter of Harlem. George D'Orsey had asked
-Imogene O'Sullivan to be his bride. That was prior to the remark which
-opened our story. And the dear girl softly promised. The lovers stood
-there in the gloaming, drinking that sweet intoxication which never
-comes but once.
-
-“It isn't hauteur, George,” replied Imogene O'Sullivan, in tones like
-far-off church bells. “But, George!--don't spurn me--I have eaten of the
-common onion of commerce, and my breath, it is so freighted with that
-trenchant vegetable, it would take the nap from your collar like a
-lawn mower. It is to spare the man she loves, George, which causes your
-Imogene to hold her head aloof.”
-
-“Look up, darling!” and George D'Orsey's tones held a glad note of
-sympathy, “I, too, have battened upon onions.”
-
-The lovers clung to each other like bats in a steeple.
-
-“But we'll have to put toe-weights on pa, George; he'll step high and
-lively when he hears of this!”
-
-The lovers were seated on the sofa, now; the prudent Imogene was taking
-a look ahead.
-
-“Doesn't your father love me, pet?”
-
-“I don't think he does,” replied the fair girl tenderly. “I begged him
-to ask you to dinner, once, George; that was on your last trip. He said
-he would sooner dine with a wet dog, George, and refused. From that I
-infer his opposition to our union.”
-
-“We'll make a monkey of him yet!” and George D'Orsey hissed the words
-through his set teeth.
-
-“And my brother?”
-
-“As for him,” said George D'Orsey (and at this he began pacing the room
-like a lion), “as for your brother! If he so much as looks slant-eyed
-at our happiness, he goes into the soup! From your father I would bear
-much; but when the balance of the family gets in on the game, they will
-pay for their chips in advance.”
-
-“Can we not leave them, George; leave them, and fly together?”
-
-“Your father is rich, Imogene; that is a sufficient answer.” There was a
-touch of sternness in George D'Orsey's tones, and the subject of flying
-was dropped.
-
-George D'Orsey lived in the far-off hamlet of Hoboken. He returned
-to his home. In three months he was to wed Imogene O'Sullivan. Benton
-O'Sullivan had a fit when it was first mentioned to him. At last he gave
-his sullen consent.
-
-“I had planned a title for you, Imogene.” That was all he said.
-
-Three months have elapsed. It was dark when the ferryboat came to a
-panting pause in its slip. George D'Orsey picked his way through the
-crowd with quick, nervous steps. It was to be his wedding-night. He
-wondered if Imogene would meet him at the ferry. At that moment he
-beheld her dear form walking just ahead.
-
-“To-night, dearest, you are mine forever!” whispered George D'Orsey
-tenderly, seizing the sweet young creature by her arm.
-
-The shrieks which emanated from the young woman could have defied the
-best efforts of a steam siren.
-
-It was not Imogene O'Sullivan!
-
-The police bore away George D'Orsey. They turned a deaf ear to his
-explanations.
-
-“You make me weary!” remarked the brutal turnkey, to whom George D'Orsey
-told his tale.
-
-The cell door slammed; the lock clanked; the cruel key grated as it
-turned. George D'Orsey was a prisoner. The charge the blotter bore
-against him was: “Insulting women on the street.”
-
-When George D'Orsey was once more alone, he cursed his fate as if his
-heart would break. At last he was calm.
-
- “Oh, woman, in our hour of ease,
-
- Uncertain, coy, and hard to please;
-
- But, seen too oft, familiar with her face;
-
- We first endure, then pity, then embrace!”
-
-The Chateau O'Sullivan was a flare and a glare of lights. The rooms were
-jungles of palms and tropical plants. Flowers were everywhere, while
-the air tottered and fainted under the burden of their perfume. Imogene
-O'Sullivan never looked more beautiful.
-
-But George D'Orsey did not come.
-
-Hour followed hour into the past. The guests moved uneasily from room to
-room. The preacher notified Benton O'Sullivan that he was ready.
-
-And still George D'Orsey came not.
-
-“The villain has laid down on us, me child!” whispered Benton O'Sullivan
-to the weeping Imogene; “but may me hopes of heaven die of heart failure
-if I have not me revenge! No man shall insult the proud house of.
-O'Sullivan and get away with it; not without blood!”
-
-The guests cheerfully dispersed, talking the most scandalous things in
-whispers.
-
-Imogene O'Sullivan's dream was over.
-
-It was the next night. George D'Orsey stood on the O'Sullivan porch,
-ringing the bell. His eye and his pocket and his stomach were alike
-wildly vacant.
-
-“Sic him, Bull! Sic him!” said Benton O'Sullivan, bitterly.
-
-Bull tore several specimens from the quivering frame of George D'Orsey,
-who vanished in the darkness with a hoarse cry.
-
-Years afterward George D'Orsey and Imogene O'Sullivan met, but they gave
-each other a cold, meaningless stare.
-
-
-
-
-THE SURETHING
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-John Sparrowhawk was a sporting man of the tribe of “Surethings.” He
-was fond of what has Cherry Hill description as a “cinch.” He never let
-any lame, slow trick get away. John Sparrowhawk's specialty was racing;
-and he always referred to this diversion with horses as his “long suit.”
- He kept several rather abrupt animals himself, and whenever he found
-a man whose horse wasn't as sudden as some horse he owned, John
-Sparrowhawk would lay plots for that man, and ultimately race equines
-with him, and become master of such sums as the man would bet. John
-Sparrowhawk wandered through life in his “surething” way and amassed
-wealth. He was rich, and was wont to boast to very intimate friends:
-
-“I never spent a dollar which I honestly earned.” This gave John
-Sparrowhawk a vast deal of vogue, and he was looked up to and revered by
-a circle which is always impressed by the genius of one who can rob his
-fellow-worms, and do it according to law.
-
-It befell one day that the Brooklyn Jockey Club offered a purse for a
-running race, but demanded five entries. In no time at all, three
-horses were entered. Their names and capacities were well known to the
-sagacious John Sparrowhawk. He had a horse that could beat them all.
-
-“He would run by them like they was tied to a post!” remarked John
-Sparrowhawk, in a chant of ungrammatical exultation.
-
-It burst upon him that the time was ripe to pillage somebody. His latest
-larceny was ten days old, and John Sparrowhawk oft quoted the Bowery
-poet where he said:
-
- “Count that day lost whose low, descending sun
-
- Sees at thy hands no worthy sucker done.”
-
-And John Sparrowhawk did business that way. If he might only get
-another horse entered, and then complete the quintet with his own,
-John Sparrowhawk would possess “a snap.” Which last may be defined as a
-condition of affairs much famed for its excellence.
-
-At this juncture John Sparrowhawk had the idea of his career. The idea
-made “a great hit” with him. He had a friend who had a horse, which,
-while not so swiftly elusive as “Tenbroeck” and “Spokane” in their palmy
-days, could defeat such things as district messenger boys, Fifth avenue
-stages, and many other enterprises which do not attain meteoric speed.
-John Sparrowhawk's horse could beat it, he was sure. He would explain
-the situation to his friend, and cause his snail of a horse to be
-entered. This would fill the race, and then John Sparrowhawk's horse
-would win “hands down,” and thereby empty everybody's pockets in favour
-of John Sparrowhawk's, which was a very glutton of a pocket, and never
-got enough.
-
-John Sparrowhawk's friend was lying ill at the Hoffman. John Sparrowhawk
-went into that hostelry and climbed the stairs, softly humming that
-optimistic ballad, which begins: “There's a farmer born every second!”
-
-The sick friend took little interest in the deadfall proposed by John
-Sparrowhawk. He was suffering from a mass-meeting on the part of divers
-boils, which had selected a trysting place on his person, where their
-influence would be felt.
-
-Locked, as it were, in conflict with his afflictions, John Sparrowhawk's
-friend was indifferent to his horse. He cared not what traps were set
-with him.
-
-John Sparrowhawk entered the friend's horse and paid the entrance
-money--$150. Then he lavished $15 on a “jock” to ride him. The field was
-full, the conditions of the purse complied with, and the race a “go.”
- Of course, John Sparrowhawk's horse would win; and, acting on it as the
-chance of his life, John Sparrowhawk went craftily about wagering his
-dollars, even unto his bottom coin; and all to the end that he deplete
-the “jays” about him and become exceeding rich.
-
-“I'm out for the stuff!” observed John Sparrow-hawk, and acted
-accordingly.
-
-When the race started John Sparrowhawk had everything up but his eyes,
-his ears, and other bric-à-brac of a personal sort, which would mean
-inconvenience to be without a moment.
-
-There could be no purpose other than a cruel one, so far as John
-Sparrowhawk is concerned, to dwell on the details of this race. Suffice
-it that they started and they finished, and the horse of the sick friend
-made a fool of the horse of John Sparrowhawk. He beat him like rocking
-a baby, so said the sports, and thereby dumped the unscrupulous yet
-sapient John Sparrow-hawk for every splinter he possessed. It shook
-every particle of dust out of John Sparrowhawk. He called to relate his
-woe to his sick friend. That suffering person's malady had temporarily
-taken a recess from its labours, and for the nonce he was resting easy.
-
-“I know'd it, and had four thousand placed that way, John,” observed the
-invalid. “I win almost thirteen thousand on the trick. My horse could do
-that skate of yours on three legs. I tumbled to it the moment you came
-in the other day.”
-
-“Why didn't you put me on?” remonstrated John Sparrowhawk, almost in
-tears, as he thought of the dray-load of money he had lost.
-
-“Put you on!” repeated the Job of the Hoffman, scornfully; “not none! I
-wanted to see how it would seem to let a 'surething' sharp like you open
-a game on a harmless sufferer and 'go broke' on it. No, John; it will
-do you good. You won't have so much money as the result of this, but you
-will be a heap more erudite.”
-
-
-
-
-GLADSTONE BURR
-
-Gladstone Burr is a small, industrious, married man. His little nest of
-a home is in Brooklyn. Perhaps the most emphasised feature of the Burr
-family home is Mrs. B. She is a large woman, direct as Bismarck in
-her diplomacy, and when Gladstone Burr does wrong, she tells him of it
-firmly and fully for his good. There is but one bad habit which can with
-slightest show of truth be charged to Gladstone Burr. The barriers of
-his nature, yielding to social pressure, at intervals give way. At such
-times the soul of Gladstone Burr issues forth on a sea of strong drink.
-
-But, as he says himself, “these bats never last longer than ten days.”
-
-Notwithstanding this meagre limit, Mrs. B. does not approve of Gladstone
-Burr when thus socially relaxed. And from time to time she has left
-nothing unsaid on that point. Indeed, Mrs. B. has so fully defined her
-position on the subject, that Gladstone Burr, while he in no sense fears
-her, does not care to go home unless he is either very drunk or very
-sober. There is no middle ground in tippling where Gladstone Burr and
-Mrs. B. can meet with his consent. He is not superstitious, but he avers
-that whenever he has been drinking and meets Mrs. B. he has had bad
-luck. His only safety lies in either being sober and avoiding it, or in
-taking refuge in a jag too thick for wifely admonitions to pierce.
-
-There arose last week in the life of Gladstone Burr some event that it
-was absolutely necessary to celebrate. For two days he gave himself up
-to his destiny in that behalf, and being very busy with his festival
-Gladstone Burr did not go home.
-
-Toward the close of the third day he was considering with himself how
-best to approach his domicile so as to avoid the full force of the
-storm. He was not so deep in his cups at that moment, but Mrs. B.'s
-opinions gave him concern. Still, he felt the need of going home. He
-was tired and he was sick. Gladstone Burr knew he would be a great deal
-sicker in the morning, but he felt of a four-bit piece in his pocket,
-and remarking something about the hair of a dog, took courage, and was
-confident he carried the means of restoring himself.
-
-But how to get home!
-
-It was at this crisis in the affairs of Gladstone Burr that his friend,
-Frederick Upham Adams, came up. An inspiration seized Gladstone Burr.
-Adams should take him home in a carriage. Mrs. B. didn't know Adams,
-being careful of her acquaintances. They would say that he, Gladstone
-Burr, had been ill, almost dead from apoplexy, or sunstroke, during the
-recent hot spell, and that “Dr. Adams” was bringing him home.
-
-It was a most happy thought.
-
-“Don't be alarmed, Mrs. Burr,” said Adams, as an hour later he supported
-the drooping Gladstone Burr through the hall and stowed him away on a
-sofa. “I am Dr. Adams, of Williamsburg. Mr. Burr has suffered a great
-shock, but he is out of danger now. All he needs is rest--perfect rest!”
-
-Gladstone Burr gasped piteously from the sofa. Mrs. B. was deceived
-perfectly. The ruse worked like a charm.
-
-[Illustration: 0159]
-
-“How long must he be kept quiet, Doctor?” asked Mrs. B., as she wrung
-her hands over Gladstone Burr's danger. She was bending above the
-invalid at the time, and he was unable to signal his friend to be
-careful how he prescribed.
-
-“Oh! ahem!” observed “Dr. Adams,” looking at the ceiling,
-professionally, “about three days! That is right! Perfect rest for three
-days, and Mr. Burr will be a well man again.”
-
-“Are there directions as to what medicines to give him?” asked Mrs. B.,
-passing her hand gently over Gladstone Burr's heated dome of thought;
-“any directions about the food, Doctor?”
-
-“He needs no medicine,” observed the wretched Adams, closing his eyes
-sagaciously, and sucking his cane. “As for food, we must be careful. I
-should advise nothing but milk. Give him milk, Mrs. Burr, milk.”
-
-After this Frederick Upham Adams drove away. And at the end of three
-days Gladstone Burr was almost dead.
-
-
-
-
-THE GARROTE
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Tell youse somethin' about d' worser side of d' Bend!” retorted Chucky.
-His manner was resentful. I had put my question in a fashion half
-apologetic and as one who might be surprised at anything bad in the
-Bend. It was this lamblike method of being curious that Chucky didn't
-applaud. Evidently he gloried a bit in the criminal vigour of certain
-phases of a Bend existence.
-
-“Mebby you t'inks there is no worser side to d' Bend! Mebby you takes
-d' Bend for a hotbed of innocence! Don't string no stuff on d' milky
-character of d' Bend. Youse would lose it one, two, t'ree, keno! see!
-There's dead loads of t'ings about d' Bend what's so tough it 'ud make
-youse sore on yourself to get onto 'em.
-
-“Be d' way! while youse is chinnin' concernin' d' hard lines of d' Bend,
-I'm put in mind about Danny d' Face, who shows up from Sing Sing to-day.
-Say! d' Face wasn't doin' a t'ing but put up a roar all d' morn-in',
-till a cop shows up an' lays it out cold if d' Face don't cork, he'll
-pinch him.
-
-“What was d' squeal about? Why! it's like this,” continued Chucky,
-settling himself where the barkeeper might know when his glass was
-empty. “It's all about d' Face's Bundle. When d' victim takes his little
-ten spaces, his Bundle mourns 'round for a brace of mont's, see! An'
-then she marries another guy.
-
-“What else could youse look for? That's what I say; what could d' Face
-expect? Ten spaces ain't like a stretch, it's 'life,' see! D' mug who
-chases in an' takes a trip for ten, he's a lifer. An' you knows as well
-as me, even if youse ain't done time, that when a duck gets life, it's
-d' same as a divorce. That's dead straight! his Bundle is free to get
-married ag'in.
-
-“An' that's just what d' Face's Rag does; she hooks up wit' another
-skate, after d' Face has had his stripes for a couple of mont's. She's
-no tree-toad to live on air an' scenery, so she gets hitched. I was
-right there, pipin' off d' play meself, when d' w'ite choker ties 'em.
-It was a good weddin', wit' a dandy lot of lush; d' can was passin' all
-d' time, an' so d' mem'ry of it is wit' me still.
-
-“As I says, d' Face comes weavin' in this mornin', an' tries to break up
-what d' poipers call 'existin' conditions.' It don't go, though; d' cop
-cuts in on d' play an' makes it a cinch case of nit, see!
-
-“What'll d' Face do? What can he do but screw his nut an' stan' for it?
-He ain't got no licence to interfere. It's a case of 'nothin' doin','
-as far as d' Face's end goes. Let him charge 'round an' grab off another
-skirt. There's plenty of 'em; d' Face can find another wife if he goes
-d' right way down d' line. But he don't make no hit be hollerin', he can
-take a tumble to that.
-
-“What is it railroads d' Face? He does a stunt garrotin', see! I'll tell
-youse d' story. Of course, d' Face is a crook.
-
-“Now, understan' me! I ain't no crook. I'm a fakir, an' a grafter; an'
-I've been fly in me time an' I ain't no dub to-day, but I never was no
-crook, see! But, of course, born as I was in Kelly's Alley, an' always
-free of d' Bowery push, I hears a lot about crooks, an' has more'n one
-of d' swell mob on me visitin' list.
-
-“Naw; d' Face was never in d' foist circles, nothin' fine to him. He
-never was d' real t'ing as a dip, an 'd' best he could do was to shove
-an' stall. Now an' then he toins a trick as a porch climber; but even at
-that I never gets a tip of any big second-story woik d' Face does.
-
-“D' Face's best trick is d' garrote, an' it's on d' gar-rote lay dey
-downs d' Face when dey puts him away.
-
-“Now-days there's a lot of sandbaggin'. Some mug comes wanderin' along,
-loaded to d' guards wit* booze, an' some soon duck lends him a t'ump
-back of d' nut wit' a sandbag, or mebby it's a lead pipe or a bar of
-rubber. Over goes d' slewed mug, on his map, an' d' rest is easy money,
-see! That's d' way it's done now.
-
-“But in d' old times, when I'm a kid, it ain't d' sandbag; it's d'
-garrote. An' d' patient can be cold sober, still d' garrote goes all
-right. It takes two to woik it; but even at that it beats d' sandbag
-hands down. It's smoother, cleaner, and more like a woik-man, see! d'
-garrote is.
-
-“Besides, there's more apt to be stuff on a sober party than on some
-stiff who's tanked. I know d' poipers is always talkin' about people
-gettin' a load, wit' money all over 'em; but youse can gamble! such talk
-is a song an' dance. I'm more'n seven years old, an' me exper'ence is,
-that it's a four-to-one shot a drunk is every time broke.
-
-“But to go to d' story of how d' Face gets pinched. As I states, it's
-way back; not quite ten spaces (for d' Face shortens his stay at d' pen
-wit' good conduct time see!), an 'd' Face an' a pal, Spot Casey, who's
-croaked now, is out on d' garrote lay.
-
-“D' Face is followin', an' Spot is sluggin'. Here's how dey lays out
-d' game. It's on Fift' Avenoo, down be Nint'. Spot's playin' round d'
-corner on Nint'; d' Face is woikin' about a block away on Fift' Avenoo,
-on d' lookout for a sucker, see! Along he comes walkin' fast, this
-sucker. As he passes, d' Face gives him d' size-up. He's got a spark,
-an' a yellow chain, an' looks like he's good for a hundred in d' long
-green. That does for d' Face. He lets this guy get good an' by, an' then
-toins an' shadows him.
-
-“D' Face walks faster than d' sucker. It's his play to be nex', be d'
-time dey hits Nint', where Spot is layin' dead.
-
-“As dey chases up, d' Face an 'd' snoozer he's out to do is bot' walkin'
-fast, wit 'd' Face five foot behint.
-
-“Just before dey makes d' corner, d' Face gives d' office to Spot be
-stampin' onct wit' his trilby on d' sidewalk. Then he moves right up
-sharp, claps his right arm about d' geezer's t'roat, at d' same time
-grabbin' his right hook wit' his left an' yankin' his arm in tight. It
-shuts off d' duck's wind.
-
-“As d' Face clenches his party, as I says, he gives him d' knee behint,
-an' sort o' lifts him up. At d' same instant, Spot comes chasin'
-round d' corner in front an' smashes his right duke into what d' prize
-fighters calls 'd' mark.' Yes, it's d' same t'ump that does for Corbett
-that day wit' Fitz.
-
-“'That's d' stuff, Spot!' says d' Face, as d' party is slugged, an' then
-he sets him down be d' fence all limp an' quiet, an' goes t'rough him.
-
-“Dey gets a super, a pin, an' quite a healt'y roll besides. He's so done
-up dey even gets a di'mond off one of his hooks.
-
-“Sure! d' garrote almost puts a mark's light out. Youse can bet! after
-youse has been t'rough d' mill onct, youse won't t'ink, travel, nor
-raise d' yell for half an hour. A mark's lucky to be alive who's been
-t'rough d' garrote. It ain't so bad as d' sandbag at that, neither.
-
-“How was it d' Face is took? Nit; d' cop don't get in on d' play; dey
-win easy. It's two weeks later when he's collared. D' Face's pal, Spot,
-gets too gabby wit' a skirt, who's stoolin' for d' p'lice on d' sly, an'
-she goes an' knocks to d' Chief!”
-
-
-
-
-O'TOOLE'S CHIVALRY
-
-
-
- A woman, a spaniel, and a walnut tree;
-
- The more you beat them, the better they be.
-
- Irish Proverb.
-
-
-Thus sadly sang P. Sarsfield O'Toole to himself, as he readjusted the
-bandage to his wronged eye. He believed it, too; at least in the case of
-Madame Bridget Burke, the wife of one John Burke.
-
-The Burkes were the neighbours of P. Sarsfield O'Toole; they lived next
-door. The intimacy, however, went no further; O'Toole and the Burkes
-were not friends.
-
-This is the story of the damaged eye. It offers the reason why P.
-Sarsfield O'Toole comforted himself with the vigorous Irish proverb.
-
-It was the evening before. P. Sarsfield O'Toole was sitting on his
-back porch, cooling himself after a day's work at his profession of
-bricklayer, by reading the history of Ireland. The Burkes were holding
-audible converse just over the division fence.
-
-P. Sarsfield O'Toole closed the history of his native land to listen.
-This last was neither an arduous nor a painful task, for the Burkes,
-with the splendid frankness of a household willing to stand or fall by
-its record, could be heard a block.
-
-“Me family was noble!” P. Sarsfield O'Toole overheard John Burke remark.
-“The Burkes wanst lived in their own cashtle.”
-
-“They did not,” observed Madame Burke. “They lived woild in the bog of
-Allen, and there was mud on their shanks from wan ind of the year to the
-other. Divvil a cashtle did a Burke ever see; barrin' a jail.”
-
-“Woman! av yez arouse me,” said John Burke, threateningly, “I'll break
-the bones of ye, an' fling yez in the corner to mend. Don't exashperate
-me, woman.”
-
-“I exashperate yez!” retorted Madame Burke, scornfully. “For phwat wud
-I exashperate yez! Wasn't your own uncle transhpoorted? Answer me that,
-John Burke?”
-
-“Me uncle suffered to free Ireland, woman!” responded the husband.
-
-“May the divvil hould him!” said Madame Burke. “He was transhpoorted as
-a felon, for b'atin' the head off Humpy Pete, the cripple, at the Fair.
-He was an illygant speciment of a Burke! always b'atin' cripples an'
-women!”
-
-The last would seem to have been an unfortunate remark, in so far as
-it contained a suggestion. The next heard by the listening P. Sarsfield
-O'Toole was the loud lament of Madame Bridget Burke as her husband, John
-Burke, submitted her to that correction which he afterwards described to
-the police justice as, “givin' her a tashte av the sthrap.”
-
-The cries of Madame Bridget Burke were at their highest when P.
-Sarsfield O'Toole looked over the fence.
-
-“Shtop b'atin' the leddy, John Burke!” commanded P. Sarsfield O'Toole.
-
-“Phwat's it to yez! ye Far-down!” demanded John Burke, looking up from
-his labours. “Av yez hang your chin on that line fince ag'in, I'll welt
-the life out av yez! D'ye moind it now!”
-
-“Is it to me yez apploies the word 'Far-down!” shouted P. Sarsfield
-O'Toole, wrathfully. “Phwat are yez yerself but a rascal of a
-Stonethrower? Don't timpt me with your names, John Burke, an' shtop
-b'atin' the leddy. If I iver come over wanst to yez, I'll return a
-criminal!”
-
-“Shtop b'atin' me own lawful Bridget,” retorted John Burke, in tones of
-scorn, “when she's been teasin' for the sthrap a month beyant! Well,
-I loike that! I'll settle with yez, O'Toole, when I tache me woife to
-respect the name of Burke.” Here the representative of that honourable
-title smote Madame Bridget lustily. “Av I foind yez in me yarud,
-O'Toole, ye'll lay no bricks to-morry.”
-
-P. Sarsfield O'Toole cleared the fence at a bound. He was chivalrous,
-and would rescue Madame Burke. He was proud and would resent the
-opprobrious epithet of “Far-down.” He was sensitive, and would teach
-John Burke never to threaten him with disability as a bricklayer.
-
-P. Sarsfield O'Toole, as stated, cleared the fence at a bound, and
-closed with John Burke as if he were a bargain.
-
-What might have been the finale of this last collision will never be
-known. As P. Sarsfield O'Toole and John Burke danced about, locked in a
-deadly embrace, the emancipated Madame Burke suddenly selected a piece
-of scantling from the general armory of the Burke backyard and brought
-it down, not on the head of her oppressor, but on that of the gallant P.
-Sarsfield O'Toole, who had come to her rescue.
-
-“Oh, ye murtherin' villyun!” shouted Madame Burke. “W'ud yez kill a
-husband befure the eyes of his lawful widded woife! An' due yez think
-I'd wear his ring and see yez do it!”
-
-At this point in the conversation Madame Bridget Burke cut a long,
-satisfactory gash in P. Sarsfield O'Toole, just over the eye.
-
-The police came.
-
-John Burke was fined twenty dollars.
-
-Madame Bridget Burke, present lovingly in court, paid it with a
-composite air, breathing insolence for the judge and affection for John
-Burke.
-
-“The ijee av that shpalpeen, O'Toole,” said Madame Burke that evening
-to John Burke, and her words floated over the fence to P. Sarsfield
-O'Toole, as he nursed his wounds on his porch; “the ijee av that
-shpalpeen, O'Toole, comin' bechuxt man and woife! D' yez moind th' cheek
-av 'im! Didn't the priest say, 'Phwat hivin has j'ined togither, let no
-man put asoonder?”
-
-“He did, Bridget, he did,” replied John Burke. “An' yez have the
-particulars av a foine woman about yez, yerself, Bridget!”
-
-“Troth! an' I have,” said Madame Burke, giving full consent to this
-view of her merits. “But, John, phwat a rapscallion yer uncle they
-transhpoorted must av been, to bate the loife out o' poor Humpy Pete,
-the cripple-fiddler, that toime at the Fair!”
-
-For the second time the strap fell, and the shrieks of Madame Burke
-filled the neighbourhood. P. Sarsfield O'Toole, still on his porch, sat
-unmoved, and bestowed no interest on the doings of the Burkes. As the
-strap was plied and the yells of the victim uplifted, P. Sarsfield
-O'Toole repeated the proverb which stands at the head of this story.
-
-
-
-
-WAGON MOUND SAL
-
-(Wolfville)
-
-
-It was Wagon Mound Sal--she got the prefix later and was plain “Sal” at
-the time--who took up laundry-labours when Benson Annie became a wife.
-And this tells of the wooing and wedding of Riley Bent with Sallie of
-Wagon Mound.
-
-Wagon Mound Sal prevailed, as stated, the mistress of a laundry. And it
-was there Riley Bent first beheld her, as she was putting a tubful of
-the blue woollen shirts affected by the males of her region through
-a second suds. On this occasion Riley's appearance was due to a
-misunderstanding. He was foggy with drink, and looked in on a theory
-that the place was a store which made a specialty of the sale of shirts.
-
-“What for a j'int is this?” asked Riley as he entered.
-
-“It's a laundry,” replied Sal; and then observing that Riley Bent was
-in his cups, she continued with delicate firmness; “an' if you-all ain't
-mighty keerful how you line out, you'll shorely get a smoothin' iron
-direct.”
-
-Nothing daunted by the lady's candour, Riley Bent sat down on a
-furloughed tub which reposed bottom up in one corner. In the course of
-a conversation, whereof he furnished the questions, and Sal the short,
-inhospitable replies, it occurred that she and Riley Bent became
-mutually, albeit dimly, known to one another.
-
-During the three months following, Riley Bent was much and persistently
-in the laundry of Wagon Mound Sal. Wolfville, eagle-eyed in the softer
-and more dulcet phenomena of life, looked confidently for a wedding. So
-in truth did Sal, emulous of Benson Annie. Also Sal was a clear-minded,
-resolute young lady; and having one day concluded to take Riley Bent for
-better or for worse, she lost no time in bringing matters to a focus.
-
-“You're a maverick?” she one day asked, suddenly looking up from her
-ironing. Sal's tones were steady and cool, but it was noticed that she
-burnt a hole in the bosom of Doc Peets's shirt while waiting a reply.
-“You-all ain't married none?”
-
-“Thar ain't no squaw has ever been able to rope, throw an' run her brand
-on me!” said Riley Bent. “Which I'm shorely a maverick!”
-
-“Whatever then is the matter of you an' me dealin'?” asked Sal, coming
-around to Riley Bent's side of the ironing table.
-
-That personage surveyed her in a thoughtful maze.
-
-“You're a long horn, an' for that much so be I,” he said at last, as
-one who meditates. “Neither of us would grade for corn-fed in anybody's
-yards!”
-
-Then came another long pause, during which, with his eyes fixedly
-gazing into Wagon Mound Sal's, Riley Bent gave himself to the unwonted
-employment of thinking. At last he shook his head until the little gold
-bells on his bullion hatband tinkled in a dubious, uncertain way, as
-taking their tone from the wearer.
-
-“Which the idee bucks me plumb off!” he remarked, with a final deep
-breath; and then with no further word Riley repaired to the Red Light
-Saloon and became dejectedly yet deeply drunk.
-
-For a month Wolfville saw naught of Riley Bent. He was supposed to be
-two-score miles away on the range with his cattle. Wagon Mound Sal, with
-a trace of grimness about the mouth, conducted her laundry, and, in the
-absence of competition, waxed opulent. She looked confidently for the
-return of Riley Bent; as what woman, knowing her spells and powers,
-would have not.
-
-At last he came. Sal, as well as Wolfville, learned of his presence by
-a mellow whoop at the far end of the single street. Sal was subsequently
-gratified by a view of him as he and a comrade, one Rice Hoskins, slid
-from their saddles and entered the Red Light Saloon.
-
-Wagon Mound Sal was offended at this; he should have come straight to
-her. But beyond slamming her irons unreasonably as she replaced them on
-the range, she made no sign.
-
-To give Riley Bent justice, he had done little during the month of his
-absence save think of Wagon Mound Sal. Whether he pursued the evanescent
-steer, or organised the baking powder biscuit of his day and kind, Wagon
-Mound Sal ran ever in his thoughts like a torrent. But he couldn't bring
-himself to the notion of a wife; not even if that favoured woman were
-Wagon Mound Sal.
-
-“Seems like bein' married that a-way,” he explained to Rice Hoskins, as
-they discussed the business about their camp-fire, “is so onnacheral.”
-
-“That's whatever!” assented Rice Hoskins.
-
-“But,” said Riley Bent after a pause; “I reckon I'd better ride in an'
-tell her she don't get me none, an' end the game.”
-
-“That's whatever!”
-
-It was deference to this view which gained Wolfville the pleasure of the
-presence of Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins on the occasion named. It had
-been Riley Bent's plan--having first acquired what stimulant he might
-crave--to leave Rice Hoskins to the companionship of the barkeeper,
-while he repaired briefly to Wagon Mound Sal, and expressed a
-determination never to wed. But after the first drink he so far modified
-the programme as to decide, instead, to write a letter.
-
-“You see!” he said, “writin' a letter shows a heap more respect. An'
-then ag'in, if I goes personal, she might get all wrought up an' lay for
-me permiscus a whole lot.”
-
-The flaw in this letter plan became apparent. Neither Riley Bent nor
-Rice Hoskins could write. They made application to Black Jack, the
-barkeeper, to act as amanuensis. But he saw objection, and hesitated.
-
-“I reckon I'll pass the deal, gents,” said Black Jack, “if you-alls
-don't mind. The grand jury is goin' to begin their round-up over in
-Tucson next week, an' they'd jest about call it forgery.”
-
-At last as a solution, Rice Hoskins drew a rude picture in ink of a
-woman going one way, and a man with a big hat and disreputable spurs,
-going the other; what he called an “Injun letter.” This work of art he
-regarded with looks of sagacity and satisfaction.
-
-“If she was an Injun,” said the artist, “she'd _sabe_ that picture
-mighty quick. That means: 'You-all take your trail an' I'll take mine.'”
-
-“Which it does seem plain as old John Chisholm's 'Fence-rail Brand,'”
- remarked Riley Bent. “Now jest make a tub by her, an' mark me with a
-4-bar-J, the same bein' my brand; then she'll shorely tumble. Thar's
-nothin' like ropin' with a big loop; then if you miss the horns, you're
-mighty likely to fasten by the feet.”
-
-The missive was despatched to Wagon Mound Sal by hand of a Mexican. Then
-Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins restored their flagged spirits with liquor.
-
-Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins drank a vast deal. And it came to pass, by
-virtue of this indiscretion, that Rice Hoskins later, while Riley Bent
-was still thoughtfully over his cups at the Red Light, rode his broncho
-into the New York Store. In the plain line of objection to this, Jack
-Moore, the Marshal, shot Rice Hoskins' pony. As the animal fell it
-pinned Rice Hoskins to the floor by his leg; in this disadvantageous
-position he emptied his pistol at Jack Moore, and of course missed.
-
-Moore was in no sort an idle target. He was a painstaking Marshal, and
-showed his sense of duty at this time by putting four bullets through
-the reckless bosom of Rice Hoskins; the staccate voices of their Colt's
-six-shooters melted into each other until they sounded as one.
-
-“I never could shoot none with a pony on my laig,” observed Rice
-Hoskins.
-
-[Illustration: 0177]
-
-Then a splash of blood stained his sun-coloured moustache; his empty
-pistol rattled on the board floor; his head dropped on his arm, and Rice
-Hoskins was dead.
-
-It was at this crisis that Riley Bent, startled by the artillery as he
-sat in the Red Light, came whirling to the scene on his pony. The duel
-was over before he set foot in stirrup. He saw at a glance that Rice
-Hoskins was only a memory. Had he been romantic, or a sentimentalist,
-Riley Bent would have shot out the hour with Jack Moore, the Marshal.
-And had there been one spark of life in the heart of Rice Hoskins to
-have fought over, Riley Bent would have stood in the smoke of his own
-six-shooter all day and taken what Fate might send. As it was, however,
-he curbed his broncho in mid-speed so bluntly, the Spanish bit filled
-its mouth with blood. It spun on its hind hoofs like a top. Then, as the
-long spurs dug to its ribs, it whizzed off in the opposite direction;
-out of camp like an arrow. The last bullet in Jack Moore's pistol
-splashed on a silver dollar in Riley Bent's pocket as he turned his
-pony.
-
-“Whenever I reloads my pistol,” said Jack Moore to Old Man Enright, who
-had come up, “I likes to reload her all around; so I don't regyard that
-last cartridge as no loss.”
-
-Wagon Mound Sal was deep in a study of Rice Hoskins' “Injun letter” when
-the shooting took place. The missive's meaning was not so easy to make
-out as its hopeful authors had believed. When the deeds of Jack Moore
-were related to her, however, the brow of Wagon Mound Sal took on an
-angry flush. She sent a message to Jack Moore asking him to call at
-once.
-
-“Whatever do you mean?” she demanded of Jack Moore, as he entered the
-laundry, “a-stampedin' of Riley Bent out of camp that a-way? Don't you
-know I was intendin' to marry him? Yere he's been gone a month, an' yet
-the minute he shows up you have to take to cuttin' the dust 'round his
-moccasins with your six-shooter, an' away he goes ag'in. He jest
-nacherally seizes on your gun-play for a good excuse. It's shore enough
-to drive one plumb loco!”
-
-Jack Moore looked decidedly bothered.
-
-“Of course, Sal,” he said at last in a deprecatory way, “you-all
-onderstands that when I takes to shakin' the loads outen my six-shooter
-at Riley Bent, I does it offishul. An' I'm free to say, that I was that
-wropped and preoccupied like with my dooties as Marshal at the time, I
-never thinks once of them nuptials you med'tates with Riley Bent. If I
-had I would have downed his pony with that last shot an' turned him over
-to you. But perhaps it ain't too late.”
-
-It was the next afternoon. Riley Bent was reclining in his camp in the
-_Très Hermanas_. Grey, keen eyes watched him from behind a point of
-rocks. Suddenly a mouthful of white smoke puffed from the point of
-rocks, and something hard and positive broke Riley Bent's leg just above
-the knee. The blow of the bullet shocked him for a moment, but the next,
-with a curse in his mouth, and a six-shooter in each hand, he tumbled in
-behind a boulder to do battle with his assailant. With the crack of the
-Winchester which accompanied the phenomena of smoke-puff and broken leg,
-came the voice of Jack Moore, Marshal.
-
-“Hold up your hands, thar!” said Moore. “Up with 'em; I shan't say it
-twice!”
-
-Riley Bent could not obey; he had taken ten seconds off to faint.
-
-When he revived Jack Moore had claimed his pistols and was calmly
-setting the bones of the broken leg; devoting the woollen shirts in the
-war-bags on his saddle to be bandages, and making splints of cedar bark.
-These folk of the plains and mountains, far from the surgeon, often set
-each other's, or, for that matter, their own bones, when a fall from a
-pony, or some similar catastrophe, furnishes the call.
-
-“If you-all needed me,” observed Riley Bent peevishly, when a little
-later Jack Moore was engaged over bacon and flap-jacks for the sundown
-meal, “whatever was the matter of sayin' so? Thisyere idee of shootin'
-up a gent without notice or pow-wow is plumb onlegal. An' I'll gamble on
-it, ten to one!”
-
-“Well!” said Jack Moore, as he deftly tossed a flap-jack in the air and
-caught it in the frying-pan again, “I didn't aim to take no chances of
-chagrinin' one who loves you, by lettin' you get away. Then, ag'in,
-my own notion is that it might sorter hasten the bridal some. Thar's
-nothin' like a bullet in a party's frame for makin' him feel romantic
-an' sentimental. It softens his nature a heap, an' sets him to yearnin'
-for female care.
-
-“Which you've been shootin me up to be married!” responded Riley Bent in
-tones of disgust.
-
-“That's straight!” retoited Jack Moore, as he slid the last flap-jack
-into the invalid's tin plate. “You've been pesterin' 'round Wagon Mound
-Sal ontil that lady has become wropped in you. She confides to me cold
-that she's anxious to make a weddin' of it, which is all the preliminary
-necessary in Arizona. You are goin' back to Wolfville with me tomorry on
-a buck-board,--which will be sent on yere from the stage station,--an'
-after Doc Peets goes over your laig ag'in, you an' Wagon Mound Sal are
-goin' to become man an' wife like a landslide. You have bred hopes in
-that lady's bosom, an' you've got to make 'em good. That's all thar is
-to this play; an' you don't get your guns ag'in ontil you're a married
-man.”
-
-Jack Moore, firm, direct and decided, had a great effect in fixing
-the wandering fancies of Riley Bent. He thoughtfully masticated his
-flap-jack a moment, and then asked:
-
-“S'pose I arches my back an' takes to buckin' at these yere abrupt
-methods in my destinies; s'pose I quits the deal cold?”
-
-“In which eevent,” responded Jack Moore, with an air of iron confidence,
-“we merely convenes the Stranglers an' hangs you for luck.”
-
-But Riley Bent was softened and his mind made fully up. Whether it
-was the sentimental influence of Jack Moore's bullet, which Doc Peets
-subsequently dug out; or whether Riley was touched by the fact that
-Wagon Mound Sal, herself, brought over the buckboard to convey him to
-Wolfville, may never be known. What was certain, however, was that Riley
-Bent came finally to the conclusion to wed. He told Wagon Mound Sal so
-while on the buckboard going back.
-
-“Which it's shorely doubtful,” said Wagon Mound Sal, “if any man is
-worth the trouble. An' this yere is my busiest day, too!”
-
-There was great rejoicing in the wareroom of the New York Store. A whole
-box of candles blazed gloriously from the walls. Old Man Enright gave
-the bride away, Benson Annie appeared to look on, while Faro Nell
-supported Sal as bridesmaid. As usual, in any hour of sacred need, a
-preacher was obtained from Tucson.
-
-“An' you can bet that pastor knows his business!” said Old Monte, the
-stage driver, who had been commissioned to bring one over. “He's a
-deep-water brand, an' he's all right! I takes my steer when I seelects
-him from the barkeep of the Golden Rod saloon, an' he'd no more give me
-the wrong p'inter, that a-way, than he'd give me the wrong bottle.”
-
-Doc Peets's offering to the bride was a bullet. It was formerly the
-property of Jack Moore. It was the one he conferred on Riley Bent that
-evening in the foothills of the _Très Hermanas_.
-
-“Keep it!” said Doc Peets to the bride. “It's what sobers him, an' takes
-the frivolity outen him, an' makes him know his own heart.”
-
-“An' I shorely reckons you're right that a-way, Doc,” said Jack Moore,
-some hours after the wedding as the two turned from the laundry whither
-Moore had repaired to return Riley Bent his pistols; “I shore reckons
-you're right a whole lot. I knows a gent in the states, an' he tells me
-himse'f how he goes projectin' 'round, keepin' company with a lady for a
-year, an' ain't thinkin' none speshul of marryin' her. One day somebody
-gets plumb tired of the play an' shoots him some, after which he simply
-goes about pantin' to lead that lady to the altar; that's straight!”
-
-
-
-
-JOE DUBUQUE'S LUCK
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-YOUSE can soak your super,” said Chucky, “some dubs has luck! I've seen
-marks who could fall into d' sewer, see! an' come out wit' a bunch of
-lilacs in each mit.
-
-“Nit; it wasn't all luck wit' Joe Dubuque. His breakin' out of hock that
-time is some luck, but mostly 'cause Joe himself is a dead wise guy an*
-onto his job. Tell youse about it? In a secont--in a hully second! Just
-say 'gin fizz!' to d' barkeep an' I'll begin.
-
-“Never mind d' preeliminaries, as d' story writers says, but Joe's in
-jail, see! Joe win out ten spaces for touchin' a farmer for his bundle.
-Was it a wad? D' roll Joe gets is big enough to choke a cow--'leven
-t'ousand plunks, if it's a splinter.
-
-“Wherefore, as I relates, Joe gets ten years, an' is layin' in jail
-while d' gezebo, who's his lawyer, sees can he woik d' high court to
-give Joe a new trial.
-
-“Joe don't feel no sort chirpy; he's onto it d' high court's dead sure
-to t'run him down. Then he goes to d' pen to do them ten spaces. An'
-onct there, wit' all that time ahead, he sees his finish all right, all
-right. He might as well be a lifer.
-
-“So Joe puts it up he'll break himself out. Joe's goil comes every day
-to see him. Say! she's a bute, Joe's Rag is; d' crooks calls her 'Wild
-Willie,' 'cause now an' then she toins dopey an' acts like she's got
-doves in her eaves. But anyhow she's on d' square wit' Joe, an' sticks
-to him like a postage stamp.
-
-“Joe sends out d' woid be his Rag about what he's goin' to do, to d'
-push outside; an' tells 'em how to help. Yes; d' job is put up as fine
-as silk. Every mark knows what he's to do.
-
-“Now, here's d' trick dey toins; here's how Joe beats d' jail for good.
-
-“It comes round to d' night. Joe's cell--it's a big cell, a reg'lar
-corker, wit' gas into it--is on d' fort' corridor. D' guard comes round
-at 9 o'clock orderin' out d'lights. Joe's gas is boinin' away to beat d'
-band, an' Joe is lay in' on his bunk.
-
-“'Dowse d' glim, Joe!' says d' guard.
-
-“What th' 'ell!' says Joe. 'Dowse d' glim, yourself, you Sheeny hobo!'
-
-“D' guard makes a bluff about what he'll do, an' cusses Joe out. All d'
-same he unlocks d' door an' comes chasin' in to put out Joe's gas.
-
-“Now, what does Joe do? As d' guard toins to d' gas to dowse it, Joe
-sets up on his bunk, an' all at onct he soaks this gezebo of a guard
-wit' a rubber billy his Moll sneaks in to him d' day before. Does he
-land d' sucker? Say! he almost cracks his nut, an' that's for fair!
-
-“D' guard drops an' in a minute Joe winds him all up tight in a bedtick
-rope he's made. Then he stoppers his jaw an' t'rows d' mucker on d'
-bunk, takes his keys, locks him in d' cell an' goes galumpin' off to let
-himself t'rough d' doors, so he can try a sprint for it. Yes, Joe makes
-some row when he t'umps this party, but d' captiffs in d' nex' cells
-hears d' racket an' half tumbles to it; an' so dey starts singin' 'Rock
-of Ages,' an' makes a noise so as to cover Joe's play, see! Oh! dey was
-some fly guys locked up in that old coop.
-
-“As Joe lines out for d' doors, he's t'inkin' to himself, how on eart'
-is he goin' to make it? Nit; it wouldn't be no trouble to get outside d'
-doors of what youse might call d' jail proper. But after that, Joe's got
-to go t'rough four offices wit' a mob of dep'ties into 'em. An' he's on
-it's goin' to be a squeak if some of 'em don't recognize him. Joe's mug
-was well known.
-
-“You know how dey woiks d' doors to a jail? Youse don't? It's this way.
-Joe, when he comes up, has d' key to d' inside door, which he nips off
-d' guard as I says when he slugs him wit 'd' billy. Joe lets himself
-into d' cage wit' that.
-
-“Now, d' key to d' outside door ain't in d' coop at all. There's an old
-stiff of a dep'ty sheriff planted outside wit' that. As Joe opens d'
-inside door, he raps on d' bars of d' cage wit' his key, an' it's d' tip
-for this outside snoozer to unlock his door. Of course he plays Joe for
-d' guard coinin' out from his rounds.
-
-“It's at this door-slammin' pinch where Joe's luck comes in, an'
-relieves him of d' chanct of d' gang of dep'ties in d' office tumblin'
-to him. Just as Joe raps to d' sucker on d' outside door, an' then lets
-himself into d' cage, a gun goes off inside d' jail. It's Joe's guard.
-Joe forgets to pinch d' pop, see! an' this gezebo gets his hooks onto
-it, all tied like he is, an' bangs away wit' it in his pockets so as to
-warn d' gang Joe's loose.
-
-“'That does me for fair!' t'inks Joe when he hears d' gun; ''dey gets me
-dead to rights!'
-
-“Say! it was d' one trick that saves him! At d' bang of d' gun every
-dep'ty leaps to his trilbys an' comes chasin'. D' outside mark has just
-unslewed his door. He flings it wide open an' scoots inside d' cage. Joe
-t'rows d' inside door open--for Joe's dead swift to take a hunch that
-way--an 'd' outside guard an 'd' entire bunch of dep'ties goes sprintin'
-into d' jail. Then Joe locks 'em all in an' loafs t'rough d' offices
-into d' street.
-
-“Yes; Joe knows where he's goin'. He toins into d' foist stairway an'
-climbs one story to a law office, which d' crooks outside has fixed to
-be open, waitin' for him. Nixie; d' law guy ain't in on d' play. A dip
-named Jim Butts comes an' touts this law sharp away, an' cons him into
-goin' out six miles to d' country to draw d' last will an' test'ment of
-a galoot he says is on d' croak, an' can't wait for mornin'. Yes, Butts
-has one of his mob faked up for sick, an' dey detains d' law guy four
-hours makin' d' will. This stall of Butts, who's doin' d' sick act, sets
-up between gasps an' gives away more'n twenty million dollars wort' of
-wealt'. This crook who's fakin' sick is on his uppers at d' time, an'
-don't really have d' price of beer; but to hear him make his will that
-night, you'd say he was d' richest ever; d' Astors was monkeys to him.
-
-“As I states, Joe skips into this lawyer's office, d' same bein' open
-for d' poipose, an' one of d' 'fambly' holdin' it down. While Joe's
-in there he hears d' chase runnin' up an' down in d' street below d'
-window.
-
-“Not for long, though. Fifteen minutes after Joe is outside d' jug, one
-of d' crooks calls up d' Central Office be telephone.
-
-“'Who's talkin'?' asts d' captain at d' Central Office.
-
-“'It's Doyle, lieutenant o' police, Fourt' Precinct,' says d' crook
-who's on d' wire. Me man on d' station house beat just reports Joe
-Dubuque drivin' west on Detroit street wit' a horse an' buggy. He was on
-d' dead run, lamin' loose to beat four of a kind. Send all d' men youse
-can spare.'
-
-“An' that's what d' captain at d' Central Office does. In ten minutes
-every cop an' fly cop is on d' chase, a mile away from Joe, an' gettin'
-furder every secont, see!
-
-“After a while it settles down all quiet an' dead about d' jail, an
-'d' little old law office where Joe lies buried. He, an' d' crook who's
-waitin' for him, is chinnin' each other in whispers. All d' time Joe's
-got his lamps to d' window pipin' off d' other side of d' street.
-At last a cab drives up opposite d' law office an' stops. A w'ite
-han'kerchief shows flutterin' be d' window. It's Wild Willie who's
-inside.
-
-“Joe's pal gets up an' goes down to d' street. All's clear an' he
-w'istles up to Joe. When he gets d' office Joe sort of loafs down an'
-saunters over to d' cab. D' door opens an' in one move Joe's inside, an'
-d' nex' his arm is 'round his Moll. She's all right, this Wild Willie
-is, an' Joe does d' correct t'ing to give her d' fervent squeeze.
-
-“That's d' end. Joe Dubuque runs clear away, goes under cover, an' d'
-sheriff never gets his hooks on him ag'in. As Joe drives be d' jail he
-can still hear them captiffs singin' 'Rock of Ages.'
-
-“'Say!' says Joe to Wild Willie as he toins her mug to his an' smacks
-her onct for luck, 'I won't do a t'ing but make it a t'ousand dollars in
-d' kecks of them ducks who's doin' that song. I'll woik d' dough to 'em
-be some of d' boys, see!'”
-
-
-
-
-BINKS AND MRS. B.
-
-
-BINKS was an excellent man, hard-working and sober. He made good money
-and took it home to his wife for her judgment to settle its fate;
-every dollar of it. Mrs. Binks was a woman among a thousand. When taken
-separate and apart from his wife and questioned, Binks said she was
-a “corker.” Binks declined all attempts at definition, and beyond
-insisting that Mrs. Binks was and would remain a “corker,” said nothing.
-
-From what was told of Mrs. Binks by herself, it would seem that she was
-a true, loving wife to Binks, and that, aside from the duty every woman
-owed to her sex and the establishment of its rights in all avenues of
-life, she held that with the wedding ring came a list of duties due from
-a good woman to her husband, which could not be avoided nor gone about.
-
-“Some women,” quoth Mrs. B., “worry their husbands with a detail of
-small matters. A woman who is to be a helpmeet to her husband, such as I
-am to Binks, will be self-reliant and decide things for herself. In the
-little cares of life which fall to her share, let her go forward in her
-own strength. What is the use of adding her troubles to his? If she
-has plans, let her execute them. If problems confront her, let her solve
-them. If she tells her husband aught of the thousand little enterprises
-of her daily home life, then let it be the result. When success has come
-to her, she may call her husband to witness the victory. Aside from that
-she should face her responsibilities alone.”
-
-Of course Mrs. B. did not mean by all this that she would not be open
-and frank with Binks, and confide in him if a burglar were in the house,
-or if the roof took fire in the night that she would not arouse Binks
-and mention it. What she did mean was that when it came to such things
-as dismissing the servant girl, the wife should gird up her loins and
-“fire” the maiden singlehanded, and not ring her husband in on a play,
-manifestly disagreeable, and likely to subject him to great remorse.
-
-It chanced recently that an opportunity opened like a gate for Mrs. B.
-to illustrate her doctrine that wives should proceed in a plain duty
-alone, without imposing needless anxiety on the head of the family.
-
-Mrs. Binks had decided to visit her sister in Hoboken. She was to go
-Thursday, and Binks, who was paid his sweat-bought stipend on Monday,
-was to furnish the money Monday evening wherewith to make the trip.
-
-It chanced, unfortunately, that pay-day this particular week was
-deferred. The head partner was sick, or out of town; checks could not be
-drawn, or something like that.
-
-“But your money will come on Saturday, boys,” said the other partner.
-
-Binks was obliged to wait.
-
-The money was all right; it would be accurately on tap Saturday, so
-Binks took no fret on that point.
-
-But what was he to do about Mrs. B.? That good woman was to go Thursday,
-and in order to organise for the descent upon her relative would need
-the money--$40--on Tuesday. What was Binks to do?
-
-Clearly he must do something. He could not ask Mrs. B. to put off her
-trip a week; indeed, his reluctance to take such course came almost to
-the point of superstition.
-
-In his troubles Binks suddenly bethought him of a gold watch, once his
-father's, with a rich chain and guard attached. These precious heirlooms
-had been given to Binks by the elder Binks' executor, and were cherished
-accordingly.
-
-Rather than disappoint Mrs. B. the worthy Binks decided, that just for
-once in his life he would seek a pawnbroker and do business with that
-common relative of all.
-
-Binks felt timid and ashamed, but the case was urgent. There was no
-risk, for his money would float in all right on the tides of Saturday.
-Binks would then redeem these pledges from disgraceful hock; all would
-be well. Mrs. B. would be in Hoboken on redemption day, and it would not
-be necessary to tell her anything about the matter. It would save her
-pain, and Binks bravely determined to keep the whole transaction dark.
-
-Again, if he told her he had not been paid at the store, the brave woman
-would indubitably wend to his employer's house and demand the reason
-why. This would be useless and embarrassing. Therefore, Binks would say
-nothing. He would pawn the ancestral super, and get it again when his
-money came in, and his wife was away.
-
-The watch and its appertainments were snug in the far corner of a bureau
-drawer; away over and behind Mrs. B.'s lingerie. Binks had a watch of
-his own, a Waterbury, with a mainspring as endless as a chain pump. Mrs.
-B. saw, therefore, no reason why he should carry the gold watch of his
-progenitor. Binks might lose it. Mrs. Binks strongly advised that it be
-kept in the bureau where it would be safe and naturally, in an affair of
-that sort Binks took his wife's advice.
-
-Binks reflected that he must secure the watch and pawn it that night.
-To do this he must plot to get Mrs. B. out of the house. Binks thought
-deeply. At last he had it.
-
-Binks sent a message home in the afternoon and asked Mrs. B. to meet
-him in a store down town at six o'clock. Then he had himself released at
-5:30, and went hotfoot homeward.
-
-The coast was clear; Mrs. B. was down town in deference to his
-stratagem, no doubt believing that Binks meditated soda water, or some
-other delicacy, as the cause of his sudden summons of the afternoon. She
-little wotted that she was the victim of deceit. If she had, there would
-have been woe.
-
-Binks rushed at once to the bureau and secured the treasure. He did not
-wait a moment, but plunged off to a store where the three balls over the
-door bore testimony to the commerce within. Binks would explain to Mrs.
-B. on his return, how he had missed her and so failed to keep his date
-with her down town.
-
-The merchant of loans and pledges looked over Binks' timepiece, and
-then, as Binks requested, gave him a ticket for it and $40. It was to
-be redeemed in thirty days or sooner. And Binks was to pay $44 to get
-it again. Binks was very willing. Anything was wiser and better than to
-permit Mrs. B.'s visit to her sister to be interrupted.
-
-When Binks got home Mrs. B. had already returned.
-
-There was a bad light in her eye. She accepted Binks' excuses and
-explanations as to “how he missed her down town” with an evil grace. She
-as good as told Binks that he deceived her; that if the phenomenon were
-treed she would find another woman in the case.
-
-However, Binks had the presence of mind to turn over the $40 he reaped
-on the watch; and as he expressed it later:
-
-“That sort of hushed her up.”
-
-The next day Binks returned to his labours, while Mrs. B. repaired to
-the marts to plunge moderately on what truck she stood in want of for
-her trip.
-
-When Mrs. B. got back to the house it chanced that the first thing she
-needed was in the fatal drawer. She opened it.
-
-Horrors! The watch was gone!
-
-There was naught of hesitation; Mrs. B. knew it had been stolen. Anybody
-could see that from the way every garment had been carefully laid back
-to hide the loss.
-
-What should she do? The police must at once be notified. Mrs. B. pulled
-on her shaker and scooted for the police station. She told her story
-out of breath. She left her house at three o'clock and was back at four
-o'clock, and in that short hour her home had been entered and looted of
-its treasures. Made to be specific, Mrs. B. said the treasures were a
-watch and chain, and described them.
-
-“What were they worth?” asked the sergeant of the detectives.
-
-Mrs. B. considered a bit, and then said they would be dog cheap at
-$1,000. She reflected that the sum, if published in the papers, would be
-a source of pride.
-
-The sergeant of detectives told Mrs. B. his men would look about for
-her property, and should they hear of it or find it they would at once
-notify her.
-
-“You bet your gum boots! ma'am,” said the sleuth confidently, “whatever
-crook's got your ticker, he's due to soak it or plant it some'ers in a
-week. Mebby he'll turn it over to his Moll. But the minute we springs
-it, ma'am, or turns it up, we'll be dead sure to put you on in a jiff.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Mrs. B.
-
-Then Mrs. Binks went home and, true to her determination to save Binks
-from unnecessary worry, she told him nothing of the loss nor of her
-arrangements for the watch's recovery.
-
-“What's the use of bothering Binks?” she asked herself. “All he could do
-would be to notify the police, and I've done that.”
-
-Thursday came and Mrs. B. set forth for Hoboken. No notice had come from
-the police. Binks was glad to see her go. He had lived in fear lest she
-come across the departure of the watch. He breathed easier when she was
-gone. As for Mrs. B., as she had not heard from the police, there was
-nothing to tell Binks; wherefore, like a self-reliant woman who did not
-believe in making her husband unhappy to no purpose, she left without
-word or sign as to her knowledge of the watch's disappearance.
-
-It was Friday; ever an unlucky day. Binks was walking swiftly homeward.
-Binks was thinking some idle thing when a hand came down on his
-shoulder, heavy as a ham.
-
-“Hold on, me covey; I want you!”
-
-Binks looked around, scared and startled. He had been halted by a
-stocky, bluff man in citizen's clothes.
-
-“What is it?” gasped Binks.
-
-“Suttenly, sech a fly guy as you don't know!” said the bluff man, with a
-glare. “Well! never mind why I wants you; I'm a detective, and you comes
-with me.”
-
-And Binks went with him.
-
-Not only that, Binks went in a noisy patrol wagon which the detective
-rang for; and it kept gonging its way along and attracting everybody's
-attention.
-
-The word went about among his friends that Binks was drunk and had been
-fighting.
-
-“And to think a man would act like that,” said one lady, who knew Binks
-by sight, “just because his wife is away on a visit! If I were his wife
-I'd never come back to him!”
-
-At the station Binks was solemnly looked over by the chief.
-
-“He's the duck!” said the chief at last. “Exactly old Goldberg's
-description of the party who spouts the ticker. Where did you collar
-him, Bill?”
-
-“I sees him paddin' along on Broadway,” replied the bluff man, “and I
-tumbles to the sucker like a hod of brick. I knowed he was a sneak the
-first look I gives; and the second I says to meself, 'he's wanted for a
-watch!' Then I nails him.”
-
-“Do you know who he is?” asked the chief.
-
-“My name,” said Binks, who was recovering from the awful daze that had
-seized him, “my name is B----”
-
-“Shet up!” roared the bluff man. “Don't give us any guff! It'll be the
-worse for you!”
-
-“I know the mark,” said an officer looking on.
-
-“His name is 'Windy Joe, the Magsman.' His mug's in the gallery all
-right enough; number 38, I think.”
-
-“That's correct!” said the chief. “I knowed he was familiar to me, and I
-never forgets a face. Frisk him, Bill, and lock him up!”
-
-“But my name's Binks!” protested our hero. “I'm an innocent man!”
-
-“That's what they all says,” replied the chief. “Go through him, Bill,
-and lock him up; I want to go to me grub.”
-
-Binks was cast into a dungeon. Next door to him abode a lunatic,
-who reviled him all night. On the blotter the ingenuity of the chief
-detective inscribed: “Windy Joe, the Magsman, alias Binks. Housebreaking
-in daytime.”
-
-*****
-
-There is scant need of spinning out the agony. Binks got free of the
-scrape some twelve hours later. But it was all very unfortunate. He came
-near dismissal at the store, and the neighbours don't understand it yet.
-They shake their heads and say:
-
-“It's very strange if he's so innocent, why he was locked up. When the
-police take a man, he's generally done something.”
-
-“I'm not sorry a bit!” said Mrs. B., when she was brought back from
-Hoboken on Saturday by a wire the police allowed Binks to send her. “And
-when I saw him with the officers, I was as good a mind to tell them to
-keep him as ever I had to eat. To think how he deceived me about that
-watch, allowing me to break my heart with thoughts of it being stolen!
-I guess the next time Binks sneaks off to pawn his dead father's watch,
-he'll let me know.”
-
-
-
-
-ARABELLA WELD
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-I
-
-It was a chill Harlem evening. The Undertaker sat in his easy chair
-smoking his pipe of clay. About him were ranged the tools and trappings
-of his gruesome art. On trestles, over in the corner's gliding shadows,
-lay the remains he had just been monkeying with.
-
-At last, as one who reviews his work, the Undertaker arose, and scanned
-the wan map of the Departed.
-
-“He makes a great front,” mused the Undertaker. “He looks out of sight,
-and it ought to fetch her.”
-
-Back to his chair roamed the Undertaker. As he seated himself he
-touched a bell. The Poet of the establishment glided dreamily in.
-The Undertaker, not only straightened the kinks out of corpses to the
-Queen's taste, but he furnished epitaphs, and as well, verses for those
-grief-bitten. These latter were to run in the papers with the funeral
-notice.
-
-“Have youse torn off that epitaph for his jiblets?” asked the
-Undertaker, nodding towards Deceased.
-
-“What was it you listed for?” asked the Poet.
-
-“D' epitaph for William Henry Weld,” replied the Undertaker. The Poet
-passed over the desired epitaph.
-
- William Henry Weld.
-
- (Aged 26 years.)
-
- His race he win with pain and sin,
-
- At Satan he did mock;
-
- St. Peter said as he let him in:
-
- “It's Willie, in a walk!”
-
-“You're a wonder!” cried the Undertaker, when he had finished the
-perusal, and he gave the Poet the glad hand. “Here's d' price. Go and
-fill your tank.”
-
-“That should win her,” reflected the Undertaker, when the poet had
-wended his way; “that ought to leave her on both sides of d' road. What
-I've done for Deceased, and that epitaph should knock her silly. She
-shall be mine!”
-
-
-II
-
-PUBLIC interest having been aroused in the corpse, it may be well to
-tell how it became that way.
-
-Deceased was William Henry Weld. Five days before the opening of
-our story, William donned his skates and lined out on one of his
-periodicals. For four days he debauched to beat four kings and an ace.
-
-And William had adventures. He paid a fine; he fell down a coal hole;
-he invaded a laundry and administered the hot wallops to the presiding
-Chinaman. On the fourth day he declared himself in on a ball not far
-from Sixth Avenue.
-
-“Ah, there!” quoth William, archly, to a beautiful being to whom he had
-not been introduced. “Ah, there! Tricksey; I choose youse for d' next
-waltz.”
-
-“Nit; not on your life!” murmured the beautiful one.
-
-As William Henry Weld was about to make fitting response, a coarse,
-vulgar person approached.
-
-“What for be youse jimmin' 'round me pick?” asked this person.
-
-“That's d' stuff, Barney!” said the beautiful one. “Don't do a t'ing to
-him!”
-
-The next instant William Henry Weld was cast into outer darkness.
-
-“It's all right, Old Man!” said the friend who rescued William Henry
-Weld, “I'm goin' to take youse home. Your wife ain't on to me, an'
-I'll fake it I'm a off'cer, see! I'll give her d' razzle dazzle of her
-existence, an' square youse wit' her.”
-
-“It's Willie!” said the friend to Arabella Weld, as he supported her
-husband into the sitting-room. “It's Willie, an' he's feelin' O. K. but
-weedy. Me name, madam, is Jackson--Jackson, of d' secret p'lice. Willie
-puts himse'f in me hands as a sacred trust to bring him home.”
-
-“Is he sick?” moaned Arabella Weld, as she began to let her hair down,
-preparatory to a yell.
-
-“Never touched him!” assured the friend. “Naw; Willie's off his feed
-a bit. You sees, madam, Willie hired out to a hypnotist purely in d'
-interest of science, an' he's been in a trance four days, see! That's
-why he ain't home. Bein' in a trance, he couldn't send woid. Now all
-he needs is a rest for, say, a week. Oughtn't to let him get out of his
-crib for a week.”
-
-At 4 o'clock the next morning William Henry Weld began to see
-blue-winged goats. Arabella Weld “sprung” a glass of water on him.
-
-“Give it a chase!” shrieked William Henry Weld, wildly waving the false
-beverage aside.
-
-In his ratty condition he didn't tumble to the pure element's identity,
-but thought it was one of those Things.
-
-At 5 o'clock A. M. William Henry Weld didn't do a thing but perish.
-When the glorious sun again poured down its golden mellow beams, the
-Undertaker had his hooks on him and Arabella Weld was a widow.
-
-
-III
-
-BUT to return to the Undertaker, the real hero of our tale. We left
-him in his studio poring over the epitaph of William Henry Weld, while
-Departed rehearsed his dumb and silent turn for eternity in the corner's
-lurking shadow. At last the Undertaker roused himself from his reveries.
-
-“I must to bed!” he said; “it waxeth late, and tomorrow I propose for
-her in wedlock.”
-
-Next morning the Undertaker arose refreshed. He had smote his ear for
-full eight hours. He felt fit to propose for his life, let alone the
-delicate duke of Arabella Weld.
-
-The Undertaker's adored one was to come at noon. She wanted to size up
-Departed prior to the obsequies.
-
-Although it was but 9 o'clock, the Undertaker had to get a curve on
-himself to keep his date with Arabella Weld at midday. He had an invalid
-to measure for a coffin--it was a riveted cinch the party would die--and
-then there was a corpse to shave in the next block. These duties were
-giving him the crowd.
-
-But our hero made it; played every inning without an error, and was
-organised for Arabella Weld when she arrived.
-
-As they stood together--Arabella and the man who, all unknown to her,
-loved her so madly--looking down at Deceased, she could not repress her
-admiration.
-
-“On d' dead! I never saw Willie look so well,” she said. “He's very much
-improved. You must have taken a woild of pains wit' Willie.”
-
-The Undertaker was silent.
-
-Struck by this, Arabella Weld turned her full lustrous lamps on the
-Undertaker and saw it all. It was for her, the loving heart beside her
-had toiled over Deceased like an artist over a picture.
-
-Swift is Love, and the Undertaker, quivering with his great passion,
-twigged in an instant that Arabella was onto him. A vast joy swept his
-heart like a torrent.
-
-“I wanted him to make a hit for your sake,” he whispered, stealing his
-arm about her.
-
-Arabella softly put his arm away.
-
-“Not now,” she sighed. “It would be too soon a play. We must wait until
-we've got Willie off our hands--we must wait a year.”
-
-“Wait a year!” and the pain of it bent the Undertaker like a willow.
-“Wait a year, dearest! Now, what's d' fun of that? You must take me for
-a farmer!” and his tones showed that the Undertaker was hurt.
-
-“But in Herkimer County they wait a year,” faltered Arabella, wistfully.
-
-“Sure! in Herkimer!” consented the Undertaker; “but that's Up-the-state.
-A week in Harlem is equal to a year in Herkimer. Let it be a week,
-love!”
-
-“This isn't a game for Willie's life insurance?” and great crystals of
-pain and doubt swam in Arabella's glorious eyes.
-
-“Oh, me love!” cried the Undertaker, fondly, yet desperately, “plant d'
-policy wit' Willie! Send it back to d' company if youse doubts me, an'
-tell 'em to call d' whole bluff a draw.”
-
-The bit of paper, containing the epitaph, fluttered to the floor from
-her nerveless mits, her beautiful head sank on the broad shoulder of the
-Undertaker, and her tears flowed unrestrained.
-
-
-IV
-
-One week had passed since William Henry Weld was solemnly pigeon-holed
-for eternal reference.
-
-The preacher received the couple in his study.
-
-“Shall I marry you with the prayer-book, or would youse prefer the short
-cut?” he asked.
-
-“Marry us on a deck of cards, if you choose!” faltered Arabella. Her
-eyes sought the floor, while the tell-tale blushes painted her lovely
-prospectus. “Only cinch the play, an' do it quick!”
-
-
-
-
-THE WEDDING
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Naw; I'm on I'm late all right, all right; but I couldn't help it,
-see!”
-
-Chucky was thirty minutes behind our hour. I'd been sitting in the
-little bar in sickening controversy with one of the vile cigars of the
-place waiting for Chucky. For which cause I was moved to mention his
-dereliction sharply.
-
-“Sorry to keep an old pal playin' sol'taire, wit' nothin' better to
-amuse him than d' len'th of rope youse is puffin',” continued Chucky in
-furtive excuse, “but I was to a weddin' an' couldn't breakaway. That's
-w'y I've got on me dress soote.
-
-“Say! on d' dead! of course I ain't in on many nuptials; but all d'
-same I likes to go. I always comes away feelin' so wise an* flossy an*
-cooney. Why, I don't know, unless it's 'cause d' guys gettin' hitched
-looks so much like a couple of come-ons--so dead sure life is such a
-cinch, such a sight of confidence like one sees at a weddin', be d'
-parts of d' two suckers who's bein' starred, never omits to make me feel
-too cunnin' to live for d' whole week after.
-
-“Sure! this weddin' was a good t'ing; what youse might call d' real
-t'ing; an' it's a spark to a rhinestone it toins out all hunk for d'
-folks involved. Who's d' two gezebos who gets nex' to each other? D'
-groom is d' boss gunner of one of our war boats, an 'd' skirt is d' cash
-goil in d' anti-Chink laundry on Great Jones street.
-
-“An' say! that little skirt's a wonder, an' don't youse forget it! She's
-good any day for any old t'ing I've got; an' all she's got to do is just
-rap, an' she takes it, see! It was me Rag sees d' goil foist one time
-when she's down be d' laundry puttin' in me t'ree-sheets for their
-weekly dose of suds.
-
-“Is me Rag an' me married? Say! I likes that, I don't t'ink! Youse is
-gettin' fanciful in your cupolo. 4 Be me little Bundle an' me married?'
-says you. Well, I should kiss a pig! Youse can take me tip for it, if
-we ain't man an' wife be d' longest system d' Cat'lic Choich could
-play--for me Rag told d' father who 'fficiates that we're out for d'
-limit--then all I got to stutter is there ain't a mug who's married in
-d' entire city of Noo York.
-
-“Cert! we're married!” Chucky went on after cheering himself with the
-tankard which the barkeeper placed before him. “If youse had let your
-lamps repose on this horseshoe scar over d' bridge of me smeller, youse
-would have tumbled to d' fac wit'out astin'.
-
-“How do I win it? I'm comin' up d' stairs like a sucker, just followin'
-a difference of opinion between me an' me loidy (I soaked her a little
-one, an' that's for fair! to show her she's off her trolley about d'
-subject in dispoote), when she cuts loose d' coal bucket at me. Say! she
-spoiled me map for a mont'.
-
-“But to get back to d' little laundry goil. Me Rag, as I says, was in
-this tub-joint where d' goil woikswit' me linen one day; an' just as she
-chases in, a fresh stiff who's standin' there t'run some raw bluff at d'
-little laundry goil she couldn't stand for, see! an' she puts up a damp
-eye an' does d' weep act.
-
-“This little laundry goil is one of them meek, harmless people--rabbits
-is bull-terriers to 'em--an' so when me onliest own beholds d' tears
-come chasin down her nose at d' remarks of this fly guy, she chucks me
-shirts in d' corner an' mounts him in a hully secont.
-
-“An' say! me Rag can scrap, an' that's no dream! I don't want none of
-it. When she an' me has carried d' conversation to d' point where she
-takes out her hairpins, an' gives her mane to d' breeze, that's me cue
-to cork. Youse can't get another rise out of me after that: I knows her.
-
-“Well! me Rag lights into this hobo who's got gay wit 'd' little goil,
-an' when she takes her hooks out of his make-up, an' he goes surgin'
-into d' street, honest! he looks like he's been fightin' a dog. Some
-lovers of true sport who's there an' payin' attention to d' mill, says
-this galoot wasn't in it wit' me Rag. She has him on d' blink from d'
-jump; she win in a loiter.
-
-“Takin' her part that way makes d' little laundry goil confidenshul
-wit' me Rag. It's about two weeks later when she sprints over an' tells
-Missus Chuck (she makes her promise to lay dead about it, too, but still
-she passes d' woid to me)--she tells me Rag, as I'm sayin', that she's
-in trouble. Her steady, she says, is one of d' top notch gunners of one
-of our big boats; he's d' main squeeze in histurrent, see! an' way up in
-d' paint. His boat's been layin' at d' Navy Yard, an' now he's ordered
-to sail for Cuba in a week an' help straighten up d' Dagoes we're havin'
-d' recent run in wit'. Meanwhiles, she says, dey won't let her beloved
-have shore leave; an' neither dey won't stand for her to come aboard an'
-see him. There youse be! a case of dead sep'ration between two lovin'
-hearts.
-
-“D' little laundry goil gives it out cold, she'll croak if she don't get
-to see her Billy before he skates off for d' wars. She says she knows
-he's out to be killed anyhow. D' question wit' her is--what's she goin'
-to do? Dey won't let her aboard d' boat, an' dey won't let him aboard d'
-land; now, what's d' soon move for her to make?
-
-“Well, me Rag--who's got a nut on her for cert--says for her to skip
-down to Washin'ton an' go ag'inst d' Sec'tary himself.
-
-“'Make him a strong talk,' says me Rag; 'give him a reg'lar
-razzle-dazzle, an' he'll write youse a poiper to them blokes aboard d'
-boat to let youse see your Billy.'
-
-“'Do youse t'ink for sure he will?' says d' little laundry goil.
-
-“'Why, it's a walkover!' says me Rag. 'If he toins out a hard game, give
-him d' tearful eye, see! an' cough a sob or two, an' he'll weaken! You
-can't miss it,' says me ownliest; 'it's easy money.'
-
-“But d' little goil was awful leary of d' play.
-
-“' Washin'ton is so far away,' she says.
-
-“' It's like goin' to Harlem,' says me Rag. 'All youse has to do to go,
-is to take some sandwidges an' apples to sort o' jolly d' trip, an' then
-climb onto d' cars an' go. When d' Con. comes t'rough, pass him your
-pasteboard, see! an' if any of them smooth marks try to make a mash,
-t'run 'em down an' t'run 'em hard. I'll go over an' do your stunt at
-d' laundry, so that needn't give youse a scare. An' be d' way! if that
-lobster I win from d' other day shows up, I'll make a monkey of him
-ag'in. I didn't spend enough time wit' him on d' occasion of our mix-up,
-anyway.'
-
-“At last d' little laundry goil makes d' brace of her life. She's so
-bashful an' timid she can't live; but she's dead stuck on seein' her
-Billy before he sails away, an' it gives her nerve. As I says, she takes
-me Rag's steer an' skins out for d' Cap'tal.
-
-“An' what do youse t'ink? D' old mut who's Sec'tary won't chin wit' her.
-Toins her down cold, he does; gives her d' grand rinky-dink wit'out so
-much as findin' out what's her racket at all.
-
-“At d' finish, however, d' little goil lands one of d' push--he's a
-cloik in d' office, I figgers--an' he hears her yarn between weeps, an'
-ups an' makes a pass or two, an' she gets d' writin'. It says to toin
-Billy loose every afternoon till d' boat pulls out.
-
-“Say! him an 'd' little goil, when she gets back, was as happy as a
-couple of kids; dey has more fun than a box of monkeys. On d' level! I
-was proud of me Rag for floor managin' d' play. She wasn't solid wit'
-Billy an 'd' little goil! Oh, no!
-
-“That's how me an' me loidy was in on this weddin' to-day wit' bot'
-trilbys. Me Rag's 'It' wit' d' little goil; youse can gamble on that!
-
-“Of course d' war's over now, an' two weeks ago d' little goil's Billy
-comes home. An' what wit' pay, an' what wit' prize money, he hits d'
-Bend wit' a bundle of d' long green big enough to make youse t'row a
-fit, an' he ain't done a t'ing but boin money ever since.
-
-“Nit; it ain't much of a story, but d' whole racket pleases me out o'
-sight, see! Considerin' d' hand me Rag plays, when I'm at that weddin'
-to-day I feels like a daddy to Billy an 'd' little goil. On d' level! I
-feels that chesty about it, that when d' priest is goin' to bat an says,
-'Is there any duck here to give d' bride away?' I cuts in on d' game wit
-'d' remark, 'I donates d' bride meself.' I s'pose I was struck dopey, or
-nutty, or somethin'.
-
-“But me Rag fetches me to all c'rrect. She clinches her mit an'
-whispers:
-
-“Let me catch youse makin' another funny break like that an' I'll cop a
-sneak on your neck.' An' then she stands there chewin' d' quiet rag an'
-pipin' me off wit' an eye of fire. 'Such an old bum as youse,' she says,
-'is a disgrace to d' Bend.'”
-
-
-
-
-POINSETTE'S CAPTIVITY
-
-
-This is a tale of last August. Poinsette was to be left alone for four
-weeks. Mrs. Poinsette had settled on Cape May as a good thing for the
-hot spell. She would hie her thither and leave Poinsette to do his worst
-without her.
-
-Poinsette did not care. He bravely told Mrs. P. she needed an outing.
-The ozone and the salty, ocean breeze would do her good. So he
-encouraged Cape May, and bid Mrs. P. go there by all means.
-
-It was decided by the Poinsettes discussing Cape May to have Poinsette
-room up town while Mrs. P. was thus Cape Maying. The Poinsette house in
-the suburbs might better be locked up during Mrs. P.'s absence from the
-city. It would be more economical; indeed, it was not esteemed safe to
-leave the Poinsette lares and penates to the unwatched ministrations of
-the Congo who performed in the Poinsette kitchen. It would be wiser
-to dismiss the servant, bolt and bar the house, obtain Poinsette
-apartments, and let him browse for food among the bounteous restaurants
-of the city.
-
-Poinsette found a room to suit in a house on West 87th Street. It
-was one of a long row of houses. Poinsette reported his victory in
-room-hunting to Mrs. P. Poinsette was now all right, and ready for what
-might come. Mrs. P. might bend her course to Cape May without further
-hesitation.
-
-Mrs. P. was glad to learn of Poinsette's apartment success. She went out
-and looked at his find to make sure that Poinsette would be comfortable.
-Incidentally, Mrs. P. kept her eye about her, to note whether the
-boarding-house books carried any pretty girls. Mrs. P. did not care to
-have Poinsette too comfortable.
-
-There were no pretty girls. Mrs. P. approved the selection. The very
-next day she kissed Poinsette good-bye and rumbled and ferried to the
-station, from which arena of smoke and noise a train leaped forth like a
-greyhound and bore her away to Cape May.
-
-Poinsette did not accompany his spouse to the station. Ten years before
-he would have done this, but experience had taught him that Mrs. P.
-could care for herself. Therefore he remained behind to fasten up the
-house. Soberly he went about locking doors, and fastening windows, and
-thinking rather sadly,--as all husbands so deserted do,--of the long,
-lonely months before him. At last all was secure, and Poinsette turned
-the key in the big front door and came away.
-
-Poinsette did not feel like work that afternoon, or the trifling
-fragment of it that was left after Mrs. P. had wended and he had locked
-up the house. He bought a few good books and several of the more solid
-periodicals. They would serve during the weary nights while Mrs. P.
-was away at the Cape. These Poinsette sent to his rooms, and, as it was
-growing six o'clock now, he turned into Sherry's for his dinner.
-
-Just where Poinsette went that evening following Sherry's, and what he
-saw and did, and who assisted at such enterprises as he embarked in,
-would be nothing to the present point and may be skipped. They are the
-private affairs of Poinsette, and not properly the subjects of a morbid
-curiosity. However, lest Mrs. P. see this and argue aught herefrom to
-feed distrust, it should be said that Poinsette saw nobody, did nothing,
-went no place unbecoming an officer and a gentleman.
-
-It was four o'clock in the morning when Poinsette, the sole passenger
-aboard a foaming night-liner, toiled through the Park and bore away for
-his new abode. Poinsette stopped the faithful night-liner two blocks
-from the door and went forward on foot. Poinsette did not care to
-clatter ostentatiously to his rooms at four in the morning the first day
-he inhabited them.
-
-Poinsette found the house without trouble, and stepped lightly to the
-door. He put the pass-key his landlady had bestowed upon him in the
-lock, but it would not turn. The bolt would not yield to his wooing.
-Do all he might, and work he never so wisely, there had sprung up a
-misunderstanding between key and lock which would not be reconciled.
-Poinsette could not get “action;” the sullen door still barred him from
-his bed.
-
-At last Poinsette gave up in despair. He might ring the bell and arouse
-the house; but he hesitated. It was his first day; the hour needed
-apology. Poinsette thought it would be better to walk gently to a
-hotel and abide for the remainder of the night. He would solve this
-incompatibility of key and lock the next afternoon.
-
-Poinsette turned away and started softly for the street. As he did so a
-policeman stepped from behind a tree and stopped him. The policeman had
-been watching Poinsette for five minutes.
-
-“Wot was you a-doin' at the door?” he asked.
-
-Poinsette, in a low, hurried voice, explained. He didn't care to awaken
-his landlady by a tumult of talk, and have that excellent woman discover
-him in the hands of the law.
-
-“If your key don't work,” said the policeman, “why don't you ring the
-bell?”
-
-Poinsette cleared up that mystery. The officer was not satisfied.
-
-“To be free with you, my man,” he said, seizing Poinsette's collar, “I
-think you're a burglar. If that's your boarding-house you're goin' in.
-If it isn't, you're goin' to the station.”
-
-Then the policeman, with one hand wound about in Poinsette's neckwear,
-made trial of the key with the other hand. The effort was futile. The
-lock was obdurate; the key was stranger to it. Then the blue guardian
-of the city's slumbers stepped back a pace and took a mighty pull at
-the door-bell. It was a yank which brought forth a wealth of jingle and
-ring.
-
-Poinsette was glad of it. He had grown desperate and wanted the thing
-to end. Bad as it was, it would be better to face his landlady than be
-locked up in a burglar's cell. Poinsette was resigned, therefore, when a
-second-story window lifted and a night-capped head was made to overhang
-the sill and blot its silhouette against the star-lit sky.
-
-“Be you the landlady?” asked the policeman.
-
-“Yes, I am!” quoth the night-cap in a snappy, snarly way. “What do you
-want?” This with added sourness.
-
-“This party says his name is Poinsette and that he rooms here,” replied
-the officer.
-
-“No such thing!” retorted the night-cap. “No such man rooms here. Don't
-even know the name!”
-
-Then the window came down with a grievous bang. It was as if it
-descended on Poinsette's heart.
-
-“You're a crook!” said the policeman, “and now you come with me.”
-
-Poinsette essayed to explain that the night-cap was not his landlady;
-that he had made a mistake in the house. The policeman laughed in hoarse
-scorn at this.
-
-“D'ye think I'm goin' all along the row, yankin' door-bells out by the
-roots on such a stiff as you're givin' me?”
-
-That was the reply of the policeman to Poinsette's pleadings to try next
-door.
-
-Poinsette was led sadly off, with the grip of the law on his collar. At
-the station he was searched and booked and bolted in. On the hard plank,
-which made the sole furnishings of his narrow cell, Poinsette threw
-himself down; not to sleep, but to give himself to bitter consideration
-of his fate.
-
-As Poinsette sat there waiting for the sun to rise and friends to come
-to his rescue, the station clock struck five. It rang dismally in the
-cell of Poinsette.
-
-At Cape May, clocks of correct habits were also telling the hour of
-five. Mrs. P. was not yet asleep. The vigorous aroma of the ocean swept
-the room. The half-morning was beautiful; Mrs. P., loosely garbed, sat
-in an easy-chair at the window and enjoyed it.
-
-“I wonder what Poinsette's been doing,” said Mrs. P. to herself; and
-there was a colour of jealousy in the tone. Then Mrs. P. snorted as in
-contempt. “I'll warrant he's been having a good time,” she continued.
-“This idea that married men when their wives are away for the summer
-have a dull time, never imposed on me.”
-
-
-
-
-TIP FROM THE TOMB
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-T. Jefferson Bender was a doctor; that is, he was not a real, legal
-doctor as yet, but he was a hard student, and looked hopefully toward
-a day when, in accordance with the statutes in such cases made and
-provided, he would be cantered through the examination chute, and
-entitled to write “M. D.” following his name, with all that it implied.
-
-Each morning T. Jefferson Bender arose with the lark, and, seizing his
-dissecting knife, plunged into whatever subject was spread before him.
-In the afternoon he attended lectures, bending a hungry ear and watching
-with eager eye, while the lecturer, in illustration of his remarks,
-tortured poor people, free of charge. At night, when the day's carvings,
-and listenings, and lookings were over, T. Jefferson Bender sat in his
-easy chair and peered down the long aisle of coming time.
-
-The world was bright to the glance of T. Jefferson Bender; the future
-full of promise. In his musings he saw himself striding towards surgical
-fame and riches over a pathway strewn with the amputational harvest of
-his skill. He filled the hereafter with himself routing disease; cutting
-down deadly maladies as a farmer might the mullein-stalk; driving
-before him bacteria and bacilli in herds, droves, schools and shoals. T.
-Jefferson Bender was a happy man, and his forehead was already, in his
-imaginings, kissed by the rays of a dawning professional prosperity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-T. Jefferson Bender allowed himself but one relaxation. He was from
-Lexington, and had a true Kentuckian's love for horseflesh. Thus it was
-that he patronised the races, and was often seen at Morris Park,
-where he prevailed from a seat in the grand-stand. Here, casting off
-professional dignity as he might a garment, T. Jefferson Bender whooped
-and howled and hurled his hat on high, as race following race swept in.
-
-At intervals T. Jefferson Bender was carried to such heights of madness
-as “playing the horses.” And then it was he suffered those vicissitudes
-which are chronicled colloquially under the phrase of “getting it in the
-neck.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-It was the day of the great race. The Morris Park grand-stand was
-reeling full. The quarter stretch was crowded with Democrats and
-Republicans and Mugwumps, who, laying aside political hatreds for a day,
-had come to see the races. The horses were backing and plunging in the
-grasp of rubbers and stable minions, while the gay jockeys, with their
-mites of saddles on their left arms, were being weighed in.
-
-Suddenly, a cry of terror rent the air. Otero, a headstrong beauty, had
-leaped upon the neck of Paddy the Pig, a horse rubber, and borne him
-to the earth. Paddy the Pig's neck was severely wrenched, so the crowd
-said. As the accident occurred, the victim fainted.
-
-“Is there a doctor present?” shouted one of the race judges, appealing
-to the grand-stand.
-
-T. Jefferson Bender arose from where he sat, walked over seventeen men
-and women, and leaped upon the stretch.
-
-“I am here,” observed T. Jefferson Bender, while his eye lighted and his
-nostrils expanded with the ardour of a great resolve.
-
-T. Jefferson Bender bent above Paddy the Pig and felt his pulse.
-
-“He lives!” muttered T. Jefferson Bender.
-
-Then he called for whiskey.
-
-At the magical words, Paddy the Pig languidly opened his eyes, while a
-flush dimly painted his cheek.
-
-“Doc, you have saved my life!” said Paddy the Pig.
-
-“I have,” said T. Jefferson Bender, willing to be impressive. “I have
-saved your life.”
-
-“Doc,” said Paddy the Pig in a weak, fluttering voice, “I am only a
-horse rubber, but I will make you rich. Play Skylight to win, Doc;
-Skylight! It's a tip from the tomb!”
-
-“It's a tip from the tomb!” said T. Jefferson Bender reverently, “what
-are the odds?”
-
-“It's a 20-to-1 shot, Doc. Play it. You will thus be paid for what
-you've done for me.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-That night T. Jefferson Bender stood in a pawnshop. The flickering
-gaslight shone on mandolins, pistols, watches, and clothing, which had
-suffered the ordeal of the spout. T. Jefferson Bender was dusty and
-footsore. He had walked from Morris Park, and was now about to pawn his
-watch for food.
-
-[Illustration: 0217]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-T. Jefferson Bender had played Skylight.
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-Why, yes,” responded Chucky readily enough, “there's choiches of all
-sorts, same as there's folks, see! Some does good an' then ag'in there's
-others that ain't so warm.”
-
-It was rude, cold weather. Because of the bluster and the freezing air
-without, Chucky had abandoned his customary ale for hot Scotches. These
-and the barroom's pleasant heat, in contrast with the chill and gusts
-of the street, served to unfold Chucky's conversational powers. He even
-waxed philosophical.
-
-“For that matter,” continued Chucky, critically, “there's lots of good
-lyin' 'round loose. Sometimes it's dead hard to find, but it's there all
-d' same, if youse is fly enough to pipe it off. An' it ain't all in
-d' choiches neither. As I states, I'm d' last mug to go knockin' d'
-choiches, but dey ain't got no corner on d' good of this woild. There
-is others. D' choices ain't d' only apple on d' tree. Nor yet d' onliest
-gas jet on 'd chandelier.
-
-“Say!” Chucky went on, after a further taste of the hot Scotch, “on d'
-level! I'm onto achoich what's got nex' to a bakery, an' what do youse
-t'ink? Each night d' bakery don't do a t'ing but give every poor hobo
-who fronts up to d' window a loaf of bread. That's for fair! an 'd'
-gezebo who runs d' bakery is a Dutch Sheeny at that. Would youse get
-bread if you was to go chasin' nex' door to d' choich? Nit; t'ree times
-nit! If you was to go slammin' 'round d! choich makin' a talk for a
-hand-out, all youse would get would be d' collar, see!
-
-“Onct a week that sanchewary would fill youse to d' chin on chimes; oh,
-yes! but no buns; not on your life! Chimes is d' limit wit' that choich.
-An' say! it's got money to boin! Bread at d' bakery! chimes at d'
-choich! that's how dey line t'ings up at that corner. An' I'm here
-to say as between d' brace of 'em, when it gets down to d' cold
-proposition, 'W'ich does d' most good?' d' bakery can lose that temple
-of worship in a walk. I strings me money on d' bakery. An' don't youse
-forget it!”
-
-Chucky was quite exhausted after this outburst. He revived, however,
-with the hot Scotch, which restored him mightily.
-
-“Onct,” resumed Chucky, “about ten years ago, this is, I was where a
-w'ite choker was takin' up a c'llection. An' what do youse figure he
-wants it for? I'm a black Republican if he didn't break it off on us
-that he was out to make up a wad so his congregation could cel'brate d'
-fortieth birt'-day of gold in Californy. Don't that knock youse silly?
-D' w'ite choker says as how he comes from Californy an' him an' his push
-is goin' to toin themselfs loose, see! an whoop it up because dey found
-gold forty spaces back. It made me tired, honest!
-
-“'Why!' I says to this pulpit t'umper, just like that, 'Why! don't youse
-preach that gold is d' roots of evil? An' now youse is framin' up a
-blow-out over findin' it! It looks like a dead gauzy bluff to me.'
-
-“What does d' w'ite choker mark do? Just gives me d' dead face an'
-ignores me.
-
-“Youse permits yourself to be amazed at me pickin' this guy up about
-gold bein' d' seeds of evil,” observed Chucky, with a touch of severity.
-This was in response to some syllable of admiration I'd let fall. “Youse
-needn't mind. I'll give youse a tip that in me yout' I was d' star
-peeple of d' Sunday school dey opens long ago at d' Five Points. That's
-straight goods, see! I was d' soonest kid at me lessons that ever comes
-down d' pike, an 'd' swiftest ever. I has all d' other kids on d' blink.
-I win a test'ment onct from d' outstretched mits of d' entire push, bar
-d' Bible class, for loinin' more verses be heart than anybody. I downs
-every kid in d' bunch. I made 'em look like a lot of suckers!” and
-Chucky paused in approving meditation over the victories of boyhood
-days.
-
-“Still d' choiches does dead lots o' good,” asserted Chucky, coming back
-to the subject. “There's d' case of Bridgy McGuire. She makes two or
-t'ree trips to d' Cat'lic joint over on Mott Street, an' all she loins,
-so it sticks in her frizzes, is: 'Honour dy father an' dy mother,' see!
-An' Bridgy says herself it's that what brings her back after she's
-been run away from home for six years. Bridgy shows up just in time to
-straighten out d' game for d' McGuires at that. D' fam'ly was on d' hog
-for fair when Bridgy gets there.
-
-“Nixie, d' yarn ain't so long, nor yet so scarce; for that matter,
-there's lots more like 'em. In d' foist place, this mark, McGuire,
-Bridgy's dad, ain't so bad. Mac's a bricklayer; but d' loose screw wit'
-him was that he ain't woikin' in d' winter; an' as durin' d' summer he
-gen'rally lushes more whiskey than he lays bricks, an' is more apt to
-hit d' bottle than a job, d' McGuire household's more or less on d' bum,
-see!
-
-“I remembers Bridgy when she's so little a yard makes a frock for her.
-She was a long, slim, bony kid, wit' legs on her like she's built to
-pick hops; an' if Bridgy shows anyt'ing in her breed when young, it's a
-strong streak of step-ladder.
-
-“In her kid days I wasn't noticin' Bridgy much; d' fact was, then as
-now, I'm havin' troubles, of me own. Her mommer, who was pretty near an
-even break wit' Mac himself when it comes to hittin' up d' booze, every
-now an' then t'run back to d' religious days of her own yout', an' it's
-durin' one of these Bible fits of d' old woman that she saws Bridgy off
-on d' choich, where I speaks of her gettin 'd' hunch from d' priest,
-or somebody, that it's d' fly caper if youse is out to finish wit' d'
-heavenly squeeze, to honour your father an' mother.
-
-“As I relates, I ain't dead clear about Bridgy when she's young an'
-little, except it does come chasin' back to me that she's dead gone on
-dancin' an' knock-about woik. Onct when me an' d' McGuires is livin' on
-d' same floor, I hears a racket in d' hall like some sucker is tryin' to
-come downstairs wit' a tool chest. Naturally, I shoves me nut outside me
-door to tell him to go chase himself. But it's only Bridgy--mebby she's
-twelve at d' time--practyesing. I keeps me lamps onto her awhile, an'
-she never tumbles I'm there; for I don't say nothin', but lays dead.
-Bridgy is doin' han'-stan's, cartwheels, backbends, fallin' splits an'
-all sorts of funny stunts.
-
-“'Is this an accident, or does you mean it?' I asts at last, as Bridgy
-winds up a cartwheel wit' a split that looks like it's goin' to leave
-her on bot' sides of d' passage way.
-
-“'I'm doin' a spread,' says Bridgy, 'same as d' Boneless Wonder at
-Miner's, see!' An' here she lays her little cocoa down on her knee to
-show she's comfortable, an' dead easy in her mind.
-
-“Wit'out keepin' exact tabs on Bridgy, I'm able to state that as soon as
-she's big enough she goes to woik; an' at one time an' another she sells
-poipers, does a toin in a vest factory, or some other sweat shop; an' at
-last, when she's about seventeen, she's model in a cloak joint. She gets
-along all right, all right for a space or so, when one day d' old grey
-guy who owns d' woiks takes it into his nut he'll float into Bridgy's
-'fections.
-
-“'Love youse!' says Bridgy, to this aged stiff; 'old gent, you're dopey!
-If youse give way to a few more dreams like that, your folks 'll put you
-in d' booby house. Yous'll be in Bloomin'dale cuttin' poiper dolls d'
-foist news you know.'
-
-“At this d' wicked old geezer makes a strong talk--makes d' speech of
-his life. But Bridgy won't stand for him, nor his game.
-
-“'Come off your perch!' she says at last. 'Either you corks up or I
-quits. You don't make no hit wit' me at all.'
-
-“But d' old mucker don't let up none, an' keeps on givin' Bridgy a song
-an' dance about his love for her; so at last she makes her bluff good
-an' walks out of d' joint an' goes home.
-
-“McGuire was hot in d' collar at Bridgy t'runnin' down her job; but d'
-old woman, she says Bridgy does dead right; an' for a finish Mac an
-'d' old woman goes on a drunk an' has a fight over it; after which d'
-subject's dropped, see! an' that's d' end of it. I only sees Bridgy onct
-after that, before she screws her cocoa. That's at d' Tugman's Ball;
-where she's d' Queen spieler of d' bunch, an' shows on d' floor as light
-an' graceful as so much cigar smoke. It's right on d' heels of this that
-Bridgy fades from d' Bend for fair, an' no one has d' least line on her
-or knows where she's at.
-
-“It runs on for t'ree or four spaces, an 'd' McGuires keeps gettin'
-drunker an' harder up. More'n onct d' neighbors has to bring in d' grub,
-or dey wouldn't have done a t'ing but starve. Dey's jumpin' sideways for
-food to chew, I'll tell youse that right now, as much as half d' time.
-Durin' all this no one hears a woid about Bridgy.
-
-“Of course, no one's makin' much of a roar. There's a good deal doin'
-about d' Bend, see! An' d' comin' or d' goin' of a skirt more or less
-don't cut much ice.
-
-“It's in d' winter, an 'd' McGuires has been carryin' on bad. No
-woik, no money, no grub! On d' dead! it's a forty-to-one shot dey bot'
-finishes at d' morgue, or d' Island before d' spring comes 'round. For
-d' winter is bad in d' Bend, an' while everybody is on, that d' McGuires
-is strikin' it hard, d' most of us is havin' all we can do runnin' down
-t'ree feeds a day, so d' McGuires ain't what*d' poipers calls 'much in
-d' public eye,' after all. One evenin', however, Mac comes sprintin' to
-me, an' he's fair sober for him.
-
-“'Nit!' he says, when I asts him, 'nit; none of d' ellegunt for me!'
-
-“Then I tumbles there's a cochin on. McGuire's t'runnin' off on a drink
-was a new one on d' Bend.
-
-“'Come wit' me,' he says, 'to Roster & Bial's.'
-
-“'Come wit' youse to Koster's!' I retort. 'That's a dandy idee; youse
-ought to sew buttons on it! Come to Koster & Bial's! Who's got d'
-price?'
-
-“'Here's d' pasteboards,' says Mac.
-
-“An' I'm a liar' if he ain't got 'em. So we goes, see!
-
-“D' fift' toin on d' programme is a 'Mamselle Fleury from Paris.' She's
-down on d' bills as a singer, dancer an' high kicker. I'm leanin' back
-in me seat feelin' sore on meself for not makin' Mac hock d' tickets for
-beer, when all at onct Mac gives me a jolt in d' slats wit' his elbow,
-an' pointin' one of his main hooks at this French tart, where she's
-singin' on d' stoige--an' say! she's a boid an' a Kokobola--an' says:
-
-“'Be youse on?'
-
-“I focuses me peeps on this Fleury, all pink tights an' silks an'
-feathers, where she's doin' her toin. I'm a lobster if she ain't Bridgy
-McGuire!
-
-“'What th' 'ell! what th' bloomin' 'ell!' is all I can say; an' on d'
-square! Mac has to drag me out an' lay an oyster on me before I'm meself
-ag'in. It comes mighty near stoppin' me in d' foist round.
-
-“You sees d' finish. Bridgy's took to d' stoige. She's been over in
-London an' Paris; an' say! she's got d' game down fine as silk. She'd
-come back an' was beatin 'd' box for t'ree hundred plunks a week.
-
-“Sure! Bridgy had been up to find her folks. Foist she said she t'ought
-she'd pass 'em up. Dey had given her d' woist of it when she's a kid;
-why should she bother! But she tells us herself, talkin' it over, how
-when she struck d' old town ag'in, an' old sights begins to toin up old
-mem'ries, it starts to run in her wig about d' Bend an 'd' old days. An'
-what stan's out clearest is d' little old Cat'lic choich, an 'd' guff
-dey gives her d' onct or twict she shows up there, about honourin' her
-father an' mother. I s'pose what youse would call Bridgy's conscience
-gets a run for its money. Anyhow, somet'ing inside of her took to
-chewin' d' rag, an' showin' Bridgy's she's wrong, an' at d' last, she
-can't stand for it no longer, an' so she sends a tracer out for her
-mother an' dad, an' lands 'em.
-
-“D' McGuires live in Harlem now. Dey drinks better whiskey then dey did
-in d' Bend, an' less of it. Bridgy is a wonder an' a winner; in it wit'
-bot' feet an' has dough to back every needful racket. Yes, d' choich
-does it, give it d' credit; an' youse can gamble your last chip d'
-McGuires crosses themselfs every time dey sees one. An' dey's dead
-flossy so to do.”
-
-
-
-
-TOO CHEAP
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-The scene was Washington.
-
-“Get the galoot to urge the Bill, gal; and I'll make over half them
-phosphate beds to you. The Senate has already passed it.”
-
-“I'll do my best, Uncle Silver Tip,” said Agnes Huntington. “Slippery
-Elm Benton loves me, and he cannot refuse his affianced wife his vote.”
-
-“They'd hang him in Colorado if he did,” observed Uncle Silver Tip; “but
-see to it at once, gal; the fourth of March draws on apace. All must
-then be over, or all is lost.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-Agnes Huntington pressed her expectant nose against the pane. Outside
-the snowstorm was profound. The flakes crowded the air as they fell. The
-drifts were four feet deep on Connecticut avenue. A man wrapped in furs
-pushed his way toward the Chateau d' Huntington. It was Arctic cold, but
-love beckoned him. He stamped the snow from his feet in the entry. The
-next moment Agnes Huntington had curled about his neck in a festoon of
-affection.
-
-It was Representative Slippery Elm Benton.
-
-Agnes Huntington was a beautiful creature--tall, slender, spirituelle,
-with eyes as dark and deep as the heavens at-night. Agnes Huntington had
-but one fault: she would sell the honour of the man she loved.
-
-Agnes Huntington was out for the stuff bigger than a wolf.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-Sometimes I doubt the longevity of our bliss,” he said. “Despair rides
-on the crupper of my hopes at times. The Witch of Waco told how in a
-trance she saw my future spread before me like a faro layout. 'And,'
-said the Witch of Waco, I saw the pale hand of Fate put a copper on
-the queen. You may be lynched, but you will never wed.' Such was her
-bleak bode.”
-
-And Slippery Elm Benton trembled like a child.
-
-“Heed her not, dearest,” murmured Agnes Huntington. “Surrender yourself,
-as I do, to the solemn currents of our love. And, darling, promise me
-again, you will do what is needful for the Phosphate Bill. It would
-brighten the last days of dear old Uncle Silver Tip.”
-
-“Where is your aged relative?” asked Slippery Elm Benton, moodily.
-
-“We'd better not call him, dearest,” she said. “Uncle is lushing
-to-night, and he is unpleasant when he has been tanking up. What you do
-for the Phosphate Bill, you do for me.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-It was “suspension day,” and the Phosphate Bill went through the House
-like the grace of Heaven through a camp-meeting.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-Half of that phosphate bed is yours, gal,” said Uncle Silver Tip, when
-Agnes Huntington told him the Bill was already at the White House for
-the President's signature. “It's wuth a million; an' you've 'arned it,
-gal! It was to turn sech tricks as this your old uncle sent you from
-the wild and woolly West to an Eastern seminary, and had them knock your
-horns off. It cost a bunch of cattle, but it's paid.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-There's something I must tell you, love,” said Agnes Huntington; “you
-would know all in time, and it is better that you learn it now from the
-lips of your Agnes.”
-
-“What is it, beautiful one?” said Slippery Elm Benton, languidly.
-
-The Congressional day, with its labours, had wearied our hero, and,
-although with the woman he loved, he still felt fatigued.
-
-“Read this,” said Agnes, as she pushed a paper into her lover's hand,
-and shrank back as if frightened.
-
-The paper made over one-half of the phosphate bed to Agnes Huntington.
-
-“And it was for this you sold my vote in the House!” and Slippery Elm
-Benton laughed mockingly.
-
-“Oh, say not so, love!” said Agnes Huntington, piteously. “Rather would
-I hear you curse than laugh like that!”
-
-“And so the vote and influence of Slippery Elm Benton are basely
-bargained by the woman he loved for a one-half interest in a phosphate
-bed!”
-
-Slippery Elm Benton strode up and down the apartment, tossing his arms
-like a Dutch windmill.
-
-Agnes Huntington cowered before the wrath of her lover.
-
-“What would you have?” she cried.
-
-“What would I have!” repeated Slippery Elm Benton, with a sneer, which
-all but withered the weeping girl; “what would I have! I would have
-all--all! My vote and influence were worth the entire phosphate bed, and
-you basely accepted a paltry moiety! Go from my side, false woman; you
-who would put so low an estimate upon me! The Witch of Waco was right. I
-leave you. I leave you as one unfit to be the wife of a Congressman!”
-
-And Slippery Elm Benton, while Agnes Huntington swooned on the rug,
-rushed into the night and the snow.
-
-
-
-
-HENRY SPENY'S BENEVOLENCE
-
-
-SUMMER was here and the day was warm. Henry Speny had been walking,
-and now stood at-the corner of Tenth Avenue and Twenty-eighth street,
-mopping his brow. Henry Speny was a Conservative; and, although Mrs.
-Speny had that morning gone almost to the frontiers of a fist fight to
-make him change his underwear for the lighter and more gauzy apparel
-proper to jocund August, Henry Speny refused. He was now paying the
-piper, and thinking how much more Mrs. Speny knew than he did, when the
-Tramp came up.
-
-“Podner!” said the Tramp in a low, guttural whine, intended to escape
-the ear of the police and touch Henry Speny's heart at one and the same
-time; “podner! couldn't you assist a pore man a little?”
-
-“Assist a poor man to what?” asked Henry Speny, returning his
-handkerchief to his pocket and looking scornfully at the Tramp.
-
-He was a fat, healthy Tramp, in good condition. Henry Speny hardened his
-heart.
-
-“Dime!” replied the Tramp; “dime to get somethin' to eat.”
-
-“No,” said Henry Speny shortly; “I'm a half dozen meals behind the game
-myself.”
-
-This last was only Henry Speny's humour. Mrs. Speny fed him twice a day.
-But Henry Speny knew that the Tramp wanted the dime for whiskey.
-
-“Well! if you don't think I want it to chew on,” said the Tramp, “jest'
-take me to a bakery and buy me a loaf of bread. I'll get away with it
-right before you.”
-
-“Say!” remarked Henry Speny, in a spirit of sarcastic irritation,
-“what's the use of your talking to me? There's the Charity Woodyard in
-this town, where, if you were really hungry, you would go and saw
-wood for something to eat. You can get two meals and a bed for sawing
-one-sixteenth of a cord of wood.”
-
-“You can't saw wood with no such fin as this, podner!” said the Tramp;
-and pulling up his coat sleeve he displayed to Henry Speny an arm
-as withered as a dead tree. “The other's all right,” he continued,
-restoring his coat sleeve; “but wot's one arm in a catch-as-catch-can
-racket with a bucksaw?”
-
-Henry Speny was conscience-stricken, but he would defeat the Tramp in
-his efforts to buy whiskey.
-
-“I'll go down to the woodyard and saw your wood myself,” said Henry
-Speny.
-
-He told Mrs. Speny afterward that he could not account for the making of
-this offer, unless it was his anxiety to keep the Tramp sober. All
-the Tramp wanted was ten cents, and for Henry Speny to propose to saw
-one-sixteenth of a cord of hard wood on a hot day, when a dime would
-have made all things even, was a conundrum too deep for Henry Speny, as
-he looked back over the transaction. But he did make the proposal; and
-the Tramp accepted with a grin of gratitude.
-
-There were twenty sticks in that one-sixteenth of a cord--hard, knotty
-sticks, too. And each one had to be sawed three times; sixty cuts in
-all. It was a poor bucksaw. Before he had finished the third stick,
-Henry Speny declared that it was the most beastly bucksaw he ever
-handled in his life. The buck itself was a wretched buck, and wouldn't
-stand still while Henry Speny sawed. It had a habit of tipping over;
-and when Henry Speny put his knee on the stick to steady the refractory
-buck, the knots tore his trousers and made his legs black and blue. Then
-the perspiration got in his eyes and made them smart. When he wiped it
-away he saw two of his friends looking at him in a shocked, sober way
-from across the street. They passed on, and told everybody that Henry
-Speny was down at the Charity Woodyard sawing wood for his food. They
-said, too, that they had reason to believe he did this every day; that
-business had gone to pieces with him, and an assignment couldn't be
-staved off much longer.
-
-Henry Speny would have thrown up the job with the second stick, but
-the Tramp was already half through his meal; Henry Speny could see him
-bolting his food like a glutton through the window, from where he stood.
-
-It took Henry Speny two hours to saw those twenty sticks sixty times.
-His hands were a fretwork of blisters; his back and shoulders ached
-like a galley-slave's. Henry Speny hired a carriage to take him home; he
-couldn't stand the slam and jolt of a street car. He was laid up three
-days with the blisters on his hands, while Mrs. Speny rubbed his back
-and shoulders with Pond's Extract.
-
-On the fourth day, as Henry Speny was limping painfully toward his
-office, he heard a voice he knew.
-
-“Podner! can't you assist a pore m--Oh! beg pardon; you looked so
-different I didn't know you!” It was the fat Tramp with the withered
-arm. Without a word Henry Speny gave him ten cents and hobbled on.
-
-
-
-
-JANE DOUGHERTY
-
-(Annals of the Bend)
-
-
-What's d' flossiest good t'ing I'm ever guilty of?” said Chucky. There
-was a pause. Chucky let his eye--somewhat softened for him--rove a bit
-abstractedly about the sordid bar. At last it came back to repose on the
-beer mug before him, as the most satisfying sight at easy hand.
-
-“Now,” retorted Chucky, as he wet his lip, “that question is a corker.
-'What's d' star good deed you does?' is d' way you slings it.
-
-“Will I name it? In a secont--in a hully secont! It's d' story of a
-little goil I steals, an' sticks in for ever since. This kid's two years
-comin' t'ree, when I pinched it, so to speak; an' youse can bet your
-boots! she was reg'larly up ag'inst it. A fly old sport like Chucky
-would never have mingled wit' her destinies otherwise; not on your life!
-Between youse, an' me, an' d' bar-keep over there, I ain't got no more
-natural use for kids than I have for a wet dog. But never mind! we'll
-pass up that kink in me make-up an' get down to this abduction I prides
-meself on.
-
-“It's nine spaces ago, an 'd' kid in dispoote is now goin' on twelve.
-I've been, as I states, stickin' in for her ever since, an' intends to
-play me string to a finish. But to go on wit' me romance.
-
-“As I relates, d' play I boasts of is nine spaces in d' rear, see! In
-that day I has a dandy graft. I've got me hooks on as big a bundle as a
-hundred plunks, many an' many is d' week. I'd be woikin' it now only I
-lushes too free.
-
-“Here's how in that day I sep'rated suckers from their stuff. It was
-simply fakin', of d' smoot' an' woidy sort, see! I'd make up like a
-Zulu, wit' burnt cork, an' feathers, an' queer duds; an' then I'd climb
-into an open carriage, drive to a good corner, do a bit of chin music,
-pull a crowd an' sell 'em brass jewellery.
-
-“Me patter would run something like this: D' waggon would stop an' I'd
-stand up. Raisin' me lamps to d' heavens above, I'd cut loose d' remark
-at d' top of me valves:
-
-“'It looks like rain! It don't look like a t'ing but rain!'
-
-“Wit' me foist yell d' pop'lace would flock 'round, an' in two minutes
-there would be a hundred people there. In ten, there'd be a t'ousand,
-if d' cops didn't get in their woik. I'll give youse a tip d' great
-American public is d' star gezebos to come to a dead halt, an' look an'
-listen to t'ings. More'n onct I've seen some stiff who's sprintin' for
-a doctor, make a runnin' switch at d' sound of me voice an' side-track
-himself for t'irty minutes to hear me. Dey's a dead curious lot, d'
-public is; buy a French pool on that!
-
-“W'en d' crowd is jammed all about me carriage w'eels, I'd cut loose
-some more. I'd quit d' rain question cold, an' holdin' up an armful of
-jimcrow jewellery, I'd t'row meself like this:
-
-“'Loidies an' gents,' I'd say, 'I'm d' only orig'nal Coal Oil Johnny.
-An' I'm a soon mug at that, see! I don't get d' woist of it; not on your
-neckties. I gives away two hundred an' I takes in four hundred toadskins
-(dollars) an' I don't let no mob of hayseeds do me, so youse farmers
-needn't try.
-
-“'Look at me! Cast your lamps over me! I'm one of Cetewayo's Zulu
-body-guard, an' I'm here from Africa on a furlough to saw off on suckers
-a lot of bum jewellery, an' down youse for your dough, see! I'm goin'
-to offer for sale four t'ings: I'm goin' to sell youse foist ten rings,
-then ten brooches, then ten chains, and then ten watches. An' when I
-gets down to d' watches, watch me dost; because, when I gets nex' to d'
-tickers I've reached d' point where I'm goin' to t'run youse down. I'm
-here to skin youse out of your money, an' leave youse lookin' like d'
-last run of shad.
-
-“'But there's this pecoolarity about me sellin 'd' rings. Each ring is a
-dollar apiece, an' when I've shoved ten of 'em onto youse, every galoot
-who's paid me a dollar for one, gets his dollar back an' a dollar wit'
-it for luck.
-
-“'Now here's d' rings, good folks an' all!'--here I*d flash d' rings;
-gilt, an' wort' t'ree dollars a ton!--'here's d' little crinklets! Who's
-goin' to take one at a dollar, an' at d' finish, when d' ten is sold,
-get two dollars back? Who'll be d' foist? Now don't rush me! don't crush
-me! but come one at a time. D' rings ain't wort' a dollar a ton: I only
-makes d' play for fun, an' because d' doctors who looks after me healt'
-says I'll croak if I don't travel. Who'll be d' early boid to nip a
-ring?
-
-“'There you be!' I goes on, as some rustic gets to d' front an' hands up
-d' bill. 'Sold ag'in an' got d' tin, another farmer just sucked in!'
-
-“So I goes, on,” continued Chucky, after reviving his voice--which his
-exertions had made a trifle raucous--with a swig at the tankard; “so
-I'd go on until d' ten rings would be sold. Then I'd go over d' outfit
-ag'in, take back d' rings, an' give 'em each a two-dollar willyum.”
-
-Now push back into d' mob, you lucky guys,' I'd say, 'an' give your
-maddened competitors to d' rear of youse a chanct to woik d' racket. I'm
-goin' to sell ten brooches now for two dollars each, an' give back
-four dollars wit' every brooch. Then I'm goin' to dazzle youse wit' ten
-chains, at five cases per chain. An' then I'll get down to d' watches,
-at which crisis, me guileless come-ons, youse must be sure to watch me,
-for it's then I'll make a monkey of youse.'
-
-“An' so I chins on, offerin' d' brooches at two dollars a t'row, an' at
-d' wind-up, when d' ten is gone, I gives back to each mucker who's got
-in, d' sum of four plunks, see!
-
-“Be that time it's a knock-down an' drag-out around me cabrioley, to see
-who's goin' to transact business wit' me, an', wit'out as much cacklin'
-as a hen makes over an egg, I goes to d' chains an' floats ten of 'em at
-five a chain. As I sells d' last, I toins sharp on some duck who's dost
-be me w'eel an' says:
-
-“'What's that? I'm a crook, am I! an' this ain't on d' level! Loidies
-an' gents, just for d' disparagin' remark of this hobo, who is no doubt
-funny in his topknot from drink, I'll go on an' sell ten more chains.
-After which I'll come down to d' watches, which is d' great commercial
-point where youse had better watch me, for it's there I'm goin' to lose
-you in a lope! An' that's for fair, see!'
-
-“Ten more chains, at five a trip, goes off like circus lem'nade, an' I
-stows d' long an' beauteous green away in me keck. As d' last one of d'
-secont ten fades into d' hooks of d' last sucker, I stows d' five he's
-coughed up for it in me raiment, an' says:
-
-“'An' now, loidies an' gents, we gets down to d' watches!'
-
-“Wit' which bluff I lugs me ticker out an' takes a squint at it.
-
-“'What th' 'ell!' I shouts. 'Here it's half-past t'ree, an' I was to be
-married at t'ree-fifteen! Hully gee! Excuse me, people, but I must fly
-to d' side of me beloved, or I'll get d' dead face; also d' frozen mit.
-I'll see youse dubs next year, if woikin' overtime wit' youse to-day
-ain't ruined me career.'
-
-“As I'm singin' out d' last, I'm givin' me driver d' office to beat his
-dogs an' chase, see! An', bein' as he's on, an' is paid extra as his
-part of d' graft, he soaks d' horses wit' d' whip an' in twenty seconts
-d' crowd is left behint, an' is busy givin' each other d' laugh. No,
-there never was no row; no mug was ever mobbed for guyin'. Nit! I always
-comes away all right, an' youse can figure it, I'm sixty good bones in
-on d' racket.
-
-“Naturally, youse would like to hear where d' kid breaks into d' play
-an' how I wins it. I'd ought to have told youse sooner, but, on d'
-level! when me old patter begins to flow off me tongue, I can't shut
-down until I've spieled it all.
-
-“But about d' kid. One afternoon I'm goin' on--it's in Joisey City--wit'
-me Zulu war-paint an' me open carriage, givin 'd' usual mob d' usual
-jolly. T'ings is runnin' off d' reel like a fish new hooked, an' I'm
-down to me fift' chain. Just then I hears a woman say:
-
-“'Fly's d' woid, Sallie! Here's your old man, an' he's got his load! He
-won't do a t'ing to youse! Screw out, Sal! screw out!”
-
-“But Sallie, who's a tattered lookin' soubrette, wit' a kid in her arms,
-an' who's been standin' dost be one of me hind w'eels, don't get no
-chanct to skin out, see! There's a drunken hobo--as big an' as strong as
-a horse--who's right up to her when d' foist skirt puts her on. As she
-toins, he cops her one in d' neck wit'-out a woid. Down she goes like
-ninepins! As she lands, d' back of her cocoa don't do a t'ing but t'ump
-a stone horse-block wit' a whack! As d' blood flies, I'm lookin' down
-at her. I sees her map fade to a grey w'ite under d' dirt; she bats her
-lamps onct or twict; an' d' nex' moment I'm on wit'out tellin' that her
-light is out for good.
-
-“As Sallie does d' fall, d' kid which she's holdin' rolls in d' gutter
-under d' carriage.
-
-“'T'run d' kid in here!' I says to d' mark who picks it up.
-
-“Me only idee at d' time is to keep d' youngone from gettin 'd' boots
-from d mob that's surgin' round, an' tryin' to mix it up wit' d' drunken
-bum who's soaked Sal. D' guy who gets d' kid fires it up to me like it's
-a football. I'm handy wit' me hooks, so I cops it off in midair, an'
-stows it away on d' seat.
-
-“Be that time d' p'lice has collared d' fightin' bum all right, an' some
-folks is draggin' Sal, who's limp an' dead enough, into a drug shop.
-
-“It's all up wit' me graft for that day, so after lookin' at d' youngone
-a secont, I goes curvin' off to d' hotel where I hangs out. While I'm
-takin' me Zulu make-up off, d' chambermaid stands good for d' kid.
-When I sees it ag'in, it's all washed up an' got some decent duds on.
-Say! on d' dead! it was a wonder!
-
-“Well, to cut it short,” said Chucky, giving the order for another
-mug of ale, “I loins that night that d' mother is dead, an' d' drunken
-hobo's in d' holdover. As it s a cinch he'll do time for life, even if
-he misses bein' stretched, I looks d' game all over, an' for a wind-up
-I freezes to d' kid. Naw; I couldn't tell why, at that, see! only d'
-youngone acts like it's stuck on me.
-
-“Nixie; I never keeps it wit' me. I've got it up to d' Sisters' school.
-Say! them nuns is gone on it. I makes a front to 'em as d' kid's uncle;
-an' while I've been shy meself on grub more'n onct since I asted d'
-Sisters to keep it, I makes good d' money for d' kid right along, an'
-I always will. What name does I give it? Jane--Jane Dougherty; it's me
-mudder's name. Nit; I don t know what I'll do wit' Jane for a finish. I
-was talkin' to me Rag only d' other day about it, an' she told me, in
-a week or so, she'd go an' take a fall out of a fortune-teller, who, me
-Rag says, is d' swiftest of d' whole fortune-tellin' push. Mebby we'll
-get a steer from her.”
-
-
-
-
-MISTRESS KILLIFER
-
-(Wolfville)
-
-
-This is of a day prior to Dave Tutt's taking a wife, and a year
-before the nuptials of Benson Annie, as planned and executed by Old Man
-Enright, with one, French.
-
-Wolfville is dissatisfied; what one might call peevish. A man has been
-picked up shot to death, no one can tell by whom; no one has hung for
-it. Any one familiar with the Western spirit and the Western way would
-note the discontent by merely walking through the single, sun-burned
-street. When two citizens of the place make casual meeting in store or
-causeway, they confine their salutations to gruff “how'd!” and pass on.
-Men are even seen to drink alone in a sullen, morbid way.
-
-Clearly something is wrong with Wolfville. The popular discontent is
-so sufficiently pronounced as to merit the notice of leading citizens.
-Therefore it is no marvel that when Old Man Enright, who, by right of
-years--and with a brain as clear and as bright as a day in June--is the
-head man of the hamlet, meets Doc Peets at the bar of the Red Light, the
-discussion falls on affairs of public concern.
-
-“Whatever do you reckon is the matter with this camp, Enright?” asks
-Doc Peets, as they tip their liquor into their throats without missing a
-drop.
-
-Doc Peets is the medical practitioner of Wolfville, but his grammar,
-like that of many another man, has lost ground before his environment.
-
-“Can't tell!” replied Enright, with a mien dubious yet thoughtful.
-“Looks like the whole outfit is somehow on a dead kyard. Mebby it's that
-Denver party gettin' downed last week an' no one lynched. Some folks
-says the Stranglers oughter have swung that Greaser.”
-
-“Well!” retorts Doc Peets, “you as chief of the Stranglers, an' I as
-a member in full standin', knows thar's no more evidence ag'in that
-Mexican than ag'in my _pinto_ hoss.”
-
-“Of course, I knows that too!” replies Enright, “but still I sorter
-thinks general sentiment lotted on a hangin'. You know, Doc, it ain't so
-important from a public stand that you stretches the right gent, as that
-you stretches somebody when it's looked for. Nacherally it would have
-been mighty mortifyin' to the Mexican who's swung off at the loop-end of
-the lariat for a killin' he ain't in on; but still I holds the belief it
-would have calmed the sperit of the camp. However, I may be 'way off
-to one side on that; it's jest my view. Set up the nosepaint ag'in,
-barkeep!”
-
-While Doc Peets is slowly freighting his glass with a fair allowance, he
-is deep in meditation.
-
-“I've an idee, Enright,” says Doc Peets at last. “The thing for us to
-do is to give the public some new direction of thought that'll hold
-'em quiet. The games is all dead at this hour, an' the boys ain't doin'
-nothin'; s'pose we makes a round-up to consider my scheme. The mere
-exercise will soothe 'em.”
-
-“Shall we have Jack Moore post a notice?” asks
-
-Enright. “He's Kettle Tender to the Stranglers, an' I reckons what he
-does that a-way makes it legal.”
-
-“No,” says Peets, “let's rustle 'em in an' hold the meetin' right now
-an' yere in the Red Light. Some of the boys is feelin' that petulant
-they're likely to get to chewin' each other's manes any minute. I'm
-tellin' you, Enright, onless somethin' is done mighty _poce tiempo_ to
-cheer 'em, an' convince 'em that Wolfville is lookin' up an' gettin'
-ahead on the correct trail, this outfit's liable to have a killin'
-any time at all. The recent decease of that Denver person won't be a
-marker!”
-
-“All right!” says Enright, “if thar ain't no time for Moore an' a
-notice, a good, handy, quick way to focus public interest would be to
-step to the back door, an' shake the loads outen my six-shooter. That'll
-excite cur'osity, an' over they'll come all spraddled out.”
-
-Thus it comes to pass that the afternoon peace of Wolfville is suddenly
-disparaged and broken down by six pistol shots. They follow each other
-like the rapid striking of a Yankee clock.
-
-“Any one creased?” asks Jack Moore, by general consent a fashion of
-marshal and executive officer for the place, and who, followed by the
-population of Wolfville, rushes up the moment following the shooting.
-
-“None whatever!” replies Doc Peets, cheerfully. “The shootin' you-alls
-hears is purely bloodless; an' Enright an' me indulges tharin onder what
-they calls the 'public welfare clause of the constitootion.' The intent
-which urges us to shake up the sereenity of the hour is to convene the
-camp, which said rite bein' now accomplished, the barkeep asks your
-beverages, an' the business proceeds in reg'lar order.”
-
-Enright, who has finished replenishing the pistol from which he evicted
-the loads, draws a chair to a monte table and drums gently with his
-fingers.
-
-“The meetin' will please bed itse'f down!” says Enright, with a sage
-dignity which has generous reflection in the faces around him. “Doc
-Peets, gents, who is a sport whom we all knows an' respects, will now
-state the object of this round-up. The barkeep meanwhile will please
-continue his rounds, the same not bein' deemed disturbin'; none
-whatever.”
-
-“Gents, an' fellow townsmen!” says Doc Peets, rising at the call of
-Enright and stepping forward, “I avoids all harassin' mention of a
-yeretofore sort. Comin' down to the turn at once, I ventures the remark
-that thar's somethin' wrong with Wolfville. I would see no virtue in
-pursooin' this subject, which might well excite the resentment of all
-true citizens of the town, was it not that I feels a crowdin' necessity
-for a change of a radical sort. Somethin' must be proposed, an'
-somethin' must be did. I am well aware thar's gents yere to-day as holds
-a conviction that a bet is overlooked in not stringin' the Mexican last
-week on account of the party from Denver. That may or may not be true;
-but in any event, that hand's been played, an' that pot's been lost
-an' won. Whether on that occasion we diskyards an' draws for the best
-interests of the public, may well pass by onasked. At any rate we
-don't fill, an' the Greaser wins out with his neck. Lettin' the past,
-tharfore, drift for a moment, I would like to hear from any gent present
-somethin' in the line of a proposal for future action; one calc'lated
-to do Wolfville proud. As affairs stand our pride is goin' our brotherly
-love is goin', our public sperit is goin', an' the way we're p'intin'
-out, onless we comes squar' about on the trail, we won't be no
-improvement on an outfit of Digger Injuns in a month. Gents, I pauses at
-this p'int for su'gestions.”
-
-As Doc Peets sits down a whispered buzz runs through the room. It is
-plain that what he has said finds sympathy in his audience.
-
-“You've heard Peets,” observes Enright, beating softly. “Any party with
-views should not withhold 'em. I takes it we-all is anxious for the good
-of Wolfville. We should proceed with wisdom. Red Dog, our tinhorn rival,
-is a-watchin' of this camp, ready to detect an' take advantages of
-any weakenin' of sperit on the Wolfville part. So far Red Dog has been
-out-lucked, out-played, an' out-held. Wolfville has downed her on the
-deal, an' on the draw. But, to continue in the future as in the past,
-requires to-day that we acts promptly, an' in yoonison, an' give the
-sitooation, mentally speakin', the best turn in the box.”
-
-“What for a play would it be?” asks Dan Boggs, doubtfully, as he rises
-and bows stiffly to Enright, who bows stiffly in return; “whatever for a
-play would it be to rope up one of these yere lecture sharps, which the
-same I goes ag'inst the other night in Tucson? He could stampede over
-an' put us up a talk in the warehouse of the New York Store; an' I'm
-right yere to say a lecture would look mighty meetropolitan, that a-way,
-an' lay over Red Dog like four kings an' an ace.”
-
-“Whatever was this yere ghost dancer you adverts to lecturin' about?”
- asks Jack Moore.
-
-“I never do hear the first of it,” replies Boggs. “Me an' Old Monte,
-the stage driver, is projectin' about Tucson at the time we strikes this
-lecture game, an* it's about half dealt out when he gets in on it. But
-as far as we keeps tabs, he's talkin' about Roosia an' Siberia, an' how
-they were pesterin' an' playin' it low on the Jews. He has a lay-out
-of maps an' sech, an' packs the whole racket with him from deal box to
-check-rack. Folks as _sabes_ lectures allows he turns as strong a game,
-with as high a limit, as any sport that ever charged four bits for a
-back seat. The lecture sharp's all right; the question is do you-alls
-deem highly of the scheme? If it's the sense of this yere town, it don't
-take two days to cut this short-horn out of the Tucson herd an' drive
-him over yere.
-
-“Onder other, an' what one might call a more concrete condition of
-public feelin',” says Doc Peets, cutting rapidly and diplomatically into
-the talk, “the hint of our esteemed townsman would be accepted on the
-instant. But to my mind this yere camp ain't in no proper frame of
-mind for lectures on Roosia. It'll be full of trouble,--sech a talk. I
-_sabes_ Roosia as well as I does an ace. Thar's an old silver tip they
-calls the Czar, which is their language for a sort o' national chief of
-scouts, an' he's always trackin' 'round for trouble. Thar's bound to be
-no end of what you might call turmoil in a lecture on Roosia, and the
-sensibilities of Wolfville, already harrowed, ain't in no shape to bear
-it. Now, while friend Boggs has been talkin', my idees has followed off
-a different waggon track. What we-all needs, is not so much a lecture,
-which is for a day, but somethin' lastin', sech as the example of a
-refined an' elevated home life abidin' in our very midst. What Wolfville
-pines for is the mollifyin' inflooence of woman. Shorely we has Faro
-Nell! who is pleasantly present with us, a-settin' back thar alongside
-Cherokee Hall; an' that gent never makes a moccasin track in Wolfville
-who don't prize an' value Nell. Thar ain't a six-shooter in camp but
-what would bark itse'f hoarse in her behalf. But Nell's young; merely a
-yearlin' as it were. What we wants is the picture of a happy household
-where the feminine part tharof, in the triple capacity of woman, wife
-an' mother, while cherishin' an' carin' for her husband, sheds likewise
-a radiant inflooence for us.”
-
-“Whoopee! for Doc Peets!” shouts Faro Nell, flourishing her broad
-sombrero over her young curls.
-
-“Pausin' only to thank our fair young townswoman,” says Doc Peets,
-bowing gallantly to Faro Nell, who waves her hand in return, “for her
-endorsements, which the same is as flatterin' as it is priceless, I
-stampedes on to say that I learns from first sources, indeed from the
-gent himse'f, that one of the worthiest citizens of Wolfville, Mr.
-Killifer, who is on the map as blacksmith at the stage station, has a
-wife in the states. I would recommend that Mr. Killifer be requested to
-bring on this esteemable lady to keep camp for him. The O. K. Restaurant
-will lose a customer, the same bein' the joint where Kif gets his daily
-_con-carne_; but Rucker, the landlord, will not repine for that. What
-will be Rucker's loss will be general gain, an' for the welfare of
-Wolfville, Rucker makes a sacrifice. Mr. Chairman, my su'gestion takes
-the form of a motion.”
-
-“Which said motion,” responds Enright, with such vigorous application of
-his fist to the purpose of a gavel that nervous spirits might well fear
-for the results, “which said motion, onless I hears a protest, goes
-as it lays. Thar bein' no objection the chair declares it to be the
-commands of Wolfville that Syd Killifer bring on his wife. What heaven
-has j'ined together, let no gent----”
-
-“See yere, Mr. Chairman!” interposes Killifer, with a mixture of
-decision and diffidence, “I merely interferes to ask whether, as the
-he'pless victim of this on-looked for uprisin', do my feelin's count?
-Which if I ain't in this--if it's regarded as the correct caper to lay
-waste the future of a gent, who in his lowly way is doin' his best to
-make good his hand, why! I ain't got nothin' to say. I'm impugnin' no
-gent's motives, but I'm free to remark, these yere proceeding strikes me
-as the froote of reckless caprice.”
-
-“I will say to our fellow gent,” says Enright with much dignity, “that
-thar's no disp'sition to force a play to which he seems averse. If from
-any knowledge we s'posed we entertained of the possession of a sperit on
-his part, which might rise to the aid of a general need--I shorely hopes
-I makes my meanin' plain--we over-deals the kyards, all we can do is to
-throw our hands in the diskyard an' shuffle an' deal ag'in.”
-
-“Not at all, an' no offence given, took or meant!” hastily retorts
-Killifer, as he balances himself uneasily upon his feet, and surveys
-first, Enright and then Peets. “I has the highest regard for the chair,
-personal, an' takes frequent occasion to remark that I looks on Doc
-Peets as the best eddicated scientist I ever sees in my life. But
-this yere surge into my domestic arrangements needs to be considered.
-You-alls don't know the lady in question, which, bein' as it's my wife,
-I ain't assoomin' no airs when I says I does.”
-
-“Does she look like me, Kif?” asks Faro Nell from her perch near
-Cherokee Hall.
-
-“None whatever, Nell!” responds Killifer. “To be shore! I ain't basked
-none in her society for several years, an' my mem'ry is no doubt blurred
-by stampedes, an' prairie fires, an' cyclones, an' lynchin's, an' other
-features of a frontier career; but she puts me in mind, as I recalls the
-lady, of an Injun uprisin' more'n anythin' else. Still, she's as good a
-woman as ever founds a flap-jack. But she's haughty; that's what she is,
-she's haughty.
-
-“I might add,” goes on Killifer, in a deprecatory way, “that inasmuch
-as I ain't jest lookin' for the camp yere to turn to me in its hour
-of need, this proposal to transplant the person onder discussion to
-Wolfville, is an honour as onexpected as a rattlesnake in a roll of
-blankets. But you-alls knows me!”--And here Killifer braces himself
-desperately.--“What the camp says, goes! I'm a _vox populi_ sort
-of sport, an' the last citizen to lay down on a duty. Still!”--here
-Killifer's courage begins to ebb a little--“I advises we go about this
-yere enterprise mighty conserv'tive. My wife has her notions, an' now
-I thinks of it she ain't likely to esteem none high neither of our
-Wolfville ways. All I can say, gents, is that if she takes a notion
-ag'in us, she's as liable to break even as any lady I knows.”
-
-“Thar ain't a gent here but what honours Kif,” says the sanguine Peets,
-as he looks encouragingly at Killifer, who has resumed his seat and is
-gloomily shaking his head, “for bein' frank an' free in this.”
-
-“Which I don't want you-alls to spread your blankets on no ant-hill, an'
-then blame me!” interrupts Killifer dejectedly.
-
-“I believe, Mr. Chairman,” continues Doc Peets, “we fully onderstands
-the feelin's of our townsman in this matter. But I'm convinced of the
-correctness of my first view. Thar can shorely be nothin' in the daily
-life of Wolfville at which the lady could aim a criticism, an' we needs
-the beneficent example of a home. I would tharfore insist on my plan
-with perhaps a modification.”
-
-“I rises to ask the Preesidin' Officer a question!” interrupts Dave
-Tutt.
-
-“Let her roll!” retorts Enright.
-
-“How would it be to invite Kif's wife to come yere on a visit?” queries
-Tutt. “Sorter take her on probation! That's the way an oncle of mine
-back in Missouri j'ines the Meth'dist Church. An' it's lucky the
-congregation takes them precautions; which they saves the trouble of
-cuttin' the old felon out of the herd later, when he falls from grace.
-Which last he shorely does!”
-
-“Not waitin' for the chair to answer,” replies Doc Peets, “I holds
-the limitation of Tutt to be good. I tharfore pinches down my original
-resolootion to the effect that Kif bring his wife yere for a month. Let
-her stack up ag'inst our daily game, an' triumph through a deal or so,
-an' she'll never quit Wolfville nor Wolfville her. I shorely holds the
-present occasion the openin' of a new era.”
-
-It is a month later, perhaps, when everybody assembles at the
-post-office to receive the lady on whom the local public has built so
-many hopes. Killifer has gone over to Tucson to act as her escort into
-Wolfville, and, as he said, “to sorter break the effect.”
-
-She is an iron-visaged heroine. As Killifer hands her from the stage--a
-ceremony upon which he bestows that delicate care wherewith he would
-have aided the unloading of so much dynamite--Doc Peets steps gallantly
-forward, raising his hat. Doc Peets is the proprietor of the only stiff
-hat in town, and presumes on it.
-
-[Illustration: 0253]
-
-“Who is that insultin' drunkard, Mr. Killifer?” demands the lady, as she
-bends her eyes on the suave Peets, with such point-blank wrath that it
-silences the salutation on Peets' lips; “no friend of your'n I hope?”
-
-“Which I says it in confidence,” remarks Old Monte, as an hour later
-he refreshes himself at the bar of the Red Light, “for I holds it
-onprofessional to go blowin' the private affairs of my passengers, but
-I shorely thinks the old grizzly gives Kif a clawin' on the way over.
-I hears him yell like a wolf back in Long's canyon. To be shore! he's
-inside an' I can't see, but I'm offerin' two to one up to $100 she was
-lickin' him; if I don't I'm a Siwash!”
-
-It turns out as Killifer predicted. He read the lady aright. There
-is nothing in Wolfville to which she yields approval. It would be as
-impossible as it would be terrific, to repeat in print the conduct
-of this remarkable woman. She utterly abashes Enright; while such
-hare-hearts as Jack Moore, Cherokee Hall, Dave Tutt, Texas Thompson,
-Short Creek Dave and Dan Boggs, fly from her like quicksilver. Even Doc
-Peets acknowledges himself defeated and put to naught. The least of
-her feats is the invasion of a peaceful poker game to which Killifer
-is party, and the sweeping confiscation of every dollar in the bank on
-claim that it is money ravished from Killifer by venal practices. The
-mildest of her plans is one to assail the Red Light with an axe, should
-she ever detect the odour of whiskey about Killifer again.
-
-“An' do you know, Doc!” observes Enright, a fortnight later, as they
-meet for their midday drink, “the boys sorter lays it on you. You know
-me, Doc! I'll stand up ag'in the iron for you; but as a squar' man,
-with a fairly balanced mind, I'm bound to admit the boys is right. Now
-I don't say they feels resentful; it's more like they was mournful over
-what used to be, an' a day of peace gone by. But you knows what people
-be whose burdens is more'n they can bear; an' if I was you, this yere
-lady or I would leave the camp. I'm the last gent to go dictatin' about
-the details of another gent's game; but you an' me, Doc, has been old
-friends, an' as a warnin' from a source which means you well, I gives it
-to you cold the camp is gettin' hostile.”
-
-It is always a spectacle to inspire, to witness a great soul rise to an
-occasion. Doc Peets never so proves the power of his nature as now, when
-the tremendous shadow of “Kif's wife” has fallen across Wolfville like a
-blight. Peets, following Enright's forebodings, holds a long and secret
-conference with the unhappy Killifer. That night Peets rides to Tucson.
-The next day Old Monte, with his six horses a-foam, comes crashing into
-Wolfville two hours ahead of schedule. Before even a mail bag is thrown
-off, Old Monte unpouches a telegram received at the Tucson office for
-Mistress Killifer. Its earmark is Illinois; its contents moving. No
-matter what it tells, its news is cogent enough to decide the lady's
-mind.
-
-The next morning this dread woman departs, leaving, as she came, with a
-withering look at all around. That night Killifer gets drunk. Wolfville
-not only pardons Killifer in his weakness; it joins him.
-
-“But you suppresses the facts, Kif, when you says she's haughty,”
- observes Dan Boggs. “Haughty, as a deescription, ain't a six-spot!”
-
-“It's with no purpose, Kif,” says Doc Peets, as he fills his glass, “to
-discourage you--whom I sympathises with as an onfortunate, an' respects
-as a dead game gent--that I yereby invites the pop'lation to join me in
-a drink of congratulation on Wolfville's escape from your wife. An' all
-informal though this assemblage be, I offers a resolootion that this,
-the 23d of August, the date when the lady in question pulls her freight,
-be an' remain forevermore a day of yearly thanksgivin' to Wolfville.”
-
-“Which I libates to that myse'f!” says Killifer as he drains his cup
-to the last lingering drop. “Also I trusts this camp will proceed with
-caution the next time it turns in to play my domestic hand.”
-
-
-
-
-BEARS
-
-
-Bears are peaceful folk. They are a mild and lowly citizenry of the
-woods--I'm talking of the black sort--and shuffle modestly away the
-moment they hear you coming. We get many of our impressions of the
-ferocity of animals and the deadly poisons of reptiles from an unworthy
-sort of hearsay evidence. Much of it comes from Mexicans and Indians
-rather than from real experience. Now I wouldn't traduce either the
-Mexicans or the Indians, for their lot is one of hard, sodden ignorance;
-but it must be conceded that they're by no means careful historians, and
-run readily to tales of the marvellous and the tragic. I am going back
-to a bear story I have in mind before I get through; but I want to
-interject here, while I think of it, that though the centipede, the
-rattlesnake, the tarantula and the Gila monster, have bitter repute as
-able to deal death with their poisonous feet or fangs, I was never, in
-my years on the plains and in the mountains, able to secure proof of
-even the shallowest sort that a death, whether of man or animal, had
-ever resulted from the sting of any one of these. On the other hand,
-I have been with men who were bitten by rattlesnakes, or stung by
-tarantulas; or who while asleep had suffered as the inadvertent
-promenade of a centipede, with its hundred hooked, poison-exuding feet;
-but none of them died. They were sick in an out-of-sort, headache fashion
-for a day or two; the bitten place inflamed and was sore for a week or
-a month; that was all. I suppose I've known of fully one hundred horses,
-cows and sheep which were bitten by rattlesnakes; none died. They were
-invariably fanged in the nose, too, as they grazed towards my lord of
-the rattlers. On more than one occasion I kept the animal so bitten in
-sight to note results. Its head would swell and puff; it would lounge
-about with a sick listlessness for several days; then the poison would
-wear away in force, and back to its grass it would go with the wire-edge
-appetite of a sailor home from sea.
-
-But about bears. I was remarking that my black, shaggy cousins of the
-woods were a peaceful folk. So much is this true, and so little do their
-neighbours apprehend violence at their clumsy hands, that they who live
-in regions which abound in bears evince not the least alarm about the
-safety of their children. The babies, some as young as five or six
-years, roam the same mountains with the bears; and, while the latter
-will swoop upon a pig and run dangers with wide-open eyes in doing it,
-never did I hear of one who disturbed a ringlet on a child's head. They
-had daily opportunities enough, for many are the households to live in
-the wide, pine-sown Rockies.
-
-Our bears, too, are creatures of vast physical power. Often, as I rode
-the mountain for cattle, have I come across a dead and fallen pine
-tree, which would have defeated the best efforts of a horse to move,
-completely torn from its bed in the earth and leaves, and either
-overturned or thrown one side by the mighty arms of a bear. He was in
-search of a dinner cf grubs--those white, helpless worms which make
-their dull homes under rotten logs--and Sir Bear made no more ado of
-lifting and laying aside a pine tree in his grub-hunt than would you or
-I of a billet of firewood.
-
-While in the mountains I marvelled over the fact that the bears and the
-mountain lions never assailed the young calves. The hills were rife
-with cattle, and every spring found the canyons and oak-bushed slopes
-a perfect nursery of calves. And yet neither the panthers nor the bears
-disturbed them. It was due, I think, more to the bellicose character of
-the old cow and her relatives, than any uprightness of character on the
-part of the bears, and the panthers. Let a calf raise but one yell of
-distress in those mountains--and I assure you he can make their walls
-and valleys ring with his youthful music when so disposed--and, out of
-canyons and off mesas, over logs and crashing through the oak bushes,
-will come plunging all the cattle within hearing. Not thirty seconds
-will elapse before as many cattle will be by the side of the threatened
-calf, lusting for battle. They make such a phalanx of sharp, threatening
-horns, coupled with their rolling, wrath-red eyes and ferocious
-breathings, that, I warrant you, they have so shocked the nerves of past
-bears and panthers, it has become instinct with these latter to give the
-whole horned, truculent brood a wide berth.
-
-The Indians are very fond of the bear for his wisdom, and he divides
-their respect with the beaver as a personage of sagacity. The curiosity
-of my shaggy friend would shame any boy or girl of ten. You may be sure,
-were a bear to visit you for a week at your home, he would open every
-door, ransack every bureau, take every garment off every hook in every
-closet--and I had almost said “try it on”--before he had been with you
-an hour. Not a box nor a barrel, not a nook nor cranny, from cellar to
-ridge pole, would escape his investigation. His black nose would sniff
-at every crack, his black hand explore every crevice. Nor, beyond what
-he bestowed in his remorseless stomach, would he destroy anything.
-I have the black coat of a bear at my house, who might be wearing it
-himself to-day, were it not for his curiosity.
-
-There was a salt spring near my camp on the upper Red River; perhaps
-two miles away, which is “near” in the mountains. This salt spring was
-popular with the deer. They repaired thither to lick the salt earth
-about the waters. I had, among the lumber at my camp, a big, two-spring
-trap of steel; I suppose it must have weighed sixty pounds. It occurred
-to me that a lazy way to kill a deer would be to set this wide-jawed
-engine near the spring and let one walk into it. I'm not proud of
-this plan as a method in deer-killing, and wouldn't do it now. On this
-occasion, however I was not particular. I “set” the trap at my camp--for
-I had to use a hand-spike to crush down the springs, and it all gave me
-a deal of work and trouble--and then, with its jaws wide open, but held
-so that it wouldn't nip me in case it did snap, I crept carefully aboard
-my pony and rode over to the spring. The next morning early I had to go
-again to remove the trap, as during the day the cattle would take the
-places of the deer at this delectable salt spring, and I didn't care to
-break the legs of a thirty-dollar steer with my trapping. I went over
-while it was yet dark, and found no deer in the trap. I took it and
-hid it, face downward--the jaws still spread and “set”--by the of a big
-yellow pine log, which stretched its decayed length along the slope of
-the canyon. There I left it, intending to return and rearrange it for
-deer at dusk.
-
-It snowed that day, and as I grew lazy towards night, I left my trap
-where I'd hidden it by the yellow pine log. The deer would have one
-night of safety. What was safety for the deer proved otherwise for the
-bear.
-
-The following day I rode over just as the canyons were getting dark and
-the cattle climbing out of them to pass the night on the hills. Behold!
-my trap was gone!
-
-There was a great flourish of tracks in the snow; long plantigrade
-impressions like the bare footprints of some giant! I knew that a bear
-had somehow acquired my trap, or the trap, him; at that time I couldn't
-tell which. To make it short, however, it came to this: The bear,
-scouting in a loaferish way down the hill, and pausing no doubt to make
-an estimate of the probable grubs he would find beneath this particular
-yellow pine next summer, had chanced upon the trap. Here was a great
-find. Thoughts of grubs and common edible things at once deserted him.
-The mysterious novelty he had found took possession of his addle-pate
-like a new toy. A wolf or a fox would have smelled the odour of my
-handling, even off the cold steel of the trap, and been over the hills
-and far away in a twinkling. Your wolf is the canniest of timber folk;
-a grey Scotchman of the mountains. But my bear was reared on a different
-bottle. He sat down at once and actually took the new plaything in his
-lap. Then it would seem as if he deliberately thrust his paw into it and
-sprung its savage jaws on his forearm.
-
-In his first wrathful surprise, my bear tore up the snow and bushes for
-twenty feet about; but at last he set off with the trap on his foot.
-
-It was late. For half an hour I followed the broad track where his
-bearship had dragged the trap in the snow at a gallop. It was dark when
-at last I turned off for camp. Bright and betimes, I took the trail next
-day. It carried me over some ten miles of rough, close country. About
-midday I stood on the bluff edge of the Canyon Caliente, picking a
-pathway with my eyes along its steep, perilous side for my pony to get
-down. The bear had crossed here; but he was in the roughest of
-moods, and seemingly made no more of hurling himself over twenty-foot
-precipices--himself and my trap--or sublimely sliding down dangerous
-descents of hundreds of feet where foothold was impossible, than you
-would of eating buttered buns. So I had to pick out paths for myself; I
-couldn't trust to so reckless and uncivil an engineer as my bear.
-
-As I sat in the saddle running a quick eye over the slope for a trail,
-I, of an instant, heard a most surprising noise. It was indeed a noble
-racket, and might have passed for a blacksmith shop. But I knew the
-hills too well. It was of a verity my bear; and from the riot he was
-making, it was plain I would have to get there soon if I wanted to save
-the trap.
-
-This formidable uproar came from across the Caliente, perhaps half a
-mile. I slid from the saddle and went forward afoot. It didn't take long
-to cover the distance. I fell and tumbled down the first third, much as
-the bear had done a bit earlier.
-
-Once on the other side, I came upon my rough gentleman cautiously, and
-found him sitting by the side of a round, boulder-like rock, something
-the size and contour of a load of hay. And he was smiting the enduring
-granite with my trap in a way which told more of his feelings than would
-have been possible with mere words. He would raise his arm clumsily,
-60-pound trap and all, and then bring it against the rock with all the
-fervour of rage and giant strength.
-
-He was so wrapt in the enterprise, he never heard me until a shot from
-my Winchester met him just under the ear. One shot did it; and I had
-trap and bear. He had ruined the trap; one spring was broken and the
-whole disparaged beyond my power to repair. Wherefore I stripped him of
-his black overcoat to pay for the damage he had done; and that and the
-grease I took from him covered all costs and damages.
-
-
-
-
-THE BIG TOUCH
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Me fren', Mollie Matches,” observed Chucky.
-
-That was our introduction. A moment later Chucky whispered in a hoarse
-aside:
-
-“Matches is d' dip I chins youse about, who gets d' Hummin' Boid t'run
-into him.”
-
-“Matches,” as Chucky called him, was a sad, grey, broken man. Years
-and a life of flight and anxious furtivity had told on him. His eye was
-dancing and birdlike; resting on nothing, roving always; the sure mark
-of one sort of criminal. Matches drank for an hour before he felt at
-ease. That time arrived, however, and I took advantage of it to feed
-my curiosity. It was no easy matter, but at last I won him by a deft
-blending of flattery and drink to talk of his crimes. And indeed I
-fear--for I suppose the expert thief does plume himself a bit on his
-art--that Matches took some sort of wretched pride in his illicit pocket
-searchings.
-
-“D' biggest touch I ever makes,” said Matches, in response to a query,
-“was $36,000; quite a bunch of dough. Gettin' it was easy; gettin' away
-wit' it was d' squeak.
-
-“We toins d' trick on d' train from Albany. D' tip comes straight to me
-in New York that a bloke is goin' to draw $36,000 from d' Albany bank on
-such a day. I makes up a mob; t'ree stalls an' meself;--all pretty fly
-we was--an' lands in Albany.
-
-“We gets onto d' party who's to be woiked early in d' mornin', an'
-shadows him so dost he's never out of reach. Our play is to follow him
-to d' bank an' do him wit 'd' drop game. If that misses, we're to stay
-wit' him till d' bundle's ours be one racket or another.
-
-“This sucker is pretty soon himself, see! He ain't such a mut as we
-figgers. His train starts at 1 o'clock, an' he takes in d' bank on his
-way to d' station.
-
-“Of course we was wit' him; but he's dead leary an' never t'rows himself
-open to be woiked. D' stuff is in t'ousand-dollar willyums, an' as he
-just sinks it in his keck d' minute his hooks is onto it, an' never
-stops to count or run his lamps over it, we don't get no chanct to do d'
-drop. D' instant d' money's in his mits he plants it--all stretched out
-long in a big leather, it is--in his inside pocket, an' screws his nut
-for d' door. D' hack slams an' he's on his way to d' train.
-
-“Yes; we starts for d' station be another street. D' bloke ain't onto us
-yet, an' we tries not to plant a scare into him. He's leary enough as it
-is; just havin' such a roll wit' him rattles him.
-
-“So I makes up me mind to do d' job on d' train runnin' into New York.
-As he sinks d' stuff away, I notes how d' ends of d' bills sticks out
-over d' pocket-book. Me idee is to weed it--get d' dough an' leave d'
-leather in his pocket--if I can make d' play. Weedin' was d' way to do;
-you gets d' long green an 'd' sucker still has d' leather to feel of,
-an' it's some time before he tumbles he's been touched, see!
-
-“D' guy wit 'd' stuff plants himself in a seat. Two of me stalls sits
-ahead of him, me an' me other pal is behint him. We only waits now for
-him to get up an' come along d' aisle of d' car to get in our hooks.
-
-“Foist I goes d' len'th of d' train to see who's onto it. I always does
-that; I wants to see if any guy aboard knows Mollie Matches. You see, if
-there is, when d' holler comes, an' some duck declares himself shy his
-spark, or roll, or ticker, it's 40 to 1 Mr. Know-all, who's onto me for
-a crook, sends a tip to d' p'lice: 'Matches was on d' train!' an' I gets
-d' collar. No, I never woiks when one of me acquaintances is along be
-accident. D' cops, in such case, as I says, is put onto me an' spots me
-wit 'd' foist yell.
-
-“I covers d' train an' comes back. There's no guy on me visiting list
-who's along. So I sits down wit' me pal to d' rear of d' sucker an'
-waits.
-
-“It's not for long. D' leather's still in his inside keck, 'cause I can
-see him pressin' on it wit' his mit to make sure it's there. At last
-he gets up to go to d' watercooler. I sees d' move comin', an' is in d'
-aisle before him. So's me stalls. From start to finish no one bungles
-d' stunt. There's a tangle--all be accident, of course--every mug
-'pologises, we break away, an' I've got d' blunt. But d' woist part
-is, I can't weed it. D' stuff won't come no other way, an' so I lifts
-leather an' all.
-
-“There's due to be a roar in no time;--this mark's bound to be on he's
-frisked!--so I splits out each stall's bit in a hurry an' says: 'Every
-gent for himself! an' if youse is nipped, don't knock!' an' then I
-sherries me nibs for d' rear coach. It was great graft. Me bit was
-$9,000, an' I has me plan all set up to save it an' meself wit' it. This
-is d' racket I has in me cocoa.
-
-“In d' last coach is an old w'ite choker--a pulpit t'umper, you
-understand. Wit' him is his daughter, an' wit' her is her kid. Mebby d'
-kid, say, is six years. I heads for 'em an' begins to give d' old skate
-a jolly. I was dead strong on patter in them days, an' puts it up I'm
-a gospel sharp from Hamilton. I saws it off on his nibs how me choich
-boins down, an' how I'm linin' out to New York to see if d' good folks
-down there won't spring their rolls--cough up be way of donations, you
-understand, an' help us slam up a new box--choich, I means--so we can go
-back to our graft.
-
-“It's all right. Me razzle dazzle takes like spring water. In two
-minutes me an 'd' old party an 'd' loidy, an' for that matter d' kid, is
-t'ick as t'ieves. We was bunched together, singin' 'Jesus, Lover of me
-Soul,' to beat four of a kind, when d' galoot I skins for his bundle
-lifts d' shout he's been done, see!
-
-“This dub who lose is t'ree coaches ahead. D' foist we knows of his
-troubles--all but me--d' Con' comes an' locks d' door. No one can get
-off d' train. Then he stops an' taps d' wires wit' a machine from d'
-baggage car an' sends d' story chasin' into New York.
-
-“'Party t'run down for $36,000, says d' message; 'swag an' crooks still
-on me train. Send orders.'
-
-“D' order comes to keep d' doors locked an' run to New York wit' no more
-stops. An' after puttin' a Brakey in each coach to see what goes on,
-that's what dey does. We go spinnin' into New York at forty-five miles
-an hour.
-
-“Naturally, I'm in a steam. I goes all right wit 'd' Con', an' d' train
-crew, as a sky pilot, but how was I to make d' riffle wit' de fly cop of
-New York, who'd be waitin' for d' train--me mug in d' gallery, an' four
-out o' five of 'em twiggin' me be me foist name? But I t'ought it out.
-
-“When d' train rumbles into d' Gran' Central, d' door is slammed open
-an' we all gets up to go. A fly-cop is comin' in just as we starts. I
-grabs up d' kid to carry him, see! bein' d' old preacher party nor d'
-skirt ain't so able as me.
-
-“Say! it was a winner. I buries me map in d' kid's make-up, gets between
-d' goil an' d' old stumblin' mucker of a gran'dad, an' walks slap
-t'rough d' entire day-push of d' Central office. An' hard, sharp marks
-dey is to beat, see!
-
-“Fly dey is, but not swift enough for Matches wit a scare on, see! Not a
-dub of 'em tumbles to me.
-
-“In two moves an' ten seconts I'm in d' street. As I goes along I pulls
-a ring off one of me north hooks wit' me teet,' an' t'oins it over to
-d' kid as his bit for makin' d' good front for me. No; d' others don't
-catch on, but d' way he cinches it in his small mit shows me he's goin'
-to save it out for fair.
-
-“When I hits d' street I drops d' youngone, who's still froze to his
-solitaire, an' grabs off a cab, an' in twenty minutes I'm buried where
-all d' p'lice in New York couldn't toin me up in a t'ousand years.
-
-“No; me pals got d' collar, an' each does a stretch. But dey lays dead
-about me; never peached nor squealed. I win out.
-
-“Who?--d' w'ite choker an' his party? Nit; never hears of 'em ag'in. For
-four days I gets one of d' fam'ly--he's a crook who's under cover for
-a bank trick, an' who's eddicted--to read me all d' poipers. I wants to
-see if d' preacher an' his goil gives up anyt'ing about d' ring I swaps
-to d' kid.
-
-“Never hears a peep! Nixie; dey was on all right, you bet your life!
-when their lamps lights on that jewelry; but most likely dey needs d'
-ring in their graft. It was a spark wort' five hundred cases from any
-fence in d' land, an' so d' old guy an' his goil sort o' stan's for d'
-play, see!”
-
-
-
-
-THE FATAL KEY
-
-
-Young Jenkins prided himself on sharp eyes. He said he could “give a
-hawk cards and spades.” He could find four-leaf clovers where no one
-else could see them. He took in the smallest detail of the scenery all
-about him.
-
-As a result, young Jenkins was a great finder of small trifles, and that
-he might miss nothing, lost, strayed or stolen, he went about during the
-little journeys of the day, with his eyes searching the ground. And
-he picked up many trinkets of a personal sort that other men had lost.
-Nothing of much value, perhaps, but it served to please young Jenkins,
-and it gave him a chance to boast of the sharp, devouring character of
-his eyes.
-
-Even as a child, young Jenkins was prone to find things. He told
-how once his talents as a retriever made him the subject of parental
-suspicion. He was ten years old when he picked up a four-blade Barlow
-knife.
-
-“Where did you get it?” queried old Jenkins, as young Jenkins displayed
-his treasure trove.
-
-“Found it,” was the reply.
-
-“Oh, you found it!” snorted old Jenkins. “Well, take it straight back,
-and put it where you found it, and don't 'find' any more. If you do,
-I'll lick you out of your knickerbockers!”
-
-In spite of such discouragement, young Jenkins kept on finding all sorts
-of bric-à-brac. He does even to this day.
-
-One evening young Jenkins had a disagreeable adventure, as the fruit of
-his talent, which for an hour or so made him wish he had weaker vision.
-
-It was on Great Jones Street, and young Jenkins, hurrying along, noticed
-in the half moonlight a big store key, where the owner had dropped it
-just after locking up for the night. The hour was full midnight.
-
-Young Jenkins possessed himself of the key. He looked at it as he held
-it in his hand, and wondered how the careless shopman would open up in
-the morning without it.
-
-From where it lay it wasn't hard to infer the store to which the key
-belonged. Yet to make sure on that point it occurred to young Jenkins
-that he might better try the lock with it.
-
-Young Jenkins had just fitted the big key to the lock when some one
-seized him by the wrist. It startled him so that he dropped the key and
-allowed it to go rattling along the sidewalk. As young Jenkins looked up
-he saw that the party who had got him was a member of the police.
-
-“I was trying to unlock the door!” stammered young Jenkins.
-
-“I saw what you were about,” said the officer with suspicious severity.
-“What were you monkeying with the door for? You aren't the owner of this
-store?”
-
-“No, sir,” said young Jenkins, much impressed. “No, sir; I----”
-
-“Nor one of the clerks?”
-
-“No, sir,” replied young Jenkins again, “I have nothing to do with the
-store. I found the key, and thought I'd see if it opened this door.”
-
-“What did you want to see if it would open the door for? Don't you think
-it is a little late for a joke of that sort?”
-
-“It wasn't a joke,” said young Jenkins, beginning to perspire rather
-copiously; “it was an experiment. I found the key on the sidewalk, and
-wanted to see----”
-
-“Yes!” interrupted the blue coat with a fine scorn; “you wanted to see
-if you could get into the store and rob it bare. That is what you wanted
-to see. You're a box-worker, if ever I met one, and if I hadn't come
-along you would have had this bin cracked and cleaned out in another ten
-minutes.”
-
-“I told you I found the key,” protested young Jenkins.
-
-“That's all right about your finding the key!” said the policeman in
-supreme contempt. “You found the key and I found you, and we'll both
-keep what we've found. That's square, ain't it?”
-
-And in spite of all young Jenkins could say at that late hour of the
-twenty-four, the faithful officer dragged him to the station, where
-a faithful sergeant faithfully registered him, and a faithful turnkey
-locked him faithfully up.
-
-As young Jenkins sat unhappy in his cell, while vermin sparred with
-him for an opening, he registered a vow that never again would he find
-anything.
-
-Young Jenkins wouldn't pick up a twenty-dollar gold piece were he to
-meet one to-day in the street.
-
-
-
-
-AN OCEAN ERROR
-
-
-No; neither my name nor the name of my vessel can I give. Our navy has
-a way of courtmartialing its officers who wax garrulous.”
-
-It was just as the Lieutenant called for the _creme de menthe_, that may
-properly succeed a dinner well ordered and well stowed.
-
-“But you are welcome to the raw facts,” continued the Lieutenant. “It
-was during those anxious days that went before the penning in of Cervera
-at Santiago. We had been ordered on a ticklish service. Schley was over
-south of the island on a prowl for the Spanish fleet. Sampson was, or
-should have been, off the Windward Passage similarly employed. Cervera
-was last heard of two weeks before at Barbadoes. Then he disappeared
-like a ghost; no one knew where his smoke would be sighted next. The
-one sure thing, of which all were aware, was that with Sampson anywhere
-between the Mole and Cape Mazie, and Schley searching the wide seas
-south of Cuba, Cervera might easily with little luck and less seamanship
-dodge either and appear off Havana. There the cardboard fleet left on
-blockade wouldn't, with such heavy odds, last as long as a drink of
-whiskey.
-
-“It stood thus when our orders came to my Captain to proceed to Bayou
-Hondu, some seventy miles west of Havana, and there stand off and on,
-like a policeman walking his beat, in what would be the path of Cervera
-should he work to the rear of Schley and to the north of Cuba by the way
-of St. Antonio.
-
-“Our vessel was detailed on this duty because of her perfect order and
-speed of seventeen knots. Our heavy armament was eight 4-inch broadside
-guns, with a 6-inch rifle forward and another mounted aft. Our orders
-were: If Cervera came upon us to fight!--steam as slowly as might be
-for Havana and fight!--and to keep fighting until sunk or sure that
-the block-aders off Havana were warned, whether by our signals or our
-racket, of Cervera's coming.
-
-“It was a grinding task, this lonely patrol off Bayou Hondu. The rains
-had just begun, the weather was a dripping hash of fog and squall and
-rain. If Cervera didn't come, it meant discomfort; and if he did, it
-meant death. Take it full and by, the outlook was depressing.
-
-“At night no light burned and the ship was dark as a coffin. This, with
-the service, contributed to keep us all in a mood of alert nervousness.
-Cervera's ships would also be dark. We didn't care to be crept upon, and
-get our first notice of his advent from the broadside that sent us to
-the bottom like an anvil.
-
-“We had been on this dreary duty some ten days. It was a dark, heavy
-night. I myself had the bridge, and the captain, whose anxiety kept him
-up, was seated in the starboard corner, dozing. His sea cloak was thrown
-over his head to keep out the weather. We were working to the eastward,
-with engines at quarter speed, and with a head sea running, were making
-perhaps three knots.
-
-“The ship's bells were not being struck for the hours, and I had just
-looked at my watch by the light of the binnacle. It was half-past two in
-the morning.
-
-“'How's your head?' I asked of the man at the wheel, as I put up my
-timepiece.
-
-“'East by south, half south,' he replied.
-
-“This was taking us too much inshore. 'Starboard for a point!' I said.
-
-“As I turned from the wheel I saw that which sent a thrill over me and
-brought me up all standing. It was the murky loom of a great ship, black
-and dim and dark and silent as ourselves. She was off our port quarter
-and not five hundred yards away. It gave me a start, I confess. None of
-our ships should be that far to the west of Havana. It was a sword to a
-sheath knife she was one of Cervera's advance.
-
-“Instantly I reached for the electric button; and instantly the red and
-white lights, which stood for the letter of that night, burned in our
-semaphore. The stranger replied with a red over two white lights. It was
-the wrong letter.
-
-“With my first motion, the captain was on his feet; his hand gripped the
-lever that worked the engine bells.
-
-“'Try her again!' he said.
-
-“Again I flashed the proper letter, and again came a queer reply.
-
-“The next moment the captain jammed the lever 'Full steam, ahead!' and a
-general call to quarters went singing through the ship.
-
-“'Starboard!' shouted the captain to the man at the wheel; 'starboard!
-pull her over!'
-
-“There was a vast churning from the propellers; the vessel leaped
-forward like a horse; the sailor climbed the wheel like a squirrel. We
-surged forward with a broad sheer to port. The next instant we opened on
-our dark visitor with every gun in the larboard battery. It wasn't ten
-seconds after she gave us the wrong signal when she got our broadside.
-
-“The result was amazing. With the first crash of our guns the stranger
-went from utter darkness to the extreme of light. She flashed out all
-over like a Fall River steamer. Knowing who we were--for they bore
-orders for us--and realizing that there had been some mixing of signals,
-the officer on her bridge had the wit to turn on every light in his
-ship. It was an inspiration and saved them from a second broadside.
-
-“Who was she? One of our own vessels. Cervera was locked in Santiago and
-she had come up to tell us the news. Her officer blundered in giving
-out the wrong letter for the night, and thereby sowed the seed of our
-misunderstanding.
-
-“No, beyond peppering her a bit, our fire did no harm. We were so close
-that most of our shot went over her. Still, I don't believe that vessel
-will ever get her signals fouled again. And it's just as well that way.
-If she had made the wrong talk to some one of our heavy-weights, the
-Oregon, for instance, she would have gone down like so much pig-iron.”
-
-
-
-
-SKINNY MIKE'S UNWISDOM
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-CHUCKY was posed in his usual corner. As I came in he nodded sullenly
-as one whom the Fates ill-use. I craved of Chucky to name his drink; it
-was the surest way to thaw him.
-
-“Make it beer,” said Chucky.
-
-Now beer stood as a symbol of gloom with Chucky, as he himself had told
-me.
-
-“It's always d' way wit' me,” said Chucky on that far occasion when he
-explained “Beer”, “when I'm dead sore an' been gettin' it in d' neck, to
-order beer. It's d' sorrowfulest kind of booze, beer is; there's a sob
-in every bottle of it, see!”
-
-Realising Chucky's low spirits by virtue of present beer, I suavely made
-query of his unknown grief and tendered sympathy.
-
-“I've been done for me dough,” replied Chucky, softening sulkily. “You
-minds d' races at d' Springs? That's it; I gets t'run down be d' horses.
-I get d' gaff for fifty plunks. Now, fifty plunks ain't all d' money in
-d' woild; but it was wit' me. It was me fortune.”
-
-Chucky ruminated bitterly.
-
-“Oh, I'm a good t'ing!” he ejaculated, as he tilted his chair against
-the wall with an air of decision. “I'll play d' jumpers agin, nit!
-
-“W'at's d' use? I can't beat nothin'. Say! I couldn't beat a drum! I'm
-a mut to ever t'ink of it! I ought to give meself up to d' p'lice right
-now an' ast 'em to put me in Bloomin'dale or some other bug house. I'm
-nutty, that's what I am; an' that's for fair! Now, I'd as lief tell you.
-It's d' boss hard luck story, an' that ain't no vision!
-
-“In d' foist place, I was a rank sucker to d' point of deemin' meself a
-wise guy about d' horses. An' it so follows, bein' stuck on meself about
-horses, as I says, that when Skinny Mike blows in wit 'd' idee that he
-can pick d' winner of d' big event, I falls to d' play, an easy mark.
-
-“Mike is an oldtime tout; an' wit' me feelin', as I says, dead fly,
-it ain't a minute before I'm addin' me ignorance to Mike's, an' we're
-runnin' over d' dopes in d' papers seein' what d' horses has done. To
-make a long story short, we settles it for a finish that War Song's out
-to win. Which, after all, ain't such a sucker t'eory.
-
-“'It's a cinch!' says Skinny Mike; 'War Song's got a pushover. Dey can't
-beat him; never in a t'ousand years!'
-
-“It looks a sure tip to me, too; so I digs for me last dollar an' hocks
-me ticker besides, an' makes up d' fifty plunks I mentions. Mike sticks
-in fifty an' then takes d' whole roll an' screws his nut for d' Springs
-to get it up on War Song. Naw; I don't go. Mike's plenty to make d'
-play; an' besides I had me lamps on a sure t'ing for a tenner over on d'
-Bowery.
-
-“Of course, while Mike's gone, I ain't doin' a t'ing but read d' poipers
-all to pieces. War Song's a 20-to-1 shot; I stan's to make a
-killin'--stan's to win a t'ousand plunks, see!
-
-“An', say! War Song win! Mebby I don't give d' yell of d' year when I
-sees it in d' print.
-
-“'W'at's eatin' youse, Chucky?' says me Rag, as I cuts loose me
-warwhoop.
-
-“'O, I ain't got no nut!' I says, givin' meself d' gran' jolly. 'No! not
-at all! I has to ast some mark to tell me me name, I don't t'ink! I'm
-cooney enough to get onto War Song, all d' same! Say! I'm d' soonest
-galoot that ever comes down d' pike!'
-
-“That's d' way I feels an' that's d' way I chins.
-
-“At last I cools off me dampers an' sets in to wait for Mike. Meanwhile
-I begins to figger how I'll blow d' stuff, see! an' settle what I'll
-buy. It's a case of money to boin an' I was gettin' me matches ready
-before even Mike shows up.
-
-“But Mike don't come. 'W'at th' 'ell!' I t'inks; 'Mike ain't crookt it;
-he ain't skipped wit' d' bundle?' An' say! you should a-seen me chew d'
-rag at d' idee.
-
-“But I'm wrong on me lead. Mike hadn't welched, an' he hadn't been
-sandbagged. He comes creepin' along a day behint d' play, an' d' secont
-I gets me lamps on his mug I'm dead on we lose. I don't have to have me
-fortune told to tumble to that. Mike looks like five cents wort' of lard
-in a paper bag. An* here's d' song he sings.
-
-“Mike says he goes to d' Springs all right, all right, an' is organised
-to get War Song for d' limit d' nex' day. It's that night, out be d'
-stables, when he chases up on a horsescraper--a sawed-off coon, he
-is--an 'd' horse-scraper breaks off a great yarn on Mike.
-
-“'I ain't no tout, an' dis ain't no tip,' Mike says d' coon says; 'it's
-a rev'lation. On d' dead! it's a prophecy! It's las' night. I'm sleepin'
-in d' stall nex' to a little horse named Dancer. All at onct I wakes up
-an' listens. It's that Dancer horse in d' nex' stall talkin' to himself.
-Over an' over agin he says: “I'm goin' to win it! I'm goin' to win it!”
- just like that.'
-
-“Well,” continued Chucky, “you know Skinny Mike. There's a ghost goes
-wit' Mike, an' he's that sooperstitious, d' nigger's story has him on
-a string in a hully secont. He can't shake it off. Away he wanders an'
-dumps d' entire wad on Dancer, an' never puts a splinter on War Song at
-all.
-
-“W'at do you t'ink of it? On d' level! w'at d' youse really t'ink of it?
-That Mike's a woild-beater; that's right; a woild-beater an' a wonder to
-boot! I'd like to trade him for a yaller dawg, an' do d' dawg!”
-
-“Did Dancer win?” I asked.
-
-“Did Dancer win?” repeated Chucky; and his tones breathed guttural
-scorn; “d' old skate never even finished. Naw; he gets 'round on d' back
-stretch, stops, bites d' boy off his back, chases over be d' fence an'
-goes to eatin' grass; that's what Dancer does. He's a dandy race horse,
-or I don't want a cent! I'll bet me mudder-in-law on that Dancer some
-day. I tells Mike to take a run an' jump on himself. Naw,” concluded
-Chucky, with a great gulp, “Dancer don't win; War Song win.”
-
-
-
-
-MOLLIE PRESCOTT
-
-(Wolfville)
-
-
-The Cactus” was the name bestowed upon her in Wolfville. Her signature,
-if she had written it, would probably have been Mollie Prescott, at
-least such was the declaration of Cherokee Hall.
-
-“I sees this yere lady a year ago in Tombstone,” asserted that veracious
-chronicler, “where she cooks at the stage station; an' she gives it out
-she's Prescott--Mollie Prescott--an' most likely she knows her name, an'
-knows it a year ago.”
-
-As Cherokee was a historian of known firmness of statement, no one cared
-to challenge either his facts or his conclusions. The true name of “The
-Cactus” was accepted by the Wolfville public as Prescott.
-
-“The Cactus” was personable, and her advent into Wolfville society
-caused something of a flutter. Her mission was to cook, and in the
-fulfilment of her destiny she presided over the range at the stage
-station.
-
-Being publicly hailed as “The Cactus” seemed in no wise to depress her.
-It was even possible she took a secret glow over an epithet, meant by
-the critical taste awarding it, to illustrate those thorns in her nature
-which repelled and held in check the amorous male of Wolfville.
-
-Women were not frequent in Wolfville, and on her coming, “The Cactus”
- had many admirers. Every man in camp loved her the moment she stepped
-from the Tucson stage; that is, every man save Cherokee Hall. That
-scientist, given wholly to faro as a philosophy, had no time--in a day
-before he met Faro Nell--for so dulcet an affair as love. Also Cherokee
-had scruples born of his business.
-
-“Life behind a deal box is a mighty sight too fantastic,” observed
-the thoughtful Cherokee, “for a fam'ly. It does well enough for
-single-footers, which it don't make much difference with when some gent
-they've mortified an' hurt, pulls his six-shooter an' sends them lopin'
-home to heaven all spraddled out. But a lady ain't got no business with
-a sport who turns kyards as a pursoot.”
-
-As time unfurled, the train of lovers to sigh on the daily trail of “The
-Cactus” dwindled. There were those who grew dispirited.
-
-“I'm clean-strain enough,” said Dan Boggs, in apologetic description of
-his failure to persevere, “but I knows when I've got through. I'll play
-a game to a finish, but when it's down to the turn an' my last chip's
-gone over to the dealer, why! I shoves my chair back an' quits. An' it's
-about that a-way of an' concernin' my yearnin's for this yere Cactus
-girl. I jest can't get her none, an' that settles it. I now drops out
-an' gives up my seat complete.”
-
-“That's whatever!” said Texas Thompson, who was an interested listener
-to the defeated Boggs, “an' you can gamble I'm with you on them views!
-Seein' as how my wife in Laredo gets herse'f that divorce, I turns in
-an' loves this Cactus person myse'f to a frightful degree. Thar's times
-I simply goes about sobbin' them sentiments publicly. But yere awhile
-back I comes wanderin' 'round her kitchen, an' bing! arrives a skillet
-at my head. That lets me out! You bet! I don't pursoo them explorations
-'round her no more. I has exper'ence with one, an' I don't aim to get
-any lariat onto a second female who is that callous as to go a-chunkin'
-of kitchen bric-a-brac at a heart which is merely pinin' for her
-smiles.”
-
-There were two at the shrine of “The Cactus,” who were known to
-Wolfville, respectively, as Cottonwood Wasson and Cape Jinks. These were
-distinguished for the ardour wherewith they made siege to the affection
-of “The Cactus,” and the energy of their demands for her capitulation.
-
-That virgin, however, paid neither heed to their court, nor took an
-interest in the comment of onlook-ing Wolfville. She pursued her path
-in life, even and unmoved. She set her tables, washed her dishes, and
-perfected her daily beefsteaks by the ingenious process, popular in the
-Southwest, of burning them on the griddles of the range, and all with a
-composure bordering hard on the stolid.
-
-“All I'm afraid of,” said Old Man Enright, the head of the local
-vigilance committee, “is that some of these yere young bucks'll take to
-pawin' 'round for trouble with each other. As the upshot of sech doin's
-would most likely be the stringin' of the survivors by the committee,
-nuptials, which now looks plenty feasible, would be plumb busted an'
-alienated, an' the camp get a setback it would be hard to rally from. I
-wishes this maiden would tip her hand to some discreet gent, so a play
-could be made in advance to get the wrong parties over to Tucson or
-some'ers. Whatever do you think yourse'f, Cherokee?”
-
-“It's a delicate deal,” replied that philosopher, “to go tamperin'
-'round a lady for the secret of her soul. But I shorely deems the
-occasion a crisis, an* public interest demands somethin' is done. I wish
-Doc Peets was yere; he knows these skirted cattle like I does an ace.
-But Peets won't be back for a month; pendin' of which, onless we-alls
-interferes, it's my jedgment some of this yere amorousness 'll come off
-in the smoke.”
-
-“Thar ought to be statoots,” observed Texas Thompson, with a fine air of
-wisdom, “ag'in love-makin' in the far West. The East should be kept
-for sech purposes speshul; same as reservations for Injuns. The Western
-climate's too exyooberant for love.”
-
-“S'pose me an' you an' Thompson yere goes to this young person, an' all
-p'lite an' congenial like, we ups an' asks her intentions?” remarked
-Enright. This was offered to Cherokee.
-
-“Excuse me, pards!” said Texas Thompson with eagerness, “but I don't
-reckon I wants kyards in this at all. 'The Cactus' is a mighty fine
-young bein', but you-alls recalls as how I've been ha'ntin' 'round her
-somewhat in the past myse'f. For which reason, with others, she might
-take my comin' on sech errants derisive, an' bust me over the forehead
-with a dipper, or some sech objectionable play. I allows I better keep
-out of this embroglio a whole lot. I ain't aiming to shirk nothin', but
-it'll be a heap more shore to win.”
-
-“Thompson ain't onlikely to be plenty right about this,” said Cherokee,
-“an' I reckons, Enright, we-alls better take this trick ourse'ves.”
-
-The mission was not a success. When the worthy pair of peace-preservers
-appeared in the presence of “The Cactus,” and made the inquiries noted,
-the scorn of that damsel was excited beyond the power of words to
-describe.
-
-“What be you-alls doin' in my kitchen?” she cried, her face a-flush
-with rage and noonday cookery. “Who sends you-alls curvin' over to me,
-a-makin' of them insultin' bluffs? I demands to know!”
-
-“An' yere,” said Cherokee Hall, relating the exploit in the Red Light
-immediately thereafter, “she stamps her foot like a buck antelope, an'
-lets fly a stovelifter at us; an' all with a proud, high air, which
-reminds me a mighty sight of a goddess.”
-
-At the time, it would seem, the duo attempted to show popular cause
-for their presence, and made an effort to point out to “The Cactus” the
-crying public need of some decision on her part.
-
-“You-all don't want the young male persons of this village to take to
-shootin' of each other all up none, do you?” asked Enright.
-
-“I wants you two beasts to get outen my kitchen!” replied “The Cactus”
- vigorously; “an' I wants you to move some hurried, too. Don't never let
-me find your moccasin tracks 'round yere no more, or I'll turn in an'
-mark you up.”
-
-[Illustration: 0287]
-
-“Yere, you!” she continued as the ambassadors were about to leave,
-something cast down by the conference; “you-alls can tell the folks of
-this town, that if they're idiots enough to go makin' a gun play over
-me, to make it. They has shore pestered me enough!”
-
-“Which I don't wonder none at Thompson bein' reluctant an' doobious
-about seein' this Cactus lady,” said Enright, as the two walked away.
-
-“She's some fiery, an' that's a fact!” observed Cherokee in assent.
-
-The result of the talk with “The Cactus” found its way about Wolfville,
-and in less than an hour bore its hateful fruit. The peaceful quiet of
-the Red Light, which, as a rule, was wounded by no harsher notes than
-the flutter of a stack of chips, was rudely broken.
-
-“Gents who ain't interested, better hunt a lower limb!”
-
-It was the voice of Cottonwood Wasson. The trained instincts of
-Wolfville at once grasped the trouble, and proceeded to hide its many
-heads behind barrels, tables, counters, and anything which promised
-refuge from the bullets.
-
-All but one; Cape Jinks. He knew it meant him the moment Cottonwood
-Wasson uttered the first syllable, and his pistol came bluntly to the
-fore without a word. His rival's was already there, and the shooting set
-in like a hailstorm. As a result, Cottonwood Wasson received an injury
-that crippled his arm for days, while Cape Jinks was picked up with
-a hole in his side, which even the sanguine sentiment of Wolfville,
-inclined to a hardy optimism at all times, called dangerous.
-
-“Well!” said Old Man Enright, drawing a deep, troubled breath, after
-the duellists were cared for at the O. K. House, “yere we be ag'in an'
-nothin' settled! Thar's all this shootin', an' this blood-lettin', an'
-the camp gets all torn up; an' thar's as many of these people now as
-thar is before, an' most likely the whole deal to go over ag'in.”
-
-“I shore 'bominates things a-splittin' even that a-way!” said Cherokee.
-
-The next day a new face was given the affair when “The Cactus” was
-observed, clothed in her best frock and with two violent red roses in
-her straw hat, to take the stage for Tucson. The stage company reported,
-in deference to the excited state of the Wolfville mind, that “The
-Cactus” would return in a week.
-
-“Goin' for her weddin' trowsoo, most likely,” said Dan Boggs, as he
-gazed after the stage.
-
-“Let's drink to the hope she wins out a red dress!” remarked Texas
-Thompson. “Set up the bottles, bar-keep, an' don't let no gent pass up
-the play. Which red is my fav'rite colour!”
-
-No one seemed to know the intentions of “The Cactus.” The shooting would
-appear to have in nowise disturbed her. That may have been her obdurate
-heart, or it may have come from a familiarity with the evanescent tenure
-of human life, born of her years on the border. Be that as one will, she
-expressed not the least concern touching her brace of wounded lovers,
-and took the stage without saying good-bye to any one.
-
-“An' some fools say women is talkers!” remarked Jack Moore, the Marshal,
-in high disgust.
-
-Three days later Old Monte, the stage driver, came in with thrilling
-news. “The Cactus” had wedded a man in Tucson, and would bring him to
-Wolfville in a week.
-
-“When I first hears of it,” went on Old Monte with a groan, “an' when
-I thinks of them two pore boys a-layin' in Wolfville, an' their claims
-bein' raffled off in that heartless way, I shore thinks I'll take my
-Winchester an' stop them marriage rites if I has to crease the preacher.
-But, pards, the Tucson marshal wouldn't have it. He stan's me off. So
-she nails him; an' the barkeep at the Oriental Saloon tells me over
-thar, how she's been organisin' to wed this yere prairie dog before she
-ever hops into Wolfville at all. I sees him afterwards; an', gents! for
-looks, he don't break even with horned toads!”
-
-“Thar you be!” said Enright, making a deprecatory gesture, “another case
-of woman, lovely woman! However, even if this Cactus lady has done rung
-in a cold hand onto us, we must still prance 'round an' show her a good
-time when she trails in with her prey. Where the honour of the camp is
-concerned, we whoops it up! Of course the Cactus don't please us none
-with this deal; but most likely she pleases herse'f, which, after all,
-is the next best thing. Gents,” concluded Enright, after a pause, “the
-return of the new couple will be the signal of a general upheaval in
-their honour. It's to be hoped our young friends, Cottonwood an' Jinks,
-will by then be healthful enough to participate tharin. Barkeep! the
-liquor, please! Boys, the limit's off; wherefore drink hearty!”
-
-“Which I has preemonitions from the first, this yere Cactus female is
-a brace game,” remarked Texas Thompson, as he filled his glass; “that's
-whatever!”
-
-“Oh! I don't know!” replied Cherokee Hall thoughtfully. “She has her
-right to place her bets to please herse'f, an' win or lose, this
-camp should be proud to turn for her. Wolfville can't always make a
-killin'--can't always be on velvet; but as long as the Cactus an' her
-victim pitches camp yere, Wolfville can call herse'f ahead on the deal.
-I sees no room for cavil, an' I yereby freights my glass to the Cactus
-an' the shorthorn she's tied down.”
-
-
-
-
-ANNA MARIE
-
-
-Anna Marie was to be a new woman. She had decided that for herself. In
-the carrying out of her destinies, Anna Marie had cut her hair short.
-She also made a specialty of very mannish costumes, and, outwardly, at
-least, became as virile as a woman might be with a make-up the basis of
-which was bound to be a skirt.
-
-Anna Marie was motherless, and at the age of nineteen, when she
-determined to become a new woman, had no advice save her father's to
-depend on. When she discussed an adoption of broader and more masculine
-methods on her girlish part with her father, the old gentleman looked
-puzzled, and said:
-
-“Well, my dear! I have great confidence in your judgment. There is
-nothing like experience, so go ahead. You will find, however, before you
-have gone far, that you labour under many structural defects. The
-great Architect didn't lay you out for a man, Anna Marie; you were not
-intended for such a fate.” However, Anna Marie kept on. She was looking
-for a fuller liberty and a wider field. She was too delicately and too
-accurately determined in her tastes to be a fool to cigarettes, or swept
-down in a current of profanity. Bad language she would leave to the real
-man; in her career as a new woman nothing so vigorous was needed.
-
-But men did other things, had other freedoms; and from that long male
-list of liberties Anna Marie proceeded to pick out a line of freedom
-for herself. She had had enough of that pent-up Utica which confines the
-conventional woman. What she wanted was more room: that is, of proper,
-decorous sort.
-
-Of course, as Anna Marie proceeded up the long trail of masculinity, it
-was noted by critics that she still continued essentially feminine as to
-many common male accomplishments. She could not throw a stone, except in
-that vague, pawey, overhand fashion usual with ladies, and which confers
-on the missile neither direction nor force. And when Anna Marie essayed
-to run, she still put everybody in mind of a cow trying to keep an
-engagement.
-
-While others noted those solemn truths, Anna Marie did not. She thought
-she was making strenuous progress, and combed her short hair as a man
-combs his, and walked with long, decided stride.
-
-Anna Marie rode a bike, and decided to don bloomers for this ceremony.
-She came to the bloomer decision hesitatingly, but made up her mind at
-last. Secretly she regarded bloomers as the Rubicon. It was bloomers
-which flowed between herself and the new woman in full standing; and
-once Anna Marie had broken on the world in this ill-considered costume,
-she would feel herself graduated, and no longer at school to Destiny.
-Therefore, there dawned a day when Anna Marie came down the avenue on
-her bike, be-bloomered to heart's content. She had made the plunge; the
-Rubicon was crossed, and Anna Marie felt now like a female Cæsar who
-must conquer or die.
-
-On the bike-bloomer occasion Anna Marie was weak enough to hurry. She
-put her unbridled steed to fullest speed, and flashed by the onlookers
-like unto some sweet meteor. She blamed herself afterward for being
-such a craven, but concluded that by sticking to her bloomers she would
-acquire heart and slacken speed in time.
-
-The worst feature about the bloomer business was that Anna Marie wotted
-not how hideous she looked. She did not know that a printer on his way
-to his case, caught a fleeting impression of her as she sped by, and
-that he at once “put on a sub.,” took a night off, and became dejectedly
-yet fully drunk. Nor did she wist that a nervous person was so affected
-by the awful tout ensemble of herself, bike, and bloomers that he
-repaired to Bloomingdale and sternly demanded admission as a right.
-
-No; Anna Marie rode all too frightened and too fast to reap these
-truths. Still, she might not have altered her system if she had known.
-For Anna Marie was resolute. Bent as Anna Marie was on her completion as
-a new woman, she resolved to inhabit bloomers and ride her two-wheeled
-vehicle even unto a grey old age. How else, indeed, could she be a new
-woman? A girl friend who had stood appalled at the vigour of Anna Marie
-asked her as to the bloomers.
-
-“They are good things,” observed Anna Marie. “There's a comfort in
-bloomers which lurks not in the tangled wilderness of the ordinary
-skirt. Their fault is that in donning bloomers one does not put them on
-over one's head. It is a great defect. As it is, one never feels more
-than half-dressed.” Anna Marie declared that the great want of the
-day was bloomers, through which one thrust one's arms and head in the
-process of harnessing.
-
-Anna Marie had a brother George. This youth was twelve years of age.
-George was essentially masculine. Anna Marie could see that, and it
-came to her as a thought that in the course of becoming a new woman of
-fullest feather, a good, ripe method would be to study George. Should
-she do as George did, young though he was, she was sure to succeed.
-George would do from instinct what she must do by imitation. Anna Marie
-felt these things without really and definitely thinking them. It so
-fell out that, without telling George, Anna Marie began to take him
-as guide, philosopher and friend. And all without really knowing it
-herself.
-
-Unconsciously, George loved her all the better because of this, and,
-moved by a warm, ingenuous lack of years, began to take Anna Marie into
-his confidence like true comrade. Anna Marie encouraged his frankness.
-
-“George,” said Anna Marie, one day, “whenever you are about to do
-anything peculiarly boyish and interesting, always tell me, so that I
-may join you in your sport.”
-
-George said he would, and he did.
-
-It so befell one day, as the fruit of this comradeship, that George
-changed the channel of Anna Marie's manly determination, and caused her
-to abandon the rôle of a new woman. This is the story, and it all taught
-Anna Marie, with the rush of a landslide, that, however industriously
-she might prune and train her habits to the trellis of the male,
-she would never be able to bring her nature to that state of icy,
-egotistical, cold-blooded hardihood absolutely necessary to the perfect
-man, and therefore indispensable to the new woman. But the story.
-
-“Anna Marie,” said George, coming on her one day, “Anna Marie, me and
-Billy Sweet wants you.”
-
-“What is it, George?” asked Anna Marie.
-
-“We're going to hang a dog out back of the barn,” explained George. “Me
-and Billy are to be the jury, and we want you for judge. Hurry up, now!
-that's a good fellow!”
-
-Anna Marie felt a shock at thought of taking the life of anything. Her
-first feeling was that George was a brute--a mere animal himself. But
-Anna Marie quickly reflected, that, whatever George might be, at least
-his hardened sex was the promontory the new woman must steer by. She put
-down the garment she was sewing and sought the scene of canine trial.
-
-“You see, Anna Marie!” explained George, pointing to a saffron-coloured
-dog, which stood with dolorous tail between his legs and looked very
-repentant, “he murdered a kitten, and we are going to try to convict and
-hang him. You sit down there by the fence, and the trial won't take a
-minute. Billy and me have got our minds made up, and we won't take no
-time to decide. There's the rope, and we're going to hang him to the
-limb of that maple.”
-
-Anna Marie felt worried. Still, she allowed herself to be installed, and
-the trial proceeded. It was very brief. George produced the defunct
-kitten,--which looked indeed, very dead,--with the remark, “Say, you
-yellow dog! you're charged with murdering this cat; have you got
-anything to say against being hung?”
-
-The yellow cur feebly wagged his disreputable tail, and looked at Anna
-Marie in a fashion of sneaking appeal. He said as plain as words: “Save
-me!”
-
-“I wouldn't hang the poor thing, George,” said Anna Marie, and she began
-to pat the felon yellow cur.
-
-“You're a great judge!” remonstrated George, indignantly. “It ain't for
-you to decide; it's for me and Billy. We are the jury, and in favour of
-hanging him, ain't we, Billy?”
-
-Billy nodded emphatically.
-
-“But, George,” expostulated Anna Marie, “it is so cruel! so brutal!”
-
-“Brutal!” scoffed George. “Don't they hang folks for murder every day?
-You wear bloomers and talk of being a new woman and having the rights
-of a man! I have heard you with that Sanford girl! And now you come
-out here and try to talk off a yellow dog who is guilty of murder, and
-admits it by his silence! You would act nice if it was a real man and a
-real murder case! Come on, Billy; let's string him up.”
-
-Here George seized on the cowering victim of lynch law, and started
-for the maple, where the rope already dangled for its prey. Anna Marie
-became utterly feminine at this, and burst into tears. Her nineteen
-years and her progress toward a new womanhood did not save her. In her
-distress she turned to the other member of the jury.
-
-Billy Sweet, at the age of thirteen, was an ardent admirer of George's
-sister, loved her dearly, if secretly, and meant to marry her in ten
-or fifteen years, when he grew up. At present he played with George
-and kept a loving eye on his future bride. Anna Marie knew of Billy's
-partiality, so she cunningly turned on this admirer, like a true
-daughter of the olden woman.
-
-“You think as I do, don't you, Billy?” And Anna Marie's tone had a
-caress in it which made Billy's ears a happy red.
-
-“Yes, ma'am!” said Billy.
-
-George was disgusted.
-
-“You are the kind of a juryman,” said George, full of contempt, “that
-makes me tired. There, Anna Marie, take your yellow dog, and don't try
-to play with me no more. You are too soft!”
-
-Anna Marie felt that some vast deposit of good, hard sense lay hidden
-in George's last remark. On her way to the house she did a good deal
-of thinking, as girls whose mothers are dead do now and then. The
-development of her cogitations was told in a remark to her girl friend:
-
-“It's so tiresome, this being a new woman! I am going to give it up. I
-am afraid, as father says, I am 'not built right.'”
-
-And thus it ended. Marie is exceedingly the olden woman now. She has
-beaten her sword into a pruning-hook, her bike into a spinning-wheel!
-She no longer walks with long, decided stride. She is a woman in all
-things, and will scream and chase a street car as if it were the last
-going that way for a week, like the tenderest and frailest of her kind.
-She has retracted as to bloomers. Anna Marie has returned to the agency,
-and forever abandoned the warpath of a new and manly womanhood.
-
-
-
-
-THE PETERSENS
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-WHEN Chucky came into the little doggery where we were wont to
-converse, there arrived with him an emphatic odour of kerosene. Also
-Chucky's face was worn and sad, and his hands were muffled with many
-bandages. To add to it all Chucky was not in spirits.
-
-“What's the trouble?” I asked.
-
-“We've been havin 'd' run in' of our lives,” replied Chucky, as he
-called to the barkeeper for his usual bracer, “an' our tenement is just
-standin' on its nut right now, an' that's for straight!”
-
-“Tell me about it,” I urged.
-
-“D' racket this time over to d' joint,” said Chucky, “is about a Swede
-skirt named Petersen who croaks herself be d' gas play last night. D'
-place is full of cops an' hobos an' all sorts of blokes, pipin' off d'
-play, while a corner mug is holdin' an inkwest over d' stiff, see! What
-you smells is d' coal oil on me mits. I soaks me hooks in it to take d'
-boin away. Me Rag gives me d' tip; an' say! it's a winner at that. D'
-boins ain't half so bad as dey was.”
-
-“But I don't understand,” I replied. “How did you come to burn your
-hands? If the gas was burning, I don't see how the woman could have
-committed suicide.”
-
-“Youse is gettin' away on d' wrong hoof,” said Chucky. “I don't boin me
-fins over d' Petersen moll croakin' herself. I cremates 'em puttin' out
-d' flames when d' Petersen kid takes fire d' day before. This inkwest
-which d' cor'oner guy is holdin' to-day, is d' secont one. He holds d'
-foist yesterday over d' kid.
-
-“On d' level! I don't catch on to d' need of inkwests anyhow. If a
-mark's dead, he's dead. It don't need no sawbones an' a mob of snoozers
-to be 'panelled for a jury, see! to put youse on. It looks to me like
-a dead case of shakin' down d' public for d' fees; these inkwests do,
-Cor'ners, I s'spose, has to have some excuse for livin', so when some
-poor duck croaks, dey comes chasin' 'round wit' a inkwest to see if
-he's surely done up, an' to put a bit of dough in their kecks. Well! I
-figgers it's law all right, all right, an' mebby it's d' proper caper.
-Anyhow, I passes it up.
-
-“What about this Petersen push? Well, if ever a household strikes it
-hard, I'm here to say it's d' Petersens. When it comes to d' boss hard
-luck story, I'll place me bets wit' that outfit every time.
-
-“It's two spaces back when this Petersen gang comes ashore at Ellis
-Island. There's t'ree of 'em; husband, wife, an' kid, see! Dey comes
-in as steerage, an' naturally, d' Ellis Island gezebos collars 'em
-an' t'rows 'em into hock d' moment dey hits d' pier. Nit; dey ain't
-arrested. But youse is on, how dey puts d' clamps to emigrants. Dey
-'detains' 'em, as it's called.
-
-“Every mug who comes steerage has to spring his plant when he lands, an'
-if he ain't as strong as $30, dey--d' offishuls--don't do a t'ing but
-chase him back on d' nex' boat. He's a pauper, see! an' he gets d'
-razzle dazzle an 'd' gran' rinky dink. Back he goes where he hails from,
-like a bundle of old clothes. Paupers is barred at Ellis Island; dey
-don't go wit' these United States, not on your overshoes!
-
-“So d' Petersens is stood up, like I tells youse, at Ellis Island to see
-be dey tramps. It toins out, nit. Dey ain't paupers. Petersen has more'n
-enough money to get be d' gate, see! Petersen has a hundred an' fifty
-plunks, an' bein' there's only t'ree, it's plenty to go 'round an' show
-$30 for each.
-
-“Still them Ellis Island snoozers detains d' Petersens a week just d'
-same. D' place where dey stays is worse'n any holdover or station house
-I'm ever in; an', bein' d' weather's winter, an' this 'detention' pen
-is wet an' cold, Petersen himself cops off d' pneumonia an' out goes his
-light before ever he leaves Ellis Island at all. Dey plants him in d'
-graveyard dey has for emigrants, an 'd' wife an' kid comes over to d'
-city alone.
-
-“That's d' foist I knows of d' Petersens. D' mother an' kid takes a
-back-room in our tenement; an' after dey gets 'quainted, she tells me
-Rag about her man dyin'. She ain't so old, this Petersen woman, an' only
-she's all broke up about her man croakin', she ain't a bad looker, see!
-wit' blue eyes an' a mop of gold hair. D' kid's name is Hilda, an,'
-except she's only seven years an' no bigger'n a drink of whiskey, she's
-a ringer for her mother.
-
-“Well! like I says, d' Petersens--what's left of 'em after d' man quits
-livin'--organised in d' back room on our floor. An' because folks who
-wants to chew must woik, d' Petersen woman gets a curve on an' goes to
-doin' stunts wit' a tub. She chases 'round doin' washin', see!
-
-“It's when d' old goil is away slingin' suds that I gets nex' wit 'd'
-kid. She's dropped her ragbaby down be a gratin' one day an' her heart
-is broke. She t'inks it's a cinch case of all over wit' d' poor ragbaby,
-an' she's cryin' to beat d' band.
-
-“But she gets it ag'in. Me an' a big fat cop who comes waddlin' along,
-tears up d' gratin' an' fishes out Hilda's doll, an' after that me an'
-her gets to be dead chummy; what youse might call * pals.'
-
-“Hilda's shy at foist, an' a bit leary of me--I ain't no bute at me
-best--but she gets used to seein' me about, an' as I stakes her to
-or'nges onct or twict, at last she gets stuck on me.
-
-“D' Petersens, an' me, an' me Rag is neighbours on d' same floor for
-near two years. An' days when I comes home early, an' me breat' ain't
-smellin' of booze--for d' kid welches every time she sniffs d' lush
-on me, see!--I used to go in an' kiss Hilda same as she's me own. An'
-between youse an' me,” and here a drop gathered in Chucky's cold eye,
-“I ain't above tippin' it off on d' quiet, I t'inks a heap of this
-young-one, an' feels better every time I gets me lamps on her.
-
-“D' finish comes t'ree days ago. D' old goil Petersen is away woikin',
-an' Hilda, for all it's so cold, is playin' in d' passage-way. There's
-one of them plumber hold-ups fixin 'd' water pipe where it's sprung a
-leak, an' he's got one of them dinky little fire pots which plumbers lug
-'round wit' em.
-
-“While this plumber stiff is busy wit' his graft, poor little Hilda
-t'inks she'll warm her dolly's mits be d' blaze. She's holdin' her
-ragbaby's hooks over d' plumber's fire as I comes up d' stairs; an' as
-she hears me foot, an' toins smilin' to make sure it's me, her frock
-catches, an' when she chases screechin' into me arms, she's a bundle of
-live flame. Say! I'd sooner ten to one it was me, an' that's no bluff!
-
-“I wraps me coat over her, an' gives d' fire d' quick smother, see! An'
-I boins me dukes until it comes to bein' mighty near a case of stumps
-wit' Chucky d' balance of his joiney to d' tomb.
-
-“But what th' 'ell! It all don't do no good. D' poor kid has swallered d'
-fire, an' she's d' deadest ever before even I takes her out of me coat.
-
-“We lays Hilda out, me Rag an' me, on d' Petersens' bed; an' d' cor'ner
-sucker, as I says at d' be-ginnin', comes sprintin' over an' goes to
-holdin' his inkwests.
-
-“Bimeby, d' mother gets home from her tubs, an' that's where d' hard
-play comes in. Me Rag tells her as easy as she can; but youse could see
-it was a centre shot all d' same. It soaked her where she lived.
-
-“'Foist d' man, an' then d' baby!' says d' Petersen woman, as she sets
-on d' floor an' mourns; 'now I'll soon go hunt for 'em.'
-
-“Me Rag tries to get her to come in wit' us, but she won't stan' for it.
-All t'rough d' night we hears her mournin' an' groanin' on d' floor be
-d' side of little Hilda's coffin.
-
-“D' kid's fun'ral was yesterday, an' a pulpit sharp from one of d'
-Missions gets in on d' play, an' offishiates. Sure! it's a case of
-Potter's Field--for d' mother ain't got d' dough to make good for a
-grave--but me an' me Rag gets a car, an' takes d' mother out to see
-little Hilda planted. No, she don't cry much at that; but me Rag toins
-in an' don't do a t'ing but break d' record for tears. If Hilda was her
-own kid, she couldn't have made more of a row. When it comes to what
-youse might call 'd' outward evidences of grief,' me Rag simply lose d'
-Petersen mother.
-
-“D' mother was feelin' it all d' same. She keeps whisperin' to herself:
-'Soon I'll go find 'em!' like that; an' that's d' limit of what youse
-could get out of her.
-
-“It's last night, after little Hilda's put away,--it's mebby, say, t'ree
-this mornin', when wit'out a woid of warnin' me Rag sets up straight in
-bed an' gives a sniff.
-
-“'Be d' mother of d' Holy Mary! it's gas!' she says, an' nex' she makes
-a straight wake for d' Petersen door.
-
-“An' me Rag guesses right d' very foist time, like d' kid in d' song.
-Gas it was; d' poor Petersen mother toins it on full blast. She's
-croaked an' cold as a wedge, hours before we tumbles to her game.
-
-“That's d' finish. As I states d' foist dash out of d' box, it's d'
-dandy hard luck story of d' year. D' whole Petersen push is wiped out,
-same as that bar-keep would swab off his bar. On d' dead! it's all too
-many for me! What's d' use of folks bein' born at all, if dey's goin' to
-get yanked in like that--t'ree at a clatter, an' all young!
-
-“Do dey have re-latiffs? Some in d' old country, I takes it. There's a
-note d' Petersen woman leaves for me Rag, astin' her to write d' hist'ry
-of d' last round an' wind-up to d' folks at home, an' givin' d' address.
-But me ownliest own says 'nit!' an* chucks d' note in d' stove.
-
-“'Dey's better off not knowin',' says me Rag.”
-
-
-
-
-BOWLDER'S BURGLAR
-
-
-Bowlder's wife and offspring were away at the time; and the time was a
-night last summer. Mrs. B. was in Long Branch, and Bowlder, left lonely
-and forlorn, to look after the house and earn money, was having a sad,
-bad time, indeed.
-
-Not that Bowlder really lacked anything; but he missed his wife and
-little ones. Where before the merry prattle of his children made the
-racket of a boiler shop, all was solemn peace and hush. The Bowlder
-mansion was like a graveyard.
-
-Naturally Bowlder felt lonesome; and to avoid, as much as might be,
-having his loneliness thrust upon him by the empty desolation of the
-house, he made it a rule during his wife's absence not to go home until
-3 o'clock A. M.
-
-He was “dead on his legs” by that time, as he expressed it, and went at
-once to sleep, before the absence of Mrs. B. began to prey upon him.
-
-On the night, or more properly morning, in question, Bowlder wended
-homeward at sharp 3. He had been missing Mrs. B. painfully all the
-evening, and, to uphold himself, subscribed to divers drinks. These
-last Bowlder put safely away within his belt, and they cherished him and
-taught him resignation, and he didn't miss his wife as much as he had.
-
-The hoary truth is that as Bowlder drew near his home, he had so far
-conquered his sense of abandonment that he wasn't even thinking of his
-wife. He was plodding along in the middle of the street for fear of
-footpads, whom he fancied might be sauntering in the shadows on either
-side, and was really in quite a happy, fortunate frame of mind. As
-Bowlder turned in toward his door he was softly repeating the lines:
-
- “'Tis sweet to hear the watch dog's honest bark,
-
- Bay deep-mouthed welcome as we draw near home,
-
- 'Tis sweet to know there is an eye will mark
-
- Our coming, and grow brighter when we come.”
-
-Not that Bowlder had a watch dog, honest or otherwise, to bay him
-deep-mouthed welcome. And inasmuch as they had discharged the exile from
-Erin, who aforetime did service as the Bowlder maid-of-all-work, when
-Mrs. B. took flight for the summer, there was slight hope of an eye on
-the premises to grow brighter when he came.
-
-No; it was not that Bowlder was really looking for deep-mouthed bays or
-brightening eyes; he was naturally musical and poetical, and the drinks
-he had corralled had unlocked his nature in that behalf. Bowlder was
-reciting the lines quoted for the pleasure he drew from their beauty;
-not from the prophecy they put forth of any meeting to which he looked
-forward. A remark which escaped Bowlder as he climbed his steps and
-dexterously fitted his night key to the day keyhole showed this.
-
-“I ought to have stayed at a hotel,” said Bowlder. “There's nobody here
-to rake me over the coals for it, and I'm going to have a great head on
-me when I wake up.”
-
-Bowlder at last by mistake got his latchkey into the keyhole to which
-it related, and the door swung inward. This was a distinct success and
-Bowlder heaved a breath of relief. This door, which had grown singularly
-obdurate since Mrs. B.'s departure, had been known to hold Bowlder at
-bay for twenty minutes.
-
-Bowlder had just cast his hat on the hall floor--he intended to hang
-it up in the morning when he would have more time--and got as far on a
-journey to the second story as one step, when a noise in the basement
-dining-room enlisted Bowlder's attention. His curiosity rather than his
-fears was aroused; another happy effect of his libations.
-
-Without one thought of burglars, Bowlder deferred his journey upstairs,
-and repaired instead to the dining-room below. Bowlder would investigate
-the untoward noises which, while soft and light, were still of such
-volume as might tell upon the ear.
-
-“Wonder 'f the houshe is haunted?” observed Bowlder as he went deviously
-below.
-
-It has already been noted that Bowlder not once bethought him of
-burglars. In truth he had often scoffed at burglars while conversing
-with Mrs. B. on this subject so interesting to ladies. Bowlder had said
-that no burglar could make day wages robbing the house.
-
-It had all the thrill of perfect surprise then when, as Bowlder
-turned into his dining-room, he beheld a bull's-eye lantern shedding a
-malevolent stream of light in his face, and caught the shadowy outlines
-of a tall man behind it who seemed engaged in pointing a pistol at him.
-
-“Hold up your hands!” said the tall man, “and don't come a step further,
-or out goes your light!”
-
-[Illustration: 0307]
-
-“Well! I like thish!” squeaked Bowlder, in a tone of querulous
-complaint, at the same time, however, clasping his hands above his head;
-“I like thish! What's the row here?”
-
-The tall man made no reply, but came across and deftly ran his hands
-over Bowlder for possible arms. Bowlder had no gun. The tall man seemed
-satisfied, and stepping back, told Bowlder he might sit down on a chair
-and rest his hands in his lap. Bowlder took advantage of the permission.
-
-“Any 'bjections to me lighting a shegar?” queried Bowlder.
-
-“Not at all,” said the tall man.
-
-Bowlder was soon puffing away. Being friendly, not to say polite by
-nature, Bowlder bestowed one on his visitor.
-
-“Is it a mild cigar?” asked the burglar.
-
-“Colorado claro,” said Bowlder.
-
-“That's all right!” assented the other. “I don't like a strong smoke; it
-makes my head ache.”
-
-As the visitor lighted the cigar, Bowlder noticed that he wore a black
-mask across his eyes, and that the latter shone through the apertures
-cut for their convenience like beads. The mask gave Bowlder a chill
-which the pistol had not evoked. Indeed, it came very near destroying
-the whole force of the drinks he had accumulated.
-
-When the stranger had lighted his cigar, Bowlder and he puffed at each
-other a moment without a word.
-
-“What are you doing in my houshe?” at last demanded Bowlder.
-
-The stranger smiled and puffed on. Then he kicked a large sack with his
-foot. Bowlder had not observed this sack before. As the stranger touched
-it with his foot, it gave out a metallic clinking.
-
-Bowlder's eyes roamed instinctively to the sideboard. There wasn't much
-light; enough, however, to show Bowlder that the sideboard's burden
-of silverware was gone. With such a start, Bowlder was able to infer a
-great deal.
-
-“Made a clean shweep, eh?” remarked Bowlder.
-
-The masked stranger nodded.
-
-“If you've got all there is loose and little in the houshe,” said
-Bowlder--he was talking plainer every moment now--“you've got $1,500
-worth. Been up-shtairs yet?”
-
-Again the man of the mask nodded. Also he exhibited symptoms of being
-about to depart.
-
-“Don't go yet!” remonstrated Bowlder. “Want to talk to you. Did you get
-the old lady's jewellery upstairs?”
-
-Again the burglar nodded. He seemed disinclined to use his voice unless
-it was necessary.
-
-“Thash's bad!” remarked Bowlder reflectively; referring to the conquest
-of his wife's jewellery. “The old lady won't do a thing but make me buy
-her some more. And the worst of it is, she'll put up the figures on what
-jimcracks you've got, and insisht they're worth four times their true
-value. I'm lucky if she don't put it higher than $1,000. And they ain't
-worth $200; you'll be lucky if you get that on 'em.”
-
-The burglar looked hopeful as well as he could with a mask, but retorted
-nothing to Bowlder. The latter mused sorrowfully over his wife's jewels.
-
-“You see it putsh me in the hole!” said Bowlder. “I get it going and
-coming. You come along and rob me; and then Mrs. B. comes home and robs
-me again. Don't you think that's a little rough?”
-
-The stranger said it was rough. He didn't nod this time, but used his
-voice. Encouraged by the agreement with his views, Bowlder urged the
-return of his wife's jewellery.
-
-“Just gimme back what's hers,” said Bowlder, “and you can keep the rest.
-That'll let me out with her, and I don't care for the balance.”
-
-But the man of midnight stoutly objected. It would be a dead loss of
-$200, he said, and worse yet, it would be unprofessional.
-
-Bowlder thought deeply a moment. Then he took a new tack.
-
-“Any 'bjections to taking a drink with me?” he asked.
-
-“None in the world!” said the burglar.
-
-Bowlder explored his coat pocket for a bottle he'd brought home to
-restore him after his sleep. He proffered the bottle to the burglar.
-
-“After you is manners!” said that person.
-
-Bowlder drank and then the burglar did the same.
-
-“You a Republican?” demanded Bowlder suddenly. “I s'pose even burglars
-have their politics!”
-
-“Administration Republican!” said the burglar; “that's what I am. I
-believe in Imperialism and a sound currency.”
-
-“I'm an Administration Republican, too,” remarked Bowlder. “I knew
-we'd find common ground at last. Now, as a member of the same party as
-yourself, I want to ask a favour of you. You've got about $1,500 worth
-of plunder there; and yet, you see yourself, there's a good deal of
-furniture you're leaving behind; piano upstairs and all that. I'll
-play you one game of ten-point seven-up to see whether you take all or
-nothing. Come, now, as a favour!”
-
-The burglar hesitated. He feared there was a trap in it. Bowlder gave
-him his word as a goldbug that he made the proffer in all honesty.
-
-“If you win,” said Bowlder, “you can cart the furniture away to-morrow.
-I'll order you a waggon as I go down, and you can sleep in the house and
-see that I don't carry off anything or hold out on you.”
-
-“But it ain't worth as much as what I've got,” demurred the burglar.
-
-“Well, see here!” said Bowlder--sober he was now--“to avoid spoiling
-sport I'll throw in my watch and $30. That's square!”
-
-The burglar admitted that the proposal was fair, but stuck for seven
-points.
-
-“I like straight seven-up,” he said. “Make it a seven-point game and
-I'll go you.”
-
-Bowlder produced a deck of cards from the sewing-machine drawer. At the
-burglar's own suggestion they lighted one gas jet.
-
-“Cut for deal!” said Bowlder.
-
-The burglar cut a ten-spot, Bowlder a deuce. The burglar had the deal.
-
-The king of diamonds was turned as trump.
-
-“Beg!” said Bowlder.
-
-“Take it!” remarked the burglar.
-
-The hands were played. Bowlder had the queen and six-spot of diamonds;
-the marauder had the ten, nine, and seven of diamonds. Bowlder took
-high, low and the burglar counted game.
-
-“No jack out!” remarked Bowlder.
-
-“No,” said the other. And then in an abused tone; “Say! you don't beg
-nor nuthin', do you? The idee of a gent's beggin' in a two-hand game,
-a-holdin' of the queen and six.”
-
-They played three hands; Jack had been out once. Bowlder was keeping
-score. It stood:
-
-“Bowl, I I I I I I.”
-
-“Burg, I I I I.”
-
-It was Bowlder's deal. He riffled the cards with the deftness of one who
-plays often and well.
-
-“Bound to settle it this time!” said the burglar. “The score stands 6 to
-4. You bet your life! I'll stand on the bare jack if I get it.”
-
-Bowlder threw the cards around and turned trump with a snap. It was the
-jack of clubs.
-
-The burglar looked at it wistfully, even sadly.
-
-“That's square, is it?” he said to Bowlder in a tone of half reproach.
-“You ain't the party to go and turn a jack on a poor crook from the
-bottom of the deck, and you only one to go?”
-
-Bowlder assured him the transaction was perfectly honest.
-
-“Yes, I guess it was,” said the burglar, rising. “I was watching you,
-and I guess it was straight. It's just my luck, that's all. Well! I must
-go; it's getting along towards 4: 30 o'clock.”
-
-“Have a drink!” said Bowlder, “and take another cigar!”
-
-The cracksman took a drink. Then he selected a cigar from Bowlder's
-proffered case.
-
-“If it's all the same to youse,” said the burglar, “I'll smoke this
-later on--after breakfast.” And he put the cigar in his pocket.
-
-“Here; let me show you out this way,” said Bowlder, leading the way to
-the front basement door.
-
-“I hates to ask it of a stranger,” said the burglar, as he hesitated
-just outside the door, “but the Eight' Avenoo cars'll be runnin' in a
-little while now, and would you mind lendin' me a nickel? I lives down
-be the Desbrosses Ferry.”
-
-Of course Bowlder would lend him car-fare. This somewhat raised the
-burglar's spirits, made sad by seven-up. As he closed the door behind
-him, the burglar looked back at Bowlder.
-
-“Do you know, pard,” he said, “if it wasn't for my weakness for
-gamblin', I'd been a rich man a dozen times.”
-
-
-
-
-ANGELINA McLAURIN
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-Angelina McLaurin's was a rare face; a beautiful face. It had but one
-defect: Angelina's nose was curved like the wing of a gull. This gave
-her an air of resolution and command that affected the onlooker like a
-sign which says: “Look out for the engine.”
-
-Still, Angelina McLaurin was bewitchingly lovely, a result much aided
-in its coming about by a form so admirably upholstered that to look upon
-her would have made Diana tired.
-
-It was a soft, sensuous September afternoon. Angelina McLaurin was
-impatiently holding down a richly cushioned chair in the library of the
-noble McLaurin mansion--one of those stately piles which are the pride
-of Washington Heights. She was awaiting the coming of her affianced
-husband, George Maurice St. John.
-
-“Why does he prove so dilatory?” she murmured. “Methinks true love would
-not own such leaden feet!”
-
-As Angelina McLaurin arose to gaze from the window she rocked on the
-tail of the ample Angora cat.
-
-The cat made it a point to hang out in the library every afternoon. On
-this occasion, while Angelina McLaurin was dreaming of her lover, the
-cat had taken advantage of her abstraction to deftly bestow his tail
-beneath the rocker of her chair. When Angelina arose, as stated, the cat
-got the worst of it.
-
-As the rocker came down on the cat's tail, the cat exploded into
-observations in Angorese that are unfit for these pages. Angelina was
-not only startled out of herself, but almost out of her frock. Angelina
-and the cat arose hastily, and stood there panting.
-
-As the shrieks of the wronged exile from Angora were uplifted into
-space, the door of the library burst violently open.
-
-“What is the matter, dearest? Are you injured? Why do you cry for help?”
-
-It was George Maurice St. John who asked the question. As he did so, he
-caught Angelina McLaurin in his powerful arms, while the Angora cat, his
-worst fears now realised, chased himself down the hall with tail excited
-to lamp-cleaner size.
-
-“What is it, love?” asked George Maurice St. John, as he tenderly
-unloaded his delicious burden onto a sofa, “Speak! it is the voice of
-your George who bids you. Has any one dared to insult the coming bride
-of a St. John?”
-
-“Bear with me, George!” she whispered. “Believe me, I will be better
-anon!”
-
-After a few moments she recovered, and was able to smile through her
-tears at the alarm of her dear one. Then she told George all: how the
-cat had been ass enough to leave his tail lying around loose while
-asleep; how, in the intensity of her waiting, she had put a crimp in it
-with the fell rocker of the chair; and how the cat had been drawn into
-statements, by sheer dint of agony, which it was impolitic as well as
-useless to repeat.
-
-“So I was just in time, Angelina, to relieve both you and the cat of
-what was doubtless an awkward situation.” And George Maurice St. John
-laughed gaily.
-
-Then he kissed her with a fervour that left nothing to be wished for,
-and Angelina took a brace and sat erect on the sofa.
-
-“I feel better now!” she remarked.
-
-George tried to get in another kiss, but she stood him off.
-
-“Don't crowd your luck, dear!” she said, with a sweet softness. “I am
-yours for ever, and there is not the slightest need for any excess of
-osculatory zeal. You are to have me with you always, so set a brake or
-two and take the grades easy.”
-
-Thus repulsed, George Maurice St. John sat abashed. A pained look seamed
-his features; he bit his lips and was silent.
-
-*****
-
-Daylight became twilight, and twilight retreated into the darkness of
-a new night. It struck eight o'clock in the adjoining tower, and George
-Maurice St John was a-hungered. His stomach was the first to tip it off
-to him.
-
-“Don't we feed to-night?” asked George Maurice St. John.
-
-The lovers for two hours had chattered aimlessly, as ones wandering in a
-wilderness of bliss. This was the first pointed remark.
-
-“Anon! love; we will feed anon!” replied Angelina McLaurin dreamily.
-“But, George, before we get in our gustatory work, I would a word with
-you--indeed! sundry words.”
-
-“Aim low, and send 'em along!” said George. “What is it my Queen would
-learn from her slave?”
-
-In his ecstacy he achieved a “half Nelson” on the lovely girl, and
-caught her in the back of the neck with a kiss.
-
-The Angora cat, who was stealthily threading the hall, intending to play
-a return game with the library rug, gave a great convulsive start,
-at the kiss, which carried him out of the mansion, and over the alley
-fence.
-
-“They're a mark too high for me!” said the Angora to himself.
-
-Then inflating his lungs to the last limit of expansion, the Angora sent
-a song of invitation down the line that set every Tabby in the block to
-washing her face and combing her ears.
-
-“Your Queen wants a square heel-and-toe talk, George,” said the sweet
-girl, as she tucked up her silken locks, dishevelled by his caresses
-into querulous little rings. “And your Queen wants straight goods
-this time, and no guff! Oh, darling!” continued Angelina McLaurin in a
-passionate outburst, “be square with me, and make me those promises upon
-which my life's happiness depends!”
-
-George Maurice St. John strained Angelina to his bosom.
-
-“I'll promise anything!” he said. “What wouldst thou have me do? My
-life, my fortune, my honour--my all, I lay at your feet! Monkey with
-them as thou wilt.”
-
-“Then listen!” said Angelina.
-
-*****
-
-“George, we are to be wedded in a month, are we not?”
-
-“We are!” he cried exultantly; and again he essayed the “half Nelson,”
- and attempted to bury his nose in her mane.
-
-“Don't get gay, George!” she said mournfully, as she broke George's
-lock, and gently but firmly pushed his bows off a point; “don't get
-funny! but hear me.”
-
-“Go on,” said George, and his tones showed that his failure pierced him
-like a javelin. “We are to be wedded in a month. What then, lady?”
-
-“George,” said Angelina McLaurin, and the tear-jewels shone in her eyes,
-“don't think me unwomanly, but you know how I am fixed;--father and
-mother both dead! I am an orphan, George, and must heel-and-handle
-myself.”
-
-“Even so!” said George, and his face showed his sympathy.
-
-“Then, George, before we take that step to the altar,” she went on
-steadily enough, but with a quaver in her voice which his ear, made
-sensitive by great love, did not fail to detect: “before we take that
-step, I say, from which there is no retreat, I must know certain things.
-You must make me certain promises.”
-
-“Name them,” he whispered, and his deep voice overran her like a melody.
-
-“Then, George,” she said, “is it too much to ask that $100,000 worth of
-property be settled upon me at this time?”
-
-“My solicitors have already received my instructions to make it
-a million.” George Maurice St. John's voice dwelt fondly on the
-settlement. “It is but a beggarly ante in such a game of table-stakes as
-this!” This time Angelina McLaurin did not decline his endearments. When
-he let up, she continued:
-
-“And it's dead sure I go to the Shore each summer?”
-
-“It is a welded cinch,” he replied, as he drew her nearer to him. “You
-take in the coast from Bar Harbour to the Florida Keys.”
-
-“And servants?”
-
-“A mob shall minister unto thee,” he said.
-
-“Then I have but one more boon, George,” she murmured, “grant that, and
-I am thine forever.”
-
-“Board the card!” cried George; “I promise before you ask.”
-
-“Say not so,” she said with a sweet sadness; “but muzzle your lips and
-listen. You must quit golf.”
-
-“What!” shrieked George, with an energy that sent the Angora backward
-off a shed-roof of dubious repute, from which he was carolling to his
-low companions; “what!” he repeated. “Woman, think!”
-
-“I have thought, George,” responded Angelina Mc-Laurin, with an air of
-sorrowful firmness. “There is but one alternative: saw short off,--saw
-short off on golf, or give me up forever!”
-
-“Is this some horrid dream?” he hissed, as he strode up and down the
-library.
-
-At last he paused before her.
-
-“Woman,” he said sternly, “look on me! Is this some lightsome bluff, or
-does it go? Dost mean it, woman?”
-
-“Ay! I mean it!” answered Angelina, while her cheek paled and her breath
-came quick and fast. “Don't make any mistake on that; I mean it. My talk
-goes. And my hand is off my chips.”
-
-“Is this your love?” he sneered, bitterly.
-
-“It is,” she faltered. “I have spoken, and I abide your answer.”
-
-“Then, girl,” said George Maurice St. John, and his words were cold and
-hard, “all is over between us. You would drive me into a corner and take
-away my golf! I say No! No! a thousand times, No!”
-
-At this outbreak the curve in Angelina's nose became more intense. She
-dried her eyes. Her features, too, became as flint. She even cut loose a
-low, mocking laugh.
-
-“Be it so!” she said; “sirrah, take your ring!”
-
-He seized the bauble and ground it beneath his heel. As he did so her
-strength failed her, and she sank to the floor.
-
-“That knocked her out!” he muttered, and he started to count:
-“One!--Two!--Three--Four!-”
-
-“Oh, not necessarily!” she said, struggling to her feet. “I'm still in
-it; and I say again, give up golf, or give up me!”
-
-“The die is cast!” and as he spoke the fatal words, the eyes of George
-Maurice St. John took on the firm, irrevocable expression of a fish's
-set in death. “I wouldn't give up golf for the best woman that ever put
-a dress on over her head. Maiden, you ask too much; you come too high!
-Damsel, I quit you cold!”
-
-*****
-
-George Maurice St. John rushed from the scene. The ponderous door, as it
-slammed behind him, echoed and re-echoed through the vaulted apartments
-of the McLaurin mansion. Angelina McLaurin listened until his footsteps
-died away far up the street.
-
-“He has flew the coop on me!” she wailed.
-
-Then she gave way to a torrent of tears. In her distress Angelina
-McLaurin was more beautiful than ever. Two minutes! Five minutes! Ten
-minutes went by! Her tears still fell like rain.
-
-“I have turned the hose on my hopes!” she said.
-
-This was the thought that crossed her mind; but she desperately womanned
-(word coined since advent of new woman) herself to bear it.
-
-Still afloat on the sad currents of her tears, her head bowed, a light
-sound beat upon the tympanum of Angelina McLaurin. She looked quickly up
-and squared herself to emit a glad cry, if one should be necessary.
-
-What was it?
-
-Something had come back.
-
-True! it was the Angora cat.
-
-As the Angora flung himself upon the rug with an air of reckless
-abandon, Angelina McLaurin gazed at him with a wistful fixedness. One
-eye was closed, his fur was torn, blood dripped from his lacerated ears.
-He was, in good sooth, but a tattered Angora! Angelina McLaurin laughed
-long and wildly.
-
-“He, too,' has got it in the neck!”
-
-
-
-
-DINKY PETE
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Do we have romances on t' East Side!” and Chucky's voice was vibrant
-with the scorn my doubts provoked. “Do we have romances! Well, I don't
-t'ink! Say! there's days when we don't have nothin' else.”
-
-At this crisis Chucky called for another glass; did it without
-invitation. This last spoke of and betrayed a sense of injury.
-
-“Let me tell youse,” continued Chucky, “an' d' yarn don't cost you a
-cent, see! how Dinky Pete sends Jimmy d' barkeep back to his wife. It's
-what I calls romantic for a hundred plunks.
-
-“Not that Jimmy ever leaves her, for that matter; that is, he don't
-leave her for fair! But he's sort o' organisin' for d' play when Dinky
-Pete puts d' kybosh on d' notion, an' wit' that Jimmy don't chase at
-all, see!
-
-“Jimmy d' barkeep is some soft in d' nut, see! Nit, he ain't really got
-w'eels; ain't bad enough for d' bug house; but he's a bit funny in his
-cocoa--mostly be way of bein' dead stuck on himself.
-
-“An' bein' weak d' way I says, Jimmy is a high roller for clothes;
-always sports a w'ite t'ree-sheet, wit' a rock blazin' in d' centre, big
-enough to trip a dog. An' say! his necktie's a dream, an' his hat's d'
-limit!
-
-“What's a t'ree-sheet? an' what's a rock? I don't want to give you no
-insultin' tips, but on d' square! youse ought to take a toim at night
-school. Why! a t'ree-sheet is his shirt, an' d' rock I names is Jimmy's
-spark! Of course, d' spark ain't d' real t'ing; only a rhinestone; but
-it goes in d' Bend all d' same for a 2-carat headlight.
-
-“Jimmy makes a tidy bit of dough, see! He gets, mebby it's fifteen bones
-a week, an' I makes no doubt he shakes down d' bar for ten more, which
-is far from bad graft. So it ain't s'prisin' one day when Jimmy gets it
-stuck in his frizzes he'll be married.
-
-“Jimmy's Bundle is all right at that. Her name's Annie, an' she's a
-proper straight chip. An' that ain't no song an' dance; square as a die
-she was. An' a bute! She was d' pick of d' Bowery crush, an' don't youse
-doubt it.
-
-“Well, Jimmy an' Annie goes on wit' their courtships, I takes it, same
-as if dey lives on Fift' Avenoo. Annie's a mil'ner, an' while she don't
-have money to t'row to d' boids, she woiks for enough so it's as good as
-a stan'-off on livin', which is all her hand calls for an' all she asts.
-If she don't quit winner after trimmin' hats a week, at any rate she
-don't get in d' hole, see!
-
-“Oh, yes; she an' Jimmy gets action on d' sights. Now an' then it's
-Coney Island; then ag'in it's a front seat at d' People's; or mebby if
-some of d' squeeze has a dance, dey pulls on their skates an' steps in
-on d' spiel. An' say! as a spieler Annie's a wonder, an' don't youse
-forget it. I has d' woid for it from me own Rag, an' when it comes to
-pickin' out a dancer, you can trust me Rag to be dead on in a minute. D'
-loidy can do a dizzy stunt or two on a wax floor herself when it comes
-to a show-down.
-
-“But about me romance. Jimmy has chased around wit' Annie, say it's
-t'ree mont's. An' all this time his strong play is voylets, see! Annie
-is gone on voylets, so each evenin' Jimmy toins in on Dinky Pete, who
-sells poipers an' peanuts, an' some of this hard, bum candy you breaks
-your teet's on. Dinky also deals a little flower game, wit' about a
-5-cent limit, an' that's what gets Jimmy. Just as I says, each evenin'
-Jimmy sticks in a nickel for a bunch of voylets at Dinky's an' sends
-some kid--Dinky's joint is a great hang-out for d' kids--to take 'em up
-to Annie.
-
-“An' them voylets tickles Annie to death.
-
-“At last all goes well, an' Jimmy an' Annie gets spliced. An' it's
-all right at that! Me Rag, who calls on 'em, says Jimmy an' Annie's d'
-happiest ever, an' gettin 'd' boss run for their money.
-
-“It's about a year when Annie don't do a t'ing but have a kid. At foist
-Jimmy likes it, an' lets on it's d' racket of his career. But after a
-while Jimmy gets chilly--sort o' gets sore on d' kid. Me Rag gives me
-a pointer it's mostly Annie's fault. She stars d' kid too heavy, an' it
-makes Jimmy feel like a deuce in a bum deck; makes him t'ink he ain't so
-strong--ain't so warm as he was. An' it toins out' Annie, bein' always
-busy monkeyin' wit 'd' young-one, an' givin' Jimmy d' languid eye, d'
-nex' news you get, Jimmy is back on d' street when he is off watch,
-tryin' to pipe off some fun.
-
-“I never knows where she catches on wit' Jimmy, but it ain't no time
-when one of them razzle-dazzle blondes has him on d' string. She's doin'
-d' grand at that, see! an' givin' him d' haughty stand-off.
-
-“Mebby Jimmy met her on d' street onct or twict, when for d' foist time,
-Goldie--which is this blonde tart's name--says Jimmy can come an' see
-her.
-
-“It's been mont's since Jimmy's done d' flower act at Dinkey Pete's. But
-d' sucker t'inks it's d' night of his life, an' so he chases in an' goes
-ag'inst Pete's counter for a bunch.
-
-“This Dinky Pete's a dead queer little mug. He's a short, sawed-off
-mark, wit' a humpy back an' a bum lamp. But you can gamble your life Î
-Dinky Pete's heart is on straight, whether his back is or not.
-
-“It's be chanct I'm in Dinky Pete's meself d' time Jimmy is out to meet
-this blonde mash. Now, at d* time I ain't onto Jimmy's curves; I don't
-tumble to d' play till a week later, when me Rag puts me on.
-
-“W'at was I doin' in Dinky Pete's? Flowers? Nit; not on your life!
-Naw; I wants to change me luck. I'd got d' gaff at draw poker d' night
-before, an' I'm layin' for Dinky Pete for to rub his hump on d' sly.
-Sure! Youse'll have luck out of sight. Only you mustn't let d' humpback
-guy get on. If he notices you rubbin' his hump it'll give youse bad
-luck, see!
-
-“Jimmy comes in, an' at foist, be force of habit, I s'spose, he's goin'
-to plunge on voylets. But he t'inks of Annie, an' he can't stand for it.
-Wit' that, Jimmy shifts his brush an' tells Dinky Pete to toin him out
-some roses.
-
-“'An' make 'em d' reddest in d' joint, see!' says Jimmy.
-
-“Dinky Pete's got his mits on some voylets, but when Jimmy says 'roses'
-Dinky comes to a stan' still.
-
-“' W'at! roses?' says Dinky Pete, an' his ratty eyes--one of 'em on d'
-hog, as I states--looks dead sharp at Jimmy. 'Roses?' he repeats.
-
-“'That's what I says!' is d' way Jimmy comes back.
-
-“' Better take voylets,' says Dinky, an' he stops foolin' wit 'd'
-flowers an' gives Jimmy d' gimlet eye.
-
-“'Nit,' declares Jimmy; * I'm dead onto me needs. Give me roses.'
-
-“'But roses won't last,' says Dinky, an' his look is sharp an' soft an'
-sad all at onct. 'Roses won't last, an' that's for fair,' says Dinky,
-'while voylets is stayers. Better take voylets, Jimmy!'
-
-“But Jimmy gets sullen an' won't have no voylets, see! An' he swings an'
-rattles wit' Dinky that he wants roses--roses red as blood.
-
-“'Roses has thorns,' goes on Dinky, still holdin' his lamps on Jimmy
-in d' same queer way; 'you don't want roses, Jimmy; you just t'inks you
-want roses! Be a square bloke, Jimmy; be yourself an' take voylets!'
-
-“An' I'm damned!” declares Chucky, “if Jimmy don't begin to look like a
-whipped kid, an' d' foist t'ing I knows, he welches on roses, grabs off
-a bunch of voylets big enough to make a salad, an' goes chasin' home to
-Annie. Me Rag is there when Jimmy pours in.
-
-“Say! It's d' finish of d' blonde! She ain't in it! Me rag, on d' quiet,
-gives Annie d' chin-chin of her existence, an' shows her Jimmy ain't
-gettin' a square deal. An' Annie--who, for all she's nutty about d' kid,
-is a dead wise fowl just d' same--takes a tumble, an' from that time
-she makes d' bettin' even money on* bot 'd' young-one an' Jimmy. D' last
-time I sees Jimmy he stops to tell me that Annie's a peach, an' d' kid's
-a wonder. An' he's lookin' like a nine-times winner himself. Now don't
-youse call that a romance for Dinky Pete to get onto Jimmy's game so
-quick, an' stickin' to him till he takes d' voylet steer? Ain't it a
-romance? Well! I should kiss a pig!”
-
-
-
-
-CRIB OR COFFIN?
-
-
-I
-
-YOUNG Jones stood in the telegraph office--the one at Twenty-third
-Street and Broadway. There was an air of triumph about Jones, an
-atmosphere of insolent sagacity, which might belong to one who, by some
-sudden, skilful sleight had caught a starling. Yet Jones's victory was
-in nowise uncommon. Others had achieved it many a time and oft. It was
-simply a baby; young Jones had become a papa, and it was this that gave
-him those frills which we have chronicled. The presence of young Jones
-in the telegraph office might be explained by looking over his shoulder.
-This is the message he wrote:
-
-New York City, Dec. 8, '99.
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps,
-
-Albany, N. Y.
-
-I still take it you are interested in the census of your family. Recent
-events in this city have altered the figures. Don't attempt to write a
-history of the tribe of Van Epps without consulting Sanford Jones.
-
-“There!” said young Jones, “that ought to fetch him. He won't know
-whether I mean the birth of a baby or Mary's death. If he doesn't come
-to see her now, I will mark him off my list for good. I would as it
-stands, if it were not for Mary.”
-
-“Won't father worry, dear?” asked Mary, when young Jones repeated the
-ambiguous message he had aimed at his up-the-State father-in-law.
-
-“I expect him to shed apprehensive tears all the way to New York,”
- replied young Jones. “But don't fret, Mary; I am sure he will come; and
-a tear or two won't hurt him. They will help his eyes, even though
-they do his heart no good. I don't resent his treatment of me, but his
-neglect of you is not so easy to forgive.”
-
-
-II
-
-This was the story:
-
-Back four years, Albany would have shown you young Jones opening his law
-office in that hamlet. Mary was “Mary Van Epps.” At that time seventeen
-years was all the family register allowed to her for age.
-
-Her father, Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps, was one of the leading citizens
-of Albany. While not a millionaire, he was of sufficient wealth to
-dazzle the local eye, and he was always mentioned by the denizens of his
-native place as “rich.”
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps had a weakness. He was slave to the pedigree
-habit. Never a day went by but he called somebody's attention to those
-celebrities who aforetime founded and set flowing the family of Van
-Epps; and he proposed at some hour in the future to write a history of
-that eminent house. With his wealth and his family pride to prompt him,
-it came easy one day for Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps to object with
-decision and vigour to a match between young Jones and his daughter
-Mary.
-
-“They were both fools!” he said.
-
-Then he pointed out that the day would never dawn when a plebeian like
-unto Jones, without lineage or lucre, boasting nothing better than a law
-office vacant of practice, and on which the rent was in arrears three
-months, would wed a daughter of the Van Epps. Colonel Stuyvesant Van
-Epps, in elaboration of his objection, showed that beyond a taste to
-drink whiskey and a speculative bent toward draw poker, he knew of
-nothing which young Jones possessed. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps closed,
-as he began, with the emphatic announcement that no orange blossoms
-would ever blow for the nuptials of young Jones and Mary Van Epps.
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps in his attitude will have the indorsement
-of all good Christian people. He was right as a father. As a prophet
-touching orange blossoms, however, he was what vulgar souls call “off.”
- Of that anon.
-
-
-III
-
-YOUNG Jones more than half believed that Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps
-was right. So far as whiskey and draw poker were concerned, he went with
-him; but with Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps' objections to him, based on
-the lack of pedigree and a failure of pocket-book, he didn't sympathise.
-
-“I may be poor, and my family tree may be a mullein stalk, but I am
-still a fitting mate for any member of the Van Epps tribe.”
-
-Thus spake young Jones to Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. He then took the
-earliest private occasion to kiss Mary good-bye, give her his picture,
-and make her his promise to wed her within five years.
-
-“Would she wait?”
-
-“I would wait a century,” said Mary.
-
-Young Jones kissed Mary again after that. The next day Albany was short
-one citizen, and that citizen was young Jones. Albany is short to this
-day.
-
-
-IV
-
-Let us drop details. Good luck came to young Jones, hard on the lonely
-heels of his evacuation of Albany. He was named a junior partner of
-a New York City law firm. His income equalled his hope. He dismissed
-whiskey and draw poker, and he wrote to Mary Van Epps:
-
-“Could he claim her now?”
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps said “No” again. Young Jones still lacked
-ancestry, and a taste for whiskey and four aces still lurked in his
-blood. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps would not consent. This served for a
-time to abate the bridal preparations.
-
-
-V
-
-Two years deserted the future for the past. A great deal of water will
-run under a bridge in two years. Mary Van Epps was nineteen. She went on
-a visit to a Trenton relative. Young Jones became abundant in Trenton
-at that very time. They took in a parson while on a stroll one day, and
-when that experienced divine got through with them they were man and
-wife. They wired their entangled condition to Colonel Stuyvesant Van
-Epps. He sent them a message of wrath.
-
-“I cast Mary off for ever! Never let me see her face again!”
-
-“Very well!” remarked young Jones as he read the wire; “I shall need
-Mary myself, in New York. Casting her off, therefore, at Albany, cuts no
-great figure. As for Mary's face, I will look at it all the more to make
-up for her brutal dad's abatement of interest therein.”
-
-Then he kissed Mary as if the feat were entirely fresh. And while Mary
-wept, she still felt very happy. Next they came to a modest home in the
-city.
-
-
-VI
-
-Two years more trailed the otners into history. Young Jones was held a
-fortunate man. His work was a success. Whiskey and poker were now so far
-astern as to be hull-down in the horizon. And he loved Mary better than
-ever. She was the triumph of his life, and he told her so every day.
-
-“It is certainly wonderful,” he said, “how much more beautiful you
-become every day.”
-
-This pleased Mary; and while her heart turned to her hard old father,
-she did not repent that episode at Trenton, which changed her name to
-Jones.
-
-Once a month Mary faithfully addressed a letter, new and fresh each time
-with the love that fails and fades not, to “Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps,
-Albany, N. Y.” And once a month Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps read it,
-gulped a little, and made no reply.
-
-“I will never see her again!” Colonel Stuyvesant
-
-Van Epps remarked to himself on these letter occasions.
-
-All the time he knew he lived for nothing else. But he thought of his
-family and mustered his pride, and of course became a limitless fool at
-once, as do those who give way to an attack of pedigree.
-
-But the Jones baby was born; and young Jones concluded to try his
-hand on Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. Mary wanted him to come, and that
-settled the whole matter so far as young Jones was concerned. In his
-new victory as a successful father, he felt that he could look down on
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. He therefore wrote the message referred
-to in our first chapter with perfect confidence, that, turn as matters
-might, he had nothing to fear.
-
-“The past, at least, is secure!” said young Jones; “and, come what may,
-I have Mary and the baby.” Both Mary and young Jones, however, awaited
-the returns from Albany with anxiety;--Mary, because she loved her
-father and mourned for his old face, and young Jones because he loved
-Mary. They were relieved when the bell rang at 7 P. M., and a bicycle
-boy handed in a yellow paper, which read: “Will be there to-morrow on
-the 8:30.--Stuyvesant Van Epps.”
-
-Mary was all gladness. Young Jones was calm, but gave way sufficiently
-to say:
-
-“Mary, we will call the cub 'Stuyvesant Van Epps Jones.'”
-
-[Illustration: 0335]
-
-
-VII
-
-YOUNG Jones met Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps at the Forty-Second
-Street station. The old gentleman had been torn by doubts and grievous
-misgivings all the way down. What did young Jones' ambiguous message
-mean? Was Mary dead? Was he bound to a funeral? or a christening?
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps knew that something tremendous had happened.
-But what?
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps walked up to young Jones at the station, and
-without pausing to greet him, remarked:
-
-“Crib or coffin?”
-
-“Crib!” said young Jones.
-
-[Illustration: 0335]
-
-Then Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps fell into a storm of tears, and began
-to shake young Jones by the hand for the first time in his life.
-
-
-VIII
-
-The three happiest people in the world that night were Colonel
-Stuyvesant Van Epps, Mary and young Jones. The baby was the one
-member of the family who did not give way to emotion. He received his
-grandfather with a stolid phlegm which became a Van Epps.
-
-“And his name is Stuyvesant Van Epps Jones,” said Mary.
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps kissed Mary again at this cheering news, and
-shook hands with young Jones for the second time in his life.
-
-That is all there is to a very true story. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps
-lives now in New York City, and Albany is shy a second citizen. Mary is
-happy, young Jones feels like a conqueror, and the infant, Stuyvesant
-Van Epps Jones, beneath the eye of his grandsire, waxes apace.
-
-
-
-
-OHIO DAYS
-
-
-
-
-I--AT THE LEES
-
-Aunt Ann, be we goin' to the spellin' to-night at the Block
-schoolhouse?”
-
-Jim Lee always called his wife “Aunt Ann.” So did everybody except her
-daughter Lydia. She called Aunt Ann “Mother.” But to Jim Lee and the
-other inhabitants of Stowe Township, she was “Aunt Ann Lee.”
-
-As Jim Lee asked Aunt Ann the question, he threw down the armful of
-maple wood and retreated to the back door to stamp the snow off his
-boots.
-
-“I want to know,” he said, “so's to do the chores in time.”
-
-Aunt Ann was chopping mince-meat. She was a clean, beautiful woman of
-the buxom sort. Her eyes were very blue, while her hair was very black
-with not a strand of silver, for all her forty-seven years. Jim Lee held
-Aunt Ann in great respect. Aunt Ann on her part was a tender soul and
-true, although Jim Lee had found her quite firm at times.
-
-“Now and then she's a morsel hard on the bit,” said Jim Lee,
-descriptively.
-
-Perhaps the two old-maid Spranglers meant the same thing when they said:
-“There never was a body with blue eyes and black hair who didn't have
-the snap in 'em.”
-
-“Yes,” replied Aunt Ann to Jim Lee's question “yes, of course we'll go.
-I've got to see Mrs. Au about some rag carpets she's weavin' for me, and
-she be there. Better get the Morgan colt and the cutter ready, father;
-we'll go in that.”
-
-“That'll only hold two,” said Jim Lee. “How Lide goin' to go?”
-
-“Lide's goin' with Ed Church. She's over to Jenn Ruple's now; she and
-Jen are goin' to choose up for the spellin' bee. But she'll be back in
-time, and Ed Church is comin' for her at half-past seven.”
-
-Jim Lee's face showed that he didn't like Ed Church He said nothing for
-five minutes, and pulling off his kip-skin boots began to give them a
-coat of tallow.
-
-“Where's Ezra?” at last he asked. Ezra was the heir of the house of Lee.
-His age was eleven; he was twenty.
-
-“Ezra's down cellar sortin' over that bin of peach blows,” said Aunt
-Ann, busy with her mince-me; and chopping-bowl; “they'd started to rot.”
-
-“I wanted to send him to the Corners for the mail,” suggested Jim Lee,
-as he kneaded the wax tallow into the instep of his boot to soften the
-leather.
-
-[Illustration: 0341]
-
-“You'd better hitch up the colt a mite early,” answered
-
-Aunt Ann, “and go to the Corners before we start to the spellin'. Ezra's
-got to churn as soon; he's done the peachblows.”
-
-There was another pause. Jim Lee softly drew on his freshly tallowed
-boots, and then stood up an tried them by raising his heels one after
-the other bending the boots at the toes as if testing a couple of
-Damascus sword blades.
-
-“I don't like this here Ed Church sparkin' our Lide,” remarked Jim Lee
-at last; “bimeby they'll want to get married.”
-
-“Father!” said Aunt Ann, raising her blue eyes with a look of cold
-criticism from the mince-meat she was massacring.
-
-“Has he asked Lide yet?” said Jim Lee.
-
-“No, he ain't,” replied Aunt Ann, “but he's goin' to.”
-
-“How do you know?”
-
-“How do I know?” repeated Aunt Ann, as she set the chopping-bowl on the
-kitchen table, and turned to put a few select sticks of maple into the
-oven to the end that they become kiln-dried and highly inflammable; “how
-do I know Ed Church is goin' to marry Lide? Humph! I can see it.”
-
-“I'm goin' to put a stop to it,” said Jim Lee. “This Church boy is goin'
-to keep away from Lide.”
-
-“Father, you're goin' to do nothing of the kind,” and Aunt Ann's eyes
-began to sparkle. “You can run the farm and Ezra, father; I'll run Lide
-and the house. The only person who's goin' to have a syllable to say
-about Lide's marryin' when the time comes, is Lide herself. If she wants
-Ed Church she's goin' to have him.”
-
-“Aunt Ann, I'm s'prised at you upholdin' for this Church boy!” Jim Lee
-threw into his tone a strain of strong reproof. “Ed Church drinks.”
-
-“Ed Church don't drink,” retorted Aunt Ann sharply.
-
-“How about that time two years ago last summer? Waren't Ed Church drunk
-over at the Royalton Fair?”
-
-“Yes, he was,” answered Aunt Ann, “and that's the only time. But so was
-my father drunk once at a barn-raisin' when he was a boy, for I've heerd
-him tell it; and I guess my father, William H. Pickering, was as good as
-any Lee who ever greased his boots. One swallow don't make a summer, and
-one drunk don't make a drunkard. Ed Church told me himself that he ain't
-took a drop since.”
-
-“I'm goin' to break up this nonsense between him and Lide, at any rate,”
- said Jim Lee. His mood was dogged, and it served to irritate Aunt Ann.
-
-“All you've got ag'inst Ed Church, father,” said Aunt Ann, “is that his
-father voted ag'in you for pathmaster, and I'm glad he did. What under
-the sun you ever wanted to be pathmaster for, and go about ploughin'
-up good roads to make 'em bad, was more'n I could see. I'm glad you was
-beat.”
-
-“I'm goin' to stop this Church boy hangin' 'round Lide, jest the same,”
- was the closing remark of Jim Lee. At this point he went out to the barn
-to put some straw in the cutter and harness the Morgan colt. Aunt Ann
-turned again to her duties.
-
-“Father is so exasperatin',” remarked Aunt Ann, as she poured some
-boiling water over a dozen slices of salt pork to “freshen it,” in the
-line of preparing them for the evening frying-pan. “He'll find out,
-though, that I'll have a tolerable lot to say about Lide's marriage.”
-
-
-
-
-II--ED CHURCH AND LIDE
-
-At half-past seven, Ed Church swung into Jim Lee's yard, with a horse
-all bells, and a cutter a billow of buffalo robes. He did not dare leave
-Grey Eagle, his pet colt, for Grey Eagle was restless with the wintry
-evening air and wanted to go. So Ed Church notified Lide of his coming
-by shouting, “House!” with a great voice.
-
-Grey Eagle made a plunge at the sound, but was brought up by the bit.
-
-“How'dy do, Ed,” said Lide, as she came out the side door. She looked
-rosy and pretty with her muskrat muff and cape.
-
-“Hello, Lide,” said Ed. “You'll have to scramble in yourself. I can
-hardly hold the colt this weather, when he don't have nothin' to do but
-eat.”
-
-Lide scrambled in. As Ed Church stood up in the cutter to allow Lide a
-chance to be seated, her face came close to his. Taking his eyes from
-Grey Eagle for the mere fraction of a second, he kissed her dexterously.
-Lide received the caress with the most admirable composure, and Ed
-Church himself did not act as if the idea was a discovery or the
-experiment new.
-
-“Let him out, Ed!” said Lide, when they were well into the road.
-
-There was a foot of snow on the ground. The fence corners showed great
-drifts, while each rail of the fence had a ruffle of its own of cold,
-white snow. As far as one could see in the moonlight, the fields to
-each side were like milk. In the background stood the grey woods laced
-against the sky. Here and there a lamp shone in a neighbour's window
-like an eye of fire.
-
-Stowe Township was out that night. The steady beat of the bells could
-be heard ahead and behind. Ed Church sent Grey Eagle forward with long
-strides, the cutter following over the hard, packed snow with no more of
-resistance than a feather. Lide held her muff to her face, so that
-she might open her mouth to talk without catching any of the flying
-snowballs from Grey Eagle's nervous hoofs.
-
-“It'll be a big spellin'-school to-night,” said Lide.
-
-“Yes, I guess it will,” replied Ed. “I hear folks are comin' clear from
-Hammond Corners.”
-
-“If that Gentry girl comes,” said Lide, “mind! you're not to speak to
-her, Ed. If you do, you can go home alone.”
-
-Ed grinned with an air of pleased superiority.
-
-“Get up,” he said to Grey Eagle. Then to Lide: “Go on! You're jealous!”
-
-“No, I ain't!” said Lide, with a lofty intonation. “Speak to her if you
-want to! What do I care!”
-
-“I won't speak to her, Lide.”
-
-Ed looked at his sweetheart to see how she received his submission. As
-the road was level and straight at this point, and Grey Eagle had worn
-away the wire edge of his appetite to “go,” Ed put his face in behind
-the muskrat muff and kissed Lide again. The victim abetted the outrage.
-
-“I saw ye!” yelled a happy voice behind. It was Ben Francis with Jennie
-Ruple. They also were enthroned in a cutter.
-
-“What if you did?” retorted Lide with a toss.
-
-“Do it again if I want to!” shouted Ed Church with much joyous
-hardihood.
-
-“I never asked you to marry me yet, did I, Lide?” observed Ed Church,
-after two minutes of silence.
-
-“No, you didn't,” said Lide from behind the muskrat muff. The words
-would have sounded hard, if it were not for the sudden soft sweetness of
-the voice, which was half a whisper.
-
-“Well, I'll do it now,” said Ed, with much resolution, but a little
-shake in the tone. “You'll marry me, Lide, when we get ready?”
-
-“Ed, what do you think father 'll say?”
-
-Ed Church knew Lide's father found no joy in him. The next time his
-voice took on a moody, half-sullen sound.
-
-“Don't care what he says! I ain't marryin' the hull Lee family.”
-
-“But s'pose he says we can't?”
-
-“If he does, I'll run away with you, Lide,” and Ed Church's tones were
-touched with storm. “I'm goin* to marry you even if all the Lees in the
-state stand in the way!”
-
-Lide crowded a bit closer to Ed at this, and, holding the muskrat muff
-against her face to keep her nose from getting red, said nothing. Lide
-was thinking what a noble fellow Ed was, and how much she admired him.
-
-
-
-
-III--THE SPELLING SCHOOL
-
-The Block schoolhouse was crowded. Lide and Ed made their way toward the
-back benches. Jim Lee spoke to his daughter and growled gruffly at Ed.
-
-The latter half growled back. Aunt Ann was all smiles and approval
-of Ed. At this, Ed thought her the best woman on earth except his own
-mother, and mentally put her next that excellent old lady in his heart.
-
-It was a Mr. Parker who taught at the Block school-house. At 8 o'clock
-he rapped on the teacher's desk with a ruler, and everybody who was
-standing up hunted for a seat. Those who could find none--they were all
-young men and boys--crouched down along the walls of the big school-room
-and made seats of their heels. Mr. Parker came down from his desk
-and opened the stove door with the end of the ruler. The stove--a
-long-bodied air-tight--was raging red hot from the four-foot wood
-blazing in its interior. When the door was opened the heat almost singed
-Mr. Parker's eyebrows. At this he started back nervously, and Ben Weld
-and Will Jenkins, two very small boys, laughed. The stove on its part
-began to cool off and the cherry colour faded from its hot sides,
-leaving them brown and rusty.
-
-“Lydia Lee and Jennie Ruple have been selected to choose sides for the
-spelling contest,” said Mr. Parker.
-
-Lide and Jennie seated themselves side by side on the bench which ran
-along the rear of the room. It was Lide's first choice.
-
-“Ed Church,” called Lide in a low voice.
-
-Several young persons giggled, while Ed, blushing deeply to have his
-sweetheart's preference thus forced into prominence, blundered along the
-aisle and sat down by Lide. It was Jennie's choice. Jennie selected Ben
-Francis.
-
-“Of course!” said Ada Farr in a loud whisper to
-
-Myrtle Jones, “they'd choose their beaux first, so as to sit by 'em.”
-
-There was no gainsaying the Farr girl's statement. The “choosing up,”
- however, went on. At last everybody, young and old, from the grey-headed
-grandpa to the five-year-old just sent to his first school that winter,
-had been chosen by Lide or Jennie. Then Mr. Parker began to give out the
-words.
-
-Ed Church failed on the first word. It was “emphasis.” Ed thought there
-was an “f” in it. He straightway sat down and spelled no more that
-night. Lide made a better showing, and lasted through five words. She
-tripped on “suet” upon which she conferred an “i.” Lide then joined Ed
-among the silenced ones.
-
-“Lide Lee missed on purpose,” whispered the Farr girl to her neighbour
-Myrtle Jones, “so she could sit and talk with Ed.”
-
-Jim Lee spelled well, but fell a prey to “moustache.”
-
-At last only three were left standing--Nellie Brad-dock, a girl from
-Hammond Corners, and Aunt Ann. Mr. Parker turned over to the back part
-of the spelling book where the hard words lived. Nellie Braddock fell
-before “umbrageous.”
-
-The struggle between the girl from Hammond Corners and Aunt Ann was a
-battle of the giantesses. The girl from Hammond Corners was the champion
-speller of her region, and had spelled down every school so far that
-winter. The interest was intense, as first to Aunt Ann and then to the
-girl from Hammond Corners, Mr. Parker put out:
-
-“Fantasy.”
-
-“Autobiographer.”
-
-“Thaumaturgie.”
-
-“Cosmography.”
-
-At last the girl from Hammond Corners tripped on:
-
-“Sibylline.”
-
-She made it “syb.” Mr. Parker had to show her the spelling book to
-convince the girl from Hammond Corners that she had missed. She glanced
-in the spelling book where Mr. Parker's finger pointed, and then burst
-into tears. At this an unknown young man, presumably from Hammond
-Corners, got up and excitedly declared the book to be wrong. Nobody took
-any notice of him, however, and Aunt Ann Lee was named the victor. She
-had spelled down the school.
-
-
-
-
-IV--THE FIGHT
-
-Ed CHURCH left Lide talking with the girls in the schoolhouse while
-he went back to the waggon shed to get Grey Eagle and bring him and the
-cutter to the door. As Ed was in the entry of the schoolhouse he was
-stopped by little Joe Barnes.
-
-“Say! Fan Brown's out there waitin' for you.”
-
-“What about Fan Brown?” asked Ed Church.
-
-Fan Brown was the bully of Hinckley. He boasted that he could thrash any
-man between Bath Lakes and the Hinckley Ridge.
-
-“He says he's goin' to wallop you for shootin' his dawg last summer,”
- said little Joe Barnes.
-
-“Joe, will you do something for me?” asked Ed.
-
-“Yep!”
-
-“You go and tell Lide Lee in there that I'm goin' over to Square
-Chanler's to get a neck-yoke he borrowed and I'll be right back. Tell
-her to wait in the school-house till I come.”
-
-“He's afraid of Fan Brown and is runnin' over to Square Chanler's to get
-the constable,” said little Joe Barnes to himself. For this he despised
-Ed Church very much, but went in and delivered the message.
-
-“All right!” said Lide, and then went on gossiping with the girls.
-
-Ed Church stepped out of the schoolhouse and started for the
-horse-sheds.
-
-He noticed a knot of men standing at the rear corner of the building;
-among them he discerned the stocky, bull-necked bully of Hinckley, Fan
-Brown.
-
-“Here he comes now!” said one, as Ed approached.
-
-“Let him come!” gritted the bully; “I'll fix him! I'll show him whose
-dog he's been shootin! As fine a coon dog, boys, as ever went into a
-corn field. He shot him, and I ain't goin' back to Hinckley till I mash
-his face.”
-
-“What's the row here?” said Ed Church, walking straight to the little
-huddle about Fan Brown. His tones were brittle and bold; a note of ready
-war ran through them. Not at all the voice in which he talked to Lide.
-“I understand somebody's lookin' for me. Who is it?”
-
-“It's me, by G--d! You killed my dog last summer, and I'm goin'----”
-
-“No, you ain't,” said Ed, interrupting; “you ain't goin' to do a thing.
-You may be the bully of Hinckley, Fan Brown, but you can't scare me.
-Your dog was killin' sheep; he was a good deal like you; but bein' a dog
-I could shoot him.”
-
-“Yes, and I ain't goin' back to Hinckley until I maul you so you won't
-shoot another dog as long as you live.”
-
-“Enough said!” replied Ed, “come right down in the hollow back of the
-horse sheds, where the folks won't see, and do it.”
-
-Just then a small, meagre man approached. He walked with a lounging
-gait, and when he spoke he had a thin, mealy voice.
-
-“What's the matter here?” piped the meagre little man.
-
-His name was Dick Bond. He was renowned widely as a wrestler. Gladiators
-had come from far and near, and at town meetings and barn raisings,
-wrestled with little Dick Bond. Where a hundred tried not one succeeded.
-
-He had not lost a “fall” for four years. His skill had given birth to a
-half proverb, and when somebody said he would do something, and somebody
-else doubted it, the latter would observe with laughing scorn: “Yes;
-you'll do it when somebody throws Dick Bond.”
-
-Such was the fell repute of this invincible little man that when his
-shrill, light voice made the inquiry chronicled, a silence fell on the
-crowd and no one answered.
-
-“Who's goin' to fight?” asked Dick Bond more pointedly.
-
-“I'm goin' to fight Fan Brown,” said Ed.
-
-There was a load of ferocity in the way he said it, which showed that
-Ed, himself, had a latent hunger for battle.
-
-“I guess I'll go 'long and see it,” said Dick Bond pipingly.
-
-“How do you want to fight?” asked Ed of Fan Brown when each had buttoned
-up his coat tight to the chin. “Stand up, or rough and tumble?”
-
-“Rough and tumble,” said Fan Brown savagely.
-
-“All right!”
-
-“Now, boys,” said Dick Bond when all was ready, “I'll give the word and
-then you're goin' to fight until one of you says 'enough.' And remember!
-there's no bitin' no gougin', no scratchin'.”
-
-“Bitin' goes?” declared Fan Brown, in a fashion of savage interrogatory.
-
-“Bitin' don't go!” replied the lean little referee, “and if you offer to
-bite or gouge, Fan Brown, I'll break your neck. You'll never go back to
-Hinckley short of being carried in a blanket.”
-
-[Illustration: 0353]
-
-The battle was brief and bloody. It didn't last ten minutes. When it was
-over, Ed Church, bleeding, but victorious, walked back to the sheds to
-get Grey Eagle. Fan Brown was unable to rise from the snow without help.
-His face was beaten badly, and he was a thoroughly whipped person. Dick
-Bond expressed great satisfaction, and in his high voice said it was a
-splendid fight.
-
-“But, Brown,” said Dick Bond to the beaten one, “I can't see how you got
-it into your head you could lick Ed Church. Why, man! he was all over
-you like a panther.”
-
-The news of the fight ran like wildfire. Everybody knew of it before an
-hour passed. It was a source of general satisfaction that Ed Church had
-whipped Fan Brown, the Hinckley bully, yet no one failed to stamp the
-whole proceeding as disgraceful; that is, among the older men at least.
-
-Lide, however, when she heard of the valour of her lover felt a great
-tenderness for him, and was never kinder than when they drove Grey Eagle
-back from the Block schoolhouse spelling-bee that crisp winter night.
-
-
-
-
-V--JIM LEE INTERFERES
-
-MOTHER,” sobbed Lide, as she threw herself down on the chintz lounge
-without pausing to take off her hat or cape, “father has just told Ed
-never to come to the house nor speak to me again.”
-
-Jim Lee and Aunt Ann got home before the lovers. The news of the broil
-overtook them, however. Jim Lee declared it a scandal and a scorn.
-
-“Now you see,” he said to Aunt Ann, “what sort of ruffian the Church boy
-is!”
-
-“Well, I'm glad he whipped that miserable Fan Brown,” said Aunt Ann.
-“He's done nothin' for ten years but come over here to Stowe Township
-and raise a fuss. I'm glad somebody's at last spunked up and thrashed
-him. I'd done it years ago if I had been a man.”
-
-“Aunt Ann Lee!” said Jim Lee, hitting the Morgan colt a blow with the
-whip which set that sprightly animal almost astride the thills--“Aunt
-Ann, do you tell me you approve of Ed Church lickin' Fan Brown?”
-
-“Yes, I do,” retorted Aunt Ann, stoutly, “and so will Lide. If you
-imagine, father, a woman finds fault with a man because he'll fight
-other men you don't know the sex.”
-
-Jim Lee moaned. Absolutely! for the first time in his life Aunt Ann had
-shocked him. Not another word was spoken by Jim Lee all the way home.
-
-Aunt Ann went into the house when they arrived, while Jim Lee remained
-to put up the Morgan colt. He was busy in the barn when Ed and Lide
-drove into the yard.
-
-“Father came up to Ed,” sobbed Lide, as she lay on the lounge, “and
-called him a brawler and a drunkard, and said he'd got to keep away from
-me.”
-
-“What did Ed say?” asked Aunt Ann, as she sat down by her daughter and
-began, with kind hands, to take off her hat and cape. Every touch was
-full of motherly love and tenderness.
-
-“Oh! Ed didn't say much,” said Lide, giving way to long-drawn sighs; a
-fashion of dead swell following the storm of sobs. “He said he'd marry
-me whether father was willing or not. Then he drove away.”
-
-Aunt Ann smiled.
-
-“I guess Ed Church is pretty high strung,” said Aunt Ann, “but that
-won't hurt him any.”
-
-Jim Lee came in at that moment, looking a bit sheepish and guilty; but
-over it all an atmosphere of victory.
-
-“That Church boy will stay away now, I guess!” said Jim Lee, as he got
-the bootjack and began pulling off his boots.
-
-“Jim Lee, you're an awful fool!” observed Aunt Ann with the air of
-a sibyl settling all things. “You're the biggest numbskull in Stowe
-Township!”
-
-“Why?” asked Jim Lee.
-
-He was disturbed because Aunt Ann addressed him by his full name.
-Experience had taught him that defeat ever followed hard on the heels of
-his full name, when Aunt Ann made use of it.
-
-“Never mind why!” said Aunt Ann.
-
-And not another word could Jim Lee get from her.
-
-
-
-
-VI--THEY DECORATE
-
-It was a month after the spelling-school. Stowe Township was decorating
-the Church for Christmas. For time out of mind Stowe Township had had a
-Christmas tree at the Church, and everybody, rich or poor, high or low,
-young or old, great or small, got a present if it were nothing but a
-gauze stocking full of painted popcorn.
-
-Aunt Ann, as usual, was at the head of the decorating committee.
-The Church was full of long strings of evergreen, which Aunt Ann's
-satellites were festooning about the walls, and to that end there was
-much climbing of step-ladders, much standing on tip-toe, much pounding
-of thumbs with caitiff tack-hammers, vilely wielded by girlish hands.
-Occasionally some fair step-ladder maid gave the public a glimpse of a
-well-filled woollen stocking as she went up and down, or stood on her
-toes on the top step. At this, the young men present always blushed,
-while the maidens tittered. Most people don't know it, but the male of
-our species is more modest, more easily embarrassed, than the female.
-
-The Christmas tree had just arrived. It had been contributed by “Square”
- Chanler. The tree was a noble hemlock; thick and feathery of bough,
-perfect of general outline. Old Curl, the Rip Van Winkle of Stowe, had
-cut it down and hauled it to the church on “Square” Chanler's bob-sleds.
-All the smallfry of the Corners had gone with Old Curl after the
-Christmas tree, and were faithful to him to the last. Every one of them
-was clamorously forward in unloading the tree and getting it into the
-Church.
-
-Then it was taken charge of by Aunt Ann, who put the smallfry to flight.
-They were to be beneficiaries of the tree, and it was held that their
-joy would be enhanced if they were not allowed to remain while the tree
-was decorated, and were debarred all sight thereof until Christmas Eve,
-when the presents would be cut from the boughs and bestowed upon their
-owners.
-
-One little boy had a cold, and Aunt Ann let him remain in the Church.
-This little boy perched himself in a window where his fellows outside
-might see and envy him. There was a three-cornered hole in the window
-pane near him, and the little boy was wont every few moments to place
-his mouth to this crevice and say to the boys outside:
-
-“My! but you ought to see what Aunt Ann's tyin' on the tree now!”
-
-“What is it?” would chorus the outside boys.
-
-“Can't tell you!”
-
-The boy with the cold became the most unpopular child in Stowe Township,
-and several of his fellows outside in their agony threatened him with
-personal violence.
-
-“I'll lick you when I ketch you!” shouted children in the rabble rout to
-the lucky child with the cold.
-
-“I don't care!” said the child inside, “you just ought to see the tree
-now!”
-
-Lide Lee was aiding the others to festoon the church. Under the maternal
-direction she was fitting tawdry little wax candles among the branches
-of the Christmas tree, and tying on Barlow knives for all the little
-boys, and “Housewives” for all the little girls.
-
-Lide had not seen Ed save once since the spelling-school, and then she
-met him in the village drug-store by chance. But they wrote to each
-other, and some progress in this way had been made toward an elopement
-which was scheduled for the coming Spring. Aunt Ann in the depths of her
-sagacity, suspected the arrangement, but it gave her no alarm. As
-for Jim Lee, so fatuous was he that he believed he had ended all ties
-between his daughter and Ed Church.
-
-While decorations were in progress in the church, Jim Lee suddenly drove
-up.
-
-“Aunt Ann,” said Jim Lee, after pausing to admire the garish display,
-“Aunt Ann, I've just got a line from Ludlow, and there's goin' to be a
-special meetin' of the board of directors of our Ice Company, and I've
-got to mosey into the city.”
-
-Jim Lee had an air of importance. He liked to appear before Aunt Ann in
-the attitude of a much-sought-for man of business.
-
-“Pshaw! father, that's too bad!” said Aunt Ann. “Can't you be back by
-Christmas Eve?”
-
-“No; Christmas Eve is only day after to-morrow, and the Ice Company
-business ought to last a week, so Ludlow says.”
-
-“Well!” said Aunt Ann, “if you must go, you must. Ezra can do most of
-the chores while you're away, and I'll have Old Curl come and do the
-heaviest of 'em.”
-
-So Jim Lee kissed Aunt Ann, and then kissed Lide. This latter caress
-was a trifle strained, for Jim Lee felt guilty when he looked at his
-daughter; and Lide hadn't half forgiven him his actions toward her
-idolised Ed. Since Ed had been forbidden her society, Lide loved him
-much better than before.
-
-Thus started Jim Lee for the city on Ice Company matters, Tuesday
-afternoon. Christmas Eve was the following Thursday. Jim Lee would
-return on the Monday or Tuesday after. He was fated to find some
-startling changes on his coming back.
-
-
-
-
-VII--AUNT ANN PLOTS
-
-AUNT Ann found much to occupy her during the hours before Christmas
-Eve. There were forty-eight of these hours. Aunt Ann needed them all.
-
-For one matter she made Ezra drive her over to the County Seat. She
-wanted to see her brother, Will Pickering, who was Probate Judge of the
-County. Aunt Ann also dispatched a letter by trusty messenger to her
-sister, Mary Newton, who lived at Eastern Crossroads, some seven miles
-from Stowe. As a last assignment, Aunt Ann told Ezra to go over and ask
-Ed to come up to the house.
-
-“You'll be at the Christmas tree at the church tonight, won't you, Ed?”
- asked Aunt Ann, after making some excuse for sending for him. She put
-the question quite casually.
-
-“Well! be sure and come, Ed,” said Aunt Ann. “And more'n that, be sure
-and dress yourself up. I think I'll need you to help me get things off
-the high limbs.”
-
-Aunt Ann, as she led Lide to his side. “Now, Brother Crandall, if you
-will perform the ceremony--the short form, please, and leave out the
-word 'obey'--the distribution will be complete.”
-
-“But the licence!” gasped the Rev. Crandall.
-
-“There it is,” said Aunt Ann, “with my brother Will's seal and signature
-as Probate Judge on it. You don't s'pose I had Ezra drive me clear to
-the County Seat in the dead of winter for nothing?”
-
-The ceremony was over. Ed and Lide were “Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Church;”
- and the entire population of Stowe, some in tears, all in earnest, were
-kissing the bride and shaking hearty hands with the groom. That latter
-young gentleman was dazed and happy, and looked both.
-
-“Now, Ed,” said Aunt Ann, after kissing him and then kissing Lide, “I'm
-your mother; and I'll begin to tell you what to do. You put Lide in your
-cutter and head Grey Eagle for Eastern Cross-roads. I sent Mary word you
-were coming, and there's a trunk full of Lide's things gone over. Stay
-a week. If you need collars, or shirts or anything, Mary will give you
-some of John's. Stay a week and then come home. Father will be back from
-the Ice Company Tuesday, and by Thursday of next week, when you return,
-I'll have him fully convinced that all is ordered for the best, and
-whatever is, is right. So kiss your mother again, children, and start.
-I hear Grey Eagle's bells a-jingling, where Dick Bond's brought him to
-the door.”
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Sandburrs, by Alfred Henry Lewis
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sandburrs and Other, by Alfred Henry Lewis
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Sandburrs and Others
-
-Author: Alfred Henry Lewis
-
-Illustrator: Horace Taylor and George B. Luks
-
-Release Date: May 3, 2016 [EBook #51981]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SANDBURRS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SANDBURRS
-
-By Alfred Henry Lewis
-
-Author of "Wolfville," etc.
-
-Illustrated by Horace Taylor and George B. Luks
-
-Second Edition
-
-New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company
-
-1898
-
-[Illustration: 0001]
-
-[Illustration: 0008]
-
-[Illustration: 0009]
-
-TO
-
-JAMES ROBERT KEENE
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-A SANDBURR is a foolish, small vegetable, irritating and grievously
-useless. Therefore this volume of sketches is named Sandburrs. Some folk
-there be who apologize for the birth of a book. There's scant propriety
-of it. A book is but a legless, dormant creature. The public has but to
-let it alone to be safe. And a book, withal! is its own punishment. Is
-it a bad book? the author loses. Is it very bad? the publisher loses.
-In any case the public is preserved. For all of which there will be no
-apology for SAND-BURRS. Nor will I tell what I think of it. No; this
-volume may make its own running, without the handicap of my apology, or
-the hamstringing of my criticism. There should be more than one to
-do the latter with the least of luck. The Bowery dialect--if it be
-a dialect--employed in sundry of these sketches is not an exalted
-literature. The stories told are true, however; so much may they have
-defence.
-
-A. H. L.
-
-New York, Nov. 15, 1899.
-
-
-
-
-SANDBURRS
-
-
-
-
-SPOT AND PINCHER.
-
-Martin is the barkeeper of an East Side hotel--not a good hotel at
-all--and flourishes as a sporting person of much emphasis. Martin, in
-passing, is at the head of the dog-fighting brotherhood. I often talk
-with Martin and love him very much.
-
-Last week I visited Martin's bar. There was "nothin' doin'," to quote
-from Martin. We talked of fighting men, a subject near to Martin, he
-having fought three prize-fights himself. Martin boasted himself as
-still being "an even break wit' any rough-and-tumble scrapper in d'
-bunch."
-
-"Come here," said Martin, in course of converse; "come here; I'll show
-you a bute."
-
-Martin opened a door to the room back of the bar. As we entered a
-pink-white bull terrier, with black spots about the eyes, raced across
-to fawn on Martin. The terrier's black toe-nails, bright and hard as
-agate, made a vast clatter on the ash floor.
-
-"This is Spot," said Martin. "Weighs thirty-three pounds, and he's a
-hully terror! I'm goin' to fight him to-night for five hundred dollars."
-
-I stooped to express with a pat on his smooth white head my approbation
-of Spot.
-
-"Pick him up, and heft him," said Martin. "He won't nip you," 'he
-continued, as I hesitated; "bulls is; d' most manful dogs there bees.
-Bulls won't bite nobody."
-
-Thereupon I picked up Spot "to heft him." Spot smiled widely, wagged
-his stumpy tail, tried to lick my face, and felt like a bundle of live
-steel.
-
-"Spot's goin' to fight McDermott's Pincher," said Martin. "And,"
-addressing this to Spot, "you want to watch out, old boy! Pincher is
-as hard as a hod of brick. And you want to look out for your Trilbys;
-Pincher'll fight for your feet and legs. He's d' limit, Spot, Pincher
-is! and you must tend to business when you're in d' pit wit' Pincher, or
-he'll do you. Then McDermott would win me money, an' you an' me, Spot,
-would look like a couple of suckers."
-
-Spot listened with a pleased air, as if drinking in every word, and
-wagged his stump reassuringly. He would remember Pincher's genius for
-crunching feet and legs, and see to it fully in a general way that
-Pincher did not "do" him.
-
-"Spot knows he's goin' to fight to-night as well as you and me," said
-Martin, as we returned to the bar. "Be d' way! don't you want to go?"
-
-* * * * *
-
-It was nine o'clock that evening. The pit, sixteen feet square, with
-board walls three feet high, was built in the centre of an empty loft on
-Bleecker street. Directly over the pit was a bunch of electric lights.
-All about, raised six inches one above the other, were a dozen rows of
-board seats like a circus. These were crowded with perhaps two hundred
-sports. They sat close, and in the vague, smoky atmosphere, their faces,
-row on row, tier above tier, put me in mind of potatoes in a bin.
-
-Fincher was a bull terrier, the counterpart of Spot, save for the
-markings about the face which gave Spot his name. Pincher seemed very
-sanguine and full of eager hope; and as he and Spot, held in the arms of
-their handlers, lolled at each other across the pit, it was plain they
-languished to begin. Neither, however, made yelp or cry or bark. Bull
-terriers of true worth on the battle-field were, I learned, a tacit,
-wordless brood, making no sound.
-
-Martin "handled" Spot and McDermott did kindly office for Pincher in
-the same behalf. Martin and McDermott "tasted" Spot and Pincher
-respectively; smelled and mouthed them for snuffs and poisons. Spot and
-Pincher submitted to these examinations in a gentlemanly way, but were
-glad when they ended.
-
-At the word of the referee, Spot and Pincher were loosed, each in his
-corner. They went straight at each other's throats. They met in the
-exact centre of the pit like two milk-white thunderbolts, and the battle
-began.
-
-Spot and Pincher moiled and toiled bloodily for forty-five minutes
-without halt or pause or space to breathe. Their handlers, who were
-confined to their corners by quarter circles drawn in chalk so as to hem
-them in, leaned forward toward the fray and breathed encouragement.
-
-What struck me as wonderful, withal, was a lack of angry ferocity on
-the parts of Spot and Pincher. There was naught of growl, naught of
-rage-born cry or comment. They simply blazed with a zeal for blood;
-burned with a blind death-ardour.
-
-When Spot and Pincher began, all was so flash-like in their motions, I
-could hardly tell what went on. They were in and out, down and up,
-over and under, writhing like two serpents. Now and then a pair of jaws
-clicked like castanets as they came together with a trap-like snap,
-missing their hold. Now and then one or the other would get a half-grip
-that would tear out. Then the blood flowed, painting both Spot and
-Pincher crimson.
-
-As time went on my eyes began to follow better, and I noted some amazing
-matters. It was plain, for one thing, that both Spot and Pincher were as
-wise and expert as two boxers. They fought intelligently, and each had
-a system. As Martin had said, Pincher fought "under," in never-ending
-efforts to seize Spot's feet and legs. Spot was perfectly aware of this,
-and never failed to keep his fore legs well back and beneath him, out of
-Pinchers reach.
-
-Spot, on his part, set his whole effort to the enterprise of getting
-Pincher by the throat. A dog without breath means a dead dog, and Spot
-knew this. Pincher appeared clear on the point, too; and would hold his
-chin close to his breast, and shrug his head and shoulders well together
-whenever Spot tried to work for a throat hold.
-
-Now and then Spot and Pincher stood up to each other like wrestlers, and
-fenced with their muzzles for "holds" as might two Frenchmen with foils.
-In the wrestling Spot proved himself a perfect Whistler, and never
-failed to throw Pincher heavily. And, as I stated, from the beginning,
-the two warriors battled on without cry. Silent, sedulous, indomitable;
-both were the sublimation of courage and fell purpose. They were
-fighting to the death; they knew it, joyed in it, and gave themselves to
-their destiny without reserve. Each was eager only to kill, willing only
-to die. It was a lesson to men. And, as I looked, I realised that both
-were two of the happiest of created things. In the very heat of the
-encounter, with throbbing hearts and heaving sides, and rending fangs
-and flowing blood, they found a great content.
-
-All at once Spot and Pincher stood motionless. Their eyes were like
-coals, and their respective stump tails stood stiffly, as indicating no
-abatement of heart or courage. What was it that brought the halt? Spot
-had set his long fangs through the side of Pinchers head in such fashion
-that Pincher couldn't reach him nor retaliate with his teeth. Pincher,
-discovering this, ceased to try, and stood there unconquered, resting
-and awaiting developments. Spot, after the manner of his breed, kept his
-grip like Death. They stood silent, motionless, while the blood dripped
-from their gashes; a grim picture! They had fought, as I learned later,
-to what is known in the great sport of dog fighting as "a turn."
-
-"It's a turn!" decided the referee.
-
-At this Martin and McDermot seized each his dog and parted them
-scientifically. Spot and Pincher were carried to their corners and
-refreshed and sponged with cold water. At the end of one minute the
-referee called:
-
-"Time!"
-
-At this point I further added to my learning touching the kingly pastime
-of dog-fighting. When two dogs have "fought to a turn," that is, locked
-themselves in a grip, not deadly to either if persisted in, and which
-still prevents further fighting,--as in the case of Spot and Pincher,--a
-responsibility rests with the call of "Time" on the dog that "turns." In
-this instance, Pincher. At the call of "Time" Spot would be held by his
-handler, standing in plain view of Pincher, but in his corner. It was
-incumbent on Pincher--as a proof of good faith--to cross the pit to
-get at him. If Pincher failed when released on call of "Time" to come
-straight across to Spot, and come at once; if he looked to right or left
-or hesitated even for the splinter of a second, he was a beaten dog. The
-battle was against him.
-
-"Time!" called the referee.
-
-Just prior to the call I heard Martin whisper huskily over his shoulder
-to a rough customer who sat just back of and above him, at Spot's corner
-of the pit:
-
-"Stand by wit' that glim now!" Martin muttered without turning his head.
-
-At the call "Time!" McDermot released Pincher across in his corner.
-Pincher's eyes were riveted on Spot, just over the way, and there's no
-doubt of Pincher's full purpose to close with him at once. There was no
-more of hesitation in his stout heart than in Spot's, who stood mouth
-open and fire-eyed, waiting.
-
-But a strange interference occurred. At the word "Time!" the rough
-customer chronicled slipped the slide of a dark lantern and threw the
-small glare of it squarely in Pincher's eyes. It dazed Pincher; he lost
-sight of Spot; forgot for a moment his great purpose. There stood poor
-Pincher, irresolute, not knowing where to find his enemy; thrall to the
-glare of the dark lantern.
-
-"Spot win!" declared the referee.
-
-At that moment the dark-lantern rough-customer closed the slide and
-disappeared.
-
-Few saw the trick or its effects. Certainly the referee was guiltless.
-But McDermot, who had had the same view of the dark lantern Pincher had,
-and on whom for a moment it had similar effect, raised a great clamour.
-But it was too late; Martin had claimed the thousand dollars from
-the stake-holder, and with it in his pocket was already in a carriage
-driving away, with Spot wrapped up in a lap robe occupying the front
-seat.
-
-"Let McDermot holler!" said Martin, with much heat, when I mentioned
-the subject the next day. "Am I goin' to lose a fight and five hundred
-dollars, just because some bloke brings a dark lantern to d' pit and
-takes to monkeyin' wit' it? Not on your life!"
-
-
-
-
-MULBERRY MARY
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Chucky d' Turk" was the _nom de guerre_ of my friend. Under this title
-he fought the battles of life. If he had another name he never made me
-his confidant concerning it. We had many talks, Chucky and I; generally
-in a dingy little bar on Baxter Street, where, when I wearied of uptown
-sights and smells, I was wont to meet with Chucky. Never did Chucky call
-on me nor seek me. From first to last he failed not to conduct himself
-towards me with an air of tolerant patronage. When together I did the
-buying and the listening, and Chucky did the drinking and the talking.
-It was on such occasion when Chucky told me the story of Mulberry Mary.
-
-"Mary was born in Kelly's Alley," remarked Chucky, examining in a
-thoughtful way his mug of mixed ale; "Mary was born in Kelly's Alley,
-an' say! she wasn't no squealer, I don't t'ink.
-
-"When Mary grows up an' can chase about an' chin, she toins out a dead
-good kid an' goes to d' Sisters' School. At this time I don't spot Mary
-in p'ticler; she's nothin' but a sawed-off kid, an' I'm busy wit' me
-graft.
-
-"D' foist I really knows of Mary is when she gets married. She hooks up
-wit' Billy, d' moll-buzzard; an' say! he's bad.
-
-"He gets his lamps on Mary at Connorses spiel, Billy does; an' he's
-stuck on her in a hully secont. It's no wonder; Mary's a peach. She's d'
-belle of d' Bend, make no doubt.
-
-"Billy's graft is hangin' round d' Bowery bars, layin' for suckers. An'
-he used to get in his hooks deep an' clever now an' then, an' most times
-Billy could, if it's a case of crowd, flash quite a bit of dough.
-
-"So when Billy sees Mary at Connorses spiel, like I says, she's such a
-bute he loses his nut. You needn't give it d' laugh! Say! I sees d' map
-of a skirt--a goil, I means--on a drop curtain at a swell t'eatre onct,
-an' it says under it she's Cleopatra. D' mark nex' me says, when I taps
-for a tip, this Cleopatra's from Egypt, an' makes a hit in d' coochee
-coochee line, wit' d' high push of d' old times, see! An' says this
-gezeybo for a finish: 'This Cleopatra was a wonder for looks. She was d'
-high-roller tart of her time, an' d' beauti-fulest.'
-
-"Now, all I got to say is," continued Chucky, regarding me with a
-challenging air of decision the while; "all I has to utter is, Mary
-could make this Cleopatra look like seven cents!
-
-"Well," resumed Chucky, as I made no comment, "Billy chases up to Mary
-an' goes in to give her d' jolly of her life. An', say! she's pleased
-all right, all right; I can see it be her mug.
-
-"An' Billy goes d' limit. He orders d' beers; an' when he pays, Billy
-springs his wad on Mary an' counts d' bills off slow, Linkin' it'll
-razzle-dazzle her. Then Billy tells Mary he's out to be her steady.
-
-"'I've got money to boin,' says Billy, 'an' what you wants you gets,
-see!' An' Billy pulls d' long green ag'in to show Mary he's dead strong,
-an 'd' money aint no dream.
-
-"But Mary says 'Nit! couple of times nit!' She says she's on d' level,
-an' no steady goes wit' her. It's either march or marry wit' Mary. An'
-so she lays it down.
-
-"That's how it stands, when d' nex' news we hears Billy an' she don't do
-a t'ing but chase off to a w'ite-choker; followin' which dey grabs off a
-garret in d' Astorbilt tenement, an' goes to keepin' house.
-
-"But Mary breaks in on Billy's graft. She says he's got to go to woik;
-he'll get lagged if he don't; an' she won't stand for no husband who
-spends half d' time wit' her an 'd' rest on d' Island. So he cuts
-loose from d' fly mob an' leaves d' suckers alone, an' hires out for a
-tinsmith, see!
-
-"An' here's d' luck Billy has. It's d' secont day an' he's fittin' in
-d' tin flashin' round a chimbley on a five-story roof; an' mebby it's
-because he aint used to woik, or mebby he gets funny in his cupolo,
-bein' up so high; anyhow he dives down to d' pavement, an' when he
-lands, you bet your life! Billy's d' deadest t'ing that ever happened.
-
-"Mary goes wild an' wrong after that. In half of no time Mary takes to
-chasin' up to Mott Street an' hittin' d' pipe. There's a Chink up
-there who can cook d' hop out o' sight, an' it aint long before Mary
-is hangin' 'round his joint for good. It's then dey quits callin' her
-Mulberry Mary, an' she goes be d' name of Mollie d' Dope.
-
-"Mary don't last in d' Chink swim more'n a year before there's bats in
-her belfry for fair; any old stiff wit' lamps could see it; an' so folks
-gets leary of Mary.
-
-[Illustration: 0027]
-
-"It runs on mebby two years after Billy does that stunt from d' roof,
-see! when there's a fire an' all d' kids run an' screeched, an' all d'
-folks hollered, an' all d' engines comes an' lams loose to put it out.
-D' fire's in a tenement, an 'd' folks who was in it has skipped, so it's
-just d' joint itself is boinin'.
-
-"All at onct a kid looks out d' fort' story window wit 'd' fire shinin'
-behint him. You can see be d' little mark's mug he's got an awful scare
-t'run into him, t'inkin' he's out to boin in d' buildin*.
-
-"'It's McManuses' Chamsey!' says one old Tommy, lettin' her hair down
-her back an' givin' a yell, 'Somebody save McManuses' Chamsey!'
-
-"'Let me save him!' says Mary, at d' same time laughin' wild. 'Let me
-save him; I want to save him! I'm only Mollie d' Dope--Mollie d' hop
-fiend--an' if I gets it in d' neck it don't count, see!'
-
-"Mary goes up in d' smoke an 'd' fire, no one knows how, wit' d' water
-pourin' from d' hose, an 'd' boards an' glass a-fallin' an' a-crashin',
-an' she brings out McManuses' Chamsey, Saves him; on d' dead! she does;
-an' boins all d' hair off her cocoa doin' it.
-
-"Well, of course d' fire push stan's in an' gives Mary all sorts of guff
-an' praise. Mary only laughs an' says, while d' amb'lance guy is doin'
-up her head, that folks ain't onto her racket; that she d' soonest frail
-that ever walks in d' Bend."
-
-At this juncture Chucky desired another mixed ale. He got it, and after
-a long, damp pause he resumed his thread.
-
-"Now what do youse t'ink of this for a finish? It's weeks ago d' fire
-is. Mary meets up wit' McManuses' Chamsey to-day--she's been followin'
-him a good deal since she saves him--an' as Chamsey is only six years
-old, he don't know nothin', an' falls to Mary's lead. It's an easy case
-of bunk, an' Chamsey only six years old like that!
-
-"Mary gives Chamsey d' gay face an' wins him right off. She buys him
-posies of one Dago an' sugar candy of another; an' then she passes
-Chamsey a strong tip, he's missin' d' sights be not goin' down to d'
-East River.
-
-"Here's what Mary does--she takes Chamsey down be d' docks--a
-longshoreman loafin' hears what she says. Mary tells Chamsey to look at
-all d' chimbleys an 'd' smoke comin' out!
-
-"'An' in every one there's fire makin 'd' smoke,' says Mary. 'T'ink of
-all d' fires there must be, Chamsey! I'll bet Hell ain't got any more
-fires in it than d' woild! Do youse remember, Chamsey, how d' fire was
-goin' to boin you? Now, I'll tell you what we'll do, so d' fire never
-will boin us; we'll jump in,--you an' me!'
-
-"An' wit' that, so d' longshoreman says, Mary nails Chamsey be d' neck
-wit' her left hook an' hops into d' drink. Yes, dey was drowned--d'
-brace of 'em. Dey's over to d' dead house now on a slab--Mary an'
-McManuses' Chamsey.
-
-"What makes me so wet? I gets to d' dock a minute too late to save 'em,
-but I'm right in time to dive up d' stiffs. So I dives 'em up. It's easy
-money. That's what makes me cuffs look like ruffles an' me collar like a
-corset string." And here Chucky called for a third mixed ale, as a sign
-that his talk was done.
-
-
-
-
-SINGLETREE JENNINGS
-
-
-It was evening in Jordan Hollow, and Singletree Jennings stood leaning
-on his street gate. Singletree Jennings was a coloured man, and, to
-win his bread, played many parts in life. He was a whitewasher; he sold
-fish; he made gardens; and during the social season he was frequently
-the "old family butler," in white cotton gloves, at the receptions of
-divers families.
-
-"I'm a pore man, honey!" Singletree Jennings was wont to say; "but dar
-was a time when me an' my ole Delia was wuf $1,800. Kase why? Kase we
-brought it at auction, when Marse Roundtree died--didn't we, Delia?"
-
-This was one of Singletree Jennings's jokes.
-
-"But pore man or no!" Singletree Jennings would conclude, "as de
-Lamb looks down an' sees me, I never wronged a man outen so much as a
-blue-laiged chicken in my life."
-
-This evening Singletree Jennings was a prey to dejection. Nor could he
-account for his gloom. His son opened the gate and went whistling up the
-street.
-
-"Clambake Jennings, whar yo' gwine?" asked Singletree Jennings.
-
-"Gwine ter shoot craps."
-
-"Have yo' got yer rabbit's foot?
-
-"Yassir."
-
-"An' de snake's head outen de clock?"
-
-"Yassir."
-
-Singletree Jennings relapsed into moody silence, and Clambake passed on
-and away.
-
-The shouts and cries of some storm-rocked multitude was heard up the
-street. The Columbia College boys were taking home their new eight-oared
-boat. The shouts settled into something like the barking of a dog. It
-was the crew emitting the college cry.
-
-"What's dat?" demanded Delia Jennings, coming to the door.
-
-"De Lawd save us ef I knows!" said Singletree Jennings; "onless it's one
-of dem yar bond issues dey's so 'fraid'll happen."
-
-The tones of Singletree Jennings showed that he was ill at ease.
-
-"What's de matter, Daddy Singletree?" demanded the observant Delia.
-
-"I've got a present'ment, I reckon!" said Singletree Jennings. "I'm
-pow'ful feard dar'll somethin' bust loose wrong about dat Andrew Jackson
-goat."
-
-Singletree Jennings was the owner and business manager of a goat named
-Andrew Jackson. In the winter Singletree Jennings never came home
-without an armful of straw for Andrew Jackson. In the summer there was
-no need of straw. Andrew Jackson then ate the shirts off the neighbour's
-clothes-lines. Andrew Jackson had been known to eat the raiment off a
-screaming child, and then lower his frontlet at the rescue party. Andrew
-Jackson was a large, impressive goat; yet he never joked nor gave way to
-mirth. Ordinarily, Andrew Jackson was a calm, placid goat; aroused, he
-was an engine of destruction.
-
-All of these peculiarities were explained by Singletree Jennings when
-Sam Hardtack and Backfence Randolph, a committee acting on behalf of the
-Othello Dramatic Club, desired the loan of Andrew Jackson. The church
-to which Singletree Jennings belonged was programming a social this
-very night, and divers and sundry tableaux, under the direction of the
-Othello Dramatic Club, were on the card. It was esteemed necessary by
-those in control to present as a tableau Abraham slaying Isaac. There
-was a paucity of sheep about, and Andrew Jackson, in this dearth of the
-real thing, was cast to play the character of the Ram in the Bush.
-
-"An' Andrew Jackson is boun' to fetch loose," reflected Singletree
-Jennings, with a shake of his head; "an' when he does, he'll jes' go
-knockin' 'round among de congregashun like a blind dog in a meat shop!"
-*****
-
-Singletree Jennings's worst fears were realised. It was nine o'clock
-now, and he and Delia had come down to the social. Andrew Jackson had
-been restrained of his liberty for the previous four hours and held
-captive in a drygoods' box. He was now in a state of frenzy. When the
-curtain went up on Abraham and Isaac, Andrew Jackson burst his bonds at
-the rear of the stage and bore down on the Hebrew father and son like
-the breath of destiny. Andrew Jackson came, dragging his bush with him.
-The bush was, of course, a welcome addition. Abraham saw him coming, and
-fled into the lap of a fiddler. Isaac, however, wasn't faced that way.
-Andrew Jackson smote Isaac upon the starboard quarter. It was a follow
-shot, rather than a carom, and Andrew Jackson and his prey landed in the
-middle of the audience together. For two minutes Andrew Jackson mingled
-freely with the people present, and then retired by the back door.
-
-"I knowed destrucshun was a-comin'!" murmured Singletree Jennings. "I
-ain't felt dat pestered, Delia, since de day I concealed my 'dentity in
-Marse Roundtree's smokehouse, an' dey cotched me at it."
-
-"Singletree Jennings!" observed the Reverend Handout F. Johnson, in a
-tone of solemn anger, while his pistol pocket still throbbed from the
-visitation of Andrew Jackson, "Elder Shakedown Bixby is in pursuit of
-dat goat of your'n with a razor. He has orders to immolate when cotched.
-At de nex' conference dar'll be charges ag'in you for substitutin' a
-deboshed goat for de Ram of Holy Writ. I keers nothin' for my pussonel
-sufferin's, but de purity of de Word mus' be protected. De congregashun
-will now join in singin' de pestilential Psalms, after which de social
-will disperse."
-
-
-
-
-JESS
-
-
-It was sunset at the Cross-K ranch. Four or five cowboys were gloomily
-about outside the adobe ranch house, awaiting supper. The Mexican cook
-had just begun his fragrant task, so a half hour would elapse before
-these Arabs were fed. Their ponies were "turned" into the wire pasture,
-their big Colorado saddles reposed astride the low pole fence which
-surrounded the house, and it was evident their riding was over for the
-day.
-
-Why were they gloomy? Not a boy of them could tell. They had been
-partners and _campaneros_, and "worked" the Cross-K cattle together for
-months, and nothing had come in misunderstanding or cloud. The ranch
-house was their home, and theirs had been the unity of brothers.
-
-The week before, a pretty girl--the daughter she was of a statesman of
-national repute--had come to the ranch from the East. Her name was Jess.
-
-Jess, the pretty girl, was protected in this venture by an old and
-gnarled aunt, watchful as a ferret, sour as a lime. Not that Jess, the
-pretty girl, needed watching; she was, indeed! propriety's climax.
-
-No soft nor dulcet reason wooed Jess, the pretty girl, to the West; she
-came on no love errand. The visitor was elegantly tired of the East,
-that was all; and longed for western air and western panorama.
-
-Jess, the pretty girl, had been at the Cross-K ranch a week, and the
-boys had met her, everyone. The meeting or meetings were marked by
-awkwardness as to the boys, indifference as to Jess, the pretty girl.
-She encountered them as she did the ponies, cows, horned-toads and other
-animals, domestic and _fero naturo_, indigenous to eastern Arizona.
-While every cowboy was blushingly conscious of Jess, the pretty girl,
-she was serenely guiltless of giving him a thought.
-
-Before Jess, the pretty girl, arrived, the cowboys were friends and the
-tenor of their calm relations was rippleless as a mirror. Jess was not
-there a day, before each drew himself insensibly from the others, while
-a vague hostility shone dimly in his eyes. It was the instinct of the
-fighting male animal aroused by the presence of Jess, the pretty girl.
-Jess, however, proceeded on her dainty way, sweetly ignorant of the
-sentiments she awakened.
-
-Men are mere animals. Women are, too, for that matter. But the latter
-are different animals from men. The effort the race makes to be other,
-better or different than the mere animal fails under pressure. It always
-failed; it will always fail. Civilisation is the veriest veneer and
-famously thin. A year on the plains cracks this veneer--this shell--and
-the animal issues visibly forth. This shell-cracking comes by the
-expanding growth of all that is animalish in man--attributes of the
-physical being, fed and pampered by a plains' existence.
-
-To recur to the boys of the Cross-K. The dark, vague, impalpable
-differences which cut off each of these creatures from his fellows, and
-inspired him with an unreasoning hate, had flourished with the brief
-week of their existence. A philosopher would have looked for near
-trouble on the Cross-K.
-
-"Whatever did you take my saddle for, Bill?" said Jack Cook to one Bill
-Watkins.
-
-"Which I allows I'll ride it some," replied Watkins; "thought it might
-like to pack a sure-'nough long-horn jest once for luck!"
-
-"Well, don't maverick it no more," retorted Cook, moodily, and ignoring
-the gay insolence of the other. "Leastwise, don't come a-takin' of it,
-an' sayin' nothin'. You can _palaver Americano_, can't you? When you
-aims to ride my saddle ag'in, ask for it; if you can't talk, make signs,
-an' if you can't make signs, shake a bush; but don't go romancin' off in
-silence with no saddle of mine no more."
-
-"Whatever do you reckon is liable to happen if I pulls it ag'in
-to-morry?" inquired Bill in high scorn.
-
-Watkins was of a more vivacious temper than the gloomy Cook.
-
-"Which if you takes it ag'in, I'll shorely come among you a whole lot.
-An' some prompt!" replied Cook, in a tone of obstinate injury.
-
-These boys were brothers before Jess, the pretty girl, appeared. Either
-would have gone afoot all day for the other. Going afoot, too, is the
-last thing a cowboy will consent to.
-
-"Don't you-all fail to come among me none," said Bill with cheerful
-ferocity, "on account of it's bein' me. I crosses the trail of a hold-up
-like you over in the Panhandle once, an' makes him dance, an' has a
-chuck-waggon full of fun with him."
-
-"Stop your millin' now, right yere!" said Tom Rawlins, the Cross-K range
-boss, who was sitting close at hand. "You-alls spring trouble 'round
-yere, an' you can gamble I'll be in it! Whatever's the matter with
-you-alls anyway? Looks like you've been as _locoed_ as a passel of
-sore-head dogs for more'n a week now. Which you're shorely too many for
-me, an' I plumb gives you up!" And Rawlins shook his sage head foggily.
-
-The boys started some grumbling reply, but the cook called them to
-supper just then, and, one animalism becoming overshadowed by another,
-they forgot their rancour in thoughts of supplying their hunger. Towards
-the last of the repast, Rawlins arose, and going to another room, began
-overlooking some entries in the ranch books.
-
-Jess, the pretty girl, did not sit at the ranch table. She had small
-banquets in her own room. Just then she was heard singing some tender
-little song that seemed born of a sigh and a tear. The boys' resentment
-of each other began again to burn in their eyes. None of these savages
-was in the least degree in love with Jess, the pretty girl.
-
-The singing went on in a cooing, soft way that did not bring you the
-words; only the music.
-
-"What I says about my saddle a while back, goes as it lays!" said Jack
-Cook.
-
-The song had ceased.
-
-As Cook spoke he turned a dark look on Watkins.
-
-"See yere!" replied Watkins in an exasperated tone--he was as vicious as
-Cook--"if you're p'intin' out for a war-jig with me, don't go stampin'
-'round none for reasons. Let her roll! Come a-runnin' an' don't pester
-none with ceremony."
-
-"Which a gent don't have to have no reason for crawlin' you!" said Cook.
-"Anyone's licenced to chase you 'round jest for exercise!"
-
-"You can gamble," said Watkins, confidently, "any party as chases me
-'round much, will regyard it as a thrillin' pastime. Which it won't grow
-on him none as a habit."
-
-"As you-all seem to feel that a-way," said the darkly wrathful Cook,
-"I'll sorter step out an' shoot with you right now!"
-
-"An' I'll shorely go you!" said Watkins.
-
-They arose and walked to the door. It was gathering dark, but it was
-light enough to shoot by. The other cowboys followed in a kind of savage
-silence. Not one word was said in comment or objection. They were grave,
-but passive like Indians. It is not good form to interfere with other
-people's affairs in Arizona.
-
-Jess, the pretty girl, began singing again. The strains fell softly
-on the ears of the cowboys. Each, as he listened, whether onlooker or
-principal, felt a licking, pleased anticipation of the blood to be soon
-set flowing.
-
-Nothing was said of distance. Cook and Watkins separated to twenty paces
-and turned to face each other. Each wore his six-shooter, the loose
-pistol belt letting it rest low on his hip. Each threw down his big hat
-and stood at apparent ease, with his thumbs caught in his belt.
-
-"Shall you give the word, or me?" asked Cook.
-
-"You says when!" retorted Watkins. "It'll be a funny passage in American
-history if you-all gets your gun to the front any sooner than I do."
-
-"Be you ready?" asked Cook.
-
-"Which I'm shorely ready!"
-
-"Then, go!"
-
-"Bang! Bang!! Bang!!!" went both pistols together.
-
-The reports came with a rapidity not to be counted. Cook got a crease
-in the face--a mere wound of the flesh. Watkins blundered forward with a
-bullet in his side.
-
-[Illustration: 0041]
-
-Rawlins ran out. His experience taught him all at a look. Hastily
-examining Cook, he discovered that his hurt was nothing serious. The
-others carried Watkins into the house.
-
-"Take my pony saddled at the fence, Jack," said Rawlins, "an' pull your
-freight. This yere Watkins is goin' to die. You've planted him."
-
-"Which I shorely hopes I has!" said Cook, with bitter cheerfulness. "I
-ain't got no use for cattle of his brand; none whatever!"
-
-Cook took Rawlins's pony. When he paused, the pony hung his head while
-his flanks steamed and quivered. And no marvel! That pony was one
-hundred miles from the last corn, as he cooled his nervous muzzle in the
-Rio San Simon.
-
-"Some deviltry about their saddles, Miss; that's all!" reported Rawlins
-to Jess, the pretty girl.
-
-"Isn't it horrible!" shuddered Jess, the pretty girl.
-
-The next morning Jess and the gnarled aunt paid the injured Watkins a
-visit. This civility affected the other three cowboys invidiously. They
-at once departed to a line of Cross-K camps in the Northwest. This on a
-pretence of working cattle over on the Cochise Mesa. They looked black
-enough as they galloped away.
-
-"Which it's shore a sin Jack Cook ain't no better pistol shot!" observed
-one, as the acrid picture of Jess, the pretty girl, sympathising above
-the wounded Watkins, arose before him.
-
-"That's whatever!" assented the others.
-
-Then, in moods of grim hatefulness, they bled their tired ponies with
-the spur by way of emphasis.
-
-
-
-
-THE HUMMING BIRD
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-NIT; I'm in a hurry to chase meself to-night," quoth Chucky, having
-first, however, taken his drink. "I'd like to stay an' chin wit' youse,
-but I can't. D' fact is I've got company over be me joint; he's a dead
-good fr'end of mine, see! Leastwise he has been; an' more'n onct, when
-I'm in d' hole, he's reached me his mit an' pulled me out. Now he's
-down on his luck I'm goin' to make good, an' for an even break on past
-favours, see if I can't straighten up _his_ game."
-
-"Who is your friend?" I asked. "Does he live here?"
-
-"Naw," retorted Chucky; "he's a crook, an' don't live nowhere.
-His name's Mollie Matches, an 'd' day was when Mollie's d' flyest
-fine-woiker on Byrnes's books. An' say! that ain't no fake neither."
-
-"What did he do?" I inquired.
-
-"Leathers, supers an' rocks," replied Chucky. "Of course, d' supers has
-to be yellow; d' w'ite kind don't pay; an' d' rocks has to be d' real
-t'ing. In d' old day, Mollie was d' king of d' dips, for fair! Of all
-d' crooks he was d' nob, an' many's d' time I've seen him come into d'
-Gran' Central wit' his t'ree stalls an' a Sheeny kid to carry d' swag,
-an' all as swell a mob as ever does time.
-
-"But he's fell be d' wayside now, an' don't youse forget it! Not only is
-he broke for dough, but his healt' is busted, too."
-
-"That's one of the strange things to me, Chucky," I said, for I was
-disposed to detain him if I could, and hear a bit more of his devious
-friend; "one of the very strange things! Here's your friend Mollie,
-who has done nothing, so you say, but steal watches, diamonds and
-pocket-books all his life, and yet to-day he is without a dollar."
-
-"Oh! as for that," returned Chucky wisely, "a crook don't make so much.
-In d' foist place, if he's nippin' leathers, nine out of ten of 'em's
-bound to be readers--no long green in 'em at all; nothin' but poi-pers,
-see! An' if he's pinchin' tickers an' sparks, a fence won't pay more'n
-a fort' what dey's wort'--an' there you be, see! Then ag'in, it costs a
-hundred plunks a day to keep a mob on d' road; an' what wit' puttin' up
-to d' p'lice for protection, an' what wit' squarin' a con or brakey if
-youse are graftin' on a train, there ain't, after his stalls has their
-bits, much left for Mollie. Takin' it over all, Mollie's dead lucky to
-get a hundred out of a t'ousand plunks; an' yet he's d' mug who has to
-put his hooks on d' stuff every time; do d' woik an' take d' chances,
-see!
-
-"But I'll tip it off to youse," continued Chucky, at the same time
-lowering his tone confidentially; "I'll put you on to what knocks
-Mollie's eye out just now. He's only a week ago toined out of one of de
-western pens, an' I reckon he was bad wit' 'em at d' finish--givin'
-'em a racket. Anyhow, dey confers on Mollie d' Hummin' Boid, an dey
-overplays. Mollie's gettin' old, and can't stand for what he could onct;
-an', as I says, these prison marks gives him too much of 'd Hummin' Boid
-and it breaks his noive.
-
-"Sure! Mollie's now what youse call hyster'cal; got bats in his steeple
-half d' time. If it wasn't for d' hop I shoots into him wit' a dandy
-little hypodermic gun me Rag's got, he'd be in d' booby house. An' all
-for too much Hummin' Boid! Say! on d' level! there ought to be a law
-ag'inst it."
-
-"What in heaven's name is the Humming Bird?" I queried.
-
-"It's d' prison punishment," replied Chucky. "Youse see, every pen has
-its punishment. In some, it's d' paddles, an' some ag'in don't do a
-t'ing but hang a guy up be a pair of handcuffs to his cell door so his
-toes just scrapes d' floor. In others dey starves you; an' in others
-still, dey slams you in d' dark hole.
-
-"Say! if youse are out to make some poor mark nutty for fair, just give
-him d' dark hole for a week. There he is wit' nothin' in d' cell but
-himself, see! an* all as black as ink. Mebby if d' guards is out to
-keep him movin', dey toins d' hose in an' wets down d' floor before dey
-leaves him. But honest to God! youse put a poor sucker in d' dark hole,
-an' be d' end of ten hours it's apples to ashes he ain't onto it whether
-he's been in a day or a week. Keep him there a week, an' away goes his
-cupolo--he ain't onto nothin'. On d' square! at d' end of a week in d'
-dark, a mut don't know lie's livin'.
-
-"D' cat-o'nine-tails, which dey has at Jeff City, ain't a marker to d'
-dark hole! D' cat'll crack d' skin all right, all right, but d' dark
-hole cracks a sucker's nut, see! His cocoa never is on straight ag'in,
-after he's done a stunt or two in d' dark hole."
-
-"But the Humming Bird?" I persisted. "What is it like?"
-
-"Why! as I relates," retorted Chucky, "d' Hummin Boid is what dey does
-to a guy in d' pen where Mollie was to teach him not to be too gay. It's
-like this: Here's a gezebo doin' time, see! Well, he gets funny. Mebby
-he soaks some other pris'ner; or mebby he toins loose and gives it to
-some guard in d' neck; or mebby ag'in he kicks on d' lock-step. I've
-seen a heap of mugs who does d' last.
-
-"Anyhow, whatever he does, it gets to be a case of Hummin' Boid, an' dey
-brings me gay scrapper or kicker, whichever he is, out for punishment.
-An' this is what he gets ag'inst:
-
-"Dey sets him in a high trough, same as dey waters a horse wit', see!
-Foist dey shucks d' mark--peels off his make-up down to d' buff. An'
-then dey sets him in d' trough, like I says, wit' mebby its eight inches
-of water in it.
-
-"Then he's strapped be d' ankles, an' d' fins, and about his waist,
-so he can't do nothin' but stay where he is. A sawbones gets him be d'
-pulse, an' one of them 'lectrical stiffs t'rows a wire, which is one end
-of d' battery, in d' water. D' wire, which is d' other end, finishes in
-a wet sponge. An' say! hully hell! when dey touches a poor mark wit' d'
-sponge end on d' shoulder, or mebby d' elbow, it completes d' circuit,
-see! an' it'll fetch such a glory hallelujah yelp out of him as would
-bring a deef an' dumb asylum into d' front yard to find out what d'
-row's about.
-
-"It's d' same t'ing as d' chair at Sing Sing, only not so warm. It's
-enough, though, to make d' toughest mug t'row a fit. No one stands for
-a secont trip; one touch of d' Hummin' Boid! an' a duck'll welch on
-anyt'ing you says--do anyt'ing, be anyt'ing; only so youse let up and
-don't give him no more. D' mere name of Hummin' Boid's good enough to
-t'run a scare into d' hardest an' d' woist of 'em, onct dey's had a
-piece.
-
-"As I says about Mollie: it seems them Indians gives him d' Hummin'
-Boid; an' dey gives him d' gaff too deep. But I've got to chase meself
-now, and pump some dope into him. I ought to land Mollie right side up
-in a week. An' then I'll bring him over to this boozin' ken of ours, an'
-cap youse a knock-down to him. Ta! ta!"
-
-
-
-
-GASSY THOMPSON, VILLAIN
-
-
-WESTERN humour is being severely spoken of by the close personal
-friends of Peter Dean. Less than a year ago, Peter Dean left the
-paternal roof on Madison Avenue and plunged into the glowing West. On
-the day of his departure he was twenty-three; not a ripe age. He had
-studied mining and engineering, and knew in those matters all that
-science could tell. His purpose in going West was to acquire the
-practical part of his chosen profession. Peter Dean believed in knowing
-it all; knowing it with the hands as well as with the head.
-
-Thus it befell that young Peter Dean, on a day to be remembered, tossed
-a careless kiss to his companions and fled away into the heart of
-the continent. Then his hair was raven black. Months later, when he
-returned, it was silver white. Western humour had worked the change;
-therefore the criticism chronicled. Peter Dean tells the following story
-of the bleaching:
-
-"At Creede I met a person named Thompson; 'Gassy' Thompson he was called
-by those about him, in testimony to his powers as a conversationist.
-A barkeeper, who seemed the best-informed and most gentlemanly soul in
-town, told me that Gassy Thompson was a miner full of practical skill,
-and that he was then engaged in sinking a shaft. I might arrange with
-Gassy and learn the business. At the barkeeper's hint, I proposed as
-much to Gassy Thompson.
-
-"'All right!' said Gassy; 'come out to the shaft to-morrow.'
-
-"The next day I was at the place appointed. The shaft was already fifty
-feet deep. Besides myself and this person, Gassy, who was to tutor me,
-there was a creature named Jim. This made three of us.
-
-"At the suggestion of Gassy, he and I descended into the shaft; Jim was
-left on the surface. We went down by means of a bucket, Jim unwinding us
-from a rickety old windlass.
-
-"Once down, Gassy and I, with sledge and drill, perpetrated a hole in
-the bottom of the shaft. I held the drill, Gassy wielding the sledge.
-When the hole met the worshipful taste of my tutor, he put in a dynamite
-cartridge, connected a long, five-minute fuse therewith, and carefully
-thumbed it about and packed it in with wet clay.
-
-"At Gassy's word, I was then hauled up from the shaft by Jim. I added
-my strength to the windlass, Gassy climbed into the bucket, lighted the
-fuse, and was then swiftly wound to the surface by Jim and myself. We
-then dragged the windlass aside, covered the mouth of the shaft, and
-quickly scampered to a distance, to be out of harm's reach.
-
-"At the end of five minutes from the time that Gassy lighted the fuse,
-and perhaps three minutes after we had cleared away, the shot exploded
-with a deafening report. Tons of rock were shot up from the mouth of the
-shaft, full fifty feet in the air. It was all very impressive, and gave
-me a lesson in the tremendous power of dynamite. I was much pleased, and
-felt as if I were learning.
-
-"Following the explosion Gassy and I again repaired to the bottom of the
-shaft. After clearing away the dbris and sending it up and out by the
-bucket, we resumed the sledge and drill. We completed another hole and
-were ready for a second shot. This was about noon.
-
-"It was at this point that the miscreant, Gassy, began to put into
-action a plot he had formed against me, and to carry out which the
-murderer, Jim, lent ready aid. You must remember that I had perfect
-confidence in these two villains.
-
-"'I never seed no tenderfoot go along like you do at this business,'
-said Gassy Thompson to me.
-
-"This was flattery. The miscreant was fattening me for the sacrifice.
-
-"'Looks like you was born to be a miner,' he went on. 'Now, I'm goin' to
-let you fire the next shot. Usual, I wouldn't feel jestified in allowin'
-a tenderfoot to fire a shot for plumb three months. But you has a genius
-for minin'; it comes as easy to you as robbin' a bird's nest. I'd be
-doin' wrong to hold you back.'
-
-"Of course, I naturally felt pleased. To be allowed to fire a dynamite
-shot on my first day in the shaft I felt and knew to be an honour. I
-determined to write home to my friends of this triumph.
-
-"Gassy said he'd put in the shot, and he selected one of giant size.
-I saw the herculean explosive placed in the hole; then he attached the
-fuse and thumbed the clay about it as before. He gave me a few last
-words.
-
-"'After I gets up,' he said, 'an' me an' Jim's all ready, you climb into
-the bucket an' light the fuse. Then raise the long yell to me an' Jim,
-an' we'll yank ye out. But be shore an' light the fuse. There's
-nothin' more discouragin' than for to wait half an* hour outside an' no
-cartridge goin' off. Especial when it goes off after you comes back to
-see what's the matter with her. So be shore an' light the fuse, an' then
-Jim an' me'll run you up the second follerin'. This oughter be a great
-day for you, young man! firin' a shot this away, the first six hours
-you're a miner!'
-
-"Jim and Gassy were at the windlass and yelled:
-
-"'All ready below?'
-
-"I was in the bucket and at the word scratched a match and lit the fuse.
-It sputtered with alarming ardour, and threw off a shower of sparks.
-
-"'Hoist away!' I called.
-
-"The villains ran me up about twenty-five feet, and came to a dead halt.
-At this they seemed to get into an altercation. They both abandoned
-the windlass, and I could hear them cursing, threatening, and shooting;
-presumably at each other.
-
-"'I'll blow your heart out!' I heard Gassy say.
-
-"My alarm was without a limit. I'd seen one dynamite cartridge go off.
-Here I was, swinging some twenty-five feet over a still heavier charge,
-and about to be blown into eternity! Meanwhile the caitiffs, on whom my
-life depended, were sacrificing me to settle some accursed feud of their
-own.
-
-"I cannot tell you of my agony. The fuse was spitting fire like forty
-fiends; the narrow shaft was choked with smoke. I swung helpless,
-awaiting death, while the two monsters, Gassy and Jim, were trying to
-murder each other above. Either from the smoke or the excitement, I
-fainted.
-
-"When I came to myself I was outside the shaft, safe and sound, while
-Gassy and his disreputable assistant were laughing at their joke. There
-had been no shot placed in the drill-hole; the heartless Gassy had
-palmed it and carried it with him to the surface.
-
-"At my very natural inquiry, made in a weak voice--for I was still sick
-and broken--as to what it all meant, they said it was merely a Colorado
-jest, and intended for the initiation of a tenderfoot.
-
-"'It gives 'em nerve!' said Gassy; 'it puts heart into 'em an' does 'em
-good!'
-
-"As soon as I could walk I severed my relations with Gassy Thompson and
-his outlaw adherent, Jim. The next morning my hair had turned the milky
-sort you see. The Creede people with whom I discussed the crime, laughed
-and said the drinks were on me. That was all the sympathy, all the
-redress, I got.
-
-"After that I came East without delay. When I leave the city of New York
-again it will not be for Creede. Nor will my next mining connection be
-formed with such abandoned barbarians as Gassy Thompson and Jim."
-
-
-
-
-ONE MOUNTAIN LION
-
-
-Pard! would you like to shoot at that lion?"
-
-Bob usually gave me no title at all. But when in any stress of our
-companionship he was driven to it, I was hailed as "pard!" Once or twice
-on some lighter occasion he had addressed me by the Spanish "_Amigo_."
-In business hours, however, my rank was "pard!"
-
-*****
-
-Sundown in the hills. The scene was a southeast spur of the Rockies;
-call the region the Upper Red River or the Vermejo, whichever you will
-for a name. Forty miles due west from the Spanish Peaks would stand one
-on the very spot.
-
-I had been out all day, ransacking the canyons, taking a Winter's look
-at the cattle to note how they were meeting the rigours of a season not
-yet half over. I had witnessed nothing alarming; my horned folk of the
-hills still made a smooth display as to ribs, and wore the air of cattle
-who had prudently stored up tallow enough the autumn before to carry
-them into the April grass.
-
-"Many a day have I dwelt in a wet saddle, only to crawl into a wetter
-blanket at night; and all for cows!" It was Bob Ellis who fathered this
-rather irrelevant observation. I had cut his trail an hour before,
-and we were making company for each other back to camp. I put forth no
-retort. Bob and I abode in the same small log hut, and I saw much of
-him, and didn't feel obliged to reply to those random utterances which
-fluttered from him like birds from a bush.
-
-It had been snowing for three days. This afternoon, however, had shaken
-off the storm. It is worth while to see the snow come down in the hills;
-flakes soft and clinging and silently cold; big as a baby's hand. Out in
-the flat valleys free of the trees the snow was deep enough to jade and
-distress our ponies. Therefore Bob and I were creeping home among the
-thick sown pines which bristled on the Divide like spines on a pig's
-back. There was very little snow under the trees. What would have made
-an easy depth of two feet had it been evenly spread on the ground over
-which our broncos picked their tired way, was above our heads in the
-pines. That was the reason why the trees were so still and silent.
-Your pine is a most garrulous vegetable in a sighing fashion, and its
-complaining notes sing for ever in your ears; sometimes like a roar,
-sometimes like a wail. But the three-days' snow in their green mouths
-gagged them; and never a tree of them all drew so much as a breath as we
-pushed on through their ranks.
-
-"Like the Winchester you're packin?" asked Bob.
-
-I confessed a weakness for the gun.
-
-"Had one of them magazine guns once myse'f," Bob remarked. "Model of
-'78. Never liked it, though; always shootin' over. As you pump the loads
-outen 'em and empty the magazine, the weight shifts till toward the last
-the muzzle's as light as a feather. Thar you be! shootin' over and still
-over, every pull."
-
-Having no interest in magazine guns beyond the act of firing them, I
-paid no heed to Bob's assault on their merits.
-
-"Now a single-shot gun," continued Bob, as he rode an oak shrub
-underfoot to come abreast of me, "is the weepon for me. Never mind about
-thar bein' jest one shot in her! Show me somethin' to shoot, an' I'll
-sling the cartridges into her frequent enough for the most impatient
-gent on earth. This rifle I'm packin' is all right--all except the hind
-sight. That's too coarse; you could drag a dog through it."
-
-Bob's dissertation on rifles was entertaining enough. My mood was
-indifferent, and his wisdom ran through my wits like water through a
-funnel, keeping them employed without filling them up. Bob had just
-begun again--all about a day far away when muzzle loaders were many in
-the hills--when my pony made sudden shy at something in the bushes. The
-muzzle of my gun instantly pointed to it, as if by an instinct of its
-own. Even as it did I became aware of the harmless cause of my pony's
-devout breathings--one of those million tragedies of nature which makes
-the wilderness a daily slaughter pen. It was the carcass of a blacktail
-deer. Its torn throat and shoulders, as well as the tracks of the giant
-cat in the snow, told how it died. The panther had leaped from the big
-bough of that yellow pine.
-
-"Mountain lion!" observed Bob, sagely, as he con templated the torn
-deer. "The deer come sa'nterin' down the slope yere, an' the lion jest
-naturally jumps his game from that tree. This deer was a bigger fool
-than most. You wouldn't ketch many of 'em as could come walkin' down the
-wind where the brush and bushes is rank, and gives the cats a chance to
-lay for 'em and bushwhack 'em!"
-
-It was becoming shadowy in among the pines by this time, and, having
-enough of Bob's defence of the dead buck and apology for its errors, I
-pushed on through the bushes for the camp. As we crossed a burnt strip
-where the fires had made a meal of the trees, the sun was reluctantly
-blinking his last before going to bed in the Sangre de Christo Range,
-which rolled upward like some tremendous billow in an ocean of milk full
-five scores of miles to the west.
-
-Bob and I were smoking our pipes in our log home that evening. Perhaps
-it was nine o'clock. A pitch-pine fire--billets set up endwise in the
-fireplace--roared in one corner. Our chimney was a vast success. Out
-back of our log habitat the surveyors had peeled the base of a pine and
-made a red-paint statement to the effect that even in the bottom of
-our little valley we were over 8,000 feet above the sea. This rather
-derogated from the pride of our chimney's performance; because, as Bob
-with justice urged, "a chimney not to 'draw' at an altitude of 8,000
-feet would have to be flat on the ground."
-
-I was sprawled on a blanket, softly taking in the smoke of a meerschaum.
-My eyes, fascinated by the glaring, pitch-pine blaze, were boring away
-at the fire as if it guarded a treasure. But neither the tobacco smoke
-nor the flames were in my thoughts; the latter were idly going back to
-the torn deer.
-
-As if in deference to a fashion of telepathy, Bob would have been
-thinking of the deer, also. It's possible, however, he had the cat in
-his meditations.
-
-Suddenly he broke into my quiet with the remark which opens this yarn.
-Then he proceeded.
-
-"Because," Bob continued, as I turned an eye on him through my tobacco
-smoke, "you might get it easy. He's shorely due to go back to-night an'
-eat up some of that black-tail, unless he's got an engagement. It's even
-money he's right thar now."
-
-I stepped to the door and looked out. The roundest of moons in the
-clearest of skies shone down. Then there was the snow; altogether, one
-might have read agate print by the light. I picked up my rifle and sent
-my eye through the sights.
-
-"But how about it when we push in among the pines; it'll be darker in
-there?"
-
-"Thar'll be plenty of light," declared Bob. "You don't have to make a
-tack-head shot. It ain't goin' to be like splittin' a bullet on a bowie.
-This mountain lion will be as big as you or me. Thar'll be light enough
-to hit a mark the size of him."
-
-Our ponies were heartily scandalised at being resaddled so soon; but
-they were powerless to enforce their views, and away we went, Indian
-file, with souls bent to slay the lion.
-
-"Which I shorely undertakes the view that we'll get him," observed Bob
-as we rode along.
-
-"Did you ever hear the Eastern proverb which says, 'The man who sold
-the lion's hide while yet upon the beast was killed in hunting him'?" I
-asked banteringly.
-
-"Who says so?" demanded Bob, defiantly.
-
-"It is an Eastern proverb."
-
-"Well, it may do for the East," responded Bob, "but you can gamble it
-ain't had no run west of the Mississippi. Why! I wouldn't be afraid to
-bet that one of these panthers never killed a human in the world. They
-do it in stories, but never in the hills. Why, shore! if you went right
-up an' got one by his two y'ears an' wrastled him, he'd have to fight.
-You could get a row out of a house cat, an' play that system. But you
-can write alongside of the Eastern proverb, that 'Bob Ellis says that
-the lion them parties complain of as killin' their friend, must have
-been plumb _locoed_, an' it oughtn't to count.'"
-
-At the edge of the trees we left the ponies standing. They pointed
-their ears forward as if wondering what all this mysterious night's work
-meant. It was entirely beside their experience. We left them to unravel
-the puzzle and passed as quietly among the trees as needles into cloth.
-
-Both Bob and I had served our apprenticeship at being noiseless, and
-brought the noble trade of silence to a science. It wasn't distant now
-to the field of the deer's death. Soon Bob pointed out the yellow pine.
-Bob was a better woodsman than I. Even in the daylight I would have
-owned trouble in picking out the tree at that distance among such a
-piney throng.
-
-What little wind we had was breathing in our faces. Bob hadn't made the
-black-tail's blunder of giving the lion the better of the breeze. Bob
-took the lead after he pointed out the yellow pine. Perhaps it was
-150 yards away when he identified it. We didn't cover five yards in
-a minute. Bob was resolutely deliberate. Still, I had no thought of
-complaint. I would have managed the case the same way had I been in the
-lead.
-
-Every ten feet Bob would pause and listen. There was now and then the
-sound of a clot of snow falling in the tops of the pines, as some bough
-surrendered its burden to the influence of the slight breeze. That was
-all my ears could detect of voices in the woods.
-
-We were within forty yards of the yellow pine, when Bob, after lingering
-a moment, turned his face toward me and made a motion of caution. I bent
-my ear to a profound effort. At last I heard it; the unctuous sound of
-feeding jaws!
-
-The oak bushes grew thick in among the pine trees. It did not seem
-possible to make out our game on account of this shrub-screen. At this
-point, instead of going any nearer the yellow pine, Bob bore off to
-the left. This flank movement not only held our title to the wind,
-but brought the moon behind us. After each fresh step Bob turned for a
-further survey of that region at the base of the yellow pine, where our
-lion, or some one of his relatives, was busy at his new repast.
-
-Then the climax of search arrived. To give myself due credit, I saw
-the panther as soon as did Bob. A fallen pine tree opened a lane in the
-bushes. Along this aisle I could dimly make out the body of the beast.
-His head and shoulders were protected by the trunk of the yellow pine,
-from the limb of which he had ambuscaded the black-tail. A cat's mouth
-serves vilely as a knife; the teeth are not arranged to cut well. His
-inability to sever a morsel left nothing for our lion to do, but gnaw at
-the carcass much as a dog might at a bone. This managed to keep his head
-out of harm's way behind the tree.
-
-Nothing better was likely to offer, and I concluded to try what a bullet
-would bring, on that part of the panther we could see. I found as I
-raised my Winchester that there was to be a strong element of faith in
-the shot. It was dim and shadowy in the woods, conditions which appeared
-to increase the moment you tried to point a gun. The aid my aim received
-from the gun-sights was of the vaguest. Indeed, for that one occasion
-they might as well have been left off the rifle. But as I was as
-familiar with the weapon as with the words I write, and could tell to
-the breadth of a hair where to lay it against my face to make it point
-directly at an object, there was nothing to gain by any elaboration
-of aim. As if to speed my impulse in the matter, a far-off crashing
-occurred in the bushes to the rear. A word suffices to read the riddle
-of the interruption. Our ponies, tired of being left to themselves, were
-coming sapiently forward to join us.
-
-With the first blundering rush of the ponies I unhooked my Winchester.
-The panther had no chance to take stock of the ponies' careless
-approach. If they had started five minutes earlier he might have owed
-them something.
-
-With the crack of the Winchester, the panther gave such a scream as,
-added to the jar of the gun--I was burning 120 grains of powder--served
-to make my ears sing. There were fear, amazement and pain all braided
-together in that yell. The flash of the discharge and the night shadows
-so blinded me that I did not make a second shot. I pumped in the
-cartridge with the instinct of precedent, but it was of no use. On
-the heels of it, our ponies, as if taking the shot to be an urgent
-invitation to make haste, came up on a canter, tearing through the
-bushes in a way to lose a stirrup if persisted in.
-
-Bob had run forward. There was blood on the snow to a praiseworthy
-extent. As we gazed along the wounded animal's line of flight there was
-more of it.
-
-"He's too hard hit to go far," said Bob. "We'll find him in the next
-canyon, or that blood's a joke." Bob walked along, looking at the
-blood-stained snow as if it were a lesson. Suddenly he halted, where the
-moonlight fell across it through the trees.
-
-"You uncoupled him," he said. "Broke his back plumb in two. See where he
-dragged his hind legs!"
-
-"He can't run far on those terms," I suggested.
-
-"I don't know," said Bob, doubtfully. "A mountain lion don't die easy.
-Mountain lions is what an insurance sharp would call a good resk. But
-I'll tell you how to carry on this campaign: I'll take the horses and
-scout over to the left until I get into the canyon yonder. Then I'll
-bear off up the canyon. If he crosses it--an' goin' on two legs that
-away, I don't look for it--I'll signal with a yell. If he don't, I'll
-circle him till I find the trail. Meanwhile you go straight ahead on
-his track afoot. Take it slow an' easy, for he's likely to be layin'
-somewhere."
-
-The trail carried me a quarter of a mile. As nearly as I might infer
-from the story the panther's passage had written in the snow, his speed
-held out. This last didn't look much like weakness. Still, the course
-was a splash of blood in red contradiction. The direction he took was
-slightly uphill.
-
-The trail ended sharp at the edge of a wide canyon. There was a shelf of
-scaly rock about twelve feet down the side. This had been protected from
-the storm by the overhanging brink of the canyon, and there was no snow
-on the shelf. That and the twelve feet of canyon side above it were the
-yellow colour of the earth.
-
-Below the shelf the snow again was deep, as the sides took an easier
-slope toward the bottom of the canyon. The panther had evidently
-scrambled down to the shelf. It took me less than a second to follow his
-wounded example. Once down I looked over the edge at the snow a few feet
-below to catch the trail again. The unmarred snow voiced no report of
-the game I hunted. I stepped to the left a few paces, still looking over
-for signs in the snow. There were none. As the shelf came to an end in
-this direction, I returned along the ledge, still keeping a hawk's eye
-on the snow below for the trail. I heard Bob riding in the canyon.
-
-"Have you struck his trail?" I shouted.
-
-"Thar's been nothin' down yere!" shouted Bob in reply. "The snow's as
-unbroken as the cream-cap on a pan of milk."
-
-Where was my panther? I had begun to regard him as a chattel. As my eye
-journeyed along the ledge the mystery cleared up. There lay my yellow
-friend close in against the wall. I had walked within a yard of him,
-looking the other way while earnestly reading the snow.
-
-The panther was sprawled flat like a rug, staring at me with green eyes.
-I had broken his back, as Bob said. As I brought the Winchester to my
-face, his gaze gave way. He turned his head as if to hide it between his
-shoulder and the wall. I was too near to talk of missing, even in the
-dim light, and the next instant he was hiccoughing with a bullet in
-his brain. Six and one-half feet from nose to tip was the measurement;
-whereof the tail, which these creatures grow foolishly long, furnished
-almost one-half.
-
-
-
-
-MOLLIE MATCHES
-
-(Annals of the Bend)
-
-
-It was clear and cold and dry--excellent weather, indeed, for a
-snowless Christmas. Everywhere one witnessed evidences of the season.
-One met more gay clothes than usual, with less of anxiety and an
-increase of smiling peace in the faces. Each window had its wreath of
-glistening green, whereof the red ribbon bow, that set off the garland,
-seemed than common a deeper and more ardent red. Or was the elevation in
-the faces, and the greenness of the wreaths, and the vivid sort of
-the ribbon, due to impressions, impalpable yet positive, of Christmas
-everywhere?
-
-All about was Christmas. Even our Baxter Street doggery had attempted
-something in the nature of a bowl of dark, suspicious drink, to
-which the barkeeper--he was a careless man of his nomenclature, this
-barkeeper--gave the name of "apple toddy." Apple toddy it might have
-been.
-
-When Chucky came in, an uncertain shuffle which was company to
-his rather solid tread showed he was not alone. I looked up. Our
-acquaintance, Mollie Matches, expert pickpocket,--now helpless and
-broken, all his one time jauntiness of successful crime gone,--was with
-him.
-
-"It was lonesome over be me joint," vouchsafed Chucky, "wit' me Bundle
-chased over to do her reg'lar anyooal confession to d' priest, see! an'
-so I fought youse wouldn't mind an' I bring Mollie along. Me old pal is
-still a bit shaky as to his hooks," remarked Chucky, as he surveyed his
-tremulous companion, "an' a sip of d' booze wouldn't do him no harm.
-It ain't age; Mollie's only come sixty spaces; it's that Hum-min' Boid
-about which I tells youse, that's knocked his noive."
-
-Drinks were ordered; whiskey strong and straight for Matches. No; I've
-no apology for buying these folk drink. "Drink," observed Johnson to the
-worthy Boswell, "drink, for one thing, makes a man pleased with himself,
-which is no small matter." Heaven knows! my shady companions, for the
-reason announced by the sagacious doctor, needed something of the
-sort. Besides, I never molest my fellows in their drinking. I've slight
-personal use for breweries, distilleries, or wine presses; and gin
-mills in any form or phase woo me not; yet I would have nothing of
-interference with the cups of other men. In such behalf, I feel not
-unlike that fat, well-living bishop of Westminster who refused to sign
-a memorial to Parliament craving strict laws in behalf of total
-abstinence. "No," said that sound priest, stoutly, "I will sign no
-such petition to Parliament. I want no such law. I would rather see
-Englishmen free than sober."
-
-It took five deep draughts of liquor, ardently raw, to put Matches in
-half control of his hands. What with the chill of the day, and what with
-the torn condition of his nerves, they shook like the oft-named aspen.
-
-"Them don't remind a guy," said Matches, as he held up his quivering
-fingers, "of a day, twenty-five years ago, when I was d' pick of d'
-swell mob, an 'd' steadiest grafter that ever ringed a watch or weeded a
-leather! It would be safe for d' Chief to take me mug out of d' gallery
-now, an' rub d' name of Mollie Matches off d' books. Me day is done, an'
-I'll graft no more."
-
-There was plaintiveness in the man's tones as if he were mourning some
-virtue, departed with his age and weakness. Clearly Matches, off his
-guard and normal, found no peculiar fault with his past.
-
-"How came you to be a thief?" I asked Matches bluntly. I had counted the
-sixth drink down his throat, which meant that he wouldn't be sensitive.
-
-"It's too far off to say," retorted Matches. "I can't t'row back to
-d' time when I wasn't a crook. Do youse want to know d' foist trick I
-loined? Well, it wasn't t'ree blocks from here, over be d' Bowery. I
-couldn't be more'n five. There was a fakir, sellin' soap. There was
-spec'ments of d' long green all over his stand, wit' cakes of soap on
-'em, to draw d' suckers. Standin' be me side was a kid; Danny d' Face
-dey called him. He was bigger than me, an' so I falls to his tips, see!"
-
-"'When you see him toin round,' said Danny d' Face, 'swipe a bill, an'
-chase yourself up d' alley wit' it.'
-
-"Danny goes behint, an' does a sneak on d' fakir's leg wit' a pin. Of
-course, he toins an' cuts loose a bluff at Danny, who's ducked out
-of reach. As he toins, up goes me small mit, an' d' nex' secont I'm
-sprintin' up d' alley wit 'd' swag.
-
-"Nit; d' mug wit' d' soap don't chase. He never even makes a holler; I
-don't t'ink he caught on. But Danny cuts in after me, an 'd' minute he
-sees we ain't bein' followed, or piped, he gives me d' foot, t'rows me
-in a heap, an' grabs off d' bill. I don't get a smell of it. An 'd' toad
-skin's a fiver at that!
-
-"D' foist real graft I recalls," continued Matches, as he took a
-meditative sip of the grog, "I'm goin' along wit' an old fat skirt,
-called Mother Worden, to Barnum's Museum down be Ann Street an'
-Broadway. Mebbe I'm seven or eight then. Mother Worden used to make up
-for d' respectable, see! an' our togs was out of sight. There was no
-flies on us when me an' Mother Worden went fort' to graft. What was d'
-racket? Pickin' women's pockets. Mother Worden would go to d' museum, or
-wherever there was a crush, an' lead me about be me mit. She'd steer me
-up to some loidy, an' let on she's lookin' at whatever d' other party
-has her lamps on. Meanwhile, I'm shoved in between d' brace of 'em,
-an' that's me cue to dip in wit' me free hook an' toin out d' loidy's
-pocket, see! An' say! it was a peach of a play; an' a winner. We used to
-take in funerals, an' theaytres, an' wherever there was a gang. Me an'
-Mother Worden was d' whole t'ing; there was nobody's bit to split out;
-just us. We was d' complete woiks.
-
-"Now an' then there was a squeal. Once in a while I'd bungle me stunt,
-an' d' loidy I was friskin' would tumble an' raise d' yell. But Mother
-Worden always 'pologised, an' acted like she's shocked, an' cuffed me
-an' t'umped me, see! an' so she'd woik us free. I stood for d' t'umpin',
-an' never knocked. Mother Worden always told me that if we was lagged,
-d' p'lice guys would croak me. An' as d' wallopin's she gives me was d'
-real t'ing,--bein' she was hot under d' collar for me failin' down wit'
-me graft,--d' folks used to believe her, an' look on me fin in their
-pocket, that way, as d' caper of a kid. Oh, d' old woman Worden was dead
-flossy in her day, an' stood d' acid all right, all right, every time.
-
-"But like it always toins out, she finds her finish. One day she makes a
-side-play on her own account, somethin' in d' shopliftin' line, I t'ink;
-an' she's pinched, an' takes six mont's on d' Island. I never sees her
-ag'in; at which I don't break no record for weeps. She's a boid, was
-Mother Worden; an' dead tough at that. She don't give me none d' best of
-it when I'm wit' her, an' I'm glad, in a kid fashion, when she gets put
-away.
-
-"That's d' start I gets. Some other time I'll unfold to youse how I
-takes me name of Mollie Matches. Youse can hock your socks! I've seen d'
-hot end of many an alley! I never chases be Trinity buryin' ground, but
-I t'inks of a day when I pitched coppers on one of d' tombstones, heads
-or tails, for a saw-buck, wit' a party grown, before I was old enough
-an' fly enough to count d' dough we was tossin' for. But we'll pass all
-that up to-night. It's gettin' late an' I'll just put me frame outside
-another hooker an' then I'll hunt me bunk. I can't set up, an' booze an'
-gab like I onct could; I ain't neither d' owl nor d' tank I was."
-
-
-
-
-THE ST. CYRS
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-Franois St. Cyr is a Frenchman. He is absent two years from La Belle
-France. He and his little wife, Bebe, live not far from Washington
-Square. They love each other like birds. Yet Franois St. Cyr is gay,
-and little Bebe is jealous. Once a year the Ball of France is held at
-the Garden. Bebe turns up a nose and will not so belittle herself. So
-Franois St. Cyr attends the Ball of France alone. However, he does not
-repine. Franois St. Cyr is permitted to be more _de gage_; the ladies
-more _abandon_. At least that is the way Franois St. Cyr explains it.
-
-It is the night of the Ball of France. Franois St. Cyr is there. The
-Garden lights shine on fair women and brave men. It is a masque. The
-costumes are fancy, some of them feverishly so. A railroad person
-present says there isn't enough costume on some of the participants to
-flag a hand-car. No one has any purpose, however, to flag a hand-car;
-the deficiency passes unnoticed. Had the railroader spoken of flagging a
-beer waggon--_mon Dieu!_ that would have been another thing!
-
-A prize, a casket of jewels, is to be given to the best dressed lady. A
-bacchante in white satin trimmed with swans' down and diamonds the
-size and lustre of salt-cellars is appointed the beneficiary by popular
-acclaim. Franois St. Cyr, as one of the directors of the ball, presents
-the jewels in a fiery speech. The music crashes, the mad whirl proceeds.
-A supple young woman, whose trousseau would have looked lonely in a
-collar-box, kicks off the hat of Franois St. Cyr. _Sapriste!_ how she
-charms him! He drinks wine from her little shoe!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-The morning papers told of the beauty in swans' down; the casket of
-jewels, and the presentation rhetoric of Franois St. Cyr, flowing
-like a river of oral fire. Bebe read it with the first light of dawn.
-_Peste!_ Later, when Franois St. Cyr came home, Bebe hurled the clock
-at him from an upper window. Bebe followed it with other implements of
-light housekeeping. Franois St. Cyr fled wildly. Then he wept and drank
-beer and talked of his honour.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-The supple person who kicked the hat of Franois St. Cyr was a chorus
-girl. The troop in whose outrages she assisted was billed to infuriate
-Newark that evening. Franois St. Cyr would seek surcease in Newark.
-He would bind a new love on the heart bruised and broken by the jealous
-Bebe. _Mon Dieu!_ yes!
-
-The curtain went up. Franois St. Cyr inhabited a box. He was very
-still; no mouse was more so. No one noticed Franois St. Cyr. At last
-the chorus folk appeared.
-
-"Brava! mam'selle, brava!" shouted Franois St. Cyr, springing to his
-feet, and performing with his hands as with cymbals.
-
-What merited this outburst? The chorus folk had done nothing; hadn't
-slain a note, nor murdered a melody. The audience stared at the shouting
-Franois St. Cyr. What ailed the man? At last the audience admonished
-Franois St. Cyr.
-
-"Sit down! Shut up!"
-
-Those were the directions the public gave Franois St. Cyr.
-
-"I weel not sit down! I weel not close up!" shouted Franois St. Cyr,
-bending over the box-rail and gesticulating like a monkey whose reason
-was suffering a strain. Then again to the chorus girl:
-
-"Brava! mam'selle, brava!"
-
-The other chorus girls looked disdainfully at the chorus girl whom
-Franois St. Cyr honoured, so as to identify her to the contempt of the
-public.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-Francois St. Cyr suddenly discharged a bouquet at the stage. It was the
-size of a butter tub. It mowed a swath through the chorus like a chain
-shot.
-
-"Put him out!" commanded the public.
-
-"Poot heem out!" repeated Franois St. Cyr with a shriek of sneering
-contempt. "_Canaille!_ I def-fy you! I am a Frenchman; I do not fee-ar
-to die!"
-
-Wafted to his duty on the breath of general opinion, a _gend'arme_ of
-Newark acquired Franois St. Cyr, and bore him vociferating from the
-scene of his triumph.
-
-As he was carried through the foyer, he raised his voice heroically:
-
-"_Vive le Boulanger!_"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-The next public appearance of Franois St. Cyr was in the Newark Police
-Court. He was pale and limp, and had thoughts of suicide. He was still
-clothed in his dress suit, which clung to him as if it, too, felt
-"_des-pond_."
-
-Franois St. Cyr was fined $20.
-
-Bebe, the jealous, the faithful little Bebe, was there to pay the money.
-_Mon Dieu!_ how he loved her! He would be her bird and sing to her all
-her life! Never would he leave his Bebe more! As for the false one of
-the chorus: Franois St. Cyr "des-spised" her.
-
-Also Bebe had brought the week-day suit of Franois St. Cyr. Could an
-angel have had more forethought? Franois St. Cyr changed his clothes in
-a jury room, and Bebe and he came home cooing like turtle doves.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-By virtue of the every-day suit, the St. Cyrs were home by 4 o'clock
-in the afternoon. Otherwise, under the rules, being habited in a dress
-suit, Franois St. Cyr could not have returned until 6,
-
-And they were happy!
-
-
-
-
-McBRIDE'S DANDY
-
-Albert Edward Murphy is a high officer in one of the departments of the
-city. He holds his position with credit to the administration, and to
-his own celebration and renown. He has a wife and a family of children;
-and sets up his Lares and Penates in a home of his own in Greenwich
-Village.
-
-Among other possessions of a household sort, Albert Edward Murphy, until
-lately, numbered one pug dog. It was a dog of vast spirit and but little
-wit. Yet the children loved it, and its puggish imbecility only seemed
-to draw it closer to their baby hearts.
-
-The pug's main delusion went to the effect that he could fight. Good
-judges say that there wasn't a dog on earth the pug could whip. But he
-didn't know this and held other views. As a result, he assailed every
-dog he met, and got thrashed. The pug had taken a whirl at all the
-canines in the neighbourhood, and been wickedly trounced in every
-instance. This only made him dearer, and the children loved him for the
-enemies he made.
-
-*****
-
-The pug's name was John.
-
-One day, John, the pug, fell heir to a frightful beating at the paws and
-jaws of the dog next door. All that saved the life of John, the pug, on
-this awful occasion, was the lucky fact that he could get between
-the pickets of the line fence, and the neighbour's dog could not. The
-neighbour's dog was many times the size and weight of John, the pug;
-but, as has been suggested, what John didn't know about other dogs would
-fill a book; and he had gone upon the neighbour's premises and pulled
-off a fight.
-
-Now these divers sporting events in which John, the pug, took disastrous
-part worried Albert Edward Murphy. They worried him because the children
-took them to heart, and wept over the wounds of John, the pug, as they
-bound them with tar and other medicaments. At last Albert Edward Murphy
-resolved upon a campaign in favour of John, the pug. His future should
-have a protector; his past should be avenged.
-
-*****
-
-There was a forty-pound bulldog resident of Philadelphia. He whipped
-every dog to whom he was introduced. His name was Alexander McBride.
-He was referred to as "McBride's Dandy" in his set, whenever his
-identification became a conversational necessity. Of the many dogs he
-had met and conquered, Alexander McBride had killed twenty-three.
-
-Albert Edward Murphy resolved to import Alexander McBride. He knew
-the latter's owner. A letter adjusted the details. The proprietor of
-Alexander McBride was willing his pet should come to the metropolis on
-a visit. Alexander McBride had fought Philadelphia to a standstill, and
-his owner's idea was that, if Alexander McBride were to go on a visit
-and remain away for a few months, Philadelphia would forget him, and
-on his return he might ring Alexander in on the town as a stranger, and
-kill another dog with him. *****
-
-Alexander McBride got off the cars in a chicken crate. The expressmen
-were afraid of him. Albert Edward Murphy was notified. He hired a
-coloured person, who looked on life as a failure, to convey Alexander
-McBride to his new home. They tied him to a bureau when they got him
-there.
-
-Alexander McBride was a gruesome-looking dog, with a wide, vacant head,
-when his mouth was open, like unto an empty coal scuttle. Albert Edward
-Murphy looked at Alexander McBride, and after saying that he "would do,"
-went to dinner. During the prandial meal he explained to his family
-the properties and attributes of Alexander McBride; and then he and the
-children went over the long list of neighbour dogs who had oppressed
-John, the pug, and settled which dog Alexander McBride should chew up
-first. Alexander McBride should begin on the morrow to rend and destroy
-the adjacent dogs, and assume toward John, the pug, the rle of guide,
-philosopher and friend. Albert Edward Murphy and his children were very
-happy.
-
-After dinner they went back to take another look at Alexander McBride.
-As they stood about that hero in an awed but admiring circle, John, the
-pug, rushed wildly into the ring, and tackled Alexander McBride. The
-coal-scuttle head opened and closed on John, the Pug.
-
-There was a moment of frozen horror, and then Albert Edward Murphy and
-his household fell upon Alexander McBride in a body.
-
-It was too late. It took thirteen minutes and the family poker to open
-the jaws of Alexander McBride. Then John, the pug, fell to the floor,
-dead and limp as a wet bath towel.
-
-*****
-
-Alexander McBride had slain his twenty-fourth dog, and John, the pug, is
-only a memory now.
-
-
-
-
-RED MIKE
-
-(Annals of the Bend)
-
-
-Say!" remarked Chucky as he squared himself before the greasy doggery
-table, "I'm goin' to make it whiskey to-day,'cause I ain't feelin' a
-t'ing but good, see!"
-
-I asked the cause of Chucky's exaltation. Chucky's reason as given for
-his high spirits was unusual.
-
-"Red Mike gets ten spaces in Sing Sing," he said; "an' he does a dead
-short stretch at that. He oughter get d' chair--that bloke had.
-
-"Red Mike croaks his kid," vouchsafed Chucky in further elucidation.
-"Say! it makes me tired to t'ink! She was as good a kid, this little
-Emmer which Mike does up, as ever comes down d' Bend. An' only 'leven!"
-
-"Tell me the story," I urged.
-
-"This Red Mike's a hod carrier," continued Chucky, thus moved, "but
-ain't out to hoit himself be hard woik at it; he don't woik overtime.
-Hit! Not on your life insurance!
-
-"What Red Mike sooner do is bum Mulberry Street for drinks, an' hang
-'round s'loons an' sling guff about d' wrongs of d' woikin'man. Then
-he'd chase home, an' bein' loaded, he'd wallop his family.
-
-"On d' level! I ain't got no use ford' sort of a phylanthrofist who
-goes chinnin' all night about d' wrongs of d' labour element an 'd'
-oppressions of d* rich an' then goes home an' slugs his wife. Say! I
-t'ink a bloke who'd soak a skirt, no matter what she does--no matter if
-she is his wife! on d' square! I t'ink he's rotten." And Chucky imbibed
-deeply, looking virtuous.
-
-"Well, at last," said Chucky, resuming his narrative, "Mike puts a crimp
-too many in his Norah--that's his wife--an' d' city 'torities plants her
-in Potters' Field."
-
-"Did Mike kill her?" I queried, a bit horrified at this murderous
-development of Chucky's tale.
-
-"Sure!" assented Chucky, "Mike kills her."
-
-"Shoot her?" I suggested.
-
-"Nit!" retorted Chucky disgustedly. "Shoot her! Mike ain't got no gun.
-If he had, he'd hocked it long before he got to croak anybody wit' it.
-Naw, Mike does Norah be his constant abuse, see! Beats d' life out of
-her be degrees.
-
-"When Norah's gone," resumed Chucky, "Emmer, who's d' oldest of d' t'ree
-kids, does d' mudder act for d' others. She's 'leven, like I says. An'
-little!--she ain't bigger'n a drink of whiskey, Emmer ain't.
-
-"But youse should oughter see her hustle to line up an' take care of
-them two young-ones. Only eight an' five dey be. Emmer washes d' duds
-for 'em, and does all sorts of stunts to get grub, an' tries like an old
-woman, night an' day, to bring 'em up.
-
-"D' neighbours helps, of course, like neighbours do when it's a case of
-dead hard luck; an' I meself has t'run a quarter or two in Emmer's lap
-when I'm a bit lushy. Say! I'm d' easiest mark when I've been hit-tin'
-d' bottle!--I'd give d' nose off me face!
-
-"If d' neighbours don't chip in, Emmer an' them kids would lots of times
-have had a hard graft; for mostly there ain't enough dough about d'
-joint from one week's end to another to flag a bread waggon.
-
-"Finally Red Mike gets woise. After Norah goes flutterin' that time,
-Mike's been goin' along as usual, talkin' about d' woikin'man, an' doin'
-up Emmer an 'd' kids for a finish before he rolls in to pound his ear.
-
-"At foist it ain't so bad. He simply fetches one of d' young ones a
-back-handed swipe across d' map wit' his mit to see it swap ends wit'
-itself; or mebbe he soaks Emmer in d' lamp an' blacks it, 'cause she's
-older. But never no woise. At least, not for long.
-
-"But as I says, finally Red Mike gets bad for fair. He lams loose
-oftener, an' he licks Emmer an 'd' kids more to d' Queen's taste--more
-like dey's grown-up folks an' can stan' for it.
-
-"Emmer, day after day chases 'round quiet as a rabbit, washin' d' kids
-an' feedin' 'em when there's any-t'ing, an' she don't make no holler
-about Mike's jumpin' on 'em for fear if she squeals d' cops'll pinch
-Mike an' give him d' Island.
-
-"Yes, Emmer was a dead game all right. Not only she don't raise d' roar
-on Mike about his soakin' 'em, but more'n onct she cuts in an' takes d'
-smash Mike means for one of d' others.
-
-"But, of course, you can see poor Emmer's finish. She's little, an'
-weak, an' t'in, not gettin' enough to chew--for she saws d' food off on
-d' others as long as dey makes d' hungry front--an 'd' night Mike puts
-d' boots to her an' breaks t'ree of her slats, that lets her out! She
-croaks in four hours, be d' watch.
-
-"W'at does Red Mike do it for? Well, he never needs, much of a hunch to
-pitch into Emmer an' d' rest. But I hears from me Rag who lives on d'
-same floor that it's all 'cause Mike gets d' tip that Emmer's got two
-bits, an' he wants it for booze. Mike comes in wit' a t'irst an' he
-ain't got d' price, an' he puts it to Emmer she's got stuff. Mike wants
-her to spring her plant an' chase d' duck.
-
-"But Emmer welched an' won't have it. She's dead stubborn an' says d'
-kids must eat d' nex' day; and so Mike can't have d' money. Mike says
-he'll kick d' heart out of her if he don't get it. Emmer stan's pat, an'
-so Mike starts in.
-
-"It's 'most an hour before I gets there. D' poor baby--for that's all
-Emmer is, even if she was dealin' d' game for d' joint--looks awful, all
-battered to bits. One of d' city's jackleg sawbones is there, mendin'
-Emmer wit' bandages. But he says himself he's on a dead card, an' that
-Emmer's going to die. Mike is settin' on a stool keepin' mum an' lookin'
-w'ite an' dopey, an' a cop is wit' him. Oh, yes! he gets d' collar long
-before I shows up.
-
-"Say! d' scene ain't solemn, oh, no! nit! Emmer lays back on d' bed--she
-twigs she's goin' to die; d' doctor puts her on. Emmer lays back an' as
-good as she can, for her valves don't woik easy an' she breathes hard,
-she tells 'em what to do. She says there's d' washboiler she borry's
-from d' Meyers's family, an' to send it back.
-
-"'An' I owes Mrs. Lynch,' says Emmer--she's talkin' dead faint--'a dime
-for sewin' me skirt, an' I ain't got d' dough. But when dey takes dad
-to d' coop, tell her to run her lamps over d' plunder, an' she has her
-pick, see! An' when I'm gone,' goes on Emmer, 'ast d' Gerries to take d'
-kids. Dey tries to get their hooks on 'em before, but I wanted to keep
-'em. Now I can't, an' d' Gerries is d' best I can do. D' Gerries ain't
-so warm, but dey can lose nothin' in a walk. An' wit' dad pinched an' me
-dead, poor Danny an' Jennie is up ag'inst it for fair.'
-
-"Nit; Emmer never sheds a weep. But say! you should a seen me Rag! She
-was d' terror for tears! She does d' sob act for two, an' don't you
-forget it.
-
-"Emmer just lays there when she's quit chinnin' an' gives Mike d' icy
-eye. If ever a bloke goes unforgiven, it's Red Mike.
-
-"'Don't youse want d' priest, or mebby a preacher?' asts me Rag of Emmer
-between sobs. Emmer's voice is most played when she comes back at her.
-
-"'W'at's d' use?' says Emmer.
-
-"Then she toins to d' two kids who's be d' bed cryin', an' tries to kiss
-'em, but it's a move too many for her. She twists back wit 'd' pain, an'
-bridges herself like you see a wrestler, an' when she sinks straight wit
-'d' bed ag'in, d' red blood is comin' out of her face. Emmer's light is
-out.
-
-"I tumbles to it d' foist. As I leads me Rag back to our room--for I can
-see she's out to t'row a fit--d' cop takes Red Mike down be d' stairs."
-
-
-
-
-HAMILTON FINNERTY'S HEART
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-Far up in Harlem, on a dead swell street, the chance pedestrian as
-he chases himself by the Ville Finnerty, may see a pale, wrung face
-pressing itself against the pane. It is the map of Hamilton Finnerty.
-
-"W'at's d' matter wit' d' bloke?" whispered Kid Dugan, the gasman's son,
-to his young companion, as they stood furtively piping off the Ville
-Finnerty. "Is it 'D' Pris'ner of Zenda' down to date?"
-
-"Stash!" said his chum in a low tone. "Don't say a woid. That guy was
-goin' to be hitched to a soubrette. At d' las' minute d' skirt goes back
-on him--won't stan' for it; see! Now d' sucker's nutty. Dey's thrunning
-dice for him at Bloomin'dale right now!"
-
-It was a sad, sad story of how two loving hearts were made to break
-away; of how in their ignorance the police declared themselves in on a
-play of which they wotted nit, and queered it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-When the betrothal of Isabelle Imogene McSween to Hamilton Finnerty was
-tipped off to their set, the lite of Harlem fairly quivered with the
-glow and glory of it. The Four Hundred were agog.
-
-"It's d' swiftest deal of d' season!" said De Pygstyster.
-
-"Hammy won't do a t'ing to McSween's millions, I don't t'ink!" said Von
-Pretselbok.
-
-"Hammy'll boin a wet dog. An' don't youse forget it, I'll be in on d'
-incineration!" said Goosevelt.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-Hamilton Finnerty embarked for England. The beautiful Isabelle Imogene
-McSween had been plunging on raiment in Paree. The wedding was to be
-pulled off in two weeks at St. Paul's, London. It was to be a corker;
-for the McSweens were hot potatoes and rolled high. Nor were the
-Finnerties listed under the head of Has-beens. It is but justice to both
-families to say, they were in it with both feet.
-
-When Hamilton Finnerty went ashore at Liverpool he communed with
-himself.
-
-"It's five days ere dey spring d' weddin' march in me young affairs,"
-soliloquised Hamilton Finnerty, "an' I might as well toin in an' do
-d' village of Liverpool while I waits. A good toot will be d' t'ing to
-allay me natural uneasiness."
-
-Thus it was that Hamilton Finnerty went forth to tank, and spread red
-paint, and plough a furrow through the hamlet of Liverpool. But Hamilton
-was a dead wise fowl. He had been on bats before, and was aware that
-they didn't do a thing to money.
-
-"For fear I'll blow me dough," said Hamilton, still communing with
-himself, "I'll buy meself an' chip d' retoin tickets, see! It's a
-lead-pipe cinch then, we goes back."
-
-And the forethoughtful Hamilton sprung his roll and went against the
-agent, for return tickets. They were to be good on the very steamer
-he chased over in. They were for him and the winsome Isabelle Imogene
-McSween, soon to be Mrs. Finnerty. The paste-boards called for the
-steamer's trip three weeks away.
-
-"There!" quoth Hamilton Finnerty, as he concealed the tickets in his
-trousseau, "I've sewed buttons on the future. We don't walk back, see! I
-can now relax an' toin meself to Gin, Dog's Head and a general whizz. I
-won't have no picnic,--oh, no! not on your eyes!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-It was early darkness on the second day. One after another the windows
-were showing a glim. Liverpool was lighting up for the evening. A
-limp figure stood holding to a lamp-post. The figure was loaded to the
-guards. It was Hamilton Finnerty, and his light was out. He had just
-been fired from that hostelry known as The Swan with the Four Legs.
-
-"I 'opes th' duffer won't croak on me doorstep," said the blooming
-barmaid, as she cast her lamps on Hamilton Finnerty from the safe
-vantage of a window of The Swan with the Four Legs.
-
-There was no danger of Hamilton Finnerty dying, not in a thousand years.
-But he was woozy and tumbled not to events about him. He knew neither
-his name, nor his nativity, Nor could he speak, for his tongue was on a
-spree with the Gin and the Dog's Head.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-As Hamilton Finnerty stood holding the lamp-post, and deeming it his
-"only own," two of the Queen's constabulary approached.
-
-[Illustration: 0085]
-
-"'Ere's a bloomin' gow, Jem!" said the one born in London. "Now '00 d'
-ye tyke the gent to be?"
-
-They were good police people, ignorant but innocent; and disinclined to
-give Hamilton Finnerty the collar.
-
-"Frisk 'un, Bill," advised the one from Yorkshire; "it's loike th' naime
-bees in 'uns pawkets."
-
-The two went through the make-up of Hamilton Finnerty. Jagged as he
-was, he heeded them not. They struck the steamer tickets and noted the
-steamer's name, but not the day of sailing.
-
-As if anxious to aid in the overthrow of Hamilton Finnerty, the steamer
-was still at her dock, with preparations all but complete for the return
-slide to New York.
-
-"Now 'ere's a luvely mess!" said London Bill, looking at the tickets.
-"The bloody bowt gows in twenty minutes, an' 'ere's this gent a-gettin'
-'eeself left! An' th' tickets for 'ees missus, too! It's punds t'
-peanuts, th' loidy's aboard th' bowt tearin' 'er blessed heyes out for
-'im. Hy, say there, kebby! bear a 'and! This gent's got to catch a
-bowt!"
-
-Hamilton Finnerty, dumb with Gin and Dog's Head, was tumbled into the
-cab, and the vehicle, taking its hunch from the excited officers, made
-the run of its life to the docks. They were in time.
-
-"It tak's th' droonken 'uns t'av th' loock!" remarked Yorkshire Jem
-cheerfully to London Bill, as they stood wiping their honest faces on
-the dock, while the majestic steamer, with Hamilton Finnerty aboard,
-worked slowly out.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-When Hamilton Finnerty came to his senses he was one hundred miles on
-his way to New York. For an hour he was off his trolley. It was six days
-before he landed, and during that period he did naught but chew the rag.
-
-Hamilton Finnerty chased straight for Harlem and sought refuge in the
-Ville Finnerty. He must think; he must reorganise his play! He would
-compile a fake calculated to make a hit as an excuse with Isabelle
-Imogene McSween, and cable it. All might yet be well.
-
-But alas! As Hamilton Finnerty opened the door of the Ville Finnerty
-the butler sawed off a cablegram upon him. It was from Isabelle Imogene
-McSween to Hamilton Finnerty's cable address of "Hamfinny."
-
-As Hamilton Finnerty read the fatal words, he fell all over himself with
-a dull, sickening thud. And well he might! The message threw the boots
-into the last hope of Hamilton Finnerty. It read as follows:
-
-_Hamfinny:--Miscreant! Villain! A friend put me onto your skip from
-Liverpool. It was a hobo trick. But I broke even with you. I was dead
-aware that you might do a sneak at the last minute, and was organised
-with a French Count up me sleeve; see! Me wedding came off just the
-same. Me hubby's a bute! I call him Papa, and he's easy money. Hoping to
-see you on me return, nit, and renew our acquaintance, nit, I am yours,
-nit._
-
-_Isabelle Imogene McSween-Marat de Rochetwister._
-
-Outside the Ville Finnerty swept the moaning winds, dismal with
-November's prophecy of snow. At intervals the election idiot blew his
-proud horn in the neighbouring thoroughfare. It was nearly morning when
-the doctor said, that, while Hamilton Finnerty's life would be spared,
-he would be mentally dopey the balance of his blighted days.
-
-
-
-
-SHORT CREEK DAVE
-
-(Wolfville)
-
-
-Short Creek Dave was one of Wolfville's leading citizens. In fact his
-friends would not have scrupled at the claim that Short Creek Dave was
-a leading citizen of Arizona. Therefore when the news came over from
-Tucson that Short Creek Dave, who had been paying that metropolis a
-breezy visit, had, in an advertant moment, strolled within the radius
-of a gospel meeting then and there prevailing, and suffered conversion,
-Wolfville became spoil and prey to some excitement.
-
-"I tells him," said Tutt, who brought the tidings, "not to go tamperin'
-'round this yere meetin'. But he would have it. He simply keeps
-pervadin' about the 'go-in' place, an' it looks like I can't herd him
-away. Says I: 'Dave, you don't onderstand this yere game they're turnin'
-inside. Which you keep out a whole lot, you'll be safer!' But warnin's
-ain't no good; Short Creek don't regard 'em a little bit."
-
-"This yere Short Creek is always speshul obstinate that a-way," said Dan
-Boggs, "an' he gets moods frequent when he jest won't stay where he
-is nor go anywhere else. I don't marvel none you don't do nothin' with
-him."
-
-"Let it go as it lays!" observed Cherokee Hall, "I reckons Short Creek
-knows his business, an* can protect himse'f in any game they opens on
-him. I ain't my-se'f none astonished by these yere news. I knows him
-to do some mighty _locoed_ things, sech as breakin' a pair to draw to
-a three-flush; an' it seems like he's merely a pursooin' of his usual
-system in this relig'ous lunge. However, he'll be in Wolfville to-morry,
-an' then we'll know a mighty sight more about it; pendin' of which let's
-irrigate. Barkeep, please inquire out the beverages for the band!"
-
-Those of Wolfville there present knew no cause to pursue the discussion
-so pleasantly ended, and drew near the bar. The debate took place in the
-Red Light, so, as one observed on the issuance of Cherokee's invitation:
-"They weren't far from centres."
-
-Cherokee himself was a suave suitor of fortune who presided behind his
-own faro game. Reputed to possess a "straight" deal box, he held high
-place in the Wolfville breast.
-
-Next day; and Wolfville began to suffer an increased exaltation. Feeling
-grew nervous as the time for the coming of the Tucson stage approached.
-An outsider might not have detected this fever. It found its evidence in
-the unusual activity of monte, high ball, stud and kindred relaxations.
-Faro, too, displayed some madness of spirit.
-
-At last out of the grey and heat-shimmer of the plains a cloud of dust
-announced the coming of the stage. Chips were cashed and games cleaned
-up, and presently the population of Wolfville stood in the street to
-catch as early a glimpse as might be of the converted one.
-
-"I don't reckon now he's goin' to look sech a whole lot different
-neither!" observed Faro Nell. She stood near Cherokee Hall, awaiting the
-coming stage.
-
-"I wonder would it 'go' to ask Dave for to drink?" said Tutt, in a tone
-of general inquiry.
-
-"Shore!" argued Dan Boggs; "an' why not?"
-
-"Oh, nothin' why not!" replied Tutt, as he watched the stage come up;
-"only Dave's nacherally a peevish person that a-way, an' I don't
-reckon now his enterin' the fold has redooced the restlessness of that
-six-shooter of his'n, none whatever."
-
-"All the same," said Cherokee Hall, "p'litenes 'mong gents should be
-observed. I asks this yere Short Creek to drink so soon as ever
-he arrives; an' I ain't lookin' to see him take it none invidious,
-neither." With a rattle of chains and a creaking of straps the stage and
-its six high-headed horses pulled up at the postoffice door. The mail
-bags were kicked off, the express boxes tumbled into the street, and
-in the general rattle and crash the eagerly expected Short Creek Dave
-stepped upon the sidewalk.
-
-There was possibly a more eager scanning of his person in the thought
-that the great inward change might have its outward evidences; a
-more vigorous shaking of his hand, perhaps; but beyond these, curious
-interest did not go. Not a word nor a look touching Short Creek's
-religious exploits betrayed the question tugging at the Wolfville heart.
-Wolfville was too polite. And, again, Wolfville was too cautious. Next
-to horse-stealing, curiosity is the greatest crime. It's worse
-than crime, it's a blunder. Wolfville merely expressed its polite
-satisfaction in Short Creek Dave's return, and took it out in
-handshaking. The only incident worth record was when Cherokee Hall
-observed in a spirit of bland but experimental friendship:
-
-"I don't reckon, Dave, you-all is objectin' to whiskey none after your
-ride?"
-
-"Which I ain't done so usual," observed Dave cheerfully, "but this yere
-time, Cherokee, I'll have to pass. Confidin' the trooth to you-all, I'm
-some off on nose-paint now. I'm allowin' to tell you the win-an'-lose
-tharof later on. Now, if you-alls will excuse me, I'll go wanderin' over
-to the O. K. House an' feed myse'f a whole lot."
-
-"I shore reckons he's converted!" said Tutt, and he shook his head
-gloomily. "I wouldn't care none, only it's me as prevails on Dave to go
-over to Tucson that time; an' so I feels responsible."
-
-"Whatever of it?" responded Dan Boggs, with a burst of energy, "I don't
-see no reecriminations comin', nor why this yere's to be regarded. If
-Dave wants to be relig'ous an' sing them hymns a heap, you bet! that's
-his American right! I'll gamble a hundred dollars, Dave splits even with
-every deal, or beats it. I'm with Dave; his system does for me, every
-time!"
-
-The next day the excitement began to subside. Late in the afternoon a
-notice posted on the postoffice door caused it to rise again. The
-notice announced that Short Creek Dave would preach that evening in the
-warehouse of the New York Store.
-
-"I reckons we-alls better go!" said Cherokee Hall. "I'm goin' to turn up
-my box an' close the game at first drink time this evenin', an' Hamilton
-says he's out to shut up the dance hall, seein' as how several of the
-ladies is due to sing a lot in the choir. We-alls might as well turn
-loose an' give Short Creek the best whirl in the wheel--might as well
-make the play to win, an* start him straight along the new trail."
-
-"That's whatever!" agreed Dan Boggs. He had recovered from his first
-amazement, and now entered into the affair with spirit.
-
-That evening the New York Store's warehouse was as brilliantly a-light
-as a mad abundance of candles could make it. All Wolfville was there.
-As a result of conferences held in private with Short Creek Dave, and by
-that convert's request, Old Man Enright took a seat by the drygoods box
-which was to serve as a pulpit. Doc Peets, also, was asked to assume a
-place at the Evangelist's left. The congregation disposed itself about
-on the improvised benches which the ardour of Boggs had provided.
-
-At 8 o'clock Short Creek Dave walked up the space in the centre reserved
-as an aisle, carrying a giant Bible. This latter he placed on the
-drygoods box. Old Man Enright, at a nod from Short Creek Dave, called
-gently for attention, and addressed the meeting briefly.
-
-"This yere is a prayer meetin' of the camp," said Enright, "an' I'm
-asked by Dave to preside, which I accordin' do. No one need make any
-mistake about the character of this gatherin', or its brand. This yere
-is a relig'ous meetin'. I am not myse'f given that a-way, but I'm allers
-glad to meet up with folks who be, an' see that they have a chance in
-for their ante, an' their game is preserved. I'm one, too, who believes
-a little religion wouldn't hurt this yere camp much. Next to a lynchin',
-I don't know of a more excellent inflooence in a western camp than these
-meetin's. I ain't expectin' to cut in on this play none myse'f, an'
-only set yere, as does Peets, in the name of order, an' for the purposes
-of a squar' deal. Which I now introdooces to you a gent who is liable to
-be as good a preacher as ever thumps a Bible--your old pard, Short Creek
-Dave."
-
-"Mr. Pres'dent!" said Short Creek Dave, turning to Enright.
-
-"Short Creek Dave!" replied Enright sententiously, bowing gravely in
-recognition.
-
-"An' ladies an' gents of Wolfville!" continued Dave, "I opens this
-racket with a prayer."
-
-The prayer proceeded. It was fervent and earnest; replete with unique
-expression and personal allusion. In the last, the congregation took a
-warm interest.
-
-Towards the close, Dave bent his energies in supplication for the
-regeneration of Texas Thompson, whom he represented in his orisons as by
-nature good, but living a misguided and vicious life. The audience was
-listening with approving attention, when there came an interruption. It
-was from Texas Thompson.
-
-"Mr. Pres'dent," said Texas Thompson, "I rises to ask a question an' put
-for'ard a protest."
-
-"The gent will state his p'int," responded Enright, rapping on the
-drygoods box.
-
-"Which the same is this," resumed Texas Thompson, drawing a long breath.
-"I objects to Dave a-tacklin' the Redeemer for me. I protests ag'in him
-makin' statements that I'm ornery enough to pillage a stage. This yere
-talk is liable to queer me on High. I objects to it!"
-
-"Prayer is a device without rools or limit," responded Enright. "Dave
-makes his runnin' with the bridle off; an* the chair, tharfore, decides
-ag'in the p'int of order."
-
-"An' the same bein' the case," rejoined Texas Thompson with heat,
-"a-waivin' of the usual appeal to the house, all I've got to say is, I'm
-a peaceful gent; I has allers been the friend of Short Creek Dave. Which
-I even assists an' abets Boggs in packin' in these yere benches, an'
-aids to promote this meetin'. But I gives notice now, if Short Creek
-Dave persists in malignin' of me to the Great White Throne, as
-yeretofore, I'll shore call on him to make them statements good with his
-gun as soon as ever the contreebution box is passed."
-
-"The chair informs the gent," said Enright with cold dignity, "that
-Dave, bein' now a Evangelist, can't make no gun plays, nor go canterin'
-out to shoot as of a former day. However, the chair recognises the
-rights of the gent, an', standin' as the chair does in the position of
-lookout to this game, the chair nom'nates Dan'l Boggs, who's officiatin'
-as deacon hereof, to back these yere orisons with his six-shooter as
-soon as ever church is out, in person."
-
-"It goes!" responded Boggs. "I proudly assoomes Dave's place."
-
-[Illustration: 0097]
-
-"Mr. Pres'dent," interrupted Short Creek Dave, "jest let me get my views
-in yere. It's my turn all right, as I makes clear, easy. I've looked up
-things some, an* I finds that the Apostle Peter, who was a great range
-boss of them days, scroopled not to fight. Which I trails out after
-Peter in this. I might add, too, that while it gives me pain to be
-obleeged to shoot up brother Texas Thompson in the first half of the
-first meetin' we holds in Wolfville, still the path of dooty is plain,
-an' I shall shorely walk tharin, fearin' nothin'. I tharfore moves we
-adjourn ten minutes, an' as thar is plenty of moon outside, if the
-chair will lend me its gun--I'm not packin' of sech frivolities no more,
-regyardin' of 'em in the light of sinful bluffs--I trusts to Providence
-to convince brother Texas Thompson that he's followed off the wrong
-waggon track. You-alls can gamble! I knows my business. I ain't
-4-flushin' none when I lines out to pray!"
-
-"Onless objection is heard, this meetin' will stand adjourned for ten
-minutes," said Enright, at the same time passing Short Creek Dave his
-pistol.
-
-Fifteen paces were stepped off, and the opponents faced up in the
-moonlit street. Enright, Peets, Hall, Boggs, Tutt, Moore and the rest of
-the congregation made a line of admiration on the sidewalk.
-
-"I counts one! two! three! an' then I drops the contreebution box," said
-Enright, "whereupon you-alls fires an' advances at will. Be you ready?"
-
-The shooting began on the word. When the smoke blew away, Texas Thompson
-staggered to the sidewalk and sat down. There was a bullet in his hip,
-and the wound, for the moment, brought a feeling of sickness.
-
-"The congregation will now take its seats in the sanctooary," remarked
-Enright, "an' play will be re-soomed. Tutt, two of you-alls carry Texas
-over to the hotel, an' fix him up all right. Yereafter, I'll visit him
-an' p'int out his errors. This shows concloosive that Short Creek Dave
-is licensed from Above to pray any gait for whoever he deems meet, an'
-I'm mighty pleased it occurs. It's shore goin' to promote confidence in
-Dave's ministrations."
-
-The concourse was duly in its seats when Short Creek Dave again reached
-the pulpit.
-
-"I will now resoome my intercessions for our onfortunate brother, Texas
-Thompson," said Short Creek Dave.
-
-"I know'd he would," commented Dan Boggs, as twenty dollars came over
-addressed by the wounded Thompson to the contribution box. "Texas
-Thompson is one of the reasonablest sports in Wolfville. Also you can
-bet! relig'ous trooths allers assert themse'ves."
-
-
-
-
-CRIME THAT FAILED
-
-(Annals of the Bend)
-
-
-Say! Matches," said Chucky, removing his nose from his glass, "youse
-remember d' Jersey Bank? I means d' time youse has to go to cover an
-'d' whole mob is pinched in d' hole. Tell us d' story; it's dead
-int'restin'."
-
-This last was to me in a husky whisper.
-
-"That play was a case of fail," remarked Mollie Matches thoughtfully.
-Then turning to me as chief auditor, he continued. "It's over twenty
-years ago; just on d' heels of d' Centenyul at Phil'delfy. D' graft was
-fairly flossy durin 'd' Centenyul, an' I had quite a pot of dough.
-
-"One day a guy comes to me; he's a bank woiker, what d' fly people calls
-'a gopher man'; he's a mug who's onto all d' points about safes an'
-such. Well, as I says, this soon guy comes chasin' to me.
-
-"'Matches,' he says, 'don't say a woid; I'll put youse onto an easy
-trick. Come wit' me to Jersey, an' I'll show you a bin what's all
-organised to be cracked. Any old hobo could toin off d' play; it's a
-walk-over.'
-
-"Wit' that, for I had confidence in this mark, see! We skins over to
-Jersey, an' he steers me out to a nearby town an' points me out a bank.
-What makes it a good t'ing is a vacant joint, wit' a 'To Rent' sign in
-d' window, built dost ag'inst d' side of d' bank.
-
-"'Are youse on?' says d' goph, pointin' his main hook at d' empty house,
-an' then at d' bank.
-
-"Bein' I'm no farmer meself, I takes no time to tumble. We screws our
-nuts, me an' d' goph, to d' duck who owns d' house, an 'd' nex' news
-is we rents it. D' duck who does d' rentin' says he can see we're on d'
-level d' moment we floats in; but all d' same, if we can bring him a
-tip or two on d' point of our bein' square people from one or two high
-rollers whose names goes, he'll take it kindly. We says, suttenly; we
-fills him to d' chin wit' all d' ref-runces he needs.
-
-"'We won't do a t'ing but send our pastor to youse,' puts in d' goph.
-
-"Good man, me pal was, as ever draws slide on a dark lantern, but always
-out to be funny.
-
-"We rents d' joint, as I states, an' no more is said about refrunces.
-Now, when it comes to d' real woik, I ain't goin' to do none, see! I
-ain't down to dig an' pick; it spoils me hooks for dippin'. What I does
-is furnish d' tools an 'd' dough.
-
-"I goes back an' gets a whole kit of bank tools--drills, centre-bits,
-cold-chisels, jointed-jimmies, wedges, pullers, spreaders, fuse, powder,
-mauls an' mufflers--I gets d' whole t'ing, see! Me pal knows a brace
-of pards who'll stand in on d' play. He calls 'em in, an' one night
-d' entire squeeze, wit 'd' tools, goes over an' plants themselfs in d
-'empty house. Yes; dey takes grub an' blankets an' all dey needs.
-
-"Before this I goes ag'inst d' bank janitor; an' while he's a fairly
-downy party, I wins him. D' janitor of d' bank gets a hundred bones, an'
-I gets a map of d' bank, which shows where d* money is planted an' all
-about it.
-
-"What's d' idee? Our racket is to tunnel from d' cellar of d' joint we
-rents, under d' sidewall of d' bank, an' keep on until we reaches
-d' stuff, see! We're out to do all d' woik we can wit'out lettin' d'
-bank-crush twig d' graft. Then we waits till Saturday noon. D' bank
-shuts up on Saturday noon, understan'! An' then we has till Monday at 9
-o'clock to finish d' woik. An' say! it's time plenty! It gives us time
-to boin!
-
-"As I states, I don't do any of d' woik. D' gopher an' his two pals is
-all d' job calls for. So I lays dead in d' town, ready to split out me
-piece of d' plunder, an' waits results.
-
-"To hurry me yarn, everyt'ing woiks like it's greased to fit d' play. D'
-mob gets d' tunnel as far as it'll go. Saturday noon comes an 'd' last
-sucker who belongs to d' bank skips out. It's then me gopher an' his two
-pals t'rows themselfs.
-
-"All t'rough Saturday afternoon an' all d' night till daylight Sunday
-mornin', them gezebos woiks away like dogs. An' say! don't youse ever
-doubt it! dey was winnin' in a walk.
-
-"But all this time d' pins was set up to do 'em. It was d' same
-old story. There's always some little nogood bet a crook is sure to
-overlook, an' it goes d' wrong way an' downs him. Here's what happens:
-
-"In d' foist place, we forgets to take d' 'To Rent' sign out of d'
-window, see! That's d' beginnin'. Nex,' me goph an' his side-partners
-digs so much dirt out of d' tunnel it fills d' cellar. Honest! it won't
-hold no more.
-
-"At this last, dey takes to shovelin 'd' dirt into a bushel basket. Then
-dey carries it up d' back stairs and dumps it on d' floor of a summer
-kitchen. Be 7 o'clock Sunday, mebby dey dumps as many as six basketfuls;
-dumps it, as I tells youse, in this lean-to, which is built on d' rear.
-
-"Now, right at this time there's an old Irish Moll who keeps a boardin'
-house not far away who is flyin' along to early Mass, bein' dead
-religious an' leary about her soul, see! This old goil, as she comes
-sprintin' along, gets her bleary old lamps on d' 'To Rent' card. All at
-onct d' idee fetches her a t'ump in d' cocoa that d' house would be out
-of sight for a boardin' joint. Wit' that she steers herself in to take a
-squint an' size up d' crib.
-
-"D' door is locked, so d' old goil can't come in. Wit' that she leads d'
-nex' best card an' goes galumpin' round, pipin' off d' place t'rough d'
-windows. An' say! she gets stuck on it. She t'inks if she can rent it,
-she can run d' dandy boardin' house of d' ward in it.
-
-"As d' old frail goes round d' place, among all d' rest, she looks
-t'rough d' windows into d' summer kitchen. She gets onto d' dirt that's
-dumped, as I states, in one corner. But she don't see none of d' gang,
-bein' dey's down in d' hole at d' time, so she don't fasten to nothin'.
-
-"At last she's seen enough an' sherries her nibs to d' cat'edral.
-
-"That's all right if it's only d' end; but it ain't. When it gets to
-about 2 o'clock, this old skate in petticoats goes toinin' nutty ag'in
-about d' empty house. Over she spins to grab another glimpse, see! When
-she strikes d' summer kitchen she comes near to throwin' a faint. D'
-pile of rubbidge is twenty times as big!
-
-"That settles it! d' joint is ha'nted! an' wit' that notion all tangled
-up in her frizzes d' old mut makes a straight wake for d' priest.
-
-"'D' empty house nex' to d' bank is full of ghosts!' she shouts, an'
-then she flings her apron over her nut an' comes a fit.
-
-"Now, this priest is about as sudden a party as ever comes over d'
-ocean. Youse can't give him no stiff about spooks, see! Bein' nex' to d'
-bank is a hot tip, an' he takes it.
-
-"Nit! he don't go surgin' round for his prayer-books an d' hully water.
-It would have been a dead good t'ing if he had. Nixie weedin'! D'
-long-coat sucker don't even come over to d' house.
-
-"What does he do? He sprints for d' nearest p'lice station at a 40 clip,
-an' fills up d' captain in charge wit 'd' story till youse can't rest.
-After that, it takes' d' p'lice captain about ten seconts to line up
-his push; an' be coppin' a sneak, he pinches me gopher an' his two pals
-right in d' hole. Dey was gettin' along beautiful at d' time, an' in ten
-hours more dey would have had that bank on d' hog for fair.
-
-Dey was dead games at that. While dey gets d' collar, not one of 'em
-coughs on me, an' me name ain't never in it from start to finish. Dey
-was game, true pals from bell to bell, an' stayed d' distance.
-
-"It was d' bummest finish, all d' same, for what looked like d' biggest
-trick, an' d' surest big money, that I ever goes near. Youse may well
-peel your peeps! If it wasn't for that old Irish keener an' her ghost
-stories, in less than ten hours more we wouldn't have got a t'ing but
-complete action on more'n a million plunks! There was a hay-mow full of
-money in that bin!
-
-"That's d' last round an' wind-up, as d' pugs puts it. Me gopher an' his
-pals is handed out ten spaces each, an' I lose me kit of tools. Take it
-over all, I'm out some four t'ousand dollars on d' deal. A tidy lump
-of dough to be done out of be a priest, a p'liceman an' an old Irish
-boardin' boss! D' old loidy lands wit' bot' her trilbys, though; d' bank
-chucks her a bundle of fly-paper big enough to stan' for all her needs
-until she croaks, forcuttin' in on our play, see!"
-
-
-
-
-THE BETRAYAL
-
-The boys had resolved on revenge, and nothing could turn them from
-their purpose. The trouble was this: Some one not otherwise engaged had
-fed the furnace an overshoe which it did not need. As incident to its
-consumption the overshoe had filled the building with an odour of
-which nothing favourable could be said. The professor afterwards, in
-denouncing the author of the outrage, had referred to it as "effluvia."
-It had as a perfume much force of character, and was stronger and more
-devastating than the odour which goes with an egg in its old age, when
-it has begun to hate the world and the future holds nothing but gloom.
-
-As stated, the schoolhouse reeked and reeled with this sublimated
-overshoe. It all pleased the boys excessively. They made as much as
-possible of the odour; they coughed, and sneezed, and worried the
-professor by holding up their hands one after the other with the remark:
-
-"Teacher, may I go out?"
-
-The professor, after several destructive whiffs of the overshoe, made
-a fiery speech. He said that could he once locate the boy who lavished
-this overshoe on mankind in a gaseous form, that boy's person would
-experience a rear-end collision. He would be so badly telescoped that
-weeks would elapse before the boy could regard himself as being in
-old-time form. The professor said the boy who founded the overshoe
-odour was a "miscreant" and a "vandal." He demanded his name of the boys
-collectively; and failing to get it, the professor said they were all
-miscreants and vandals, and that it would be as balm to his spirits were
-he to wade in and larrup the entire outfit.
-
-After school the boys held a meeting.
-
-Frank Payne, aged fourteen, the boy who could lick any boy in school,
-denounced the professor. He referred to the fact that his father was a
-school trustee; and that under the rules the professor had no right to
-bestow upon them the epithets of miscreants and vandals. Frank Payne
-advised that they whip the professor; who must, he said, while a large,
-muscular man, yield to mob violence.
-
-The proposition to whip the professor was carried unanimously under a
-suspension of the rules.
-
-In the ardour of this crusade for their rights the boys did not feel as
-if they could await the slow approach of trouble in the natural way. It
-was decided by them to bring matters to a focus. It was planned to have
-Tony Sanford stick a pin in John Dayton. That would be a splendid start!
-John Dayton, thus stuck, would yell; and when the professor asked the
-cause of his lamentations, John Dayton would point to Tony Sanford as
-his assassin. When the professor laid corrective hands on Tony all of
-the conspirators were to rush upon the professor and give him such a
-rough-and-tumble experience that succeeding ages would date time from
-the emeute. The boys were filled with glee; they regarded the business,
-so they said, as "a pushover."
-
-The hour for action had arrived.
-
-Tony Sanford had no pin. But Tony was a fertile boy; if there was a
-picket off Tony's mental fence at all, it was his foresight. Lacking
-a pin, the ingenious Tony stuck the small blade of his knife into John
-Dayton. The victim howled like a dog at night.
-
-"Please, sir, Tony Sanford's stabbed me," was John Dayton's explanation
-of his shrieks.
-
-Tony Sanford was paraded for punishment. The cold-blooded enormity of
-the crime seemed to strike the professor dumb. He did not know how to
-take hold of the situation. But Tony pursued a course which not only
-invited but suggested action. As Tony approached, he dealt the professor
-an uppercut in the bread-basket, and with the cry, "Come on, boys!"
-closed doughtily with the foe.
-
-The boys beheld the deeds of the intrepid Tony; they heard his cry and
-knew it for their cue. Nevertheless, notwithstanding, not a boy moved.
-They sat in their seats and gazed fixedly at Tony and the professor.
-With the call of Tony to his fellow-conspirators the professor saw it
-all.
-
-"Tony Sanford," quoth the professor, "we will adjourn to the library.
-When I get through, you will be of no further use to science."
-
-The door closed on Tony Sanford, and a professor weighing 211 pounds.
-The sounds which came welling from the library showed that some strong,
-emotional work was being done within. Tony and the professor sounded
-at times like a curlew at night, and anon like unto a man falling
-downstairs with a stove. Tony Sanford said afterward that he would never
-again attach himself to a plot which did not show two green lights on
-the rear platform of its caboose.
-
-
-
-
-FOILED
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-DARLING, I fear that man! The cruel guy can from his place as umpire do
-you up."
-
-It was Gwendolin O'Toole who spoke. She was a beautiful blonde angel,
-and as she clung to her lover, Marty O'Malley, they were a picture from
-which a painter would have drawn an inspiration.
-
-"Take courage, love!" said Marty O'Malley tenderly; "I'm too swift for
-the duck."
-
-"I know, dearest," murmured the fair Gwendolin, "but think what's up
-on the game! Me brother, you know him well! the rooter prince, the
-bleachers' uncrowned king! he is the guardian of me vast estates. If I
-do not marry as he directs, me lands and houses go to found an asylum
-for decrepit ball tossers. And to-day me brother Godfrey swore by the
-Banshee of the O'Tooles that me hand should belong to the man who made
-the best average in to-morrow's game. Can you win me, love?"
-
-"I will win you or break the bat!" said Marty O'Malley, as he folded his
-dear one in his arms.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-WHEN that villain, O'Malley, goes to bat to-morrow, pitch the ball ten
-feet over his head. No matter where it goes I'll call a 'strike.'"
-
-It was Dennis Mulcahey who spoke; the man most feared by Gwendolin
-O'Toole. He was to be the next day's umpire, and as he considered how
-securely his rival was in his grasp, he laughed the laugh of a fiend.
-
-Dennis Mulcahey, too, loved the fair Gwendolin, but the dear girl
-scorned his addresses. His heart was bitter; he would be revenged on his
-rival.
-
-"You've got it in for the mug!" replied Terry Devine, to whom Dennis
-Mulcahey had spoken. Devine was the pitcher of the opposition, and like
-many of his class, a low, murdering scoundrel. "But, say! Denny, if
-you wants to do the sucker, why don't youse give him a poke in d' face?
-See!"
-
-"Such suggestions are veriest guff," retorted Dennis Mulcahey. "Do as I
-bid you, caitiff, an' presume not to give d' hunch to such as I! A wild
-pitch is what I want whenever Marty O'Malley steps to the plate. I'll do
-the rest."
-
-"I'll t'row d' pigskin over d' grand stand," said Terry Devine as he and
-his fellow-plotter walked away.
-
-As the conspirators drifted into the darkness a dim form arose from
-behind a shrub. It was Marty O'Malley.
-
-"Ah! I'll fool you yet!" he hissed between his clinched teeth, and
-turning in the opposite direction he was soon swallowed by the darkness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-You'll not fail me, Jack!" said Marty O'Malley to Jack, the barkeeper
-of the Fielders' Rest.
-
-"Not on your sweater!" said Jack, "Leave it to me. If that snoozer
-pitches this afternoon I hopes d' boss'll put in a cash-register!"
-
-Marty O'Malley hastened to the side of his love. Jack, the faithful
-barkeeper, went on cleaning his glasses.
-
-"That hobo, Devine, will be here in a minute," said Jack at last, "an' I
-must organise for him."
-
-Jack took a shell glass and dipped it in the tank behind the bar. Taking
-his cigar from between his finely chiselled lips, he blew the smoke into
-the moistened interior of the glass. This he did several times.
-
-"I'll smoke a glass on d' stiff," said Jack softly. "It's better than a
-knockout drop."
-
-It was a moment later when Terry Devine came in. With a gleam of almost
-human intelligence in his eye Jack, the barkeeper, set up the smoked
-glass. Terry Devine tossed off the fiery potation, staggered to a chair,
-and sat there glaring. A moment later his head fell on the table, while
-a stertorous snore proclaimed him unconscious.
-
-"That fetched d' sucker," murmured Jack, the barkeeper, and he went on
-cleaning his glasses. "His light's gone out for fourteen hours, an' he
-don't make no wild pitches at Marty O'Malley to-day, see!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-Ten thousand people gathered to witness the last great contest between
-the Shamrocks and the Shantytowns.
-
-Gwendolin O'Toole, pale but resolute, occupied her accustomed seat in
-the grand stand. Far away, and high above the tumult of the bleachers
-she heard the hoarse shouts of her brother, Godfrey O'Toole, the
-bleachers' king.
-
-"Remember, Gwendolin!" he had said, as they parted just before the game,
-"the mug who-makes the best average to-day wins your hand. I've sworn
-it, and the word of an O'Toole is never broken."
-
-"Make it the best fielding average, oh, me brother!" pleaded Gwendolin,
-while the tears welled to her glorious eyes.
-
-"Never!" retorted Godfrey O'Toole, with a scowl; "I'm on to your
-curves! You want to give Marty O'Malley a better show. But if the
-butter-fingered muffer wants you, he must not only win you with his
-fielding, but with the stick."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-Terry Devine wasn't in the box for the Shantytowns. With his head on
-the seven-up table, he snored on, watched over by the faithful barboy
-Jack. He still yielded to smoked glass and gave no sign of life.
-
-"Curse him!" growled Umpire Mulcahey hoarsely beneath his breath "has he
-t'run me down? If I thought so, the world is not wide enough to save him
-from me vengeance."
-
-And the change pitcher took the box for the Shantytowns.
-
-Marty O'Malley, the great catcher of the Shamrocks, stepped to the
-plate. Dennis Mulcahey girded up his false heart, and registered a
-black, hellish oath to call everything a strike.
-
-"Never! never shall he win Gwendolin O'Toole while I am umpire!" he
-whispered, and his face was dark as a cloud.
-
-It was the last word that issued from the clam-shell of Dennis Mulcahey
-for many a long and bitter hour; the last crack he made. Just as he
-offered his bluff, the first ball was pitched. It was as wild and high
-as a bird, as most first balls are. But Marty O'Malley was ready. He,
-too, had been plotting; he would fight Satan with fire!
-
-As the ball sped by, far above his head, Marty O'Malley leaped twenty
-feet in the air. As he did this he swung his unerring timber. Just as
-he had planned, the flying, whizzing sphere struck the under side of his
-bat, and glancing downward with fearful force, went crashing into the
-dark, malignant visage of Dennis Mulcahey, upturned to mark its flight.
-The fragile mask was broken; the features were crushed into complete
-confusion with the awful inveteracy of the ball.
-
-Dennis Mulcahey fell as one dead. As he was borne away another umpire
-was sent to his post. Marty O'Malley bent a glance of intelligence on
-the change pitcher of the Shantytowns, who had taken the place of the
-miscreant Dermis, and whispered loud enough to resell from plate to box:
-
-"Now, gimme a fair ball!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-And so the day was won; the Shamrocks basted the Shantytowns by the
-score of 15 to 2. As for Marty O'Malley, his score stood:
-
- Ab. R. H. Po. A. E.
-
- O'Malley, c,....4 4 4 10 14 0
-
-No such record had ever been made on the grounds. With four times at
-bat, Marty O'Malley did so well, withal, that he scored a base hit, two
-three-baggers and a home-run.
-
-That night Marty O'Malley wedded the rich and beautiful Gwendolin
-O'Toole. Jack, the faithful bar-boy of the Fielders' Rest, officiated as
-groomsman. Godfrey O'Toole, haughty and proud, was yet a square sport,
-and gave the bride away.
-
-The rich notes of the wedding bells, welling and swelling, drifted
-into the open windows of the Charity Hospital, and smote on the ears of
-Dennis Mulcahey, where he lay with his face.
-
-"Curse 'em!" he moaned.
-
-Then came a horrible rattle in his throat, and the guilty spirit of
-Dennis Mulcahey passed away.
-
-Death caught him off his base.
-
-
-
-
-POLITICS
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Nixie! I ain't did nothin', but all de same I'm feelin' like a mut,
-see!"
-
-Chucky was displeased with some chapter in his recent past. I could tell
-as much by the shifty, deprecatory way in which he twiddled and fiddled
-with his beer-stein.
-
-"This is d' way it all happens," exclaimed Chucky. "Over be Washin'ton
-Square there's an old soak, an' he's out to go into pol'tics--wants to
-hold office; Congress, I t'inks, is what this gezeybo is after. Anyhow
-he's nutty to hold office.
-
-"Of course, I figgers that a guy who wants to hold office is a sucker;
-for meself, I'd sooner hold a baby. Still, when some such duck comes
-chasin' into pol'tics, I'm out for his dough like all d' rest of d'
-gang.
-
-"So I goes an' gets nex' to this mucker an' jollies his game. I tells
-him all he's got to do is to fix his lamps on d' perch that pleases him,
-blow in his stuff an' me push'll toin loose, an' we'll win out d' whole
-box of tricks in a walk, see!
-
-"That's all right; d' Washin'ton Square duck is of d' same views.
-An' some of it ain't no foolish talk at that. I'm dead strong wit' d'
-Dagoes, an' d' push about d' Bend, an' me old chum--if he starts--is
-goin' to get a run for his money.
-
-"It ain t this, however, what wilts me d' way you sees to-night. It's
-that I'm 'shamed, see! In d' foist place, I'm bashful. That's
-straight stuff; I'm so bashful that if I'm in some other geezer's
-joint--par-tic'ler if he's a high roller an' t'rowin' on social lugs,
-like this Washin'ton Square party--I feels like creep-in' under d' door
-mat.
-
-"D' other night this can'date for office says, says he, 'Chucky, I'm
-goin to begin my money-boinin' be givin' a dinner over be me house, an'
-youse are in it, see! in it wit' bot' feet.*
-
-"'Be I comin' to chew at your joint?' I asts; 'is that d' bright idee?'
-
-"'That's d' stuff,' he says; 'youse are comin' to eat wit' me an' me
-friends. An' you can gamble your socks me friends is a flossy bunch at
-that.'
-
-"I says I'll assemble wit' 'em.
-
-"Nit, I ain't stuck on d' play. I'd sooner eat be meself. But if I'm
-goin' to catch up wit' his Whiskers an' sep'rate him from some of d'
-long green, I've got to stay dost to his game, see!
-
-"It's at d' table me troubles begins. I does d' social double-shuffle in
-d' hall all right. D' crush parts to let me t'rough, an' I woiks me
-way up to me can'date--who, of course, is d' main hobo, bein' he's d'
-architect of d' blowout--an' gives him d' joyful mit; what you calls d'
-glad hand.
-
-"'Glad to see youse, Chucky,' says d' old mark. 'Tummas, steer Chucky to
-his stool be d' table.'
-
-"It's at d' table I'm rattled, wit' all d' glasses an' dishes an 'd'
-lights overhead. But I'm cooney all d' same. I ain't onto d' graft
-meself, but I puts it up on d' quiet I'll pick out some student who
-knows d' ropes an' string me bets wit' his.
-
-"As I sets there, I flashes me lamps along d' line, an' sort o' stacks
-up d' blokes, for to pick out d' fly guys from d' lobsters, see!
-
-"Over'cross'd table I lights on an old stiff who looks like he could
-teach d' game. T'inks I to meself, 'There's a mut who's been t'rough d'
-mill many a time an' oft. All I got to do now is to pipe his play an'
-never let him out o' me sight. If I follows his smoke, I'll finish in d'
-front somewheres, an' none of these mugs 'll tumble to me ignorance.'
-
-"Say! on d' level! there was no flies on that for a scheme, was there?
-An' it would have been all right, me system would; only this old galoot
-I goes nex' to don't have no more sense than me. Why! he was d' ass of
-d' evening! d' prize pig of d' play, he was! Let me tell youse.
-
-"D' foist move, he spreads a little table clot' across his legs. I ain't
-missin' no tricks, so I gets me hooks on me own little table clot' and
-spreads it over me legs also.
-
-"'This is good enough for a dog, I t'inks, an' easy money! Be keepin' me
-eye on Mr. Goodplayer over there I can do this stunt all right.'
-
-"An' so I does. I never lets him lose me onct.
-
-"'How be youse makin' it, Chucky?' shouts me can'date from up be d' end
-of d' room.
-
-"'Out o' sight!' I says. 'I'm winner from d' jump; I'm on velvet.'
-
-"'Play ball!' me can'date shouts back to encourage me, I suppose because
-he's dead on I ain't no Foxy Quiller at d' racket we're at; 'play ball,
-Chucky, an' don't let 'em fan youse out. When you can't bat d' ball,
-bunt it,' says me can'date.
-
-"Of course gettin 'd' gay face that way from d' boss gives me
-confidence, an' as a result it ain't two seconts before I'm all but
-caught off me base. It's in d' soup innin's an 'd' flunk slams down d'
-consomme in a tea cup. It's a new one on me for fair! I don't at d'
-time have me lamps on d' mark 'cross d' way, who I'm understudyin', bein'
-busy, as I says, slingin 'd' bit of guff I tells of wit' me can'date.
-An' bein' off me guard, I takes d' soup for tea or some such dope, an'
-is layin' out to sugar it.
-
-"'Stan' your hand!' says a dub who's organised be me right elbow, an'
-who's feedin' his face wit' both mits; 'set a brake!' he says. 'That's
-soup. Did youse t'ink it was booze?'
-
-"After that I fastens to d' old skate across d' table to note where he's
-at wit' his game. He's doin' his toin on d' consomme wit' a spoon, so I
-gets a spoon in me hooks, goes to mixin' it up wit 'd' soup as fast as
-ever, an' follows him out.
-
-"An' say! I'm feelin' dead grateful to this snoozer, see! He was d'
-ugliest mug I ever meets, at that. Say! he was d' limit for looks, an'
-don't youse doubt it. As I sizes him up I was t'inking to meself, what
-a wonder he is! Honest! if I was a lion an' that old party comes into
-me cage, do youse know what I'd do? Nit; you don't. Well, I'll tip it to
-youse straight. If any such lookin' monster showed up in me cage, if d'
-door was open, I'd get out. That's on d' square, I'd simply give him
-d' cage an' go an' board in d' woods. An' if d' door was locked an' I
-couldn't get out, I'd t'row a fit from d' scare. Oh! he was a dream!
-He's one of them t'ings a mark sees after he's been hittin' it up wit
-'d' lush for a mont'.
-
-"'But simply because he looks like a murderer,' I reflects, 'that's no
-reason why he ain't wise. He knows his way t'rough this dinner like a
-p'liceman does his beat, an' I'll go wit' him.'
-
-"It's a go! When he plays a fork, I plays a fork; when he boards a
-shave, I'm only a neck behint him. When he shifts his brush an' tucks
-his little table clot' over his t'ree-sheet, I'm wit' him. I plays nex'
-to him from soda to hock.
-
-"An' every secont I'm gettin' more confidence in this gezebo, an' more
-an' more stuck on meself. On d' dead! I was farmer enough to t'ink I'd
-t'ank him for bein' me guide before I shook d' push an' quit. Say! he'd
-be a nice old dub for me to be t'ankin 'd' way it toins out. I was a
-good t'ing to follow him, I don't t'ink.
-
-"If I was onto it early that me old friend across d' table had w'eels
-an' was wrong in his cocoa, I wouldn't have felt so bad, see! But I'd
-been playin' him to win, an' followin' his lead for two hours. An' I was
-so sure I was trottin' in front, that all d' time I was jollyin' meself,
-an' pattin' meself on d' back, an' tellin' meself I was a corker to
-be gettin' an even run wit 'd' 400 d' way I was, d' foist time I enter
-s'ciety. An' of course, lettin' me nut swell that way makes it all d'
-harder when I gets d' jolt.
-
-"It's at d' finish. I'd gone down d' line wit' this sucker, when one of
-them waiter touts, who's cappin' d' play for d' kitchen, shoves a bowl
-of water in front of him. Now, what do youse t'ink he does? Drink it?
-Nit; that's what he ought to have done. I'm Dutch if he don't up an'
-sink his hooks in it. An' then he swabs off his mits wit' d' little
-table clot'. Say! an' to t'ink I'd been takin' his steer t'rough d'
-whole racket! It makes me tired to tell it!
-
-"'W'at th' 'ell!' I says to meself; 'I've been on a dead one from d'
-start. This stiff is a bigger mut than I be.'
-
-"It let me out. Me heart was broke, an' I ain't had d' gall to hunt
-up me can'date since. Nit; I don't stay to say no 'good-byes.' I'm too
-bashful, as I tells you at d' beginnin'. As it is, I cops a sneak on
-d' door, side-steps d' outfit, an' screws me nut. The can'date sees me
-oozin' out, however, an' sends a chaser after me in d' shape of one
-of his flunks. He wants me to come back. He says me can'date wants to
-present me to his friends. I couldn't stan' for it d' way I felt, an' as
-d' flunk shows fight an' is goin' to take me back be force, I soaks him
-one an' comes away. On d' dead! I feels as'shamed of d' entire racket as
-if some sucker had pushed in me face."
-
-
-
-
-ESSLEIN GAMES
-
-
-For generations the Essleins have been fanciers of game chickens. The
-name "Esslein" for a century and a half has had honourable place among
-Virginians. In his day, they, the Essleins, were as well known as Thomas
-Jefferson. As this is written they have equal Old Dominion fame with
-either the Conways, the Fairfaxes, the McCarthys or the Lees. And all
-because of the purity and staunch worth of the "Esslein Games."
-
-It was the broad Esslein boast that no man had chickens of such feather
-or strain. And this was accepted popularly as truth. The Essleins never
-loaned, sold, nor gave away egg or chicken. No one could produce the
-counterpart of the Esslein chickens for looks or warlike heart; no one
-ever won a main from the Essleins. So at last it was agreed generally,
-that no one save the Essleins did have the "Esslein Games;" and this
-belief went unchallenged while years added themselves to years.
-
-But there came a day when a certain one named Smith, who dwelt in the
-region round about the Essleins, and who also had note for his fighting
-cocks, whispered to a neighbour that he, as well as the Essleins, had
-the "Esslein Games." The whisper spread into talk, and the talk into
-general clamour; everywhere one heard that the long monopoly was broken,
-and that Smith had the "Esslein Games."
-
-This startling story had half confirmation by visitors to the Smith
-walks. Undoubtedly Smith had chickens, feather for feather, twins of the
-famous Essleins. That much at least was true. The rest of the question
-might have evidence pro or con some day, should Smith and the Essleins
-make a main.
-
-But this great day seemed slow, uncertain of approach. Smith would not
-divulge the genesis of his fowls, nor tell how he came to be possessed
-of the Esslein chickens. Smith confined himself to the bluff claim:
-
-"I've got 'em, and there they be."
-
-Beyond this Smith wouldn't go. On' their parts, the Essleins, at first
-maintained themselves in silent dignity. They said nothing; treating the
-Smith claim as beneath contempt.
-
-As man after man, however, went over to the Smith side, the Essleins so
-far unbent from their pose of tongue-tied hauteur as to call Smith "a
-liar!"
-
-Still this failed of full effect; the talk went on, the subject was in
-mighty dispute, and the Essleins at last, to settle discussion, defied
-Smith to a main.
-
-But Smith refused to fight his chickens against the Essleins. Smith said
-it was conscience, but failed to go into details. This was damaging.
-Meanwhile, however, as Smith challenged the world of fighting cocks,
-and, moreover, won every match he ever made, and barred only the
-Essleins in his campaigning, there arose, in spite of his steady
-objection to fighting the Essleins, many who believed Smith and stood
-forth for it that Smith did have the far-famed "Esslein Games." It is to
-the credit of the Essleins that they did all that was in their power to
-bring Smith and his chickens to the battlefield. They offered him every
-inducement known in chicken war, and tendered him a duel for his cocks
-to be fought for anything from love to money.
-
-Firm to the last, Smith wouldn't have it; and so, discouraged, the
-Essleins, failing action, nailed as it were their gauntlet to Smith's
-hen-coop door, and thus the business stood for months.
-
-It came about one day that a stranger from Baltimore accepted Smith's
-standing challenge to fight anybody save the Essleins. The stranger
-proposed and made a match with Smith to fight him nine battles, $500
-on each couple and $2,500 on the general main. And then the news went
-'round.
-
-There was high excitement in chicken circles. The day came and the
-sides of the pit were crowded. Smith was in his corner with his handler,
-getting the first of his champions ready for the struggle. As Smith was
-holding the chicken for the handler to fasten on the gaffs--drop-socket,
-they were, and keen as little scimetars--he chanced to glance across the
-pit.
-
-There stood John, chief of the Essleins.
-
-Smith saw it in a moment; he had been trapped. But it was too late. The
-match was made and the money was up; there was no chance to retrace,
-even if Smith had wanted. As a fact to his glory, however, he had no
-desire so to do.
-
-"We're up against the Essleins, Bill," Smith said to his trainer; "and
-it's all right. I didn't want to make a match with them, because I got
-their chickens queer. And if I'd fought them and won, I'd felt like I'd
-got their money queer; and that I couldn't stand. But this is different.
-We'll fight the Essleins now they're here, and 'if they can win over me,
-they're welcome."
-
-Then the main began. The first battle was short, sharp, deadly; and
-glorious for Smith. The Esslein chicken got a stab in the heart the
-first buckle. Smith smiled as his handler pulled his chicken's gaff out
-of its dead victim, and set it free.
-
-The Smith entries won the second and third battle. Triumph rode on the
-glance of Smith, while the Esslein brows were bleak and dark.
-
-"Smith's got the 'Esslein Games,' sure!" was whispered about the pit.
-
-In the fourth and fifth battles the tide ran the other way, the Esslein
-chickens killing their rivals. Each battle, for that matter, had so far
-been to the death.
-
-The sixth battle went to Smith and the seventh to the Essleins. Thus it
-stood four for Smith to three for the Essleins, just before the eighth
-battle. It didn't look as if Smith could lose.
-
-It was at this juncture so hopeful for the coops of Smith, that Smith
-did a foolish thing. Yielding to the appeals of his trainer, Smith let
-that worthy man put up a chicken of his own to face the Esslein entry
-for the eighth duel. It was a gorgeous shawl-neck that Smith's trainer
-produced; eye bright as a diamond, and beak like some arrow-head of jet.
-His legs looked as strong as a hod-carrier's. It was a horse to a hen,
-so everybody said, that the Esslein chicken,--which was but a small,
-indifferent bird,--would lose its life, the battle, and the main at one
-and the same time.
-
-Popular conjecture was wrong, as popular conjecture often is. The
-Esslein chicken locked both gaffs through the shawl-neck's brain in the
-second buckle.
-
-"That teaches me a lesson," said Smith. "Hereafter should an angel come
-down from heaven and beg me to let him fight a chicken in a main of
-mine, I'll turn him down!"
-
-It was the ninth battle and the score stood four for Smith and four
-for the Essleins. As the slim gaffs, grey and cruelly sharp, were being
-placed on the feathered gladiators for the last deadly joust, Smith
-called across the pit to John Esslein:
-
-"Esslein," he said, "no matter how this last battle may fall, I reckon
-I've convinced you and everybody looking on, that, just as I said, I've
-got the 'Esslein Games.' To show you that I know I have, and give you
-a chance for revenge as well, I'll make this last fight for $10,000 a
-cock. The main so far has been an even break, and neither of us has won
-or lost. The last battle decides the tie and wins or loses me $3,000. To
-make it interesting, I'll raise the risk both ways, if you're willing,
-just $7,000, and call the bundle ten. And," concluded Smith, as he
-glanced around the pit, "there isn't a sport here but will believe in
-his heart, when I, a poor man, offer to make this last battle one for
-$20,000, that I know that, even if I'm against, I'm at least behind an
-'Esslein Game.'"
-
-"Make it for $10,000 a cock, then!" said John Esslein bitterly. "Whether
-I win or lose main and money too, I've already lost much more than both
-to-day."
-
-Then the fight began. The chickens were big and strong and quick and as
-dauntlessly savage as ospreys. And feather and size, eye, and beak and
-leg, they were the absolute counterparts of each other.
-
-For ten minutes the battle raged. Either the spurred fencers had more of
-luck or more of caution than the others. Buckle after buckle occurred,
-and after ten minutes' fighting the two enemies still faced each other
-with angry, bead-like eyes, and without so much as a drop of blood
-spilled.
-
-[Illustration: 0127]
-
-They fronted each other balefully while one might count seven. Their
-beaks travelled up and down as evenly as if moved by the same impulse.
-Then they clashed together.
-
-This time,-as they drew apart, Smith's chicken fell upon its side, its
-right leg cut and broken well up toward the hip, with the bone pushing
-upward and outward through the slash of the gaff.
-
-"Get your chicken and wring its neck, Smith," said someone. "It's all
-over!"
-
-"Let them fight!" responded Smith. "It's not 'all over!' That chicken of
-Esslein's has a long row to hoe to kill that bird of mine."
-
-Hardly were the words uttered when a strange chance befell. Smith's
-prostrate cripple reached up as its foe approached, seized it with its
-beak, and struggled to its one good foot. In the buckle that followed,
-the one gaff by some sleight of the cripple slashed the Esslein chicken
-over the eyes and blinded it. The muscles closed down and covered the
-eyes. Otherwise the Esslein cock was unhurt.
-
-Then began a long, fierce, yet feeble fight. One chicken couldn't stand
-and the other couldn't see. The Smith chicken would lie on its side and
-watch its rival with eyes blazing hate, while the Esslein chicken, blind
-as a bat, would grope for him. When he came within reach of Smith's
-chicken, that indomitable bird would seize him with his bill; there
-would be some weak, aimless clashing, and again they'd be separated, the
-blind one to grope, the cripple to lie and wait.
-
-The war limped on in this fashion for almost two hours. But the end
-came. As the Esslein chicken strayed blindly within reach, its enemy
-got a strong, sudden grip, and in the collision that was the sequel, the
-Esslein chicken had its head half slashed from its body. It staggered a
-step with blood spurting, tottered and fell dead.
-
-Smith said never a word, but from first to last his face had been cold
-and grimly indifferent. His heart was fire, but no one could see it in
-his face. Evidently the man was as clean-strain as his chickens.
-
-That's all there is to the story. What became of the victor with the
-broken leg? Smith looked him over, decided it was "no use," and wrung
-his dauntless neck. The great main was over. Smith had won, everybody
-knew, as Smith went home that night, that he wras $10,000 better off,
-and that fast and sure, beyond denial or doubt, Smith had the "Esslein
-Games."
-
-
-
-
-THE PAINFUL ERROR
-
-
-This is a tale of school life. Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin
-Clayton are scholars in the same school. The name of this seminary
-is withheld by particular request. Suffice it that all three of these
-youths come and go and have their bright young beings within the
-neighbourhood of Newark. The age of each is thirteen years. Thirteen is
-a sinister number. They are all jocund, merry-hearted boys, and put in
-many hours each day thinking up a good time.
-
-One day during the noon hour the school building was all but deserted.
-Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Benjamin Clayton, however, were there. They
-had formed plans for their entertainment which demanded the desertion
-of the school building as chronicled. The coast being fairly clear, the
-conspiring three proceeded to one of the upper recitation rooms of the
-building. This room did not appertain to the particular school favoured
-by the attendance of Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton as
-scholars. This, however, only added zest to the adventure.
-
-The room to which our heroes repaired was the recitation stamping ground
-of a high school class in physiology. The better to know anatomy, the
-class was furnished with the skeleton of some dead gentleman, all nicely
-hung and arranged with wires so as to look as much like former days as
-possible. During class hours the framework of the dead person stood in
-a corner of the room, and the students learned things from it that were
-useful to know. When off duty it reposed in a box.
-
-Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton had heard of deceased.
-Their purpose this noon was to call on him. They gained entrance to the
-room by the burglarious method of picking the lock. Once within they
-took the skeleton from its box home and stood it in the window where the
-public might revel in the spectacle. To take off any grimness of effect
-they fixed a cob pipe in its bony jaws and clothed the skull in a
-bad hat, pulled much over the left eye, the whole conferring upon the
-remains a highly gala, joyous air indeed.
-
-Then Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Benjamin Clayton withdrew from the
-scene.
-
-The skeleton in the window was very popular. Countless folk had
-assembled to gaze upon it at the end of the first ten minutes, and
-armies were on their way.
-
-The principal of the school as he came from lunch saw it and was much
-vexed. He put the skeleton back in its box, and the hydra-headed public
-slowly dispersed.
-
-Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton secretly gloated over the
-transaction in detail and entirety. But the principal began to make
-inquiries; the avenger was on the track of the criminal three. Some big
-girls had witnessed the felonious entrance of the guilty ones into
-the den of the skeleton. The big girls imparted their knowledge to the
-principal, hunting these felons of the school. But the big girls slipped
-a cog on one important point. They did not know the recreant Benjamin
-Clayton. After arguing it all over they decided that "the third boy" was
-a very innocent young person named Albert Weed, and so gave in the names
-of the guerillas as:
-
-"Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Albert Weed!" That afternoon the indignant
-principal demanded that Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Albert Weed attend
-him to the study. They were there charged with the atrocity of the
-skeleton in the window. Charles Roy and Fred Avery confessed and asked
-for mercy. Albert Weed denied having art, part or lot in the outrage.
-The principal was much shocked at his prompt depravity in trying to lie
-himself clear. The principal, in order to be exactly just, and evenly
-fair, craved to know of Charles Roy and Fred Avery:
-
-"Was Albert Weed with you?"
-
-"Please, sir, we would rather be excused from answering," they said,
-hanging down their heads.
-
-Then the principal knew that Albert Weed was guilty. Fred Avery
-and Charles Roy were forgiven, and were complimented on their
-straightforward, manly course in refusing to tell a lie to shield
-themselves.
-
-"As for you, Albert," observed the principal, as he seized Albert Weed
-by the top of his head, "as for you, Albert, I do not punish you for
-being roguish with the skeleton, but for telling me a lie."
-
-* * * * *
-
-The principal thereupon lambasted the daylights out of Albert Weed.
-
-
-
-
-THE RAT
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Be d' cops at d' Central office fly?" Chucky buried his face in his
-tankard in a polite effort to hide his contempt for the question. "Be
-dey fly! Say! make no mistake! d' Central Office mugs is as soon a set
-of geezers as ever looked over d' hill. Dey're d' swiftest ever. On d'
-level! I t'ink t'ree out of every four of them gezebos could loin to
-play d' pianny in one lesson.
-
-"Just to put youse onto how quick dey be, an' to give you some idee of
-their curves, let me tell you what dey does to Billy d' Rat.
-
-"Youse never chases up on d' Rat? Nit! Well, Cully, you don't miss much.
-Yes, d' Rat's a crook all right. He's a nipper, but a dead queer one,
-see! He always woiks alone, an' his lay is diamonds.
-
-"'I don't want no pals or stalls in mine," says d' Rat. "I can toin
-all needful tricks be me lonesome. Stalls is a give-away, see! Let some
-sucker holler, an' let one of your mob get pinched, an' what then? Why,
-about d' time he's stood up an' given d' secont degree be Mc-Clusky,
-he coughs. That's it! he squeals, an' d' nex' dash out o' d' box youse
-don't get a t'ing but d' collar. Nine out o' ten of d' good people doin'
-time to-day, was t'rown into soak be some pal knockin'. I passes all
-that up! I goes it alone! If I nips a rock it's mine; I don't split out
-no bits for no snoozer, see! I'm d' entire woiks, an' if I stumbles an'
-falls be d' wayside, it's me's to blame. Which last makes it easier to
-stan' for.'
-
-"That's d' way d' Rat lays out d' ground for me one day," continued
-Chucky, "an' he ain't slingin' no guff at that. It's d' way he always
-woiked.
-
-"But to skin back to d' Central Office cops an' how flydey be: One of d'
-Rat's favourite stunts is dampin' a diamond. What's that? Youse'll catch
-on as me tale unfolds, as d' nov'lists puts it.
-
-"Here's how d' Rat would graft. Foist he'd rub up his two lamps wit'
-pepper till dey looks red an', out of line. When he'd got t'rough doin'
-d' pepper act to 'em, d' Rat's peeps, for fair! would do to understudy
-two fried eggs.
-
-"Then d' Rat would pull on a w'ite wig, like he's some old stuff; an'
-wit' that an' some black goggles over his peeps, his own Rag wouldn't
-have known him. To t'row 'em down for sure, d' Rat would wear a
-cork-sole shoe,--one of these 6-inch soles,--like he's got a game
-trilby. Then when he's all made up in black togs, d' Rat is ready.
-
-"Bein' organised, d' Rat hobbles into a cab an' drives to a diamond
-shop. D' racket is this: Of course it takes a bit of dough, but that's
-no drawback, for d' Rat is always on velvet an' dead strong. As I
-say, d' play is this: D' Rat being well dressed an' fitted up wit' his
-cork-soles, his goggles an' his wig, comes hobblin' into d' diamond
-joint an' gives d' impression he's some rich old mark who ain't got
-a t'ing but money, an' that he's out to boin a small bundle be way
-of matchin' a spark which he has wit' him in his mit. D' Rat fills d'
-diamond man up wit' a yarn, how he's goin' to saw a brace of ear-rings
-off on his daughter an' needs d' secont rock, see! Of course it's a dead
-case of string. D' Rat ain't got no kid, an' would be d' last bloke to
-go festoonin' her wit' diamonds if he had.
-
-"Naturally, d' mut who owns d' store is out an' eager to do business.
-D' Rat won't let d' diamond man do d' matchin'; not on your life! he's
-goin' to mate them sparks himself. So he gives d' stiff wit' d' store
-d' tip to spread a handful of stones, say about d' size of d' one he's
-holdin' in his hooks--which mebby is a 2-carat--on some black velvet for
-him to pick from. D' diamond party ain't lookin' for no t'row down
-from an old sore-eyed, cork-sole hobo like d' Rat, so he lays out a
-sprinklin' of stones. D' Rat, who all this time is starring his bum
-lamps, an' tellin' how bad an' weak dey be, an' how he can hardly see,
-gets his map down dost to d' lay-out of sparks, so as he can get onto em
-an' make d' match.
-
-"It's now d' touch comes in. When d' Rat's got his smeller right
-among d' diamonds, he sticks out his tongue, quick like a toad for a
-honey-bee, an' nails a gem. That's what dey calls 'dampin' a diamond.'
-Yes, mebby if there's so many of 'em laid out, he t'inks d' mark behint
-d' show case will stan' for it wit'out missin' 'em, d' Rat gets two.
-Then d' Rat goes on jollyin' an' chinnin' wit' d' sparks in his face;
-an' mebby for a finish an' to put a cover on d' play, he buys one an'
-screws his nut.
-
-"Wit' his cab, as I says, d' Rat is miles away, an' has time to shed his
-wig an' goggles an' cork-sole before d' guy wit' d' diamonds tumbles
-to it he's been done. That's how d' Rat gets in his woik. Now I'll tell
-youse how d' Central Office people t'run d' harpoon into him.
-
-"One day d' Rat makes a play an' gets two butes. He tucks 'em away in
-back of his teet', an' is just raisin' his nut to say somethin', when
-d' store duck grabs him an' raises a roar. Two or t'ree cloiks an' a cop
-off d' street comes sprintin' up, an' away goes d' Rat to d' coop.
-
-"Wit 'd' foist yell of d' sucker who makes d' front for d' store--naw,
-he ain't d' owner, he's one of d' cloiks--d' Rat goes clean outside of
-d' sparks at a gulp; swallows 'em; that's what he does. There bein' no
-diamond toined up, an' no one at headquarters bein' onto him--for he's
-always laid low an' kept out of sight of d' p'lice--d' Rat makes sure
-dey'll have to t'run him loose.
-
-"But d' boss cop is pretty cooney. He figgers it all out, how d' Rat's
-a crook, an' how he's eat d' diamonds, just as I says. So he cons d' Rat
-an' t'rows a dream into him. He tells him there'll be no trouble, but
-he'll have to keep him for an hour or two until his 'sooperior off'cer,'
-as he calls him, gets there. He's d' main squeeze, this p'lice dub
-dey're waitin' for, an' as soon as he shows up an' goes over d' play, d'
-Rat can screw out.
-
-"That's d' sort of song an' dance d' high cop gives d' Rat; an' say! I'm
-a lobster if d' Rat don't fall to it, at that. On d' dead! this p'lice
-duck is so smooth an' flossy d' Rat believes him.
-
-"Just for appearances d' Rat registers a big kick; an' then--for dey
-don't lock him up at all--he plants himself in a easy chair to do a toin
-of wait. D' Rat couldn't have broke an' run for it, even if he'd took d'
-scare, for d' cops is all over d' place. But he ain't lookin' for d'
-woist of it nohow. He t'inks it's all as d' boss cop has told him; he'll
-wait there an hour or two for d' main guy an' then dey'll cut him free.
-
-"After a half hour d' boss cop says: 'It's no use you bein' hungry, me
-frien', an' as I'm goin' to chew, come wit' me an' feed your face. D'
-treat's on me, anyhow, bein' obliged to detain a respect'ble old mucker
-like you. So come along.'
-
-"Wit' that d' Rat goes along wit 'd' boss cop, an' all d' time he's
-t'inkin' what a Stoughton bottle d' cop is.
-
-"It's nex' door, d' chop-house is. D' cop an 'd' Rat sets down an'
-breasts up to d' table. Dey gives d' orders all right, all right. But
-say! d' grub never gets to 'em. D' nex' move after d' orders, d' Rat,
-who's got a t'irst on from d' worry of bein' lagged, takes a drink out
-of a glass.
-
-"'I'm poisoned!' yells d' Rat as he slams down d' tumbler; 'somebody's
-doped me!' an' wit' that d' Rat toins in, t'rows a fit, an' is seasick
-to d' limit.
-
-"That's what that boss cop does. He sends over an' doctors a glass while
-d' Rat is settin' in his office waitin', an' then gives him a bluff
-about chewin' an' steers d' Rat ag'inst it. Say! it was a dandy play. D'
-dope or whatever it was, toins me poor friend d' Rat inside out, like an
-old woman's pocket.
-
-"An' them sparks is recovered.
-
-"Yes, d' Rat does a stretch. As d' judge sentences him, d' Rat gives d'
-cop who downs him his mit. 'You're a wonder,' says d' Rat to d' cop;
-'there's no flies baskin' in d' sun on you. When I reflects on d' way
-you sneaks d' chaser after them sparks, an' lands 'em, I'm bound to say
-d' Central Office mugs are onto their job.'"
-
-
-
-
-CHEYENNE BILL
-
-(Wolfville)
-
-
-Cheyenne Bill is out of luck. Ordinarily his vagaries are not regarded
-in Wolfville. His occasional appearance in its single street in a
-voluntary of nice feats of horsemanship, coupled with an exhibition of
-pistol shooting, in which old tomato cans and pass beer bottles perform
-as targets, has hitherto excited no more baleful sentiment in the
-Wolfville bosom than disgust.
-
-"Shootin' up the town a whole lot!" is the name for this engaging
-pastime, as given by Cheyenne Bill, and up to date the exercise has
-passed unchallenged.
-
-But to-day it is different. Camps like individuals have moods, now
-light, now dark; and so it is with Wolfville. At this time Wolfville
-is experiencing a wave of virtue. This may have come spontaneously from
-those seeds of order which, after all, dwell sturdily in the Wolfville
-breast. It may have been excited by the presence of a pale party of
-Eastern tourists, just now abiding at the O. K. Hotel; persons whom
-the rather sanguine sentiment of Wolfville credits with meditating an
-investment of treasure in her rocks and rills. But whatever the reason,
-Wolfville virtue is aroused; a condition of the public mind which makes
-it a bad day for Cheyenne Bill.
-
-The angry sun smites hotly in the deserted causeway of Wolfville. The
-public is within doors. The Red Light Saloon is thriving mightily. Those
-games which generally engross public thought are drowsy enough; but
-the counter whereat the citizen of Wolfville gathers with his peers in
-absorption of the incautious compounds of the place, is fairly sloppy
-from excess of trade. Notwithstanding the torrid heat this need not
-sound strangely; Wolfville leaning is strongly homoeopathic. "_Similia
-similibus curantur_," says Wolfville; and when it is blazing hot, drinks
-whiskey.
-
-But to-day there is further reason for this consumption. Wolfville is
-excited, and this provokes a thirst. Cheyenne Bill, rendering himself
-prisoner to Jack Moore, rescue or no rescue, has by order of that
-sagacious body been conveyed by his captor before the vigilance
-committee, and is about to be tried for his life.
-
-What was Cheyenne Bill's immediate crime? Certainly not a grave one. Ten
-days before it would have hardly earned a comment. But now in its spasm
-of virtue, and sensitive in its memories of the erratic courses of
-Cheyenne Bill aforetime, Wolfville has grimly taken possession of that
-volatile gentleman for punishment. He has killed a Chinaman. Here is the
-story:
-
-"Yere comes that prairie dog, Cheyenne Bill, all spraddled out," says
-Dave Tutt.
-
-Dave Tutt is peering from the window of the Red Light, to which lattice
-he has been carried by the noise of hoofs. There is a sense of injury
-disclosed in Dave Tutt's tone, born of the awakened virtue of Wolfville.
-
-"It looks like this camp never can assoome no airs," remarks Cherokee
-Hall in a distempered way, "but this yere miser'ble Cheyenne comes
-chargin' up to queer it."
-
-[Illustration: 0141]
-
-As he speaks, that offending personage, unconscious of the great change
-in Wolf ville morals, sweeps up the street, expressing gladsome and
-ecstatic whoops, and whirling his pistol on his forefinger like a thing
-of light. One of the tourists stands in the door of the hotel smoking
-a pipe in short, brief puffs of astonishment, and reviews the
-amazing performance. Cheyenne Bill at once and abruptly halts. Gazing
-for a disgruntled moment on the man from the East, he takes the pipe
-from its owner's amazed mouth and places it in his own "smokin' of
-pipes," he vouchsafes in condemnatory explanation, "is onelegant an'
-degradin'; an' don't you do it no more in my presence. I'm mighty
-sensitive that a-way about pipes, an' I don't aim to tolerate 'em none
-whatever."
-
-This solution of his motives seems satisfactory to Cheyenne Bill. He
-sits puffing and gazing at the tourist, while the latter stands dumbly
-staring, with a morsel of the ravished meerschaum still between his
-lips.
-
-What further might have followed in the way of oratory or overt acts
-cannot be stated, for the thoughts of the guileless Cheyenne suddenly
-receive a new direction. A Chinaman, voluminously robed, emerges from
-the New York store, whither he has been drawn by dint of soap.
-
-"Whatever is this Mongol doin' in camp, I'd like for to know?" inquires
-Cheyenne Bill disdainfully. "I shore leaves orders when I'm yere last,
-for the immejit removal of all sech. I wouldn't mind it, but with
-strangers visitin' Wolf ville this a-way, it plumb mortifies me to
-death."
-
-"Oh well!" he continues in tones of weary, bitter reflection, "I'm the
-only public-sperited gent in this yere outfit, so all reforms falls
-nacheral to me. Still, I plays my hand! I'm simply a pore, lonely white,
-but jest the same, I makes an example of this speciment of a sudsmonger
-to let 'em know whatever a white man is, anyhow."
-
-Then comes the short, emphatic utterance of a six-shooter. A puff of
-smoke lifts and vanishes in the hot air, and the next census will be
-short one Asiatic.
-
-In a moment arrives a brief order from Enright, the chief of the
-vigilance committee, to Jack Moore. The last-named official proffers a
-Winchester and a request to surrender simultaneously, and Cheyenne Bill,
-realizing fate, at once accedes.
-
-"Of course, gents," says Enright, apologetically, as he convenes the
-committee in the Red Light bar; "I don't say this Cheyenne is held for
-beefin' the Chinaman sole an' alone. The fact is, he's been havin' a
-mighty sight too gay a time of late, an' so I thinks it's a good, safe
-play, bein' as it's a hot day an' we has the time, to sorter call the
-committee together an' ask its views, whether we better hang this yere
-Cheyenne yet or not?"
-
-"Mr. Pres'dent," responds Dave Tutt, "if I'm in order, an' to get the
-feelin' of the meetin' to flowin' smooth, I moves we takes this Cheyenne
-an' proceeds with his immolation. I ain't basin' it on nothin' in
-partic'lar, but lettin' her slide as fulfillin' a long-felt want."
-
-"Do I note any remarks?" asks Enright. "If not, I takes Mr. Tutt's very
-excellent motion as the census of this meetin', an' it's hang she is."
-
-"Not intendin' of no interruption," remarks Texas Thompson, "I wants to
-say this: I'm a quiet gent my-se'f, an' nacheral aims to keep Wolfville
-a quiet place likewise. For which-all I shorely favours a-hangin' of
-Cheyenne. He's given us a heap of trouble. Like Tutt I don't make no
-p'int on the Chinaman; we spares the Chink too easy. But this Cheyenne
-is allers a-ridin', an' a-yellin', an' a-shootin' up this camp till I'm
-plumb tired out. So I says let's hang him, an' su'gests as a eligible,
-as well as usual nook tharfore, the windmill back of the dance hall."
-
-"Yes," says Enright, "the windmill is, as experience has showed, amply
-upholstered for sech plays; an' as delays is aggravatin', the committee
-might as well go wanderin' over now, an' get this yere ceremony off its
-mind."
-
-"See yere, Mr. Pres'dent!" interrupts Cheyenne Bill in tones of one
-ill-used, "what for a deal is this I rises to ask?"
-
-"You can gamble this is a squar' game," replies Enright confidently.
-"You're entitled to your say when the committee is done. Jest figure out
-what kyards you needs, an' we deals to you in a minute."
-
-"I solely wants to know if my voice is to be regarded in this yere play,
-that's all," retorts Cheyenne Bill.
-
-"Gents," says Doc Peets, who has been silently listening. "I'm with
-you on this hangin'. These Eastern sharps is here in our midst. It'll
-impress 'em that Wolfville means business, an' it's a good, safe, quiet
-place. They'll carry reports East as will do us credit, an' thar you be.
-As to the propriety of stringin' Cheyenne, little need be said. If the
-Chinaman ain't enough, if assaultin' of an innocent tenderfoot ain't
-enough, you can bet he's done plenty besides as merits a lariat. He
-wouldn't deny it himse'f if you asks him."
-
-There is a silence succeeding the rather spirited address of Doc Peets,
-on whose judgment Wolfville has been taught to lean. At last Enright
-breaks it by inquiring of Cheyenne Bill if he has anything to offer.
-
-"I reckons it's your play now, Cheyenne," he says, "so come a-runnin.'"
-
-"Why!" urges Cheyenne Bill, disgustedly, "these proceedin's is ornery
-an' makes me sick. I shore objects to this hangin'; an' all for a measly
-Chinaman too! This yere Wolfville outfit is gettin' a mighty sight too
-stylish for me. It's growin' that per-dad-binged-'tic'lar it can't take
-its reg'lar drinks, an'----"
-
-"Stop right thar!" says Enright, with dignity, rapping a shoe-box with
-his six-shooter; "don't you cuss the chair none,'cause the chair won't
-have it. It's parliamentary law, if any gent cusses the chair he's
-out of order, same as it's law that all chips on the floor goes to the
-house. When a gent's out of order once, that settles it. He can't talk
-no more that meetin'. Seein' we're aimin' to eliminate you, we won't
-claim nothin' on you this time. But be careful how you come trackin'
-'round ag'in, an' don't fret us! _Sabe?_ Don't you-all go an' fret us
-none!"
-
-"I ain't allowin' to fret you," retorts Cheyenne Bill. "I don't have to
-fret you. What I says is this: I s'pose, I sees fifty gents stretched
-by one passel of Stranglers or another between yere an' The Dalis, an' I
-never does know a party who's roped yet on account of no Chinaman. An'
-I offers a side bet of a blue stack, it ain't law to hang people on
-account of downin' no Chinaman. But you-alls seems sot on this, an' so I
-tells you what I'll do. I'm a plain gent an' thar's no filigree work on
-me. If it's all congenial to the boys yere assembled--not puttin' it on
-the grounds of no miser'ble hop slave, but jest to meet public sentiment
-half way--I'll gamble my life, hang or no hang, on the first ace turned
-from the box, Cherokee deal. Does it go?"
-
-Wolfville tastes are bizarre. A proposition original and new finds
-in its very novelty an argument for Wolfville favour. It befalls,
-therefore, that the unusual offer of Cheyenne Bill to stake his neck on
-a turn at faro is approvingly criticised. The general disposition agrees
-to it; even the resolute Enright sees no reason to object.
-
-"Cheyenne," says Enright, "we don't have to take this chance, an' it's
-a-makin' of a bad preceedent which the same may tangle us yereafter; but
-Wolfville goes you this time, an' may Heaven have mercy on your soul.
-Cherokee, turn the kyards for the ace."
-
-"Turn squar', Cherokee!" remarks Cheyenne Bill with an air of interest.
-"You wouldn't go to sand no deck, nor deal two kyards at a clatter,
-ag'in perishin' flesh an' blood?"
-
-"I should say, no!" replies Cherokee. "I wouldn't turn queer for money,
-an' you can gamble! I don't do it none when the epeesode comes more
-onder the head of reelaxation."
-
-"Which the same bein' satisfact'ry," says Cheyenne Bill, "roll your
-game. I'm eager for action; also, I plays it open."
-
-"I dunno!" observes Dan Boggs, meditatively caressing his chin; "I'm
-thinkin' I'd a-coppered;--that's whatever!"
-
-The deal proceeds in silence, and as may happen in that interesting
-sport called faro, a split falls out. Two aces appear in succession.
-
-"Ace lose, ace win!" says Cherokee, pausing. "Whatever be we goin' to do
-now, I'd like to know?" There is a pause.
-
-"Gents," announces Enright, with dignity, "a split like this yere
-creates a doubt; an' all doubts goes to the pris'ner, same as a maverick
-goes to the first rider as ties it down, an' runs his brand onto it.
-This camp of Wolfville abides by law, an' blow though it be, this yere
-Cheyenne Bill, temp'rarily at least, goes free. However, he should
-remember this yere graze an' restrain his methods yereafter. Some of
-them ways of his is onhealthful, an' if he's wise he'll shorely alter
-his system from now on."
-
-"Which the camp really lose! an' this person Bill goes free!" says Jack
-Moore, dejectedly. "I allers was ag'in faro as a game. Where we-all
-misses it egreegious, is we don't play him freeze-out."
-
-"Do you know, Cherokee," whispers Faro Nell, as her eyes turn softly to
-that personage of the deal box, "I don't like killin's none! I'd sooner
-Cheyenne goes loose, than two bonnets from Tucson!"
-
-At this Cherokee Hall pinches the cheek of Faro Nell with a delicate
-accuracy born of his profession, and smiles approval.
-
-
-
-
-BLIGHTED
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-Is it hauteur, or is it a maiden's coyness which causes you to turn
-away your head, love?"
-
-George D'Orsey stood with his arm about the willowy form of Imogene
-O'Sullivan. The scene was the ancestral halls of the O'Sullivans in
-the fashionable north-west quarter of Harlem. George D'Orsey had asked
-Imogene O'Sullivan to be his bride. That was prior to the remark which
-opened our story. And the dear girl softly promised. The lovers stood
-there in the gloaming, drinking that sweet intoxication which never
-comes but once.
-
-"It isn't hauteur, George," replied Imogene O'Sullivan, in tones like
-far-off church bells. "But, George!--don't spurn me--I have eaten of the
-common onion of commerce, and my breath, it is so freighted with that
-trenchant vegetable, it would take the nap from your collar like a
-lawn mower. It is to spare the man she loves, George, which causes your
-Imogene to hold her head aloof."
-
-"Look up, darling!" and George D'Orsey's tones held a glad note of
-sympathy, "I, too, have battened upon onions."
-
-The lovers clung to each other like bats in a steeple.
-
-"But we'll have to put toe-weights on pa, George; he'll step high and
-lively when he hears of this!"
-
-The lovers were seated on the sofa, now; the prudent Imogene was taking
-a look ahead.
-
-"Doesn't your father love me, pet?"
-
-"I don't think he does," replied the fair girl tenderly. "I begged him
-to ask you to dinner, once, George; that was on your last trip. He said
-he would sooner dine with a wet dog, George, and refused. From that I
-infer his opposition to our union."
-
-"We'll make a monkey of him yet!" and George D'Orsey hissed the words
-through his set teeth.
-
-"And my brother?"
-
-"As for him," said George D'Orsey (and at this he began pacing the room
-like a lion), "as for your brother! If he so much as looks slant-eyed
-at our happiness, he goes into the soup! From your father I would bear
-much; but when the balance of the family gets in on the game, they will
-pay for their chips in advance."
-
-"Can we not leave them, George; leave them, and fly together?"
-
-"Your father is rich, Imogene; that is a sufficient answer." There was a
-touch of sternness in George D'Orsey's tones, and the subject of flying
-was dropped.
-
-George D'Orsey lived in the far-off hamlet of Hoboken. He returned
-to his home. In three months he was to wed Imogene O'Sullivan. Benton
-O'Sullivan had a fit when it was first mentioned to him. At last he gave
-his sullen consent.
-
-"I had planned a title for you, Imogene." That was all he said.
-
-Three months have elapsed. It was dark when the ferryboat came to a
-panting pause in its slip. George D'Orsey picked his way through the
-crowd with quick, nervous steps. It was to be his wedding-night. He
-wondered if Imogene would meet him at the ferry. At that moment he
-beheld her dear form walking just ahead.
-
-"To-night, dearest, you are mine forever!" whispered George D'Orsey
-tenderly, seizing the sweet young creature by her arm.
-
-The shrieks which emanated from the young woman could have defied the
-best efforts of a steam siren.
-
-It was not Imogene O'Sullivan!
-
-The police bore away George D'Orsey. They turned a deaf ear to his
-explanations.
-
-"You make me weary!" remarked the brutal turnkey, to whom George D'Orsey
-told his tale.
-
-The cell door slammed; the lock clanked; the cruel key grated as it
-turned. George D'Orsey was a prisoner. The charge the blotter bore
-against him was: "Insulting women on the street."
-
-When George D'Orsey was once more alone, he cursed his fate as if his
-heart would break. At last he was calm.
-
- "Oh, woman, in our hour of ease,
-
- Uncertain, coy, and hard to please;
-
- But, seen too oft, familiar with her face;
-
- We first endure, then pity, then embrace!"
-
-The Chateau O'Sullivan was a flare and a glare of lights. The rooms were
-jungles of palms and tropical plants. Flowers were everywhere, while
-the air tottered and fainted under the burden of their perfume. Imogene
-O'Sullivan never looked more beautiful.
-
-But George D'Orsey did not come.
-
-Hour followed hour into the past. The guests moved uneasily from room to
-room. The preacher notified Benton O'Sullivan that he was ready.
-
-And still George D'Orsey came not.
-
-"The villain has laid down on us, me child!" whispered Benton O'Sullivan
-to the weeping Imogene; "but may me hopes of heaven die of heart failure
-if I have not me revenge! No man shall insult the proud house of.
-O'Sullivan and get away with it; not without blood!"
-
-The guests cheerfully dispersed, talking the most scandalous things in
-whispers.
-
-Imogene O'Sullivan's dream was over.
-
-It was the next night. George D'Orsey stood on the O'Sullivan porch,
-ringing the bell. His eye and his pocket and his stomach were alike
-wildly vacant.
-
-"Sic him, Bull! Sic him!" said Benton O'Sullivan, bitterly.
-
-Bull tore several specimens from the quivering frame of George D'Orsey,
-who vanished in the darkness with a hoarse cry.
-
-Years afterward George D'Orsey and Imogene O'Sullivan met, but they gave
-each other a cold, meaningless stare.
-
-
-
-
-THE SURETHING
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-John Sparrowhawk was a sporting man of the tribe of "Surethings." He
-was fond of what has Cherry Hill description as a "cinch." He never let
-any lame, slow trick get away. John Sparrowhawk's specialty was racing;
-and he always referred to this diversion with horses as his "long suit."
-He kept several rather abrupt animals himself, and whenever he found
-a man whose horse wasn't as sudden as some horse he owned, John
-Sparrowhawk would lay plots for that man, and ultimately race equines
-with him, and become master of such sums as the man would bet. John
-Sparrowhawk wandered through life in his "surething" way and amassed
-wealth. He was rich, and was wont to boast to very intimate friends:
-
-"I never spent a dollar which I honestly earned." This gave John
-Sparrowhawk a vast deal of vogue, and he was looked up to and revered by
-a circle which is always impressed by the genius of one who can rob his
-fellow-worms, and do it according to law.
-
-It befell one day that the Brooklyn Jockey Club offered a purse for a
-running race, but demanded five entries. In no time at all, three
-horses were entered. Their names and capacities were well known to the
-sagacious John Sparrowhawk. He had a horse that could beat them all.
-
-"He would run by them like they was tied to a post!" remarked John
-Sparrowhawk, in a chant of ungrammatical exultation.
-
-It burst upon him that the time was ripe to pillage somebody. His latest
-larceny was ten days old, and John Sparrowhawk oft quoted the Bowery
-poet where he said:
-
- "Count that day lost whose low, descending sun
-
- Sees at thy hands no worthy sucker done."
-
-And John Sparrowhawk did business that way. If he might only get
-another horse entered, and then complete the quintet with his own,
-John Sparrowhawk would possess "a snap." Which last may be defined as a
-condition of affairs much famed for its excellence.
-
-At this juncture John Sparrowhawk had the idea of his career. The idea
-made "a great hit" with him. He had a friend who had a horse, which,
-while not so swiftly elusive as "Tenbroeck" and "Spokane" in their palmy
-days, could defeat such things as district messenger boys, Fifth avenue
-stages, and many other enterprises which do not attain meteoric speed.
-John Sparrowhawk's horse could beat it, he was sure. He would explain
-the situation to his friend, and cause his snail of a horse to be
-entered. This would fill the race, and then John Sparrowhawk's horse
-would win "hands down," and thereby empty everybody's pockets in favour
-of John Sparrowhawk's, which was a very glutton of a pocket, and never
-got enough.
-
-John Sparrowhawk's friend was lying ill at the Hoffman. John Sparrowhawk
-went into that hostelry and climbed the stairs, softly humming that
-optimistic ballad, which begins: "There's a farmer born every second!"
-
-The sick friend took little interest in the deadfall proposed by John
-Sparrowhawk. He was suffering from a mass-meeting on the part of divers
-boils, which had selected a trysting place on his person, where their
-influence would be felt.
-
-Locked, as it were, in conflict with his afflictions, John Sparrowhawk's
-friend was indifferent to his horse. He cared not what traps were set
-with him.
-
-John Sparrowhawk entered the friend's horse and paid the entrance
-money--$150. Then he lavished $15 on a "jock" to ride him. The field was
-full, the conditions of the purse complied with, and the race a "go."
-Of course, John Sparrowhawk's horse would win; and, acting on it as the
-chance of his life, John Sparrowhawk went craftily about wagering his
-dollars, even unto his bottom coin; and all to the end that he deplete
-the "jays" about him and become exceeding rich.
-
-"I'm out for the stuff!" observed John Sparrow-hawk, and acted
-accordingly.
-
-When the race started John Sparrowhawk had everything up but his eyes,
-his ears, and other bric--brac of a personal sort, which would mean
-inconvenience to be without a moment.
-
-There could be no purpose other than a cruel one, so far as John
-Sparrowhawk is concerned, to dwell on the details of this race. Suffice
-it that they started and they finished, and the horse of the sick friend
-made a fool of the horse of John Sparrowhawk. He beat him like rocking
-a baby, so said the sports, and thereby dumped the unscrupulous yet
-sapient John Sparrow-hawk for every splinter he possessed. It shook
-every particle of dust out of John Sparrowhawk. He called to relate his
-woe to his sick friend. That suffering person's malady had temporarily
-taken a recess from its labours, and for the nonce he was resting easy.
-
-"I know'd it, and had four thousand placed that way, John," observed the
-invalid. "I win almost thirteen thousand on the trick. My horse could do
-that skate of yours on three legs. I tumbled to it the moment you came
-in the other day."
-
-"Why didn't you put me on?" remonstrated John Sparrowhawk, almost in
-tears, as he thought of the dray-load of money he had lost.
-
-"Put you on!" repeated the Job of the Hoffman, scornfully; "not none! I
-wanted to see how it would seem to let a 'surething' sharp like you open
-a game on a harmless sufferer and 'go broke' on it. No, John; it will
-do you good. You won't have so much money as the result of this, but you
-will be a heap more erudite."
-
-
-
-
-GLADSTONE BURR
-
-Gladstone Burr is a small, industrious, married man. His little nest of
-a home is in Brooklyn. Perhaps the most emphasised feature of the Burr
-family home is Mrs. B. She is a large woman, direct as Bismarck in
-her diplomacy, and when Gladstone Burr does wrong, she tells him of it
-firmly and fully for his good. There is but one bad habit which can with
-slightest show of truth be charged to Gladstone Burr. The barriers of
-his nature, yielding to social pressure, at intervals give way. At such
-times the soul of Gladstone Burr issues forth on a sea of strong drink.
-
-But, as he says himself, "these bats never last longer than ten days."
-
-Notwithstanding this meagre limit, Mrs. B. does not approve of Gladstone
-Burr when thus socially relaxed. And from time to time she has left
-nothing unsaid on that point. Indeed, Mrs. B. has so fully defined her
-position on the subject, that Gladstone Burr, while he in no sense fears
-her, does not care to go home unless he is either very drunk or very
-sober. There is no middle ground in tippling where Gladstone Burr and
-Mrs. B. can meet with his consent. He is not superstitious, but he avers
-that whenever he has been drinking and meets Mrs. B. he has had bad
-luck. His only safety lies in either being sober and avoiding it, or in
-taking refuge in a jag too thick for wifely admonitions to pierce.
-
-There arose last week in the life of Gladstone Burr some event that it
-was absolutely necessary to celebrate. For two days he gave himself up
-to his destiny in that behalf, and being very busy with his festival
-Gladstone Burr did not go home.
-
-Toward the close of the third day he was considering with himself how
-best to approach his domicile so as to avoid the full force of the
-storm. He was not so deep in his cups at that moment, but Mrs. B.'s
-opinions gave him concern. Still, he felt the need of going home. He
-was tired and he was sick. Gladstone Burr knew he would be a great deal
-sicker in the morning, but he felt of a four-bit piece in his pocket,
-and remarking something about the hair of a dog, took courage, and was
-confident he carried the means of restoring himself.
-
-But how to get home!
-
-It was at this crisis in the affairs of Gladstone Burr that his friend,
-Frederick Upham Adams, came up. An inspiration seized Gladstone Burr.
-Adams should take him home in a carriage. Mrs. B. didn't know Adams,
-being careful of her acquaintances. They would say that he, Gladstone
-Burr, had been ill, almost dead from apoplexy, or sunstroke, during the
-recent hot spell, and that "Dr. Adams" was bringing him home.
-
-It was a most happy thought.
-
-"Don't be alarmed, Mrs. Burr," said Adams, as an hour later he supported
-the drooping Gladstone Burr through the hall and stowed him away on a
-sofa. "I am Dr. Adams, of Williamsburg. Mr. Burr has suffered a great
-shock, but he is out of danger now. All he needs is rest--perfect rest!"
-
-Gladstone Burr gasped piteously from the sofa. Mrs. B. was deceived
-perfectly. The ruse worked like a charm.
-
-[Illustration: 0159]
-
-"How long must he be kept quiet, Doctor?" asked Mrs. B., as she wrung
-her hands over Gladstone Burr's danger. She was bending above the
-invalid at the time, and he was unable to signal his friend to be
-careful how he prescribed.
-
-"Oh! ahem!" observed "Dr. Adams," looking at the ceiling,
-professionally, "about three days! That is right! Perfect rest for three
-days, and Mr. Burr will be a well man again."
-
-"Are there directions as to what medicines to give him?" asked Mrs. B.,
-passing her hand gently over Gladstone Burr's heated dome of thought;
-"any directions about the food, Doctor?"
-
-"He needs no medicine," observed the wretched Adams, closing his eyes
-sagaciously, and sucking his cane. "As for food, we must be careful. I
-should advise nothing but milk. Give him milk, Mrs. Burr, milk."
-
-After this Frederick Upham Adams drove away. And at the end of three
-days Gladstone Burr was almost dead.
-
-
-
-
-THE GARROTE
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Tell youse somethin' about d' worser side of d' Bend!" retorted Chucky.
-His manner was resentful. I had put my question in a fashion half
-apologetic and as one who might be surprised at anything bad in the
-Bend. It was this lamblike method of being curious that Chucky didn't
-applaud. Evidently he gloried a bit in the criminal vigour of certain
-phases of a Bend existence.
-
-"Mebby you t'inks there is no worser side to d' Bend! Mebby you takes
-d' Bend for a hotbed of innocence! Don't string no stuff on d' milky
-character of d' Bend. Youse would lose it one, two, t'ree, keno! see!
-There's dead loads of t'ings about d' Bend what's so tough it 'ud make
-youse sore on yourself to get onto 'em.
-
-"Be d' way! while youse is chinnin' concernin' d' hard lines of d' Bend,
-I'm put in mind about Danny d' Face, who shows up from Sing Sing to-day.
-Say! d' Face wasn't doin' a t'ing but put up a roar all d' morn-in',
-till a cop shows up an' lays it out cold if d' Face don't cork, he'll
-pinch him.
-
-"What was d' squeal about? Why! it's like this," continued Chucky,
-settling himself where the barkeeper might know when his glass was
-empty. "It's all about d' Face's Bundle. When d' victim takes his little
-ten spaces, his Bundle mourns 'round for a brace of mont's, see! An'
-then she marries another guy.
-
-"What else could youse look for? That's what I say; what could d' Face
-expect? Ten spaces ain't like a stretch, it's 'life,' see! D' mug who
-chases in an' takes a trip for ten, he's a lifer. An' you knows as well
-as me, even if youse ain't done time, that when a duck gets life, it's
-d' same as a divorce. That's dead straight! his Bundle is free to get
-married ag'in.
-
-"An' that's just what d' Face's Rag does; she hooks up wit' another
-skate, after d' Face has had his stripes for a couple of mont's. She's
-no tree-toad to live on air an' scenery, so she gets hitched. I was
-right there, pipin' off d' play meself, when d' w'ite choker ties 'em.
-It was a good weddin', wit' a dandy lot of lush; d' can was passin' all
-d' time, an' so d' mem'ry of it is wit' me still.
-
-"As I says, d' Face comes weavin' in this mornin', an' tries to break up
-what d' poipers call 'existin' conditions.' It don't go, though; d' cop
-cuts in on d' play an' makes it a cinch case of nit, see!
-
-"What'll d' Face do? What can he do but screw his nut an' stan' for it?
-He ain't got no licence to interfere. It's a case of 'nothin' doin','
-as far as d' Face's end goes. Let him charge 'round an' grab off another
-skirt. There's plenty of 'em; d' Face can find another wife if he goes
-d' right way down d' line. But he don't make no hit be hollerin', he can
-take a tumble to that.
-
-"What is it railroads d' Face? He does a stunt garrotin', see! I'll tell
-youse d' story. Of course, d' Face is a crook.
-
-"Now, understan' me! I ain't no crook. I'm a fakir, an' a grafter; an'
-I've been fly in me time an' I ain't no dub to-day, but I never was no
-crook, see! But, of course, born as I was in Kelly's Alley, an' always
-free of d' Bowery push, I hears a lot about crooks, an' has more'n one
-of d' swell mob on me visitin' list.
-
-"Naw; d' Face was never in d' foist circles, nothin' fine to him. He
-never was d' real t'ing as a dip, an 'd' best he could do was to shove
-an' stall. Now an' then he toins a trick as a porch climber; but even at
-that I never gets a tip of any big second-story woik d' Face does.
-
-"D' Face's best trick is d' garrote, an' it's on d' gar-rote lay dey
-downs d' Face when dey puts him away.
-
-"Now-days there's a lot of sandbaggin'. Some mug comes wanderin' along,
-loaded to d' guards wit* booze, an' some soon duck lends him a t'ump
-back of d' nut wit' a sandbag, or mebby it's a lead pipe or a bar of
-rubber. Over goes d' slewed mug, on his map, an' d' rest is easy money,
-see! That's d' way it's done now.
-
-"But in d' old times, when I'm a kid, it ain't d' sandbag; it's d'
-garrote. An' d' patient can be cold sober, still d' garrote goes all
-right. It takes two to woik it; but even at that it beats d' sandbag
-hands down. It's smoother, cleaner, and more like a woik-man, see! d'
-garrote is.
-
-"Besides, there's more apt to be stuff on a sober party than on some
-stiff who's tanked. I know d' poipers is always talkin' about people
-gettin' a load, wit' money all over 'em; but youse can gamble! such talk
-is a song an' dance. I'm more'n seven years old, an' me exper'ence is,
-that it's a four-to-one shot a drunk is every time broke.
-
-"But to go to d' story of how d' Face gets pinched. As I states, it's
-way back; not quite ten spaces (for d' Face shortens his stay at d' pen
-wit' good conduct time see!), an 'd' Face an' a pal, Spot Casey, who's
-croaked now, is out on d' garrote lay.
-
-"D' Face is followin', an' Spot is sluggin'. Here's how dey lays out
-d' game. It's on Fift' Avenoo, down be Nint'. Spot's playin' round d'
-corner on Nint'; d' Face is woikin' about a block away on Fift' Avenoo,
-on d' lookout for a sucker, see! Along he comes walkin' fast, this
-sucker. As he passes, d' Face gives him d' size-up. He's got a spark,
-an' a yellow chain, an' looks like he's good for a hundred in d' long
-green. That does for d' Face. He lets this guy get good an' by, an' then
-toins an' shadows him.
-
-"D' Face walks faster than d' sucker. It's his play to be nex', be d'
-time dey hits Nint', where Spot is layin' dead.
-
-"As dey chases up, d' Face an 'd' snoozer he's out to do is bot' walkin'
-fast, wit 'd' Face five foot behint.
-
-"Just before dey makes d' corner, d' Face gives d' office to Spot be
-stampin' onct wit' his trilby on d' sidewalk. Then he moves right up
-sharp, claps his right arm about d' geezer's t'roat, at d' same time
-grabbin' his right hook wit' his left an' yankin' his arm in tight. It
-shuts off d' duck's wind.
-
-"As d' Face clenches his party, as I says, he gives him d' knee behint,
-an' sort o' lifts him up. At d' same instant, Spot comes chasin'
-round d' corner in front an' smashes his right duke into what d' prize
-fighters calls 'd' mark.' Yes, it's d' same t'ump that does for Corbett
-that day wit' Fitz.
-
-"'That's d' stuff, Spot!' says d' Face, as d' party is slugged, an' then
-he sets him down be d' fence all limp an' quiet, an' goes t'rough him.
-
-"Dey gets a super, a pin, an' quite a healt'y roll besides. He's so done
-up dey even gets a di'mond off one of his hooks.
-
-"Sure! d' garrote almost puts a mark's light out. Youse can bet! after
-youse has been t'rough d' mill onct, youse won't t'ink, travel, nor
-raise d' yell for half an hour. A mark's lucky to be alive who's been
-t'rough d' garrote. It ain't so bad as d' sandbag at that, neither.
-
-"How was it d' Face is took? Nit; d' cop don't get in on d' play; dey
-win easy. It's two weeks later when he's collared. D' Face's pal, Spot,
-gets too gabby wit' a skirt, who's stoolin' for d' p'lice on d' sly, an'
-she goes an' knocks to d' Chief!"
-
-
-
-
-O'TOOLE'S CHIVALRY
-
-
-
- A woman, a spaniel, and a walnut tree;
-
- The more you beat them, the better they be.
-
- Irish Proverb.
-
-
-Thus sadly sang P. Sarsfield O'Toole to himself, as he readjusted the
-bandage to his wronged eye. He believed it, too; at least in the case of
-Madame Bridget Burke, the wife of one John Burke.
-
-The Burkes were the neighbours of P. Sarsfield O'Toole; they lived next
-door. The intimacy, however, went no further; O'Toole and the Burkes
-were not friends.
-
-This is the story of the damaged eye. It offers the reason why P.
-Sarsfield O'Toole comforted himself with the vigorous Irish proverb.
-
-It was the evening before. P. Sarsfield O'Toole was sitting on his
-back porch, cooling himself after a day's work at his profession of
-bricklayer, by reading the history of Ireland. The Burkes were holding
-audible converse just over the division fence.
-
-P. Sarsfield O'Toole closed the history of his native land to listen.
-This last was neither an arduous nor a painful task, for the Burkes,
-with the splendid frankness of a household willing to stand or fall by
-its record, could be heard a block.
-
-"Me family was noble!" P. Sarsfield O'Toole overheard John Burke remark.
-"The Burkes wanst lived in their own cashtle."
-
-"They did not," observed Madame Burke. "They lived woild in the bog of
-Allen, and there was mud on their shanks from wan ind of the year to the
-other. Divvil a cashtle did a Burke ever see; barrin' a jail."
-
-"Woman! av yez arouse me," said John Burke, threateningly, "I'll break
-the bones of ye, an' fling yez in the corner to mend. Don't exashperate
-me, woman."
-
-"I exashperate yez!" retorted Madame Burke, scornfully. "For phwat wud
-I exashperate yez! Wasn't your own uncle transhpoorted? Answer me that,
-John Burke?"
-
-"Me uncle suffered to free Ireland, woman!" responded the husband.
-
-"May the divvil hould him!" said Madame Burke. "He was transhpoorted as
-a felon, for b'atin' the head off Humpy Pete, the cripple, at the Fair.
-He was an illygant speciment of a Burke! always b'atin' cripples an'
-women!"
-
-The last would seem to have been an unfortunate remark, in so far as
-it contained a suggestion. The next heard by the listening P. Sarsfield
-O'Toole was the loud lament of Madame Bridget Burke as her husband, John
-Burke, submitted her to that correction which he afterwards described to
-the police justice as, "givin' her a tashte av the sthrap."
-
-The cries of Madame Bridget Burke were at their highest when P.
-Sarsfield O'Toole looked over the fence.
-
-"Shtop b'atin' the leddy, John Burke!" commanded P. Sarsfield O'Toole.
-
-"Phwat's it to yez! ye Far-down!" demanded John Burke, looking up from
-his labours. "Av yez hang your chin on that line fince ag'in, I'll welt
-the life out av yez! D'ye moind it now!"
-
-"Is it to me yez apploies the word 'Far-down!" shouted P. Sarsfield
-O'Toole, wrathfully. "Phwat are yez yerself but a rascal of a
-Stonethrower? Don't timpt me with your names, John Burke, an' shtop
-b'atin' the leddy. If I iver come over wanst to yez, I'll return a
-criminal!"
-
-"Shtop b'atin' me own lawful Bridget," retorted John Burke, in tones of
-scorn, "when she's been teasin' for the sthrap a month beyant! Well,
-I loike that! I'll settle with yez, O'Toole, when I tache me woife to
-respect the name of Burke." Here the representative of that honourable
-title smote Madame Bridget lustily. "Av I foind yez in me yarud,
-O'Toole, ye'll lay no bricks to-morry."
-
-P. Sarsfield O'Toole cleared the fence at a bound. He was chivalrous,
-and would rescue Madame Burke. He was proud and would resent the
-opprobrious epithet of "Far-down." He was sensitive, and would teach
-John Burke never to threaten him with disability as a bricklayer.
-
-P. Sarsfield O'Toole, as stated, cleared the fence at a bound, and
-closed with John Burke as if he were a bargain.
-
-What might have been the finale of this last collision will never be
-known. As P. Sarsfield O'Toole and John Burke danced about, locked in a
-deadly embrace, the emancipated Madame Burke suddenly selected a piece
-of scantling from the general armory of the Burke backyard and brought
-it down, not on the head of her oppressor, but on that of the gallant P.
-Sarsfield O'Toole, who had come to her rescue.
-
-"Oh, ye murtherin' villyun!" shouted Madame Burke. "W'ud yez kill a
-husband befure the eyes of his lawful widded woife! An' due yez think
-I'd wear his ring and see yez do it!"
-
-At this point in the conversation Madame Bridget Burke cut a long,
-satisfactory gash in P. Sarsfield O'Toole, just over the eye.
-
-The police came.
-
-John Burke was fined twenty dollars.
-
-Madame Bridget Burke, present lovingly in court, paid it with a
-composite air, breathing insolence for the judge and affection for John
-Burke.
-
-"The ijee av that shpalpeen, O'Toole," said Madame Burke that evening
-to John Burke, and her words floated over the fence to P. Sarsfield
-O'Toole, as he nursed his wounds on his porch; "the ijee av that
-shpalpeen, O'Toole, comin' bechuxt man and woife! D' yez moind th' cheek
-av 'im! Didn't the priest say, 'Phwat hivin has j'ined togither, let no
-man put asoonder?"
-
-"He did, Bridget, he did," replied John Burke. "An' yez have the
-particulars av a foine woman about yez, yerself, Bridget!"
-
-"Troth! an' I have," said Madame Burke, giving full consent to this
-view of her merits. "But, John, phwat a rapscallion yer uncle they
-transhpoorted must av been, to bate the loife out o' poor Humpy Pete,
-the cripple-fiddler, that toime at the Fair!"
-
-For the second time the strap fell, and the shrieks of Madame Burke
-filled the neighbourhood. P. Sarsfield O'Toole, still on his porch, sat
-unmoved, and bestowed no interest on the doings of the Burkes. As the
-strap was plied and the yells of the victim uplifted, P. Sarsfield
-O'Toole repeated the proverb which stands at the head of this story.
-
-
-
-
-WAGON MOUND SAL
-
-(Wolfville)
-
-
-It was Wagon Mound Sal--she got the prefix later and was plain "Sal" at
-the time--who took up laundry-labours when Benson Annie became a wife.
-And this tells of the wooing and wedding of Riley Bent with Sallie of
-Wagon Mound.
-
-Wagon Mound Sal prevailed, as stated, the mistress of a laundry. And it
-was there Riley Bent first beheld her, as she was putting a tubful of
-the blue woollen shirts affected by the males of her region through
-a second suds. On this occasion Riley's appearance was due to a
-misunderstanding. He was foggy with drink, and looked in on a theory
-that the place was a store which made a specialty of the sale of shirts.
-
-"What for a j'int is this?" asked Riley as he entered.
-
-"It's a laundry," replied Sal; and then observing that Riley Bent was
-in his cups, she continued with delicate firmness; "an' if you-all ain't
-mighty keerful how you line out, you'll shorely get a smoothin' iron
-direct."
-
-Nothing daunted by the lady's candour, Riley Bent sat down on a
-furloughed tub which reposed bottom up in one corner. In the course of
-a conversation, whereof he furnished the questions, and Sal the short,
-inhospitable replies, it occurred that she and Riley Bent became
-mutually, albeit dimly, known to one another.
-
-During the three months following, Riley Bent was much and persistently
-in the laundry of Wagon Mound Sal. Wolfville, eagle-eyed in the softer
-and more dulcet phenomena of life, looked confidently for a wedding. So
-in truth did Sal, emulous of Benson Annie. Also Sal was a clear-minded,
-resolute young lady; and having one day concluded to take Riley Bent for
-better or for worse, she lost no time in bringing matters to a focus.
-
-"You're a maverick?" she one day asked, suddenly looking up from her
-ironing. Sal's tones were steady and cool, but it was noticed that she
-burnt a hole in the bosom of Doc Peets's shirt while waiting a reply.
-"You-all ain't married none?"
-
-"Thar ain't no squaw has ever been able to rope, throw an' run her brand
-on me!" said Riley Bent. "Which I'm shorely a maverick!"
-
-"Whatever then is the matter of you an' me dealin'?" asked Sal, coming
-around to Riley Bent's side of the ironing table.
-
-That personage surveyed her in a thoughtful maze.
-
-"You're a long horn, an' for that much so be I," he said at last, as
-one who meditates. "Neither of us would grade for corn-fed in anybody's
-yards!"
-
-Then came another long pause, during which, with his eyes fixedly
-gazing into Wagon Mound Sal's, Riley Bent gave himself to the unwonted
-employment of thinking. At last he shook his head until the little gold
-bells on his bullion hatband tinkled in a dubious, uncertain way, as
-taking their tone from the wearer.
-
-"Which the idee bucks me plumb off!" he remarked, with a final deep
-breath; and then with no further word Riley repaired to the Red Light
-Saloon and became dejectedly yet deeply drunk.
-
-For a month Wolfville saw naught of Riley Bent. He was supposed to be
-two-score miles away on the range with his cattle. Wagon Mound Sal, with
-a trace of grimness about the mouth, conducted her laundry, and, in the
-absence of competition, waxed opulent. She looked confidently for the
-return of Riley Bent; as what woman, knowing her spells and powers,
-would have not.
-
-At last he came. Sal, as well as Wolfville, learned of his presence by
-a mellow whoop at the far end of the single street. Sal was subsequently
-gratified by a view of him as he and a comrade, one Rice Hoskins, slid
-from their saddles and entered the Red Light Saloon.
-
-Wagon Mound Sal was offended at this; he should have come straight to
-her. But beyond slamming her irons unreasonably as she replaced them on
-the range, she made no sign.
-
-To give Riley Bent justice, he had done little during the month of his
-absence save think of Wagon Mound Sal. Whether he pursued the evanescent
-steer, or organised the baking powder biscuit of his day and kind, Wagon
-Mound Sal ran ever in his thoughts like a torrent. But he couldn't bring
-himself to the notion of a wife; not even if that favoured woman were
-Wagon Mound Sal.
-
-"Seems like bein' married that a-way," he explained to Rice Hoskins, as
-they discussed the business about their camp-fire, "is so onnacheral."
-
-"That's whatever!" assented Rice Hoskins.
-
-"But," said Riley Bent after a pause; "I reckon I'd better ride in an'
-tell her she don't get me none, an' end the game."
-
-"That's whatever!"
-
-It was deference to this view which gained Wolfville the pleasure of the
-presence of Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins on the occasion named. It had
-been Riley Bent's plan--having first acquired what stimulant he might
-crave--to leave Rice Hoskins to the companionship of the barkeeper,
-while he repaired briefly to Wagon Mound Sal, and expressed a
-determination never to wed. But after the first drink he so far modified
-the programme as to decide, instead, to write a letter.
-
-"You see!" he said, "writin' a letter shows a heap more respect. An'
-then ag'in, if I goes personal, she might get all wrought up an' lay for
-me permiscus a whole lot."
-
-The flaw in this letter plan became apparent. Neither Riley Bent nor
-Rice Hoskins could write. They made application to Black Jack, the
-barkeeper, to act as amanuensis. But he saw objection, and hesitated.
-
-"I reckon I'll pass the deal, gents," said Black Jack, "if you-alls
-don't mind. The grand jury is goin' to begin their round-up over in
-Tucson next week, an' they'd jest about call it forgery."
-
-At last as a solution, Rice Hoskins drew a rude picture in ink of a
-woman going one way, and a man with a big hat and disreputable spurs,
-going the other; what he called an "Injun letter." This work of art he
-regarded with looks of sagacity and satisfaction.
-
-"If she was an Injun," said the artist, "she'd _sabe_ that picture
-mighty quick. That means: 'You-all take your trail an' I'll take mine.'"
-
-"Which it does seem plain as old John Chisholm's 'Fence-rail Brand,'"
-remarked Riley Bent. "Now jest make a tub by her, an' mark me with a
-4-bar-J, the same bein' my brand; then she'll shorely tumble. Thar's
-nothin' like ropin' with a big loop; then if you miss the horns, you're
-mighty likely to fasten by the feet."
-
-The missive was despatched to Wagon Mound Sal by hand of a Mexican. Then
-Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins restored their flagged spirits with liquor.
-
-Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins drank a vast deal. And it came to pass, by
-virtue of this indiscretion, that Rice Hoskins later, while Riley Bent
-was still thoughtfully over his cups at the Red Light, rode his broncho
-into the New York Store. In the plain line of objection to this, Jack
-Moore, the Marshal, shot Rice Hoskins' pony. As the animal fell it
-pinned Rice Hoskins to the floor by his leg; in this disadvantageous
-position he emptied his pistol at Jack Moore, and of course missed.
-
-Moore was in no sort an idle target. He was a painstaking Marshal, and
-showed his sense of duty at this time by putting four bullets through
-the reckless bosom of Rice Hoskins; the staccate voices of their Colt's
-six-shooters melted into each other until they sounded as one.
-
-"I never could shoot none with a pony on my laig," observed Rice
-Hoskins.
-
-[Illustration: 0177]
-
-Then a splash of blood stained his sun-coloured moustache; his empty
-pistol rattled on the board floor; his head dropped on his arm, and Rice
-Hoskins was dead.
-
-It was at this crisis that Riley Bent, startled by the artillery as he
-sat in the Red Light, came whirling to the scene on his pony. The duel
-was over before he set foot in stirrup. He saw at a glance that Rice
-Hoskins was only a memory. Had he been romantic, or a sentimentalist,
-Riley Bent would have shot out the hour with Jack Moore, the Marshal.
-And had there been one spark of life in the heart of Rice Hoskins to
-have fought over, Riley Bent would have stood in the smoke of his own
-six-shooter all day and taken what Fate might send. As it was, however,
-he curbed his broncho in mid-speed so bluntly, the Spanish bit filled
-its mouth with blood. It spun on its hind hoofs like a top. Then, as the
-long spurs dug to its ribs, it whizzed off in the opposite direction;
-out of camp like an arrow. The last bullet in Jack Moore's pistol
-splashed on a silver dollar in Riley Bent's pocket as he turned his
-pony.
-
-"Whenever I reloads my pistol," said Jack Moore to Old Man Enright, who
-had come up, "I likes to reload her all around; so I don't regyard that
-last cartridge as no loss."
-
-Wagon Mound Sal was deep in a study of Rice Hoskins' "Injun letter" when
-the shooting took place. The missive's meaning was not so easy to make
-out as its hopeful authors had believed. When the deeds of Jack Moore
-were related to her, however, the brow of Wagon Mound Sal took on an
-angry flush. She sent a message to Jack Moore asking him to call at
-once.
-
-"Whatever do you mean?" she demanded of Jack Moore, as he entered the
-laundry, "a-stampedin' of Riley Bent out of camp that a-way? Don't you
-know I was intendin' to marry him? Yere he's been gone a month, an' yet
-the minute he shows up you have to take to cuttin' the dust 'round his
-moccasins with your six-shooter, an' away he goes ag'in. He jest
-nacherally seizes on your gun-play for a good excuse. It's shore enough
-to drive one plumb loco!"
-
-Jack Moore looked decidedly bothered.
-
-"Of course, Sal," he said at last in a deprecatory way, "you-all
-onderstands that when I takes to shakin' the loads outen my six-shooter
-at Riley Bent, I does it offishul. An' I'm free to say, that I was that
-wropped and preoccupied like with my dooties as Marshal at the time, I
-never thinks once of them nuptials you med'tates with Riley Bent. If I
-had I would have downed his pony with that last shot an' turned him over
-to you. But perhaps it ain't too late."
-
-It was the next afternoon. Riley Bent was reclining in his camp in the
-_Trs Hermanas_. Grey, keen eyes watched him from behind a point of
-rocks. Suddenly a mouthful of white smoke puffed from the point of
-rocks, and something hard and positive broke Riley Bent's leg just above
-the knee. The blow of the bullet shocked him for a moment, but the next,
-with a curse in his mouth, and a six-shooter in each hand, he tumbled in
-behind a boulder to do battle with his assailant. With the crack of the
-Winchester which accompanied the phenomena of smoke-puff and broken leg,
-came the voice of Jack Moore, Marshal.
-
-"Hold up your hands, thar!" said Moore. "Up with 'em; I shan't say it
-twice!"
-
-Riley Bent could not obey; he had taken ten seconds off to faint.
-
-When he revived Jack Moore had claimed his pistols and was calmly
-setting the bones of the broken leg; devoting the woollen shirts in the
-war-bags on his saddle to be bandages, and making splints of cedar bark.
-These folk of the plains and mountains, far from the surgeon, often set
-each other's, or, for that matter, their own bones, when a fall from a
-pony, or some similar catastrophe, furnishes the call.
-
-"If you-all needed me," observed Riley Bent peevishly, when a little
-later Jack Moore was engaged over bacon and flap-jacks for the sundown
-meal, "whatever was the matter of sayin' so? Thisyere idee of shootin'
-up a gent without notice or pow-wow is plumb onlegal. An' I'll gamble on
-it, ten to one!"
-
-"Well!" said Jack Moore, as he deftly tossed a flap-jack in the air and
-caught it in the frying-pan again, "I didn't aim to take no chances of
-chagrinin' one who loves you, by lettin' you get away. Then, ag'in,
-my own notion is that it might sorter hasten the bridal some. Thar's
-nothin' like a bullet in a party's frame for makin' him feel romantic
-an' sentimental. It softens his nature a heap, an' sets him to yearnin'
-for female care.
-
-"Which you've been shootin me up to be married!" responded Riley Bent in
-tones of disgust.
-
-"That's straight!" retoited Jack Moore, as he slid the last flap-jack
-into the invalid's tin plate. "You've been pesterin' 'round Wagon Mound
-Sal ontil that lady has become wropped in you. She confides to me cold
-that she's anxious to make a weddin' of it, which is all the preliminary
-necessary in Arizona. You are goin' back to Wolfville with me tomorry on
-a buck-board,--which will be sent on yere from the stage station,--an'
-after Doc Peets goes over your laig ag'in, you an' Wagon Mound Sal are
-goin' to become man an' wife like a landslide. You have bred hopes in
-that lady's bosom, an' you've got to make 'em good. That's all thar is
-to this play; an' you don't get your guns ag'in ontil you're a married
-man."
-
-Jack Moore, firm, direct and decided, had a great effect in fixing
-the wandering fancies of Riley Bent. He thoughtfully masticated his
-flap-jack a moment, and then asked:
-
-"S'pose I arches my back an' takes to buckin' at these yere abrupt
-methods in my destinies; s'pose I quits the deal cold?"
-
-"In which eevent," responded Jack Moore, with an air of iron confidence,
-"we merely convenes the Stranglers an' hangs you for luck."
-
-But Riley Bent was softened and his mind made fully up. Whether it
-was the sentimental influence of Jack Moore's bullet, which Doc Peets
-subsequently dug out; or whether Riley was touched by the fact that
-Wagon Mound Sal, herself, brought over the buckboard to convey him to
-Wolfville, may never be known. What was certain, however, was that Riley
-Bent came finally to the conclusion to wed. He told Wagon Mound Sal so
-while on the buckboard going back.
-
-"Which it's shorely doubtful," said Wagon Mound Sal, "if any man is
-worth the trouble. An' this yere is my busiest day, too!"
-
-There was great rejoicing in the wareroom of the New York Store. A whole
-box of candles blazed gloriously from the walls. Old Man Enright gave
-the bride away, Benson Annie appeared to look on, while Faro Nell
-supported Sal as bridesmaid. As usual, in any hour of sacred need, a
-preacher was obtained from Tucson.
-
-"An' you can bet that pastor knows his business!" said Old Monte, the
-stage driver, who had been commissioned to bring one over. "He's a
-deep-water brand, an' he's all right! I takes my steer when I seelects
-him from the barkeep of the Golden Rod saloon, an' he'd no more give me
-the wrong p'inter, that a-way, than he'd give me the wrong bottle."
-
-Doc Peets's offering to the bride was a bullet. It was formerly the
-property of Jack Moore. It was the one he conferred on Riley Bent that
-evening in the foothills of the _Trs Hermanas_.
-
-"Keep it!" said Doc Peets to the bride. "It's what sobers him, an' takes
-the frivolity outen him, an' makes him know his own heart."
-
-"An' I shorely reckons you're right that a-way, Doc," said Jack Moore,
-some hours after the wedding as the two turned from the laundry whither
-Moore had repaired to return Riley Bent his pistols; "I shore reckons
-you're right a whole lot. I knows a gent in the states, an' he tells me
-himse'f how he goes projectin' 'round, keepin' company with a lady for a
-year, an' ain't thinkin' none speshul of marryin' her. One day somebody
-gets plumb tired of the play an' shoots him some, after which he simply
-goes about pantin' to lead that lady to the altar; that's straight!"
-
-
-
-
-JOE DUBUQUE'S LUCK
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-YOUSE can soak your super," said Chucky, "some dubs has luck! I've seen
-marks who could fall into d' sewer, see! an' come out wit' a bunch of
-lilacs in each mit.
-
-"Nit; it wasn't all luck wit' Joe Dubuque. His breakin' out of hock that
-time is some luck, but mostly 'cause Joe himself is a dead wise guy an*
-onto his job. Tell youse about it? In a secont--in a hully second! Just
-say 'gin fizz!' to d' barkeep an' I'll begin.
-
-"Never mind d' preeliminaries, as d' story writers says, but Joe's in
-jail, see! Joe win out ten spaces for touchin' a farmer for his bundle.
-Was it a wad? D' roll Joe gets is big enough to choke a cow--'leven
-t'ousand plunks, if it's a splinter.
-
-"Wherefore, as I relates, Joe gets ten years, an' is layin' in jail
-while d' gezebo, who's his lawyer, sees can he woik d' high court to
-give Joe a new trial.
-
-"Joe don't feel no sort chirpy; he's onto it d' high court's dead sure
-to t'run him down. Then he goes to d' pen to do them ten spaces. An'
-onct there, wit' all that time ahead, he sees his finish all right, all
-right. He might as well be a lifer.
-
-"So Joe puts it up he'll break himself out. Joe's goil comes every day
-to see him. Say! she's a bute, Joe's Rag is; d' crooks calls her 'Wild
-Willie,' 'cause now an' then she toins dopey an' acts like she's got
-doves in her eaves. But anyhow she's on d' square wit' Joe, an' sticks
-to him like a postage stamp.
-
-"Joe sends out d' woid be his Rag about what he's goin' to do, to d'
-push outside; an' tells 'em how to help. Yes; d' job is put up as fine
-as silk. Every mark knows what he's to do.
-
-"Now, here's d' trick dey toins; here's how Joe beats d' jail for good.
-
-"It comes round to d' night. Joe's cell--it's a big cell, a reg'lar
-corker, wit' gas into it--is on d' fort' corridor. D' guard comes round
-at 9 o'clock orderin' out d'lights. Joe's gas is boinin' away to beat d'
-band, an' Joe is lay in' on his bunk.
-
-"'Dowse d' glim, Joe!' says d' guard.
-
-"What th' 'ell!' says Joe. 'Dowse d' glim, yourself, you Sheeny hobo!'
-
-"D' guard makes a bluff about what he'll do, an' cusses Joe out. All d'
-same he unlocks d' door an' comes chasin' in to put out Joe's gas.
-
-"Now, what does Joe do? As d' guard toins to d' gas to dowse it, Joe
-sets up on his bunk, an' all at onct he soaks this gezebo of a guard
-wit' a rubber billy his Moll sneaks in to him d' day before. Does he
-land d' sucker? Say! he almost cracks his nut, an' that's for fair!
-
-"D' guard drops an' in a minute Joe winds him all up tight in a bedtick
-rope he's made. Then he stoppers his jaw an' t'rows d' mucker on d'
-bunk, takes his keys, locks him in d' cell an' goes galumpin' off to let
-himself t'rough d' doors, so he can try a sprint for it. Yes, Joe makes
-some row when he t'umps this party, but d' captiffs in d' nex' cells
-hears d' racket an' half tumbles to it; an' so dey starts singin' 'Rock
-of Ages,' an' makes a noise so as to cover Joe's play, see! Oh! dey was
-some fly guys locked up in that old coop.
-
-"As Joe lines out for d' doors, he's t'inkin' to himself, how on eart'
-is he goin' to make it? Nit; it wouldn't be no trouble to get outside d'
-doors of what youse might call d' jail proper. But after that, Joe's got
-to go t'rough four offices wit' a mob of dep'ties into 'em. An' he's on
-it's goin' to be a squeak if some of 'em don't recognize him. Joe's mug
-was well known.
-
-"You know how dey woiks d' doors to a jail? Youse don't? It's this way.
-Joe, when he comes up, has d' key to d' inside door, which he nips off
-d' guard as I says when he slugs him wit 'd' billy. Joe lets himself
-into d' cage wit' that.
-
-"Now, d' key to d' outside door ain't in d' coop at all. There's an old
-stiff of a dep'ty sheriff planted outside wit' that. As Joe opens d'
-inside door, he raps on d' bars of d' cage wit' his key, an' it's d' tip
-for this outside snoozer to unlock his door. Of course he plays Joe for
-d' guard coinin' out from his rounds.
-
-"It's at this door-slammin' pinch where Joe's luck comes in, an'
-relieves him of d' chanct of d' gang of dep'ties in d' office tumblin'
-to him. Just as Joe raps to d' sucker on d' outside door, an' then lets
-himself into d' cage, a gun goes off inside d' jail. It's Joe's guard.
-Joe forgets to pinch d' pop, see! an' this gezebo gets his hooks onto
-it, all tied like he is, an' bangs away wit' it in his pockets so as to
-warn d' gang Joe's loose.
-
-"'That does me for fair!' t'inks Joe when he hears d' gun; ''dey gets me
-dead to rights!'
-
-"Say! it was d' one trick that saves him! At d' bang of d' gun every
-dep'ty leaps to his trilbys an' comes chasin'. D' outside mark has just
-unslewed his door. He flings it wide open an' scoots inside d' cage. Joe
-t'rows d' inside door open--for Joe's dead swift to take a hunch that
-way--an 'd' outside guard an 'd' entire bunch of dep'ties goes sprintin'
-into d' jail. Then Joe locks 'em all in an' loafs t'rough d' offices
-into d' street.
-
-"Yes; Joe knows where he's goin'. He toins into d' foist stairway an'
-climbs one story to a law office, which d' crooks outside has fixed to
-be open, waitin' for him. Nixie; d' law guy ain't in on d' play. A dip
-named Jim Butts comes an' touts this law sharp away, an' cons him into
-goin' out six miles to d' country to draw d' last will an' test'ment of
-a galoot he says is on d' croak, an' can't wait for mornin'. Yes, Butts
-has one of his mob faked up for sick, an' dey detains d' law guy four
-hours makin' d' will. This stall of Butts, who's doin' d' sick act, sets
-up between gasps an' gives away more'n twenty million dollars wort' of
-wealt'. This crook who's fakin' sick is on his uppers at d' time, an'
-don't really have d' price of beer; but to hear him make his will that
-night, you'd say he was d' richest ever; d' Astors was monkeys to him.
-
-"As I states, Joe skips into this lawyer's office, d' same bein' open
-for d' poipose, an' one of d' 'fambly' holdin' it down. While Joe's
-in there he hears d' chase runnin' up an' down in d' street below d'
-window.
-
-"Not for long, though. Fifteen minutes after Joe is outside d' jug, one
-of d' crooks calls up d' Central Office be telephone.
-
-"'Who's talkin'?' asts d' captain at d' Central Office.
-
-"'It's Doyle, lieutenant o' police, Fourt' Precinct,' says d' crook
-who's on d' wire. Me man on d' station house beat just reports Joe
-Dubuque drivin' west on Detroit street wit' a horse an' buggy. He was on
-d' dead run, lamin' loose to beat four of a kind. Send all d' men youse
-can spare.'
-
-"An' that's what d' captain at d' Central Office does. In ten minutes
-every cop an' fly cop is on d' chase, a mile away from Joe, an' gettin'
-furder every secont, see!
-
-"After a while it settles down all quiet an' dead about d' jail, an
-'d' little old law office where Joe lies buried. He, an' d' crook who's
-waitin' for him, is chinnin' each other in whispers. All d' time Joe's
-got his lamps to d' window pipin' off d' other side of d' street.
-At last a cab drives up opposite d' law office an' stops. A w'ite
-han'kerchief shows flutterin' be d' window. It's Wild Willie who's
-inside.
-
-"Joe's pal gets up an' goes down to d' street. All's clear an' he
-w'istles up to Joe. When he gets d' office Joe sort of loafs down an'
-saunters over to d' cab. D' door opens an' in one move Joe's inside, an'
-d' nex' his arm is 'round his Moll. She's all right, this Wild Willie
-is, an' Joe does d' correct t'ing to give her d' fervent squeeze.
-
-"That's d' end. Joe Dubuque runs clear away, goes under cover, an' d'
-sheriff never gets his hooks on him ag'in. As Joe drives be d' jail he
-can still hear them captiffs singin' 'Rock of Ages.'
-
-"'Say!' says Joe to Wild Willie as he toins her mug to his an' smacks
-her onct for luck, 'I won't do a t'ing but make it a t'ousand dollars in
-d' kecks of them ducks who's doin' that song. I'll woik d' dough to 'em
-be some of d' boys, see!'"
-
-
-
-
-BINKS AND MRS. B.
-
-
-BINKS was an excellent man, hard-working and sober. He made good money
-and took it home to his wife for her judgment to settle its fate;
-every dollar of it. Mrs. Binks was a woman among a thousand. When taken
-separate and apart from his wife and questioned, Binks said she was
-a "corker." Binks declined all attempts at definition, and beyond
-insisting that Mrs. Binks was and would remain a "corker," said nothing.
-
-From what was told of Mrs. Binks by herself, it would seem that she was
-a true, loving wife to Binks, and that, aside from the duty every woman
-owed to her sex and the establishment of its rights in all avenues of
-life, she held that with the wedding ring came a list of duties due from
-a good woman to her husband, which could not be avoided nor gone about.
-
-"Some women," quoth Mrs. B., "worry their husbands with a detail of
-small matters. A woman who is to be a helpmeet to her husband, such as I
-am to Binks, will be self-reliant and decide things for herself. In the
-little cares of life which fall to her share, let her go forward in her
-own strength. What is the use of adding her troubles to his? If she
-has plans, let her execute them. If problems confront her, let her solve
-them. If she tells her husband aught of the thousand little enterprises
-of her daily home life, then let it be the result. When success has come
-to her, she may call her husband to witness the victory. Aside from that
-she should face her responsibilities alone."
-
-Of course Mrs. B. did not mean by all this that she would not be open
-and frank with Binks, and confide in him if a burglar were in the house,
-or if the roof took fire in the night that she would not arouse Binks
-and mention it. What she did mean was that when it came to such things
-as dismissing the servant girl, the wife should gird up her loins and
-"fire" the maiden singlehanded, and not ring her husband in on a play,
-manifestly disagreeable, and likely to subject him to great remorse.
-
-It chanced recently that an opportunity opened like a gate for Mrs. B.
-to illustrate her doctrine that wives should proceed in a plain duty
-alone, without imposing needless anxiety on the head of the family.
-
-Mrs. Binks had decided to visit her sister in Hoboken. She was to go
-Thursday, and Binks, who was paid his sweat-bought stipend on Monday,
-was to furnish the money Monday evening wherewith to make the trip.
-
-It chanced, unfortunately, that pay-day this particular week was
-deferred. The head partner was sick, or out of town; checks could not be
-drawn, or something like that.
-
-"But your money will come on Saturday, boys," said the other partner.
-
-Binks was obliged to wait.
-
-The money was all right; it would be accurately on tap Saturday, so
-Binks took no fret on that point.
-
-But what was he to do about Mrs. B.? That good woman was to go Thursday,
-and in order to organise for the descent upon her relative would need
-the money--$40--on Tuesday. What was Binks to do?
-
-Clearly he must do something. He could not ask Mrs. B. to put off her
-trip a week; indeed, his reluctance to take such course came almost to
-the point of superstition.
-
-In his troubles Binks suddenly bethought him of a gold watch, once his
-father's, with a rich chain and guard attached. These precious heirlooms
-had been given to Binks by the elder Binks' executor, and were cherished
-accordingly.
-
-Rather than disappoint Mrs. B. the worthy Binks decided, that just for
-once in his life he would seek a pawnbroker and do business with that
-common relative of all.
-
-Binks felt timid and ashamed, but the case was urgent. There was no
-risk, for his money would float in all right on the tides of Saturday.
-Binks would then redeem these pledges from disgraceful hock; all would
-be well. Mrs. B. would be in Hoboken on redemption day, and it would not
-be necessary to tell her anything about the matter. It would save her
-pain, and Binks bravely determined to keep the whole transaction dark.
-
-Again, if he told her he had not been paid at the store, the brave woman
-would indubitably wend to his employer's house and demand the reason
-why. This would be useless and embarrassing. Therefore, Binks would say
-nothing. He would pawn the ancestral super, and get it again when his
-money came in, and his wife was away.
-
-The watch and its appertainments were snug in the far corner of a bureau
-drawer; away over and behind Mrs. B.'s lingerie. Binks had a watch of
-his own, a Waterbury, with a mainspring as endless as a chain pump. Mrs.
-B. saw, therefore, no reason why he should carry the gold watch of his
-progenitor. Binks might lose it. Mrs. Binks strongly advised that it be
-kept in the bureau where it would be safe and naturally, in an affair of
-that sort Binks took his wife's advice.
-
-Binks reflected that he must secure the watch and pawn it that night.
-To do this he must plot to get Mrs. B. out of the house. Binks thought
-deeply. At last he had it.
-
-Binks sent a message home in the afternoon and asked Mrs. B. to meet
-him in a store down town at six o'clock. Then he had himself released at
-5:30, and went hotfoot homeward.
-
-The coast was clear; Mrs. B. was down town in deference to his
-stratagem, no doubt believing that Binks meditated soda water, or some
-other delicacy, as the cause of his sudden summons of the afternoon. She
-little wotted that she was the victim of deceit. If she had, there would
-have been woe.
-
-Binks rushed at once to the bureau and secured the treasure. He did not
-wait a moment, but plunged off to a store where the three balls over the
-door bore testimony to the commerce within. Binks would explain to Mrs.
-B. on his return, how he had missed her and so failed to keep his date
-with her down town.
-
-The merchant of loans and pledges looked over Binks' timepiece, and
-then, as Binks requested, gave him a ticket for it and $40. It was to
-be redeemed in thirty days or sooner. And Binks was to pay $44 to get
-it again. Binks was very willing. Anything was wiser and better than to
-permit Mrs. B.'s visit to her sister to be interrupted.
-
-When Binks got home Mrs. B. had already returned.
-
-There was a bad light in her eye. She accepted Binks' excuses and
-explanations as to "how he missed her down town" with an evil grace. She
-as good as told Binks that he deceived her; that if the phenomenon were
-treed she would find another woman in the case.
-
-However, Binks had the presence of mind to turn over the $40 he reaped
-on the watch; and as he expressed it later:
-
-"That sort of hushed her up."
-
-The next day Binks returned to his labours, while Mrs. B. repaired to
-the marts to plunge moderately on what truck she stood in want of for
-her trip.
-
-When Mrs. B. got back to the house it chanced that the first thing she
-needed was in the fatal drawer. She opened it.
-
-Horrors! The watch was gone!
-
-There was naught of hesitation; Mrs. B. knew it had been stolen. Anybody
-could see that from the way every garment had been carefully laid back
-to hide the loss.
-
-What should she do? The police must at once be notified. Mrs. B. pulled
-on her shaker and scooted for the police station. She told her story
-out of breath. She left her house at three o'clock and was back at four
-o'clock, and in that short hour her home had been entered and looted of
-its treasures. Made to be specific, Mrs. B. said the treasures were a
-watch and chain, and described them.
-
-"What were they worth?" asked the sergeant of the detectives.
-
-Mrs. B. considered a bit, and then said they would be dog cheap at
-$1,000. She reflected that the sum, if published in the papers, would be
-a source of pride.
-
-The sergeant of detectives told Mrs. B. his men would look about for
-her property, and should they hear of it or find it they would at once
-notify her.
-
-"You bet your gum boots! ma'am," said the sleuth confidently, "whatever
-crook's got your ticker, he's due to soak it or plant it some'ers in a
-week. Mebby he'll turn it over to his Moll. But the minute we springs
-it, ma'am, or turns it up, we'll be dead sure to put you on in a jiff."
-
-"Thank you," said Mrs. B.
-
-Then Mrs. Binks went home and, true to her determination to save Binks
-from unnecessary worry, she told him nothing of the loss nor of her
-arrangements for the watch's recovery.
-
-"What's the use of bothering Binks?" she asked herself. "All he could do
-would be to notify the police, and I've done that."
-
-Thursday came and Mrs. B. set forth for Hoboken. No notice had come from
-the police. Binks was glad to see her go. He had lived in fear lest she
-come across the departure of the watch. He breathed easier when she was
-gone. As for Mrs. B., as she had not heard from the police, there was
-nothing to tell Binks; wherefore, like a self-reliant woman who did not
-believe in making her husband unhappy to no purpose, she left without
-word or sign as to her knowledge of the watch's disappearance.
-
-It was Friday; ever an unlucky day. Binks was walking swiftly homeward.
-Binks was thinking some idle thing when a hand came down on his
-shoulder, heavy as a ham.
-
-"Hold on, me covey; I want you!"
-
-Binks looked around, scared and startled. He had been halted by a
-stocky, bluff man in citizen's clothes.
-
-"What is it?" gasped Binks.
-
-"Suttenly, sech a fly guy as you don't know!" said the bluff man, with a
-glare. "Well! never mind why I wants you; I'm a detective, and you comes
-with me."
-
-And Binks went with him.
-
-Not only that, Binks went in a noisy patrol wagon which the detective
-rang for; and it kept gonging its way along and attracting everybody's
-attention.
-
-The word went about among his friends that Binks was drunk and had been
-fighting.
-
-"And to think a man would act like that," said one lady, who knew Binks
-by sight, "just because his wife is away on a visit! If I were his wife
-I'd never come back to him!"
-
-At the station Binks was solemnly looked over by the chief.
-
-"He's the duck!" said the chief at last. "Exactly old Goldberg's
-description of the party who spouts the ticker. Where did you collar
-him, Bill?"
-
-"I sees him paddin' along on Broadway," replied the bluff man, "and I
-tumbles to the sucker like a hod of brick. I knowed he was a sneak the
-first look I gives; and the second I says to meself, 'he's wanted for a
-watch!' Then I nails him."
-
-"Do you know who he is?" asked the chief.
-
-"My name," said Binks, who was recovering from the awful daze that had
-seized him, "my name is B----"
-
-"Shet up!" roared the bluff man. "Don't give us any guff! It'll be the
-worse for you!"
-
-"I know the mark," said an officer looking on.
-
-"His name is 'Windy Joe, the Magsman.' His mug's in the gallery all
-right enough; number 38, I think."
-
-"That's correct!" said the chief. "I knowed he was familiar to me, and I
-never forgets a face. Frisk him, Bill, and lock him up!"
-
-"But my name's Binks!" protested our hero. "I'm an innocent man!"
-
-"That's what they all says," replied the chief. "Go through him, Bill,
-and lock him up; I want to go to me grub."
-
-Binks was cast into a dungeon. Next door to him abode a lunatic,
-who reviled him all night. On the blotter the ingenuity of the chief
-detective inscribed: "Windy Joe, the Magsman, alias Binks. Housebreaking
-in daytime."
-
-*****
-
-There is scant need of spinning out the agony. Binks got free of the
-scrape some twelve hours later. But it was all very unfortunate. He came
-near dismissal at the store, and the neighbours don't understand it yet.
-They shake their heads and say:
-
-"It's very strange if he's so innocent, why he was locked up. When the
-police take a man, he's generally done something."
-
-"I'm not sorry a bit!" said Mrs. B., when she was brought back from
-Hoboken on Saturday by a wire the police allowed Binks to send her. "And
-when I saw him with the officers, I was as good a mind to tell them to
-keep him as ever I had to eat. To think how he deceived me about that
-watch, allowing me to break my heart with thoughts of it being stolen!
-I guess the next time Binks sneaks off to pawn his dead father's watch,
-he'll let me know."
-
-
-
-
-ARABELLA WELD
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-I
-
-It was a chill Harlem evening. The Undertaker sat in his easy chair
-smoking his pipe of clay. About him were ranged the tools and trappings
-of his gruesome art. On trestles, over in the corner's gliding shadows,
-lay the remains he had just been monkeying with.
-
-At last, as one who reviews his work, the Undertaker arose, and scanned
-the wan map of the Departed.
-
-"He makes a great front," mused the Undertaker. "He looks out of sight,
-and it ought to fetch her."
-
-Back to his chair roamed the Undertaker. As he seated himself he
-touched a bell. The Poet of the establishment glided dreamily in.
-The Undertaker, not only straightened the kinks out of corpses to the
-Queen's taste, but he furnished epitaphs, and as well, verses for those
-grief-bitten. These latter were to run in the papers with the funeral
-notice.
-
-"Have youse torn off that epitaph for his jiblets?" asked the
-Undertaker, nodding towards Deceased.
-
-"What was it you listed for?" asked the Poet.
-
-"D' epitaph for William Henry Weld," replied the Undertaker. The Poet
-passed over the desired epitaph.
-
- William Henry Weld.
-
- (Aged 26 years.)
-
- His race he win with pain and sin,
-
- At Satan he did mock;
-
- St. Peter said as he let him in:
-
- "It's Willie, in a walk!"
-
-"You're a wonder!" cried the Undertaker, when he had finished the
-perusal, and he gave the Poet the glad hand. "Here's d' price. Go and
-fill your tank."
-
-"That should win her," reflected the Undertaker, when the poet had
-wended his way; "that ought to leave her on both sides of d' road. What
-I've done for Deceased, and that epitaph should knock her silly. She
-shall be mine!"
-
-
-II
-
-PUBLIC interest having been aroused in the corpse, it may be well to
-tell how it became that way.
-
-Deceased was William Henry Weld. Five days before the opening of
-our story, William donned his skates and lined out on one of his
-periodicals. For four days he debauched to beat four kings and an ace.
-
-And William had adventures. He paid a fine; he fell down a coal hole;
-he invaded a laundry and administered the hot wallops to the presiding
-Chinaman. On the fourth day he declared himself in on a ball not far
-from Sixth Avenue.
-
-"Ah, there!" quoth William, archly, to a beautiful being to whom he had
-not been introduced. "Ah, there! Tricksey; I choose youse for d' next
-waltz."
-
-"Nit; not on your life!" murmured the beautiful one.
-
-As William Henry Weld was about to make fitting response, a coarse,
-vulgar person approached.
-
-"What for be youse jimmin' 'round me pick?" asked this person.
-
-"That's d' stuff, Barney!" said the beautiful one. "Don't do a t'ing to
-him!"
-
-The next instant William Henry Weld was cast into outer darkness.
-
-"It's all right, Old Man!" said the friend who rescued William Henry
-Weld, "I'm goin' to take youse home. Your wife ain't on to me, an'
-I'll fake it I'm a off'cer, see! I'll give her d' razzle dazzle of her
-existence, an' square youse wit' her."
-
-"It's Willie!" said the friend to Arabella Weld, as he supported her
-husband into the sitting-room. "It's Willie, an' he's feelin' O. K. but
-weedy. Me name, madam, is Jackson--Jackson, of d' secret p'lice. Willie
-puts himse'f in me hands as a sacred trust to bring him home."
-
-"Is he sick?" moaned Arabella Weld, as she began to let her hair down,
-preparatory to a yell.
-
-"Never touched him!" assured the friend. "Naw; Willie's off his feed
-a bit. You sees, madam, Willie hired out to a hypnotist purely in d'
-interest of science, an' he's been in a trance four days, see! That's
-why he ain't home. Bein' in a trance, he couldn't send woid. Now all
-he needs is a rest for, say, a week. Oughtn't to let him get out of his
-crib for a week."
-
-At 4 o'clock the next morning William Henry Weld began to see
-blue-winged goats. Arabella Weld "sprung" a glass of water on him.
-
-"Give it a chase!" shrieked William Henry Weld, wildly waving the false
-beverage aside.
-
-In his ratty condition he didn't tumble to the pure element's identity,
-but thought it was one of those Things.
-
-At 5 o'clock A. M. William Henry Weld didn't do a thing but perish.
-When the glorious sun again poured down its golden mellow beams, the
-Undertaker had his hooks on him and Arabella Weld was a widow.
-
-
-III
-
-BUT to return to the Undertaker, the real hero of our tale. We left
-him in his studio poring over the epitaph of William Henry Weld, while
-Departed rehearsed his dumb and silent turn for eternity in the corner's
-lurking shadow. At last the Undertaker roused himself from his reveries.
-
-"I must to bed!" he said; "it waxeth late, and tomorrow I propose for
-her in wedlock."
-
-Next morning the Undertaker arose refreshed. He had smote his ear for
-full eight hours. He felt fit to propose for his life, let alone the
-delicate duke of Arabella Weld.
-
-The Undertaker's adored one was to come at noon. She wanted to size up
-Departed prior to the obsequies.
-
-Although it was but 9 o'clock, the Undertaker had to get a curve on
-himself to keep his date with Arabella Weld at midday. He had an invalid
-to measure for a coffin--it was a riveted cinch the party would die--and
-then there was a corpse to shave in the next block. These duties were
-giving him the crowd.
-
-But our hero made it; played every inning without an error, and was
-organised for Arabella Weld when she arrived.
-
-As they stood together--Arabella and the man who, all unknown to her,
-loved her so madly--looking down at Deceased, she could not repress her
-admiration.
-
-"On d' dead! I never saw Willie look so well," she said. "He's very much
-improved. You must have taken a woild of pains wit' Willie."
-
-The Undertaker was silent.
-
-Struck by this, Arabella Weld turned her full lustrous lamps on the
-Undertaker and saw it all. It was for her, the loving heart beside her
-had toiled over Deceased like an artist over a picture.
-
-Swift is Love, and the Undertaker, quivering with his great passion,
-twigged in an instant that Arabella was onto him. A vast joy swept his
-heart like a torrent.
-
-"I wanted him to make a hit for your sake," he whispered, stealing his
-arm about her.
-
-Arabella softly put his arm away.
-
-"Not now," she sighed. "It would be too soon a play. We must wait until
-we've got Willie off our hands--we must wait a year."
-
-"Wait a year!" and the pain of it bent the Undertaker like a willow.
-"Wait a year, dearest! Now, what's d' fun of that? You must take me for
-a farmer!" and his tones showed that the Undertaker was hurt.
-
-"But in Herkimer County they wait a year," faltered Arabella, wistfully.
-
-"Sure! in Herkimer!" consented the Undertaker; "but that's Up-the-state.
-A week in Harlem is equal to a year in Herkimer. Let it be a week,
-love!"
-
-"This isn't a game for Willie's life insurance?" and great crystals of
-pain and doubt swam in Arabella's glorious eyes.
-
-"Oh, me love!" cried the Undertaker, fondly, yet desperately, "plant d'
-policy wit' Willie! Send it back to d' company if youse doubts me, an'
-tell 'em to call d' whole bluff a draw."
-
-The bit of paper, containing the epitaph, fluttered to the floor from
-her nerveless mits, her beautiful head sank on the broad shoulder of the
-Undertaker, and her tears flowed unrestrained.
-
-
-IV
-
-One week had passed since William Henry Weld was solemnly pigeon-holed
-for eternal reference.
-
-The preacher received the couple in his study.
-
-"Shall I marry you with the prayer-book, or would youse prefer the short
-cut?" he asked.
-
-"Marry us on a deck of cards, if you choose!" faltered Arabella. Her
-eyes sought the floor, while the tell-tale blushes painted her lovely
-prospectus. "Only cinch the play, an' do it quick!"
-
-
-
-
-THE WEDDING
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Naw; I'm on I'm late all right, all right; but I couldn't help it,
-see!"
-
-Chucky was thirty minutes behind our hour. I'd been sitting in the
-little bar in sickening controversy with one of the vile cigars of the
-place waiting for Chucky. For which cause I was moved to mention his
-dereliction sharply.
-
-"Sorry to keep an old pal playin' sol'taire, wit' nothin' better to
-amuse him than d' len'th of rope youse is puffin'," continued Chucky in
-furtive excuse, "but I was to a weddin' an' couldn't breakaway. That's
-w'y I've got on me dress soote.
-
-"Say! on d' dead! of course I ain't in on many nuptials; but all d'
-same I likes to go. I always comes away feelin' so wise an* flossy an*
-cooney. Why, I don't know, unless it's 'cause d' guys gettin' hitched
-looks so much like a couple of come-ons--so dead sure life is such a
-cinch, such a sight of confidence like one sees at a weddin', be d'
-parts of d' two suckers who's bein' starred, never omits to make me feel
-too cunnin' to live for d' whole week after.
-
-"Sure! this weddin' was a good t'ing; what youse might call d' real
-t'ing; an' it's a spark to a rhinestone it toins out all hunk for d'
-folks involved. Who's d' two gezebos who gets nex' to each other? D'
-groom is d' boss gunner of one of our war boats, an 'd' skirt is d' cash
-goil in d' anti-Chink laundry on Great Jones street.
-
-"An' say! that little skirt's a wonder, an' don't youse forget it! She's
-good any day for any old t'ing I've got; an' all she's got to do is just
-rap, an' she takes it, see! It was me Rag sees d' goil foist one time
-when she's down be d' laundry puttin' in me t'ree-sheets for their
-weekly dose of suds.
-
-"Is me Rag an' me married? Say! I likes that, I don't t'ink! Youse is
-gettin' fanciful in your cupolo. 4 Be me little Bundle an' me married?'
-says you. Well, I should kiss a pig! Youse can take me tip for it, if
-we ain't man an' wife be d' longest system d' Cat'lic Choich could
-play--for me Rag told d' father who 'fficiates that we're out for d'
-limit--then all I got to stutter is there ain't a mug who's married in
-d' entire city of Noo York.
-
-"Cert! we're married!" Chucky went on after cheering himself with the
-tankard which the barkeeper placed before him. "If youse had let your
-lamps repose on this horseshoe scar over d' bridge of me smeller, youse
-would have tumbled to d' fac wit'out astin'.
-
-"How do I win it? I'm comin' up d' stairs like a sucker, just followin'
-a difference of opinion between me an' me loidy (I soaked her a little
-one, an' that's for fair! to show her she's off her trolley about d'
-subject in dispoote), when she cuts loose d' coal bucket at me. Say! she
-spoiled me map for a mont'.
-
-"But to get back to d' little laundry goil. Me Rag, as I says, was in
-this tub-joint where d' goil woikswit' me linen one day; an' just as she
-chases in, a fresh stiff who's standin' there t'run some raw bluff at d'
-little laundry goil she couldn't stand for, see! an' she puts up a damp
-eye an' does d' weep act.
-
-"This little laundry goil is one of them meek, harmless people--rabbits
-is bull-terriers to 'em--an' so when me onliest own beholds d' tears
-come chasin down her nose at d' remarks of this fly guy, she chucks me
-shirts in d' corner an' mounts him in a hully secont.
-
-"An' say! me Rag can scrap, an' that's no dream! I don't want none of
-it. When she an' me has carried d' conversation to d' point where she
-takes out her hairpins, an' gives her mane to d' breeze, that's me cue
-to cork. Youse can't get another rise out of me after that: I knows her.
-
-"Well! me Rag lights into this hobo who's got gay wit 'd' little goil,
-an' when she takes her hooks out of his make-up, an' he goes surgin'
-into d' street, honest! he looks like he's been fightin' a dog. Some
-lovers of true sport who's there an' payin' attention to d' mill, says
-this galoot wasn't in it wit' me Rag. She has him on d' blink from d'
-jump; she win in a loiter.
-
-"Takin' her part that way makes d' little laundry goil confidenshul
-wit' me Rag. It's about two weeks later when she sprints over an' tells
-Missus Chuck (she makes her promise to lay dead about it, too, but still
-she passes d' woid to me)--she tells me Rag, as I'm sayin', that she's
-in trouble. Her steady, she says, is one of d' top notch gunners of one
-of our big boats; he's d' main squeeze in histurrent, see! an' way up in
-d' paint. His boat's been layin' at d' Navy Yard, an' now he's ordered
-to sail for Cuba in a week an' help straighten up d' Dagoes we're havin'
-d' recent run in wit'. Meanwhiles, she says, dey won't let her beloved
-have shore leave; an' neither dey won't stand for her to come aboard an'
-see him. There youse be! a case of dead sep'ration between two lovin'
-hearts.
-
-"D' little laundry goil gives it out cold, she'll croak if she don't get
-to see her Billy before he skates off for d' wars. She says she knows
-he's out to be killed anyhow. D' question wit' her is--what's she goin'
-to do? Dey won't let her aboard d' boat, an' dey won't let him aboard d'
-land; now, what's d' soon move for her to make?
-
-"Well, me Rag--who's got a nut on her for cert--says for her to skip
-down to Washin'ton an' go ag'inst d' Sec'tary himself.
-
-"'Make him a strong talk,' says me Rag; 'give him a reg'lar
-razzle-dazzle, an' he'll write youse a poiper to them blokes aboard d'
-boat to let youse see your Billy.'
-
-"'Do youse t'ink for sure he will?' says d' little laundry goil.
-
-"'Why, it's a walkover!' says me Rag. 'If he toins out a hard game, give
-him d' tearful eye, see! an' cough a sob or two, an' he'll weaken! You
-can't miss it,' says me ownliest; 'it's easy money.'
-
-"But d' little goil was awful leary of d' play.
-
-"' Washin'ton is so far away,' she says.
-
-"' It's like goin' to Harlem,' says me Rag. 'All youse has to do to go,
-is to take some sandwidges an' apples to sort o' jolly d' trip, an' then
-climb onto d' cars an' go. When d' Con. comes t'rough, pass him your
-pasteboard, see! an' if any of them smooth marks try to make a mash,
-t'run 'em down an' t'run 'em hard. I'll go over an' do your stunt at
-d' laundry, so that needn't give youse a scare. An' be d' way! if that
-lobster I win from d' other day shows up, I'll make a monkey of him
-ag'in. I didn't spend enough time wit' him on d' occasion of our mix-up,
-anyway.'
-
-"At last d' little laundry goil makes d' brace of her life. She's so
-bashful an' timid she can't live; but she's dead stuck on seein' her
-Billy before he sails away, an' it gives her nerve. As I says, she takes
-me Rag's steer an' skins out for d' Cap'tal.
-
-"An' what do youse t'ink? D' old mut who's Sec'tary won't chin wit' her.
-Toins her down cold, he does; gives her d' grand rinky-dink wit'out so
-much as findin' out what's her racket at all.
-
-"At d' finish, however, d' little goil lands one of d' push--he's a
-cloik in d' office, I figgers--an' he hears her yarn between weeps, an'
-ups an' makes a pass or two, an' she gets d' writin'. It says to toin
-Billy loose every afternoon till d' boat pulls out.
-
-"Say! him an 'd' little goil, when she gets back, was as happy as a
-couple of kids; dey has more fun than a box of monkeys. On d' level! I
-was proud of me Rag for floor managin' d' play. She wasn't solid wit'
-Billy an 'd' little goil! Oh, no!
-
-"That's how me an' me loidy was in on this weddin' to-day wit' bot'
-trilbys. Me Rag's 'It' wit' d' little goil; youse can gamble on that!
-
-"Of course d' war's over now, an' two weeks ago d' little goil's Billy
-comes home. An' what wit' pay, an' what wit' prize money, he hits d'
-Bend wit' a bundle of d' long green big enough to make youse t'row a
-fit, an' he ain't done a t'ing but boin money ever since.
-
-"Nit; it ain't much of a story, but d' whole racket pleases me out o'
-sight, see! Considerin' d' hand me Rag plays, when I'm at that weddin'
-to-day I feels like a daddy to Billy an 'd' little goil. On d' level! I
-feels that chesty about it, that when d' priest is goin' to bat an says,
-'Is there any duck here to give d' bride away?' I cuts in on d' game wit
-'d' remark, 'I donates d' bride meself.' I s'pose I was struck dopey, or
-nutty, or somethin'.
-
-"But me Rag fetches me to all c'rrect. She clinches her mit an'
-whispers:
-
-"Let me catch youse makin' another funny break like that an' I'll cop a
-sneak on your neck.' An' then she stands there chewin' d' quiet rag an'
-pipin' me off wit' an eye of fire. 'Such an old bum as youse,' she says,
-'is a disgrace to d' Bend.'"
-
-
-
-
-POINSETTE'S CAPTIVITY
-
-
-This is a tale of last August. Poinsette was to be left alone for four
-weeks. Mrs. Poinsette had settled on Cape May as a good thing for the
-hot spell. She would hie her thither and leave Poinsette to do his worst
-without her.
-
-Poinsette did not care. He bravely told Mrs. P. she needed an outing.
-The ozone and the salty, ocean breeze would do her good. So he
-encouraged Cape May, and bid Mrs. P. go there by all means.
-
-It was decided by the Poinsettes discussing Cape May to have Poinsette
-room up town while Mrs. P. was thus Cape Maying. The Poinsette house in
-the suburbs might better be locked up during Mrs. P.'s absence from the
-city. It would be more economical; indeed, it was not esteemed safe to
-leave the Poinsette lares and penates to the unwatched ministrations of
-the Congo who performed in the Poinsette kitchen. It would be wiser
-to dismiss the servant, bolt and bar the house, obtain Poinsette
-apartments, and let him browse for food among the bounteous restaurants
-of the city.
-
-Poinsette found a room to suit in a house on West 87th Street. It
-was one of a long row of houses. Poinsette reported his victory in
-room-hunting to Mrs. P. Poinsette was now all right, and ready for what
-might come. Mrs. P. might bend her course to Cape May without further
-hesitation.
-
-Mrs. P. was glad to learn of Poinsette's apartment success. She went out
-and looked at his find to make sure that Poinsette would be comfortable.
-Incidentally, Mrs. P. kept her eye about her, to note whether the
-boarding-house books carried any pretty girls. Mrs. P. did not care to
-have Poinsette too comfortable.
-
-There were no pretty girls. Mrs. P. approved the selection. The very
-next day she kissed Poinsette good-bye and rumbled and ferried to the
-station, from which arena of smoke and noise a train leaped forth like a
-greyhound and bore her away to Cape May.
-
-Poinsette did not accompany his spouse to the station. Ten years before
-he would have done this, but experience had taught him that Mrs. P.
-could care for herself. Therefore he remained behind to fasten up the
-house. Soberly he went about locking doors, and fastening windows, and
-thinking rather sadly,--as all husbands so deserted do,--of the long,
-lonely months before him. At last all was secure, and Poinsette turned
-the key in the big front door and came away.
-
-Poinsette did not feel like work that afternoon, or the trifling
-fragment of it that was left after Mrs. P. had wended and he had locked
-up the house. He bought a few good books and several of the more solid
-periodicals. They would serve during the weary nights while Mrs. P.
-was away at the Cape. These Poinsette sent to his rooms, and, as it was
-growing six o'clock now, he turned into Sherry's for his dinner.
-
-Just where Poinsette went that evening following Sherry's, and what he
-saw and did, and who assisted at such enterprises as he embarked in,
-would be nothing to the present point and may be skipped. They are the
-private affairs of Poinsette, and not properly the subjects of a morbid
-curiosity. However, lest Mrs. P. see this and argue aught herefrom to
-feed distrust, it should be said that Poinsette saw nobody, did nothing,
-went no place unbecoming an officer and a gentleman.
-
-It was four o'clock in the morning when Poinsette, the sole passenger
-aboard a foaming night-liner, toiled through the Park and bore away for
-his new abode. Poinsette stopped the faithful night-liner two blocks
-from the door and went forward on foot. Poinsette did not care to
-clatter ostentatiously to his rooms at four in the morning the first day
-he inhabited them.
-
-Poinsette found the house without trouble, and stepped lightly to the
-door. He put the pass-key his landlady had bestowed upon him in the
-lock, but it would not turn. The bolt would not yield to his wooing.
-Do all he might, and work he never so wisely, there had sprung up a
-misunderstanding between key and lock which would not be reconciled.
-Poinsette could not get "action;" the sullen door still barred him from
-his bed.
-
-At last Poinsette gave up in despair. He might ring the bell and arouse
-the house; but he hesitated. It was his first day; the hour needed
-apology. Poinsette thought it would be better to walk gently to a
-hotel and abide for the remainder of the night. He would solve this
-incompatibility of key and lock the next afternoon.
-
-Poinsette turned away and started softly for the street. As he did so a
-policeman stepped from behind a tree and stopped him. The policeman had
-been watching Poinsette for five minutes.
-
-"Wot was you a-doin' at the door?" he asked.
-
-Poinsette, in a low, hurried voice, explained. He didn't care to awaken
-his landlady by a tumult of talk, and have that excellent woman discover
-him in the hands of the law.
-
-"If your key don't work," said the policeman, "why don't you ring the
-bell?"
-
-Poinsette cleared up that mystery. The officer was not satisfied.
-
-"To be free with you, my man," he said, seizing Poinsette's collar, "I
-think you're a burglar. If that's your boarding-house you're goin' in.
-If it isn't, you're goin' to the station."
-
-Then the policeman, with one hand wound about in Poinsette's neckwear,
-made trial of the key with the other hand. The effort was futile. The
-lock was obdurate; the key was stranger to it. Then the blue guardian
-of the city's slumbers stepped back a pace and took a mighty pull at
-the door-bell. It was a yank which brought forth a wealth of jingle and
-ring.
-
-Poinsette was glad of it. He had grown desperate and wanted the thing
-to end. Bad as it was, it would be better to face his landlady than be
-locked up in a burglar's cell. Poinsette was resigned, therefore, when a
-second-story window lifted and a night-capped head was made to overhang
-the sill and blot its silhouette against the star-lit sky.
-
-"Be you the landlady?" asked the policeman.
-
-"Yes, I am!" quoth the night-cap in a snappy, snarly way. "What do you
-want?" This with added sourness.
-
-"This party says his name is Poinsette and that he rooms here," replied
-the officer.
-
-"No such thing!" retorted the night-cap. "No such man rooms here. Don't
-even know the name!"
-
-Then the window came down with a grievous bang. It was as if it
-descended on Poinsette's heart.
-
-"You're a crook!" said the policeman, "and now you come with me."
-
-Poinsette essayed to explain that the night-cap was not his landlady;
-that he had made a mistake in the house. The policeman laughed in hoarse
-scorn at this.
-
-"D'ye think I'm goin' all along the row, yankin' door-bells out by the
-roots on such a stiff as you're givin' me?"
-
-That was the reply of the policeman to Poinsette's pleadings to try next
-door.
-
-Poinsette was led sadly off, with the grip of the law on his collar. At
-the station he was searched and booked and bolted in. On the hard plank,
-which made the sole furnishings of his narrow cell, Poinsette threw
-himself down; not to sleep, but to give himself to bitter consideration
-of his fate.
-
-As Poinsette sat there waiting for the sun to rise and friends to come
-to his rescue, the station clock struck five. It rang dismally in the
-cell of Poinsette.
-
-At Cape May, clocks of correct habits were also telling the hour of
-five. Mrs. P. was not yet asleep. The vigorous aroma of the ocean swept
-the room. The half-morning was beautiful; Mrs. P., loosely garbed, sat
-in an easy-chair at the window and enjoyed it.
-
-"I wonder what Poinsette's been doing," said Mrs. P. to herself; and
-there was a colour of jealousy in the tone. Then Mrs. P. snorted as in
-contempt. "I'll warrant he's been having a good time," she continued.
-"This idea that married men when their wives are away for the summer
-have a dull time, never imposed on me."
-
-
-
-
-TIP FROM THE TOMB
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-T. Jefferson Bender was a doctor; that is, he was not a real, legal
-doctor as yet, but he was a hard student, and looked hopefully toward
-a day when, in accordance with the statutes in such cases made and
-provided, he would be cantered through the examination chute, and
-entitled to write "M. D." following his name, with all that it implied.
-
-Each morning T. Jefferson Bender arose with the lark, and, seizing his
-dissecting knife, plunged into whatever subject was spread before him.
-In the afternoon he attended lectures, bending a hungry ear and watching
-with eager eye, while the lecturer, in illustration of his remarks,
-tortured poor people, free of charge. At night, when the day's carvings,
-and listenings, and lookings were over, T. Jefferson Bender sat in his
-easy chair and peered down the long aisle of coming time.
-
-The world was bright to the glance of T. Jefferson Bender; the future
-full of promise. In his musings he saw himself striding towards surgical
-fame and riches over a pathway strewn with the amputational harvest of
-his skill. He filled the hereafter with himself routing disease; cutting
-down deadly maladies as a farmer might the mullein-stalk; driving
-before him bacteria and bacilli in herds, droves, schools and shoals. T.
-Jefferson Bender was a happy man, and his forehead was already, in his
-imaginings, kissed by the rays of a dawning professional prosperity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-T. Jefferson Bender allowed himself but one relaxation. He was from
-Lexington, and had a true Kentuckian's love for horseflesh. Thus it was
-that he patronised the races, and was often seen at Morris Park,
-where he prevailed from a seat in the grand-stand. Here, casting off
-professional dignity as he might a garment, T. Jefferson Bender whooped
-and howled and hurled his hat on high, as race following race swept in.
-
-At intervals T. Jefferson Bender was carried to such heights of madness
-as "playing the horses." And then it was he suffered those vicissitudes
-which are chronicled colloquially under the phrase of "getting it in the
-neck."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-It was the day of the great race. The Morris Park grand-stand was
-reeling full. The quarter stretch was crowded with Democrats and
-Republicans and Mugwumps, who, laying aside political hatreds for a day,
-had come to see the races. The horses were backing and plunging in the
-grasp of rubbers and stable minions, while the gay jockeys, with their
-mites of saddles on their left arms, were being weighed in.
-
-Suddenly, a cry of terror rent the air. Otero, a headstrong beauty, had
-leaped upon the neck of Paddy the Pig, a horse rubber, and borne him
-to the earth. Paddy the Pig's neck was severely wrenched, so the crowd
-said. As the accident occurred, the victim fainted.
-
-"Is there a doctor present?" shouted one of the race judges, appealing
-to the grand-stand.
-
-T. Jefferson Bender arose from where he sat, walked over seventeen men
-and women, and leaped upon the stretch.
-
-"I am here," observed T. Jefferson Bender, while his eye lighted and his
-nostrils expanded with the ardour of a great resolve.
-
-T. Jefferson Bender bent above Paddy the Pig and felt his pulse.
-
-"He lives!" muttered T. Jefferson Bender.
-
-Then he called for whiskey.
-
-At the magical words, Paddy the Pig languidly opened his eyes, while a
-flush dimly painted his cheek.
-
-"Doc, you have saved my life!" said Paddy the Pig.
-
-"I have," said T. Jefferson Bender, willing to be impressive. "I have
-saved your life."
-
-"Doc," said Paddy the Pig in a weak, fluttering voice, "I am only a
-horse rubber, but I will make you rich. Play Skylight to win, Doc;
-Skylight! It's a tip from the tomb!"
-
-"It's a tip from the tomb!" said T. Jefferson Bender reverently, "what
-are the odds?"
-
-"It's a 20-to-1 shot, Doc. Play it. You will thus be paid for what
-you've done for me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-That night T. Jefferson Bender stood in a pawnshop. The flickering
-gaslight shone on mandolins, pistols, watches, and clothing, which had
-suffered the ordeal of the spout. T. Jefferson Bender was dusty and
-footsore. He had walked from Morris Park, and was now about to pawn his
-watch for food.
-
-[Illustration: 0217]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-T. Jefferson Bender had played Skylight.
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-Why, yes," responded Chucky readily enough, "there's choiches of all
-sorts, same as there's folks, see! Some does good an' then ag'in there's
-others that ain't so warm."
-
-It was rude, cold weather. Because of the bluster and the freezing air
-without, Chucky had abandoned his customary ale for hot Scotches. These
-and the barroom's pleasant heat, in contrast with the chill and gusts
-of the street, served to unfold Chucky's conversational powers. He even
-waxed philosophical.
-
-"For that matter," continued Chucky, critically, "there's lots of good
-lyin' 'round loose. Sometimes it's dead hard to find, but it's there all
-d' same, if youse is fly enough to pipe it off. An' it ain't all in
-d' choiches neither. As I states, I'm d' last mug to go knockin' d'
-choiches, but dey ain't got no corner on d' good of this woild. There
-is others. D' choices ain't d' only apple on d' tree. Nor yet d' onliest
-gas jet on 'd chandelier.
-
-"Say!" Chucky went on, after a further taste of the hot Scotch, "on d'
-level! I'm onto achoich what's got nex' to a bakery, an' what do youse
-t'ink? Each night d' bakery don't do a t'ing but give every poor hobo
-who fronts up to d' window a loaf of bread. That's for fair! an 'd'
-gezebo who runs d' bakery is a Dutch Sheeny at that. Would youse get
-bread if you was to go chasin' nex' door to d' choich? Nit; t'ree times
-nit! If you was to go slammin' 'round d! choich makin' a talk for a
-hand-out, all youse would get would be d' collar, see!
-
-"Onct a week that sanchewary would fill youse to d' chin on chimes; oh,
-yes! but no buns; not on your life! Chimes is d' limit wit' that choich.
-An' say! it's got money to boin! Bread at d' bakery! chimes at d'
-choich! that's how dey line t'ings up at that corner. An' I'm here
-to say as between d' brace of 'em, when it gets down to d' cold
-proposition, 'W'ich does d' most good?' d' bakery can lose that temple
-of worship in a walk. I strings me money on d' bakery. An' don't youse
-forget it!"
-
-Chucky was quite exhausted after this outburst. He revived, however,
-with the hot Scotch, which restored him mightily.
-
-"Onct," resumed Chucky, "about ten years ago, this is, I was where a
-w'ite choker was takin' up a c'llection. An' what do youse figure he
-wants it for? I'm a black Republican if he didn't break it off on us
-that he was out to make up a wad so his congregation could cel'brate d'
-fortieth birt'-day of gold in Californy. Don't that knock youse silly?
-D' w'ite choker says as how he comes from Californy an' him an' his push
-is goin' to toin themselfs loose, see! an whoop it up because dey found
-gold forty spaces back. It made me tired, honest!
-
-"'Why!' I says to this pulpit t'umper, just like that, 'Why! don't youse
-preach that gold is d' roots of evil? An' now youse is framin' up a
-blow-out over findin' it! It looks like a dead gauzy bluff to me.'
-
-"What does d' w'ite choker mark do? Just gives me d' dead face an'
-ignores me.
-
-"Youse permits yourself to be amazed at me pickin' this guy up about
-gold bein' d' seeds of evil," observed Chucky, with a touch of severity.
-This was in response to some syllable of admiration I'd let fall. "Youse
-needn't mind. I'll give youse a tip that in me yout' I was d' star
-peeple of d' Sunday school dey opens long ago at d' Five Points. That's
-straight goods, see! I was d' soonest kid at me lessons that ever comes
-down d' pike, an 'd' swiftest ever. I has all d' other kids on d' blink.
-I win a test'ment onct from d' outstretched mits of d' entire push, bar
-d' Bible class, for loinin' more verses be heart than anybody. I downs
-every kid in d' bunch. I made 'em look like a lot of suckers!" and
-Chucky paused in approving meditation over the victories of boyhood
-days.
-
-"Still d' choiches does dead lots o' good," asserted Chucky, coming back
-to the subject. "There's d' case of Bridgy McGuire. She makes two or
-t'ree trips to d' Cat'lic joint over on Mott Street, an' all she loins,
-so it sticks in her frizzes, is: 'Honour dy father an' dy mother,' see!
-An' Bridgy says herself it's that what brings her back after she's
-been run away from home for six years. Bridgy shows up just in time to
-straighten out d' game for d' McGuires at that. D' fam'ly was on d' hog
-for fair when Bridgy gets there.
-
-"Nixie, d' yarn ain't so long, nor yet so scarce; for that matter,
-there's lots more like 'em. In d' foist place, this mark, McGuire,
-Bridgy's dad, ain't so bad. Mac's a bricklayer; but d' loose screw wit'
-him was that he ain't woikin' in d' winter; an' as durin' d' summer he
-gen'rally lushes more whiskey than he lays bricks, an' is more apt to
-hit d' bottle than a job, d' McGuire household's more or less on d' bum,
-see!
-
-"I remembers Bridgy when she's so little a yard makes a frock for her.
-She was a long, slim, bony kid, wit' legs on her like she's built to
-pick hops; an' if Bridgy shows anyt'ing in her breed when young, it's a
-strong streak of step-ladder.
-
-"In her kid days I wasn't noticin' Bridgy much; d' fact was, then as
-now, I'm havin' troubles, of me own. Her mommer, who was pretty near an
-even break wit' Mac himself when it comes to hittin' up d' booze, every
-now an' then t'run back to d' religious days of her own yout', an' it's
-durin' one of these Bible fits of d' old woman that she saws Bridgy off
-on d' choich, where I speaks of her gettin 'd' hunch from d' priest,
-or somebody, that it's d' fly caper if youse is out to finish wit' d'
-heavenly squeeze, to honour your father an' mother.
-
-"As I relates, I ain't dead clear about Bridgy when she's young an'
-little, except it does come chasin' back to me that she's dead gone on
-dancin' an' knock-about woik. Onct when me an' d' McGuires is livin' on
-d' same floor, I hears a racket in d' hall like some sucker is tryin' to
-come downstairs wit' a tool chest. Naturally, I shoves me nut outside me
-door to tell him to go chase himself. But it's only Bridgy--mebby she's
-twelve at d' time--practyesing. I keeps me lamps onto her awhile, an'
-she never tumbles I'm there; for I don't say nothin', but lays dead.
-Bridgy is doin' han'-stan's, cartwheels, backbends, fallin' splits an'
-all sorts of funny stunts.
-
-"'Is this an accident, or does you mean it?' I asts at last, as Bridgy
-winds up a cartwheel wit' a split that looks like it's goin' to leave
-her on bot' sides of d' passage way.
-
-"'I'm doin' a spread,' says Bridgy, 'same as d' Boneless Wonder at
-Miner's, see!' An' here she lays her little cocoa down on her knee to
-show she's comfortable, an' dead easy in her mind.
-
-"Wit'out keepin' exact tabs on Bridgy, I'm able to state that as soon as
-she's big enough she goes to woik; an' at one time an' another she sells
-poipers, does a toin in a vest factory, or some other sweat shop; an' at
-last, when she's about seventeen, she's model in a cloak joint. She gets
-along all right, all right for a space or so, when one day d' old grey
-guy who owns d' woiks takes it into his nut he'll float into Bridgy's
-'fections.
-
-"'Love youse!' says Bridgy, to this aged stiff; 'old gent, you're dopey!
-If youse give way to a few more dreams like that, your folks 'll put you
-in d' booby house. Yous'll be in Bloomin'dale cuttin' poiper dolls d'
-foist news you know.'
-
-"At this d' wicked old geezer makes a strong talk--makes d' speech of
-his life. But Bridgy won't stand for him, nor his game.
-
-"'Come off your perch!' she says at last. 'Either you corks up or I
-quits. You don't make no hit wit' me at all.'
-
-"But d' old mucker don't let up none, an' keeps on givin' Bridgy a song
-an' dance about his love for her; so at last she makes her bluff good
-an' walks out of d' joint an' goes home.
-
-"McGuire was hot in d' collar at Bridgy t'runnin' down her job; but d'
-old woman, she says Bridgy does dead right; an' for a finish Mac an
-'d' old woman goes on a drunk an' has a fight over it; after which d'
-subject's dropped, see! an' that's d' end of it. I only sees Bridgy onct
-after that, before she screws her cocoa. That's at d' Tugman's Ball;
-where she's d' Queen spieler of d' bunch, an' shows on d' floor as light
-an' graceful as so much cigar smoke. It's right on d' heels of this that
-Bridgy fades from d' Bend for fair, an' no one has d' least line on her
-or knows where she's at.
-
-"It runs on for t'ree or four spaces, an 'd' McGuires keeps gettin'
-drunker an' harder up. More'n onct d' neighbors has to bring in d' grub,
-or dey wouldn't have done a t'ing but starve. Dey's jumpin' sideways for
-food to chew, I'll tell youse that right now, as much as half d' time.
-Durin' all this no one hears a woid about Bridgy.
-
-"Of course, no one's makin' much of a roar. There's a good deal doin'
-about d' Bend, see! An' d' comin' or d' goin' of a skirt more or less
-don't cut much ice.
-
-"It's in d' winter, an 'd' McGuires has been carryin' on bad. No
-woik, no money, no grub! On d' dead! it's a forty-to-one shot dey bot'
-finishes at d' morgue, or d' Island before d' spring comes 'round. For
-d' winter is bad in d' Bend, an' while everybody is on, that d' McGuires
-is strikin' it hard, d' most of us is havin' all we can do runnin' down
-t'ree feeds a day, so d' McGuires ain't what*d' poipers calls 'much in
-d' public eye,' after all. One evenin', however, Mac comes sprintin' to
-me, an' he's fair sober for him.
-
-"'Nit!' he says, when I asts him, 'nit; none of d' ellegunt for me!'
-
-"Then I tumbles there's a cochin on. McGuire's t'runnin' off on a drink
-was a new one on d' Bend.
-
-"'Come wit' me,' he says, 'to Roster & Bial's.'
-
-"'Come wit' youse to Koster's!' I retort. 'That's a dandy idee; youse
-ought to sew buttons on it! Come to Koster & Bial's! Who's got d'
-price?'
-
-"'Here's d' pasteboards,' says Mac.
-
-"An' I'm a liar' if he ain't got 'em. So we goes, see!
-
-"D' fift' toin on d' programme is a 'Mamselle Fleury from Paris.' She's
-down on d' bills as a singer, dancer an' high kicker. I'm leanin' back
-in me seat feelin' sore on meself for not makin' Mac hock d' tickets for
-beer, when all at onct Mac gives me a jolt in d' slats wit' his elbow,
-an' pointin' one of his main hooks at this French tart, where she's
-singin' on d' stoige--an' say! she's a boid an' a Kokobola--an' says:
-
-"'Be youse on?'
-
-"I focuses me peeps on this Fleury, all pink tights an' silks an'
-feathers, where she's doin' her toin. I'm a lobster if she ain't Bridgy
-McGuire!
-
-"'What th' 'ell! what th' bloomin' 'ell!' is all I can say; an' on d'
-square! Mac has to drag me out an' lay an oyster on me before I'm meself
-ag'in. It comes mighty near stoppin' me in d' foist round.
-
-"You sees d' finish. Bridgy's took to d' stoige. She's been over in
-London an' Paris; an' say! she's got d' game down fine as silk. She'd
-come back an' was beatin 'd' box for t'ree hundred plunks a week.
-
-"Sure! Bridgy had been up to find her folks. Foist she said she t'ought
-she'd pass 'em up. Dey had given her d' woist of it when she's a kid;
-why should she bother! But she tells us herself, talkin' it over, how
-when she struck d' old town ag'in, an' old sights begins to toin up old
-mem'ries, it starts to run in her wig about d' Bend an 'd' old days. An'
-what stan's out clearest is d' little old Cat'lic choich, an 'd' guff
-dey gives her d' onct or twict she shows up there, about honourin' her
-father an' mother. I s'pose what youse would call Bridgy's conscience
-gets a run for its money. Anyhow, somet'ing inside of her took to
-chewin' d' rag, an' showin' Bridgy's she's wrong, an' at d' last, she
-can't stand for it no longer, an' so she sends a tracer out for her
-mother an' dad, an' lands 'em.
-
-"D' McGuires live in Harlem now. Dey drinks better whiskey then dey did
-in d' Bend, an' less of it. Bridgy is a wonder an' a winner; in it wit'
-bot' feet an' has dough to back every needful racket. Yes, d' choich
-does it, give it d' credit; an' youse can gamble your last chip d'
-McGuires crosses themselfs every time dey sees one. An' dey's dead
-flossy so to do."
-
-
-
-
-TOO CHEAP
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-The scene was Washington.
-
-"Get the galoot to urge the Bill, gal; and I'll make over half them
-phosphate beds to you. The Senate has already passed it."
-
-"I'll do my best, Uncle Silver Tip," said Agnes Huntington. "Slippery
-Elm Benton loves me, and he cannot refuse his affianced wife his vote."
-
-"They'd hang him in Colorado if he did," observed Uncle Silver Tip; "but
-see to it at once, gal; the fourth of March draws on apace. All must
-then be over, or all is lost."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-Agnes Huntington pressed her expectant nose against the pane. Outside
-the snowstorm was profound. The flakes crowded the air as they fell. The
-drifts were four feet deep on Connecticut avenue. A man wrapped in furs
-pushed his way toward the Chateau d' Huntington. It was Arctic cold, but
-love beckoned him. He stamped the snow from his feet in the entry. The
-next moment Agnes Huntington had curled about his neck in a festoon of
-affection.
-
-It was Representative Slippery Elm Benton.
-
-Agnes Huntington was a beautiful creature--tall, slender, spirituelle,
-with eyes as dark and deep as the heavens at-night. Agnes Huntington had
-but one fault: she would sell the honour of the man she loved.
-
-Agnes Huntington was out for the stuff bigger than a wolf.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-Sometimes I doubt the longevity of our bliss," he said. "Despair rides
-on the crupper of my hopes at times. The Witch of Waco told how in a
-trance she saw my future spread before me like a faro layout. 'And,'
-said the Witch of Waco, I saw the pale hand of Fate put a copper on
-the queen. You may be lynched, but you will never wed.' Such was her
-bleak bode."
-
-And Slippery Elm Benton trembled like a child.
-
-"Heed her not, dearest," murmured Agnes Huntington. "Surrender yourself,
-as I do, to the solemn currents of our love. And, darling, promise me
-again, you will do what is needful for the Phosphate Bill. It would
-brighten the last days of dear old Uncle Silver Tip."
-
-"Where is your aged relative?" asked Slippery Elm Benton, moodily.
-
-"We'd better not call him, dearest," she said. "Uncle is lushing
-to-night, and he is unpleasant when he has been tanking up. What you do
-for the Phosphate Bill, you do for me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-It was "suspension day," and the Phosphate Bill went through the House
-like the grace of Heaven through a camp-meeting.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-Half of that phosphate bed is yours, gal," said Uncle Silver Tip, when
-Agnes Huntington told him the Bill was already at the White House for
-the President's signature. "It's wuth a million; an' you've 'arned it,
-gal! It was to turn sech tricks as this your old uncle sent you from
-the wild and woolly West to an Eastern seminary, and had them knock your
-horns off. It cost a bunch of cattle, but it's paid."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-There's something I must tell you, love," said Agnes Huntington; "you
-would know all in time, and it is better that you learn it now from the
-lips of your Agnes."
-
-"What is it, beautiful one?" said Slippery Elm Benton, languidly.
-
-The Congressional day, with its labours, had wearied our hero, and,
-although with the woman he loved, he still felt fatigued.
-
-"Read this," said Agnes, as she pushed a paper into her lover's hand,
-and shrank back as if frightened.
-
-The paper made over one-half of the phosphate bed to Agnes Huntington.
-
-"And it was for this you sold my vote in the House!" and Slippery Elm
-Benton laughed mockingly.
-
-"Oh, say not so, love!" said Agnes Huntington, piteously. "Rather would
-I hear you curse than laugh like that!"
-
-"And so the vote and influence of Slippery Elm Benton are basely
-bargained by the woman he loved for a one-half interest in a phosphate
-bed!"
-
-Slippery Elm Benton strode up and down the apartment, tossing his arms
-like a Dutch windmill.
-
-Agnes Huntington cowered before the wrath of her lover.
-
-"What would you have?" she cried.
-
-"What would I have!" repeated Slippery Elm Benton, with a sneer, which
-all but withered the weeping girl; "what would I have! I would have
-all--all! My vote and influence were worth the entire phosphate bed, and
-you basely accepted a paltry moiety! Go from my side, false woman; you
-who would put so low an estimate upon me! The Witch of Waco was right. I
-leave you. I leave you as one unfit to be the wife of a Congressman!"
-
-And Slippery Elm Benton, while Agnes Huntington swooned on the rug,
-rushed into the night and the snow.
-
-
-
-
-HENRY SPENY'S BENEVOLENCE
-
-
-SUMMER was here and the day was warm. Henry Speny had been walking,
-and now stood at-the corner of Tenth Avenue and Twenty-eighth street,
-mopping his brow. Henry Speny was a Conservative; and, although Mrs.
-Speny had that morning gone almost to the frontiers of a fist fight to
-make him change his underwear for the lighter and more gauzy apparel
-proper to jocund August, Henry Speny refused. He was now paying the
-piper, and thinking how much more Mrs. Speny knew than he did, when the
-Tramp came up.
-
-"Podner!" said the Tramp in a low, guttural whine, intended to escape
-the ear of the police and touch Henry Speny's heart at one and the same
-time; "podner! couldn't you assist a pore man a little?"
-
-"Assist a poor man to what?" asked Henry Speny, returning his
-handkerchief to his pocket and looking scornfully at the Tramp.
-
-He was a fat, healthy Tramp, in good condition. Henry Speny hardened his
-heart.
-
-"Dime!" replied the Tramp; "dime to get somethin' to eat."
-
-"No," said Henry Speny shortly; "I'm a half dozen meals behind the game
-myself."
-
-This last was only Henry Speny's humour. Mrs. Speny fed him twice a day.
-But Henry Speny knew that the Tramp wanted the dime for whiskey.
-
-"Well! if you don't think I want it to chew on," said the Tramp, "jest'
-take me to a bakery and buy me a loaf of bread. I'll get away with it
-right before you."
-
-"Say!" remarked Henry Speny, in a spirit of sarcastic irritation,
-"what's the use of your talking to me? There's the Charity Woodyard in
-this town, where, if you were really hungry, you would go and saw
-wood for something to eat. You can get two meals and a bed for sawing
-one-sixteenth of a cord of wood."
-
-"You can't saw wood with no such fin as this, podner!" said the Tramp;
-and pulling up his coat sleeve he displayed to Henry Speny an arm
-as withered as a dead tree. "The other's all right," he continued,
-restoring his coat sleeve; "but wot's one arm in a catch-as-catch-can
-racket with a bucksaw?"
-
-Henry Speny was conscience-stricken, but he would defeat the Tramp in
-his efforts to buy whiskey.
-
-"I'll go down to the woodyard and saw your wood myself," said Henry
-Speny.
-
-He told Mrs. Speny afterward that he could not account for the making of
-this offer, unless it was his anxiety to keep the Tramp sober. All
-the Tramp wanted was ten cents, and for Henry Speny to propose to saw
-one-sixteenth of a cord of hard wood on a hot day, when a dime would
-have made all things even, was a conundrum too deep for Henry Speny, as
-he looked back over the transaction. But he did make the proposal; and
-the Tramp accepted with a grin of gratitude.
-
-There were twenty sticks in that one-sixteenth of a cord--hard, knotty
-sticks, too. And each one had to be sawed three times; sixty cuts in
-all. It was a poor bucksaw. Before he had finished the third stick,
-Henry Speny declared that it was the most beastly bucksaw he ever
-handled in his life. The buck itself was a wretched buck, and wouldn't
-stand still while Henry Speny sawed. It had a habit of tipping over;
-and when Henry Speny put his knee on the stick to steady the refractory
-buck, the knots tore his trousers and made his legs black and blue. Then
-the perspiration got in his eyes and made them smart. When he wiped it
-away he saw two of his friends looking at him in a shocked, sober way
-from across the street. They passed on, and told everybody that Henry
-Speny was down at the Charity Woodyard sawing wood for his food. They
-said, too, that they had reason to believe he did this every day; that
-business had gone to pieces with him, and an assignment couldn't be
-staved off much longer.
-
-Henry Speny would have thrown up the job with the second stick, but
-the Tramp was already half through his meal; Henry Speny could see him
-bolting his food like a glutton through the window, from where he stood.
-
-It took Henry Speny two hours to saw those twenty sticks sixty times.
-His hands were a fretwork of blisters; his back and shoulders ached
-like a galley-slave's. Henry Speny hired a carriage to take him home; he
-couldn't stand the slam and jolt of a street car. He was laid up three
-days with the blisters on his hands, while Mrs. Speny rubbed his back
-and shoulders with Pond's Extract.
-
-On the fourth day, as Henry Speny was limping painfully toward his
-office, he heard a voice he knew.
-
-"Podner! can't you assist a pore m--Oh! beg pardon; you looked so
-different I didn't know you!" It was the fat Tramp with the withered
-arm. Without a word Henry Speny gave him ten cents and hobbled on.
-
-
-
-
-JANE DOUGHERTY
-
-(Annals of the Bend)
-
-
-What's d' flossiest good t'ing I'm ever guilty of?" said Chucky. There
-was a pause. Chucky let his eye--somewhat softened for him--rove a bit
-abstractedly about the sordid bar. At last it came back to repose on the
-beer mug before him, as the most satisfying sight at easy hand.
-
-"Now," retorted Chucky, as he wet his lip, "that question is a corker.
-'What's d' star good deed you does?' is d' way you slings it.
-
-"Will I name it? In a secont--in a hully secont! It's d' story of a
-little goil I steals, an' sticks in for ever since. This kid's two years
-comin' t'ree, when I pinched it, so to speak; an' youse can bet your
-boots! she was reg'larly up ag'inst it. A fly old sport like Chucky
-would never have mingled wit' her destinies otherwise; not on your life!
-Between youse, an' me, an' d' bar-keep over there, I ain't got no more
-natural use for kids than I have for a wet dog. But never mind! we'll
-pass up that kink in me make-up an' get down to this abduction I prides
-meself on.
-
-"It's nine spaces ago, an 'd' kid in dispoote is now goin' on twelve.
-I've been, as I states, stickin' in for her ever since, an' intends to
-play me string to a finish. But to go on wit' me romance.
-
-"As I relates, d' play I boasts of is nine spaces in d' rear, see! In
-that day I has a dandy graft. I've got me hooks on as big a bundle as a
-hundred plunks, many an' many is d' week. I'd be woikin' it now only I
-lushes too free.
-
-"Here's how in that day I sep'rated suckers from their stuff. It was
-simply fakin', of d' smoot' an' woidy sort, see! I'd make up like a
-Zulu, wit' burnt cork, an' feathers, an' queer duds; an' then I'd climb
-into an open carriage, drive to a good corner, do a bit of chin music,
-pull a crowd an' sell 'em brass jewellery.
-
-"Me patter would run something like this: D' waggon would stop an' I'd
-stand up. Raisin' me lamps to d' heavens above, I'd cut loose d' remark
-at d' top of me valves:
-
-"'It looks like rain! It don't look like a t'ing but rain!'
-
-"Wit' me foist yell d' pop'lace would flock 'round, an' in two minutes
-there would be a hundred people there. In ten, there'd be a t'ousand,
-if d' cops didn't get in their woik. I'll give youse a tip d' great
-American public is d' star gezebos to come to a dead halt, an' look an'
-listen to t'ings. More'n onct I've seen some stiff who's sprintin' for
-a doctor, make a runnin' switch at d' sound of me voice an' side-track
-himself for t'irty minutes to hear me. Dey's a dead curious lot, d'
-public is; buy a French pool on that!
-
-"W'en d' crowd is jammed all about me carriage w'eels, I'd cut loose
-some more. I'd quit d' rain question cold, an' holdin' up an armful of
-jimcrow jewellery, I'd t'row meself like this:
-
-"'Loidies an' gents,' I'd say, 'I'm d' only orig'nal Coal Oil Johnny.
-An' I'm a soon mug at that, see! I don't get d' woist of it; not on your
-neckties. I gives away two hundred an' I takes in four hundred toadskins
-(dollars) an' I don't let no mob of hayseeds do me, so youse farmers
-needn't try.
-
-"'Look at me! Cast your lamps over me! I'm one of Cetewayo's Zulu
-body-guard, an' I'm here from Africa on a furlough to saw off on suckers
-a lot of bum jewellery, an' down youse for your dough, see! I'm goin'
-to offer for sale four t'ings: I'm goin' to sell youse foist ten rings,
-then ten brooches, then ten chains, and then ten watches. An' when I
-gets down to d' watches, watch me dost; because, when I gets nex' to d'
-tickers I've reached d' point where I'm goin' to t'run youse down. I'm
-here to skin youse out of your money, an' leave youse lookin' like d'
-last run of shad.
-
-"'But there's this pecoolarity about me sellin 'd' rings. Each ring is a
-dollar apiece, an' when I've shoved ten of 'em onto youse, every galoot
-who's paid me a dollar for one, gets his dollar back an' a dollar wit'
-it for luck.
-
-"'Now here's d' rings, good folks an' all!'--here I*d flash d' rings;
-gilt, an' wort' t'ree dollars a ton!--'here's d' little crinklets! Who's
-goin' to take one at a dollar, an' at d' finish, when d' ten is sold,
-get two dollars back? Who'll be d' foist? Now don't rush me! don't crush
-me! but come one at a time. D' rings ain't wort' a dollar a ton: I only
-makes d' play for fun, an' because d' doctors who looks after me healt'
-says I'll croak if I don't travel. Who'll be d' early boid to nip a
-ring?
-
-"'There you be!' I goes on, as some rustic gets to d' front an' hands up
-d' bill. 'Sold ag'in an' got d' tin, another farmer just sucked in!'
-
-"So I goes, on," continued Chucky, after reviving his voice--which his
-exertions had made a trifle raucous--with a swig at the tankard; "so
-I'd go on until d' ten rings would be sold. Then I'd go over d' outfit
-ag'in, take back d' rings, an' give 'em each a two-dollar willyum."
-
-Now push back into d' mob, you lucky guys,' I'd say, 'an' give your
-maddened competitors to d' rear of youse a chanct to woik d' racket. I'm
-goin' to sell ten brooches now for two dollars each, an' give back
-four dollars wit' every brooch. Then I'm goin' to dazzle youse wit' ten
-chains, at five cases per chain. An' then I'll get down to d' watches,
-at which crisis, me guileless come-ons, youse must be sure to watch me,
-for it's then I'll make a monkey of youse.'
-
-"An' so I chins on, offerin' d' brooches at two dollars a t'row, an' at
-d' wind-up, when d' ten is gone, I gives back to each mucker who's got
-in, d' sum of four plunks, see!
-
-"Be that time it's a knock-down an' drag-out around me cabrioley, to see
-who's goin' to transact business wit' me, an', wit'out as much cacklin'
-as a hen makes over an egg, I goes to d' chains an' floats ten of 'em at
-five a chain. As I sells d' last, I toins sharp on some duck who's dost
-be me w'eel an' says:
-
-"'What's that? I'm a crook, am I! an' this ain't on d' level! Loidies
-an' gents, just for d' disparagin' remark of this hobo, who is no doubt
-funny in his topknot from drink, I'll go on an' sell ten more chains.
-After which I'll come down to d' watches, which is d' great commercial
-point where youse had better watch me, for it's there I'm goin' to lose
-you in a lope! An' that's for fair, see!'
-
-"Ten more chains, at five a trip, goes off like circus lem'nade, an' I
-stows d' long an' beauteous green away in me keck. As d' last one of d'
-secont ten fades into d' hooks of d' last sucker, I stows d' five he's
-coughed up for it in me raiment, an' says:
-
-"'An' now, loidies an' gents, we gets down to d' watches!'
-
-"Wit' which bluff I lugs me ticker out an' takes a squint at it.
-
-"'What th' 'ell!' I shouts. 'Here it's half-past t'ree, an' I was to be
-married at t'ree-fifteen! Hully gee! Excuse me, people, but I must fly
-to d' side of me beloved, or I'll get d' dead face; also d' frozen mit.
-I'll see youse dubs next year, if woikin' overtime wit' youse to-day
-ain't ruined me career.'
-
-"As I'm singin' out d' last, I'm givin' me driver d' office to beat his
-dogs an' chase, see! An', bein' as he's on, an' is paid extra as his
-part of d' graft, he soaks d' horses wit' d' whip an' in twenty seconts
-d' crowd is left behint, an' is busy givin' each other d' laugh. No,
-there never was no row; no mug was ever mobbed for guyin'. Nit! I always
-comes away all right, an' youse can figure it, I'm sixty good bones in
-on d' racket.
-
-"Naturally, youse would like to hear where d' kid breaks into d' play
-an' how I wins it. I'd ought to have told youse sooner, but, on d'
-level! when me old patter begins to flow off me tongue, I can't shut
-down until I've spieled it all.
-
-"But about d' kid. One afternoon I'm goin' on--it's in Joisey City--wit'
-me Zulu war-paint an' me open carriage, givin 'd' usual mob d' usual
-jolly. T'ings is runnin' off d' reel like a fish new hooked, an' I'm
-down to me fift' chain. Just then I hears a woman say:
-
-"'Fly's d' woid, Sallie! Here's your old man, an' he's got his load! He
-won't do a t'ing to youse! Screw out, Sal! screw out!"
-
-"But Sallie, who's a tattered lookin' soubrette, wit' a kid in her arms,
-an' who's been standin' dost be one of me hind w'eels, don't get no
-chanct to skin out, see! There's a drunken hobo--as big an' as strong as
-a horse--who's right up to her when d' foist skirt puts her on. As she
-toins, he cops her one in d' neck wit'-out a woid. Down she goes like
-ninepins! As she lands, d' back of her cocoa don't do a t'ing but t'ump
-a stone horse-block wit' a whack! As d' blood flies, I'm lookin' down
-at her. I sees her map fade to a grey w'ite under d' dirt; she bats her
-lamps onct or twict; an' d' nex' moment I'm on wit'out tellin' that her
-light is out for good.
-
-"As Sallie does d' fall, d' kid which she's holdin' rolls in d' gutter
-under d' carriage.
-
-"'T'run d' kid in here!' I says to d' mark who picks it up.
-
-"Me only idee at d' time is to keep d' youngone from gettin 'd' boots
-from d mob that's surgin' round, an' tryin' to mix it up wit' d' drunken
-bum who's soaked Sal. D' guy who gets d' kid fires it up to me like it's
-a football. I'm handy wit' me hooks, so I cops it off in midair, an'
-stows it away on d' seat.
-
-"Be that time d' p'lice has collared d' fightin' bum all right, an' some
-folks is draggin' Sal, who's limp an' dead enough, into a drug shop.
-
-"It's all up wit' me graft for that day, so after lookin' at d' youngone
-a secont, I goes curvin' off to d' hotel where I hangs out. While I'm
-takin' me Zulu make-up off, d' chambermaid stands good for d' kid.
-When I sees it ag'in, it's all washed up an' got some decent duds on.
-Say! on d' dead! it was a wonder!
-
-"Well, to cut it short," said Chucky, giving the order for another
-mug of ale, "I loins that night that d' mother is dead, an' d' drunken
-hobo's in d' holdover. As it s a cinch he'll do time for life, even if
-he misses bein' stretched, I looks d' game all over, an' for a wind-up
-I freezes to d' kid. Naw; I couldn't tell why, at that, see! only d'
-youngone acts like it's stuck on me.
-
-"Nixie; I never keeps it wit' me. I've got it up to d' Sisters' school.
-Say! them nuns is gone on it. I makes a front to 'em as d' kid's uncle;
-an' while I've been shy meself on grub more'n onct since I asted d'
-Sisters to keep it, I makes good d' money for d' kid right along, an'
-I always will. What name does I give it? Jane--Jane Dougherty; it's me
-mudder's name. Nit; I don t know what I'll do wit' Jane for a finish. I
-was talkin' to me Rag only d' other day about it, an' she told me, in
-a week or so, she'd go an' take a fall out of a fortune-teller, who, me
-Rag says, is d' swiftest of d' whole fortune-tellin' push. Mebby we'll
-get a steer from her."
-
-
-
-
-MISTRESS KILLIFER
-
-(Wolfville)
-
-
-This is of a day prior to Dave Tutt's taking a wife, and a year
-before the nuptials of Benson Annie, as planned and executed by Old Man
-Enright, with one, French.
-
-Wolfville is dissatisfied; what one might call peevish. A man has been
-picked up shot to death, no one can tell by whom; no one has hung for
-it. Any one familiar with the Western spirit and the Western way would
-note the discontent by merely walking through the single, sun-burned
-street. When two citizens of the place make casual meeting in store or
-causeway, they confine their salutations to gruff "how'd!" and pass on.
-Men are even seen to drink alone in a sullen, morbid way.
-
-Clearly something is wrong with Wolfville. The popular discontent is
-so sufficiently pronounced as to merit the notice of leading citizens.
-Therefore it is no marvel that when Old Man Enright, who, by right of
-years--and with a brain as clear and as bright as a day in June--is the
-head man of the hamlet, meets Doc Peets at the bar of the Red Light, the
-discussion falls on affairs of public concern.
-
-"Whatever do you reckon is the matter with this camp, Enright?" asks
-Doc Peets, as they tip their liquor into their throats without missing a
-drop.
-
-Doc Peets is the medical practitioner of Wolfville, but his grammar,
-like that of many another man, has lost ground before his environment.
-
-"Can't tell!" replied Enright, with a mien dubious yet thoughtful.
-"Looks like the whole outfit is somehow on a dead kyard. Mebby it's that
-Denver party gettin' downed last week an' no one lynched. Some folks
-says the Stranglers oughter have swung that Greaser."
-
-"Well!" retorts Doc Peets, "you as chief of the Stranglers, an' I as
-a member in full standin', knows thar's no more evidence ag'in that
-Mexican than ag'in my _pinto_ hoss."
-
-"Of course, I knows that too!" replies Enright, "but still I sorter
-thinks general sentiment lotted on a hangin'. You know, Doc, it ain't so
-important from a public stand that you stretches the right gent, as that
-you stretches somebody when it's looked for. Nacherally it would have
-been mighty mortifyin' to the Mexican who's swung off at the loop-end of
-the lariat for a killin' he ain't in on; but still I holds the belief it
-would have calmed the sperit of the camp. However, I may be 'way off
-to one side on that; it's jest my view. Set up the nosepaint ag'in,
-barkeep!"
-
-While Doc Peets is slowly freighting his glass with a fair allowance, he
-is deep in meditation.
-
-"I've an idee, Enright," says Doc Peets at last. "The thing for us to
-do is to give the public some new direction of thought that'll hold
-'em quiet. The games is all dead at this hour, an' the boys ain't doin'
-nothin'; s'pose we makes a round-up to consider my scheme. The mere
-exercise will soothe 'em."
-
-"Shall we have Jack Moore post a notice?" asks
-
-Enright. "He's Kettle Tender to the Stranglers, an' I reckons what he
-does that a-way makes it legal."
-
-"No," says Peets, "let's rustle 'em in an' hold the meetin' right now
-an' yere in the Red Light. Some of the boys is feelin' that petulant
-they're likely to get to chewin' each other's manes any minute. I'm
-tellin' you, Enright, onless somethin' is done mighty _poce tiempo_ to
-cheer 'em, an' convince 'em that Wolfville is lookin' up an' gettin'
-ahead on the correct trail, this outfit's liable to have a killin'
-any time at all. The recent decease of that Denver person won't be a
-marker!"
-
-"All right!" says Enright, "if thar ain't no time for Moore an' a
-notice, a good, handy, quick way to focus public interest would be to
-step to the back door, an' shake the loads outen my six-shooter. That'll
-excite cur'osity, an' over they'll come all spraddled out."
-
-Thus it comes to pass that the afternoon peace of Wolfville is suddenly
-disparaged and broken down by six pistol shots. They follow each other
-like the rapid striking of a Yankee clock.
-
-"Any one creased?" asks Jack Moore, by general consent a fashion of
-marshal and executive officer for the place, and who, followed by the
-population of Wolfville, rushes up the moment following the shooting.
-
-"None whatever!" replies Doc Peets, cheerfully. "The shootin' you-alls
-hears is purely bloodless; an' Enright an' me indulges tharin onder what
-they calls the 'public welfare clause of the constitootion.' The intent
-which urges us to shake up the sereenity of the hour is to convene the
-camp, which said rite bein' now accomplished, the barkeep asks your
-beverages, an' the business proceeds in reg'lar order."
-
-Enright, who has finished replenishing the pistol from which he evicted
-the loads, draws a chair to a monte table and drums gently with his
-fingers.
-
-"The meetin' will please bed itse'f down!" says Enright, with a sage
-dignity which has generous reflection in the faces around him. "Doc
-Peets, gents, who is a sport whom we all knows an' respects, will now
-state the object of this round-up. The barkeep meanwhile will please
-continue his rounds, the same not bein' deemed disturbin'; none
-whatever."
-
-"Gents, an' fellow townsmen!" says Doc Peets, rising at the call of
-Enright and stepping forward, "I avoids all harassin' mention of a
-yeretofore sort. Comin' down to the turn at once, I ventures the remark
-that thar's somethin' wrong with Wolfville. I would see no virtue in
-pursooin' this subject, which might well excite the resentment of all
-true citizens of the town, was it not that I feels a crowdin' necessity
-for a change of a radical sort. Somethin' must be proposed, an'
-somethin' must be did. I am well aware thar's gents yere to-day as holds
-a conviction that a bet is overlooked in not stringin' the Mexican last
-week on account of the party from Denver. That may or may not be true;
-but in any event, that hand's been played, an' that pot's been lost
-an' won. Whether on that occasion we diskyards an' draws for the best
-interests of the public, may well pass by onasked. At any rate we
-don't fill, an' the Greaser wins out with his neck. Lettin' the past,
-tharfore, drift for a moment, I would like to hear from any gent present
-somethin' in the line of a proposal for future action; one calc'lated
-to do Wolfville proud. As affairs stand our pride is goin' our brotherly
-love is goin', our public sperit is goin', an' the way we're p'intin'
-out, onless we comes squar' about on the trail, we won't be no
-improvement on an outfit of Digger Injuns in a month. Gents, I pauses at
-this p'int for su'gestions."
-
-As Doc Peets sits down a whispered buzz runs through the room. It is
-plain that what he has said finds sympathy in his audience.
-
-"You've heard Peets," observes Enright, beating softly. "Any party with
-views should not withhold 'em. I takes it we-all is anxious for the good
-of Wolfville. We should proceed with wisdom. Red Dog, our tinhorn rival,
-is a-watchin' of this camp, ready to detect an' take advantages of
-any weakenin' of sperit on the Wolfville part. So far Red Dog has been
-out-lucked, out-played, an' out-held. Wolfville has downed her on the
-deal, an' on the draw. But, to continue in the future as in the past,
-requires to-day that we acts promptly, an' in yoonison, an' give the
-sitooation, mentally speakin', the best turn in the box."
-
-"What for a play would it be?" asks Dan Boggs, doubtfully, as he rises
-and bows stiffly to Enright, who bows stiffly in return; "whatever for a
-play would it be to rope up one of these yere lecture sharps, which the
-same I goes ag'inst the other night in Tucson? He could stampede over
-an' put us up a talk in the warehouse of the New York Store; an' I'm
-right yere to say a lecture would look mighty meetropolitan, that a-way,
-an' lay over Red Dog like four kings an' an ace."
-
-"Whatever was this yere ghost dancer you adverts to lecturin' about?"
-asks Jack Moore.
-
-"I never do hear the first of it," replies Boggs. "Me an' Old Monte,
-the stage driver, is projectin' about Tucson at the time we strikes this
-lecture game, an* it's about half dealt out when he gets in on it. But
-as far as we keeps tabs, he's talkin' about Roosia an' Siberia, an' how
-they were pesterin' an' playin' it low on the Jews. He has a lay-out
-of maps an' sech, an' packs the whole racket with him from deal box to
-check-rack. Folks as _sabes_ lectures allows he turns as strong a game,
-with as high a limit, as any sport that ever charged four bits for a
-back seat. The lecture sharp's all right; the question is do you-alls
-deem highly of the scheme? If it's the sense of this yere town, it don't
-take two days to cut this short-horn out of the Tucson herd an' drive
-him over yere.
-
-"Onder other, an' what one might call a more concrete condition of
-public feelin'," says Doc Peets, cutting rapidly and diplomatically into
-the talk, "the hint of our esteemed townsman would be accepted on the
-instant. But to my mind this yere camp ain't in no proper frame of
-mind for lectures on Roosia. It'll be full of trouble,--sech a talk. I
-_sabes_ Roosia as well as I does an ace. Thar's an old silver tip they
-calls the Czar, which is their language for a sort o' national chief of
-scouts, an' he's always trackin' 'round for trouble. Thar's bound to be
-no end of what you might call turmoil in a lecture on Roosia, and the
-sensibilities of Wolfville, already harrowed, ain't in no shape to bear
-it. Now, while friend Boggs has been talkin', my idees has followed off
-a different waggon track. What we-all needs, is not so much a lecture,
-which is for a day, but somethin' lastin', sech as the example of a
-refined an' elevated home life abidin' in our very midst. What Wolfville
-pines for is the mollifyin' inflooence of woman. Shorely we has Faro
-Nell! who is pleasantly present with us, a-settin' back thar alongside
-Cherokee Hall; an' that gent never makes a moccasin track in Wolfville
-who don't prize an' value Nell. Thar ain't a six-shooter in camp but
-what would bark itse'f hoarse in her behalf. But Nell's young; merely a
-yearlin' as it were. What we wants is the picture of a happy household
-where the feminine part tharof, in the triple capacity of woman, wife
-an' mother, while cherishin' an' carin' for her husband, sheds likewise
-a radiant inflooence for us."
-
-"Whoopee! for Doc Peets!" shouts Faro Nell, flourishing her broad
-sombrero over her young curls.
-
-"Pausin' only to thank our fair young townswoman," says Doc Peets,
-bowing gallantly to Faro Nell, who waves her hand in return, "for her
-endorsements, which the same is as flatterin' as it is priceless, I
-stampedes on to say that I learns from first sources, indeed from the
-gent himse'f, that one of the worthiest citizens of Wolfville, Mr.
-Killifer, who is on the map as blacksmith at the stage station, has a
-wife in the states. I would recommend that Mr. Killifer be requested to
-bring on this esteemable lady to keep camp for him. The O. K. Restaurant
-will lose a customer, the same bein' the joint where Kif gets his daily
-_con-carne_; but Rucker, the landlord, will not repine for that. What
-will be Rucker's loss will be general gain, an' for the welfare of
-Wolfville, Rucker makes a sacrifice. Mr. Chairman, my su'gestion takes
-the form of a motion."
-
-"Which said motion," responds Enright, with such vigorous application of
-his fist to the purpose of a gavel that nervous spirits might well fear
-for the results, "which said motion, onless I hears a protest, goes
-as it lays. Thar bein' no objection the chair declares it to be the
-commands of Wolfville that Syd Killifer bring on his wife. What heaven
-has j'ined together, let no gent----"
-
-"See yere, Mr. Chairman!" interposes Killifer, with a mixture of
-decision and diffidence, "I merely interferes to ask whether, as the
-he'pless victim of this on-looked for uprisin', do my feelin's count?
-Which if I ain't in this--if it's regarded as the correct caper to lay
-waste the future of a gent, who in his lowly way is doin' his best to
-make good his hand, why! I ain't got nothin' to say. I'm impugnin' no
-gent's motives, but I'm free to remark, these yere proceeding strikes me
-as the froote of reckless caprice."
-
-"I will say to our fellow gent," says Enright with much dignity, "that
-thar's no disp'sition to force a play to which he seems averse. If from
-any knowledge we s'posed we entertained of the possession of a sperit on
-his part, which might rise to the aid of a general need--I shorely hopes
-I makes my meanin' plain--we over-deals the kyards, all we can do is to
-throw our hands in the diskyard an' shuffle an' deal ag'in."
-
-"Not at all, an' no offence given, took or meant!" hastily retorts
-Killifer, as he balances himself uneasily upon his feet, and surveys
-first, Enright and then Peets. "I has the highest regard for the chair,
-personal, an' takes frequent occasion to remark that I looks on Doc
-Peets as the best eddicated scientist I ever sees in my life. But
-this yere surge into my domestic arrangements needs to be considered.
-You-alls don't know the lady in question, which, bein' as it's my wife,
-I ain't assoomin' no airs when I says I does."
-
-"Does she look like me, Kif?" asks Faro Nell from her perch near
-Cherokee Hall.
-
-"None whatever, Nell!" responds Killifer. "To be shore! I ain't basked
-none in her society for several years, an' my mem'ry is no doubt blurred
-by stampedes, an' prairie fires, an' cyclones, an' lynchin's, an' other
-features of a frontier career; but she puts me in mind, as I recalls the
-lady, of an Injun uprisin' more'n anythin' else. Still, she's as good a
-woman as ever founds a flap-jack. But she's haughty; that's what she is,
-she's haughty.
-
-"I might add," goes on Killifer, in a deprecatory way, "that inasmuch
-as I ain't jest lookin' for the camp yere to turn to me in its hour
-of need, this proposal to transplant the person onder discussion to
-Wolfville, is an honour as onexpected as a rattlesnake in a roll of
-blankets. But you-alls knows me!"--And here Killifer braces himself
-desperately.--"What the camp says, goes! I'm a _vox populi_ sort
-of sport, an' the last citizen to lay down on a duty. Still!"--here
-Killifer's courage begins to ebb a little--"I advises we go about this
-yere enterprise mighty conserv'tive. My wife has her notions, an' now
-I thinks of it she ain't likely to esteem none high neither of our
-Wolfville ways. All I can say, gents, is that if she takes a notion
-ag'in us, she's as liable to break even as any lady I knows."
-
-"Thar ain't a gent here but what honours Kif," says the sanguine Peets,
-as he looks encouragingly at Killifer, who has resumed his seat and is
-gloomily shaking his head, "for bein' frank an' free in this."
-
-"Which I don't want you-alls to spread your blankets on no ant-hill, an'
-then blame me!" interrupts Killifer dejectedly.
-
-"I believe, Mr. Chairman," continues Doc Peets, "we fully onderstands
-the feelin's of our townsman in this matter. But I'm convinced of the
-correctness of my first view. Thar can shorely be nothin' in the daily
-life of Wolfville at which the lady could aim a criticism, an' we needs
-the beneficent example of a home. I would tharfore insist on my plan
-with perhaps a modification."
-
-"I rises to ask the Preesidin' Officer a question!" interrupts Dave
-Tutt.
-
-"Let her roll!" retorts Enright.
-
-"How would it be to invite Kif's wife to come yere on a visit?" queries
-Tutt. "Sorter take her on probation! That's the way an oncle of mine
-back in Missouri j'ines the Meth'dist Church. An' it's lucky the
-congregation takes them precautions; which they saves the trouble of
-cuttin' the old felon out of the herd later, when he falls from grace.
-Which last he shorely does!"
-
-"Not waitin' for the chair to answer," replies Doc Peets, "I holds
-the limitation of Tutt to be good. I tharfore pinches down my original
-resolootion to the effect that Kif bring his wife yere for a month. Let
-her stack up ag'inst our daily game, an' triumph through a deal or so,
-an' she'll never quit Wolfville nor Wolfville her. I shorely holds the
-present occasion the openin' of a new era."
-
-It is a month later, perhaps, when everybody assembles at the
-post-office to receive the lady on whom the local public has built so
-many hopes. Killifer has gone over to Tucson to act as her escort into
-Wolfville, and, as he said, "to sorter break the effect."
-
-She is an iron-visaged heroine. As Killifer hands her from the stage--a
-ceremony upon which he bestows that delicate care wherewith he would
-have aided the unloading of so much dynamite--Doc Peets steps gallantly
-forward, raising his hat. Doc Peets is the proprietor of the only stiff
-hat in town, and presumes on it.
-
-[Illustration: 0253]
-
-"Who is that insultin' drunkard, Mr. Killifer?" demands the lady, as she
-bends her eyes on the suave Peets, with such point-blank wrath that it
-silences the salutation on Peets' lips; "no friend of your'n I hope?"
-
-"Which I says it in confidence," remarks Old Monte, as an hour later
-he refreshes himself at the bar of the Red Light, "for I holds it
-onprofessional to go blowin' the private affairs of my passengers, but
-I shorely thinks the old grizzly gives Kif a clawin' on the way over.
-I hears him yell like a wolf back in Long's canyon. To be shore! he's
-inside an' I can't see, but I'm offerin' two to one up to $100 she was
-lickin' him; if I don't I'm a Siwash!"
-
-It turns out as Killifer predicted. He read the lady aright. There
-is nothing in Wolfville to which she yields approval. It would be as
-impossible as it would be terrific, to repeat in print the conduct
-of this remarkable woman. She utterly abashes Enright; while such
-hare-hearts as Jack Moore, Cherokee Hall, Dave Tutt, Texas Thompson,
-Short Creek Dave and Dan Boggs, fly from her like quicksilver. Even Doc
-Peets acknowledges himself defeated and put to naught. The least of
-her feats is the invasion of a peaceful poker game to which Killifer
-is party, and the sweeping confiscation of every dollar in the bank on
-claim that it is money ravished from Killifer by venal practices. The
-mildest of her plans is one to assail the Red Light with an axe, should
-she ever detect the odour of whiskey about Killifer again.
-
-"An' do you know, Doc!" observes Enright, a fortnight later, as they
-meet for their midday drink, "the boys sorter lays it on you. You know
-me, Doc! I'll stand up ag'in the iron for you; but as a squar' man,
-with a fairly balanced mind, I'm bound to admit the boys is right. Now
-I don't say they feels resentful; it's more like they was mournful over
-what used to be, an' a day of peace gone by. But you knows what people
-be whose burdens is more'n they can bear; an' if I was you, this yere
-lady or I would leave the camp. I'm the last gent to go dictatin' about
-the details of another gent's game; but you an' me, Doc, has been old
-friends, an' as a warnin' from a source which means you well, I gives it
-to you cold the camp is gettin' hostile."
-
-It is always a spectacle to inspire, to witness a great soul rise to an
-occasion. Doc Peets never so proves the power of his nature as now, when
-the tremendous shadow of "Kif's wife" has fallen across Wolfville like a
-blight. Peets, following Enright's forebodings, holds a long and secret
-conference with the unhappy Killifer. That night Peets rides to Tucson.
-The next day Old Monte, with his six horses a-foam, comes crashing into
-Wolfville two hours ahead of schedule. Before even a mail bag is thrown
-off, Old Monte unpouches a telegram received at the Tucson office for
-Mistress Killifer. Its earmark is Illinois; its contents moving. No
-matter what it tells, its news is cogent enough to decide the lady's
-mind.
-
-The next morning this dread woman departs, leaving, as she came, with a
-withering look at all around. That night Killifer gets drunk. Wolfville
-not only pardons Killifer in his weakness; it joins him.
-
-"But you suppresses the facts, Kif, when you says she's haughty,"
-observes Dan Boggs. "Haughty, as a deescription, ain't a six-spot!"
-
-"It's with no purpose, Kif," says Doc Peets, as he fills his glass, "to
-discourage you--whom I sympathises with as an onfortunate, an' respects
-as a dead game gent--that I yereby invites the pop'lation to join me in
-a drink of congratulation on Wolfville's escape from your wife. An' all
-informal though this assemblage be, I offers a resolootion that this,
-the 23d of August, the date when the lady in question pulls her freight,
-be an' remain forevermore a day of yearly thanksgivin' to Wolfville."
-
-"Which I libates to that myse'f!" says Killifer as he drains his cup
-to the last lingering drop. "Also I trusts this camp will proceed with
-caution the next time it turns in to play my domestic hand."
-
-
-
-
-BEARS
-
-
-Bears are peaceful folk. They are a mild and lowly citizenry of the
-woods--I'm talking of the black sort--and shuffle modestly away the
-moment they hear you coming. We get many of our impressions of the
-ferocity of animals and the deadly poisons of reptiles from an unworthy
-sort of hearsay evidence. Much of it comes from Mexicans and Indians
-rather than from real experience. Now I wouldn't traduce either the
-Mexicans or the Indians, for their lot is one of hard, sodden ignorance;
-but it must be conceded that they're by no means careful historians, and
-run readily to tales of the marvellous and the tragic. I am going back
-to a bear story I have in mind before I get through; but I want to
-interject here, while I think of it, that though the centipede, the
-rattlesnake, the tarantula and the Gila monster, have bitter repute as
-able to deal death with their poisonous feet or fangs, I was never, in
-my years on the plains and in the mountains, able to secure proof of
-even the shallowest sort that a death, whether of man or animal, had
-ever resulted from the sting of any one of these. On the other hand,
-I have been with men who were bitten by rattlesnakes, or stung by
-tarantulas; or who while asleep had suffered as the inadvertent
-promenade of a centipede, with its hundred hooked, poison-exuding feet;
-but none of them died. They were sick in an out-of-sort, headache fashion
-for a day or two; the bitten place inflamed and was sore for a week or
-a month; that was all. I suppose I've known of fully one hundred horses,
-cows and sheep which were bitten by rattlesnakes; none died. They were
-invariably fanged in the nose, too, as they grazed towards my lord of
-the rattlers. On more than one occasion I kept the animal so bitten in
-sight to note results. Its head would swell and puff; it would lounge
-about with a sick listlessness for several days; then the poison would
-wear away in force, and back to its grass it would go with the wire-edge
-appetite of a sailor home from sea.
-
-But about bears. I was remarking that my black, shaggy cousins of the
-woods were a peaceful folk. So much is this true, and so little do their
-neighbours apprehend violence at their clumsy hands, that they who live
-in regions which abound in bears evince not the least alarm about the
-safety of their children. The babies, some as young as five or six
-years, roam the same mountains with the bears; and, while the latter
-will swoop upon a pig and run dangers with wide-open eyes in doing it,
-never did I hear of one who disturbed a ringlet on a child's head. They
-had daily opportunities enough, for many are the households to live in
-the wide, pine-sown Rockies.
-
-Our bears, too, are creatures of vast physical power. Often, as I rode
-the mountain for cattle, have I come across a dead and fallen pine
-tree, which would have defeated the best efforts of a horse to move,
-completely torn from its bed in the earth and leaves, and either
-overturned or thrown one side by the mighty arms of a bear. He was in
-search of a dinner cf grubs--those white, helpless worms which make
-their dull homes under rotten logs--and Sir Bear made no more ado of
-lifting and laying aside a pine tree in his grub-hunt than would you or
-I of a billet of firewood.
-
-While in the mountains I marvelled over the fact that the bears and the
-mountain lions never assailed the young calves. The hills were rife
-with cattle, and every spring found the canyons and oak-bushed slopes
-a perfect nursery of calves. And yet neither the panthers nor the bears
-disturbed them. It was due, I think, more to the bellicose character of
-the old cow and her relatives, than any uprightness of character on the
-part of the bears, and the panthers. Let a calf raise but one yell of
-distress in those mountains--and I assure you he can make their walls
-and valleys ring with his youthful music when so disposed--and, out of
-canyons and off mesas, over logs and crashing through the oak bushes,
-will come plunging all the cattle within hearing. Not thirty seconds
-will elapse before as many cattle will be by the side of the threatened
-calf, lusting for battle. They make such a phalanx of sharp, threatening
-horns, coupled with their rolling, wrath-red eyes and ferocious
-breathings, that, I warrant you, they have so shocked the nerves of past
-bears and panthers, it has become instinct with these latter to give the
-whole horned, truculent brood a wide berth.
-
-The Indians are very fond of the bear for his wisdom, and he divides
-their respect with the beaver as a personage of sagacity. The curiosity
-of my shaggy friend would shame any boy or girl of ten. You may be sure,
-were a bear to visit you for a week at your home, he would open every
-door, ransack every bureau, take every garment off every hook in every
-closet--and I had almost said "try it on"--before he had been with you
-an hour. Not a box nor a barrel, not a nook nor cranny, from cellar to
-ridge pole, would escape his investigation. His black nose would sniff
-at every crack, his black hand explore every crevice. Nor, beyond what
-he bestowed in his remorseless stomach, would he destroy anything.
-I have the black coat of a bear at my house, who might be wearing it
-himself to-day, were it not for his curiosity.
-
-There was a salt spring near my camp on the upper Red River; perhaps
-two miles away, which is "near" in the mountains. This salt spring was
-popular with the deer. They repaired thither to lick the salt earth
-about the waters. I had, among the lumber at my camp, a big, two-spring
-trap of steel; I suppose it must have weighed sixty pounds. It occurred
-to me that a lazy way to kill a deer would be to set this wide-jawed
-engine near the spring and let one walk into it. I'm not proud of
-this plan as a method in deer-killing, and wouldn't do it now. On this
-occasion, however I was not particular. I "set" the trap at my camp--for
-I had to use a hand-spike to crush down the springs, and it all gave me
-a deal of work and trouble--and then, with its jaws wide open, but held
-so that it wouldn't nip me in case it did snap, I crept carefully aboard
-my pony and rode over to the spring. The next morning early I had to go
-again to remove the trap, as during the day the cattle would take the
-places of the deer at this delectable salt spring, and I didn't care to
-break the legs of a thirty-dollar steer with my trapping. I went over
-while it was yet dark, and found no deer in the trap. I took it and
-hid it, face downward--the jaws still spread and "set"--by the of a big
-yellow pine log, which stretched its decayed length along the slope of
-the canyon. There I left it, intending to return and rearrange it for
-deer at dusk.
-
-It snowed that day, and as I grew lazy towards night, I left my trap
-where I'd hidden it by the yellow pine log. The deer would have one
-night of safety. What was safety for the deer proved otherwise for the
-bear.
-
-The following day I rode over just as the canyons were getting dark and
-the cattle climbing out of them to pass the night on the hills. Behold!
-my trap was gone!
-
-There was a great flourish of tracks in the snow; long plantigrade
-impressions like the bare footprints of some giant! I knew that a bear
-had somehow acquired my trap, or the trap, him; at that time I couldn't
-tell which. To make it short, however, it came to this: The bear,
-scouting in a loaferish way down the hill, and pausing no doubt to make
-an estimate of the probable grubs he would find beneath this particular
-yellow pine next summer, had chanced upon the trap. Here was a great
-find. Thoughts of grubs and common edible things at once deserted him.
-The mysterious novelty he had found took possession of his addle-pate
-like a new toy. A wolf or a fox would have smelled the odour of my
-handling, even off the cold steel of the trap, and been over the hills
-and far away in a twinkling. Your wolf is the canniest of timber folk;
-a grey Scotchman of the mountains. But my bear was reared on a different
-bottle. He sat down at once and actually took the new plaything in his
-lap. Then it would seem as if he deliberately thrust his paw into it and
-sprung its savage jaws on his forearm.
-
-In his first wrathful surprise, my bear tore up the snow and bushes for
-twenty feet about; but at last he set off with the trap on his foot.
-
-It was late. For half an hour I followed the broad track where his
-bearship had dragged the trap in the snow at a gallop. It was dark when
-at last I turned off for camp. Bright and betimes, I took the trail next
-day. It carried me over some ten miles of rough, close country. About
-midday I stood on the bluff edge of the Canyon Caliente, picking a
-pathway with my eyes along its steep, perilous side for my pony to get
-down. The bear had crossed here; but he was in the roughest of
-moods, and seemingly made no more of hurling himself over twenty-foot
-precipices--himself and my trap--or sublimely sliding down dangerous
-descents of hundreds of feet where foothold was impossible, than you
-would of eating buttered buns. So I had to pick out paths for myself; I
-couldn't trust to so reckless and uncivil an engineer as my bear.
-
-As I sat in the saddle running a quick eye over the slope for a trail,
-I, of an instant, heard a most surprising noise. It was indeed a noble
-racket, and might have passed for a blacksmith shop. But I knew the
-hills too well. It was of a verity my bear; and from the riot he was
-making, it was plain I would have to get there soon if I wanted to save
-the trap.
-
-This formidable uproar came from across the Caliente, perhaps half a
-mile. I slid from the saddle and went forward afoot. It didn't take long
-to cover the distance. I fell and tumbled down the first third, much as
-the bear had done a bit earlier.
-
-Once on the other side, I came upon my rough gentleman cautiously, and
-found him sitting by the side of a round, boulder-like rock, something
-the size and contour of a load of hay. And he was smiting the enduring
-granite with my trap in a way which told more of his feelings than would
-have been possible with mere words. He would raise his arm clumsily,
-60-pound trap and all, and then bring it against the rock with all the
-fervour of rage and giant strength.
-
-He was so wrapt in the enterprise, he never heard me until a shot from
-my Winchester met him just under the ear. One shot did it; and I had
-trap and bear. He had ruined the trap; one spring was broken and the
-whole disparaged beyond my power to repair. Wherefore I stripped him of
-his black overcoat to pay for the damage he had done; and that and the
-grease I took from him covered all costs and damages.
-
-
-
-
-THE BIG TOUCH
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Me fren', Mollie Matches," observed Chucky.
-
-That was our introduction. A moment later Chucky whispered in a hoarse
-aside:
-
-"Matches is d' dip I chins youse about, who gets d' Hummin' Boid t'run
-into him."
-
-"Matches," as Chucky called him, was a sad, grey, broken man. Years
-and a life of flight and anxious furtivity had told on him. His eye was
-dancing and birdlike; resting on nothing, roving always; the sure mark
-of one sort of criminal. Matches drank for an hour before he felt at
-ease. That time arrived, however, and I took advantage of it to feed
-my curiosity. It was no easy matter, but at last I won him by a deft
-blending of flattery and drink to talk of his crimes. And indeed I
-fear--for I suppose the expert thief does plume himself a bit on his
-art--that Matches took some sort of wretched pride in his illicit pocket
-searchings.
-
-"D' biggest touch I ever makes," said Matches, in response to a query,
-"was $36,000; quite a bunch of dough. Gettin' it was easy; gettin' away
-wit' it was d' squeak.
-
-"We toins d' trick on d' train from Albany. D' tip comes straight to me
-in New York that a bloke is goin' to draw $36,000 from d' Albany bank on
-such a day. I makes up a mob; t'ree stalls an' meself;--all pretty fly
-we was--an' lands in Albany.
-
-"We gets onto d' party who's to be woiked early in d' mornin', an'
-shadows him so dost he's never out of reach. Our play is to follow him
-to d' bank an' do him wit 'd' drop game. If that misses, we're to stay
-wit' him till d' bundle's ours be one racket or another.
-
-"This sucker is pretty soon himself, see! He ain't such a mut as we
-figgers. His train starts at 1 o'clock, an' he takes in d' bank on his
-way to d' station.
-
-"Of course we was wit' him; but he's dead leary an' never t'rows himself
-open to be woiked. D' stuff is in t'ousand-dollar willyums, an' as he
-just sinks it in his keck d' minute his hooks is onto it, an' never
-stops to count or run his lamps over it, we don't get no chanct to do d'
-drop. D' instant d' money's in his mits he plants it--all stretched out
-long in a big leather, it is--in his inside pocket, an' screws his nut
-for d' door. D' hack slams an' he's on his way to d' train.
-
-"Yes; we starts for d' station be another street. D' bloke ain't onto us
-yet, an' we tries not to plant a scare into him. He's leary enough as it
-is; just havin' such a roll wit' him rattles him.
-
-"So I makes up me mind to do d' job on d' train runnin' into New York.
-As he sinks d' stuff away, I notes how d' ends of d' bills sticks out
-over d' pocket-book. Me idee is to weed it--get d' dough an' leave d'
-leather in his pocket--if I can make d' play. Weedin' was d' way to do;
-you gets d' long green an 'd' sucker still has d' leather to feel of,
-an' it's some time before he tumbles he's been touched, see!
-
-"D' guy wit 'd' stuff plants himself in a seat. Two of me stalls sits
-ahead of him, me an' me other pal is behint him. We only waits now for
-him to get up an' come along d' aisle of d' car to get in our hooks.
-
-"Foist I goes d' len'th of d' train to see who's onto it. I always does
-that; I wants to see if any guy aboard knows Mollie Matches. You see, if
-there is, when d' holler comes, an' some duck declares himself shy his
-spark, or roll, or ticker, it's 40 to 1 Mr. Know-all, who's onto me for
-a crook, sends a tip to d' p'lice: 'Matches was on d' train!' an' I gets
-d' collar. No, I never woiks when one of me acquaintances is along be
-accident. D' cops, in such case, as I says, is put onto me an' spots me
-wit 'd' foist yell.
-
-"I covers d' train an' comes back. There's no guy on me visiting list
-who's along. So I sits down wit' me pal to d' rear of d' sucker an'
-waits.
-
-"It's not for long. D' leather's still in his inside keck, 'cause I can
-see him pressin' on it wit' his mit to make sure it's there. At last
-he gets up to go to d' watercooler. I sees d' move comin', an' is in d'
-aisle before him. So's me stalls. From start to finish no one bungles
-d' stunt. There's a tangle--all be accident, of course--every mug
-'pologises, we break away, an' I've got d' blunt. But d' woist part
-is, I can't weed it. D' stuff won't come no other way, an' so I lifts
-leather an' all.
-
-"There's due to be a roar in no time;--this mark's bound to be on he's
-frisked!--so I splits out each stall's bit in a hurry an' says: 'Every
-gent for himself! an' if youse is nipped, don't knock!' an' then I
-sherries me nibs for d' rear coach. It was great graft. Me bit was
-$9,000, an' I has me plan all set up to save it an' meself wit' it. This
-is d' racket I has in me cocoa.
-
-"In d' last coach is an old w'ite choker--a pulpit t'umper, you
-understand. Wit' him is his daughter, an' wit' her is her kid. Mebby d'
-kid, say, is six years. I heads for 'em an' begins to give d' old skate
-a jolly. I was dead strong on patter in them days, an' puts it up I'm
-a gospel sharp from Hamilton. I saws it off on his nibs how me choich
-boins down, an' how I'm linin' out to New York to see if d' good folks
-down there won't spring their rolls--cough up be way of donations, you
-understand, an' help us slam up a new box--choich, I means--so we can go
-back to our graft.
-
-"It's all right. Me razzle dazzle takes like spring water. In two
-minutes me an 'd' old party an 'd' loidy, an' for that matter d' kid, is
-t'ick as t'ieves. We was bunched together, singin' 'Jesus, Lover of me
-Soul,' to beat four of a kind, when d' galoot I skins for his bundle
-lifts d' shout he's been done, see!
-
-"This dub who lose is t'ree coaches ahead. D' foist we knows of his
-troubles--all but me--d' Con' comes an' locks d' door. No one can get
-off d' train. Then he stops an' taps d' wires wit' a machine from d'
-baggage car an' sends d' story chasin' into New York.
-
-"'Party t'run down for $36,000, says d' message; 'swag an' crooks still
-on me train. Send orders.'
-
-"D' order comes to keep d' doors locked an' run to New York wit' no more
-stops. An' after puttin' a Brakey in each coach to see what goes on,
-that's what dey does. We go spinnin' into New York at forty-five miles
-an hour.
-
-"Naturally, I'm in a steam. I goes all right wit 'd' Con', an' d' train
-crew, as a sky pilot, but how was I to make d' riffle wit' de fly cop of
-New York, who'd be waitin' for d' train--me mug in d' gallery, an' four
-out o' five of 'em twiggin' me be me foist name? But I t'ought it out.
-
-"When d' train rumbles into d' Gran' Central, d' door is slammed open
-an' we all gets up to go. A fly-cop is comin' in just as we starts. I
-grabs up d' kid to carry him, see! bein' d' old preacher party nor d'
-skirt ain't so able as me.
-
-"Say! it was a winner. I buries me map in d' kid's make-up, gets between
-d' goil an' d' old stumblin' mucker of a gran'dad, an' walks slap
-t'rough d' entire day-push of d' Central office. An' hard, sharp marks
-dey is to beat, see!
-
-"Fly dey is, but not swift enough for Matches wit a scare on, see! Not a
-dub of 'em tumbles to me.
-
-"In two moves an' ten seconts I'm in d' street. As I goes along I pulls
-a ring off one of me north hooks wit' me teet,' an' t'oins it over to
-d' kid as his bit for makin' d' good front for me. No; d' others don't
-catch on, but d' way he cinches it in his small mit shows me he's goin'
-to save it out for fair.
-
-"When I hits d' street I drops d' youngone, who's still froze to his
-solitaire, an' grabs off a cab, an' in twenty minutes I'm buried where
-all d' p'lice in New York couldn't toin me up in a t'ousand years.
-
-"No; me pals got d' collar, an' each does a stretch. But dey lays dead
-about me; never peached nor squealed. I win out.
-
-"Who?--d' w'ite choker an' his party? Nit; never hears of 'em ag'in. For
-four days I gets one of d' fam'ly--he's a crook who's under cover for
-a bank trick, an' who's eddicted--to read me all d' poipers. I wants to
-see if d' preacher an' his goil gives up anyt'ing about d' ring I swaps
-to d' kid.
-
-"Never hears a peep! Nixie; dey was on all right, you bet your life!
-when their lamps lights on that jewelry; but most likely dey needs d'
-ring in their graft. It was a spark wort' five hundred cases from any
-fence in d' land, an' so d' old guy an' his goil sort o' stan's for d'
-play, see!"
-
-
-
-
-THE FATAL KEY
-
-
-Young Jenkins prided himself on sharp eyes. He said he could "give a
-hawk cards and spades." He could find four-leaf clovers where no one
-else could see them. He took in the smallest detail of the scenery all
-about him.
-
-As a result, young Jenkins was a great finder of small trifles, and that
-he might miss nothing, lost, strayed or stolen, he went about during the
-little journeys of the day, with his eyes searching the ground. And
-he picked up many trinkets of a personal sort that other men had lost.
-Nothing of much value, perhaps, but it served to please young Jenkins,
-and it gave him a chance to boast of the sharp, devouring character of
-his eyes.
-
-Even as a child, young Jenkins was prone to find things. He told
-how once his talents as a retriever made him the subject of parental
-suspicion. He was ten years old when he picked up a four-blade Barlow
-knife.
-
-"Where did you get it?" queried old Jenkins, as young Jenkins displayed
-his treasure trove.
-
-"Found it," was the reply.
-
-"Oh, you found it!" snorted old Jenkins. "Well, take it straight back,
-and put it where you found it, and don't 'find' any more. If you do,
-I'll lick you out of your knickerbockers!"
-
-In spite of such discouragement, young Jenkins kept on finding all sorts
-of bric--brac. He does even to this day.
-
-One evening young Jenkins had a disagreeable adventure, as the fruit of
-his talent, which for an hour or so made him wish he had weaker vision.
-
-It was on Great Jones Street, and young Jenkins, hurrying along, noticed
-in the half moonlight a big store key, where the owner had dropped it
-just after locking up for the night. The hour was full midnight.
-
-Young Jenkins possessed himself of the key. He looked at it as he held
-it in his hand, and wondered how the careless shopman would open up in
-the morning without it.
-
-From where it lay it wasn't hard to infer the store to which the key
-belonged. Yet to make sure on that point it occurred to young Jenkins
-that he might better try the lock with it.
-
-Young Jenkins had just fitted the big key to the lock when some one
-seized him by the wrist. It startled him so that he dropped the key and
-allowed it to go rattling along the sidewalk. As young Jenkins looked up
-he saw that the party who had got him was a member of the police.
-
-"I was trying to unlock the door!" stammered young Jenkins.
-
-"I saw what you were about," said the officer with suspicious severity.
-"What were you monkeying with the door for? You aren't the owner of this
-store?"
-
-"No, sir," said young Jenkins, much impressed. "No, sir; I----"
-
-"Nor one of the clerks?"
-
-"No, sir," replied young Jenkins again, "I have nothing to do with the
-store. I found the key, and thought I'd see if it opened this door."
-
-"What did you want to see if it would open the door for? Don't you think
-it is a little late for a joke of that sort?"
-
-"It wasn't a joke," said young Jenkins, beginning to perspire rather
-copiously; "it was an experiment. I found the key on the sidewalk, and
-wanted to see----"
-
-"Yes!" interrupted the blue coat with a fine scorn; "you wanted to see
-if you could get into the store and rob it bare. That is what you wanted
-to see. You're a box-worker, if ever I met one, and if I hadn't come
-along you would have had this bin cracked and cleaned out in another ten
-minutes."
-
-"I told you I found the key," protested young Jenkins.
-
-"That's all right about your finding the key!" said the policeman in
-supreme contempt. "You found the key and I found you, and we'll both
-keep what we've found. That's square, ain't it?"
-
-And in spite of all young Jenkins could say at that late hour of the
-twenty-four, the faithful officer dragged him to the station, where
-a faithful sergeant faithfully registered him, and a faithful turnkey
-locked him faithfully up.
-
-As young Jenkins sat unhappy in his cell, while vermin sparred with
-him for an opening, he registered a vow that never again would he find
-anything.
-
-Young Jenkins wouldn't pick up a twenty-dollar gold piece were he to
-meet one to-day in the street.
-
-
-
-
-AN OCEAN ERROR
-
-
-No; neither my name nor the name of my vessel can I give. Our navy has
-a way of courtmartialing its officers who wax garrulous."
-
-It was just as the Lieutenant called for the _creme de menthe_, that may
-properly succeed a dinner well ordered and well stowed.
-
-"But you are welcome to the raw facts," continued the Lieutenant. "It
-was during those anxious days that went before the penning in of Cervera
-at Santiago. We had been ordered on a ticklish service. Schley was over
-south of the island on a prowl for the Spanish fleet. Sampson was, or
-should have been, off the Windward Passage similarly employed. Cervera
-was last heard of two weeks before at Barbadoes. Then he disappeared
-like a ghost; no one knew where his smoke would be sighted next. The
-one sure thing, of which all were aware, was that with Sampson anywhere
-between the Mole and Cape Mazie, and Schley searching the wide seas
-south of Cuba, Cervera might easily with little luck and less seamanship
-dodge either and appear off Havana. There the cardboard fleet left on
-blockade wouldn't, with such heavy odds, last as long as a drink of
-whiskey.
-
-"It stood thus when our orders came to my Captain to proceed to Bayou
-Hondu, some seventy miles west of Havana, and there stand off and on,
-like a policeman walking his beat, in what would be the path of Cervera
-should he work to the rear of Schley and to the north of Cuba by the way
-of St. Antonio.
-
-"Our vessel was detailed on this duty because of her perfect order and
-speed of seventeen knots. Our heavy armament was eight 4-inch broadside
-guns, with a 6-inch rifle forward and another mounted aft. Our orders
-were: If Cervera came upon us to fight!--steam as slowly as might be
-for Havana and fight!--and to keep fighting until sunk or sure that
-the block-aders off Havana were warned, whether by our signals or our
-racket, of Cervera's coming.
-
-"It was a grinding task, this lonely patrol off Bayou Hondu. The rains
-had just begun, the weather was a dripping hash of fog and squall and
-rain. If Cervera didn't come, it meant discomfort; and if he did, it
-meant death. Take it full and by, the outlook was depressing.
-
-"At night no light burned and the ship was dark as a coffin. This, with
-the service, contributed to keep us all in a mood of alert nervousness.
-Cervera's ships would also be dark. We didn't care to be crept upon, and
-get our first notice of his advent from the broadside that sent us to
-the bottom like an anvil.
-
-"We had been on this dreary duty some ten days. It was a dark, heavy
-night. I myself had the bridge, and the captain, whose anxiety kept him
-up, was seated in the starboard corner, dozing. His sea cloak was thrown
-over his head to keep out the weather. We were working to the eastward,
-with engines at quarter speed, and with a head sea running, were making
-perhaps three knots.
-
-"The ship's bells were not being struck for the hours, and I had just
-looked at my watch by the light of the binnacle. It was half-past two in
-the morning.
-
-"'How's your head?' I asked of the man at the wheel, as I put up my
-timepiece.
-
-"'East by south, half south,' he replied.
-
-"This was taking us too much inshore. 'Starboard for a point!' I said.
-
-"As I turned from the wheel I saw that which sent a thrill over me and
-brought me up all standing. It was the murky loom of a great ship, black
-and dim and dark and silent as ourselves. She was off our port quarter
-and not five hundred yards away. It gave me a start, I confess. None of
-our ships should be that far to the west of Havana. It was a sword to a
-sheath knife she was one of Cervera's advance.
-
-"Instantly I reached for the electric button; and instantly the red and
-white lights, which stood for the letter of that night, burned in our
-semaphore. The stranger replied with a red over two white lights. It was
-the wrong letter.
-
-"With my first motion, the captain was on his feet; his hand gripped the
-lever that worked the engine bells.
-
-"'Try her again!' he said.
-
-"Again I flashed the proper letter, and again came a queer reply.
-
-"The next moment the captain jammed the lever 'Full steam, ahead!' and a
-general call to quarters went singing through the ship.
-
-"'Starboard!' shouted the captain to the man at the wheel; 'starboard!
-pull her over!'
-
-"There was a vast churning from the propellers; the vessel leaped
-forward like a horse; the sailor climbed the wheel like a squirrel. We
-surged forward with a broad sheer to port. The next instant we opened on
-our dark visitor with every gun in the larboard battery. It wasn't ten
-seconds after she gave us the wrong signal when she got our broadside.
-
-"The result was amazing. With the first crash of our guns the stranger
-went from utter darkness to the extreme of light. She flashed out all
-over like a Fall River steamer. Knowing who we were--for they bore
-orders for us--and realizing that there had been some mixing of signals,
-the officer on her bridge had the wit to turn on every light in his
-ship. It was an inspiration and saved them from a second broadside.
-
-"Who was she? One of our own vessels. Cervera was locked in Santiago and
-she had come up to tell us the news. Her officer blundered in giving
-out the wrong letter for the night, and thereby sowed the seed of our
-misunderstanding.
-
-"No, beyond peppering her a bit, our fire did no harm. We were so close
-that most of our shot went over her. Still, I don't believe that vessel
-will ever get her signals fouled again. And it's just as well that way.
-If she had made the wrong talk to some one of our heavy-weights, the
-Oregon, for instance, she would have gone down like so much pig-iron."
-
-
-
-
-SKINNY MIKE'S UNWISDOM
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-CHUCKY was posed in his usual corner. As I came in he nodded sullenly
-as one whom the Fates ill-use. I craved of Chucky to name his drink; it
-was the surest way to thaw him.
-
-"Make it beer," said Chucky.
-
-Now beer stood as a symbol of gloom with Chucky, as he himself had told
-me.
-
-"It's always d' way wit' me," said Chucky on that far occasion when he
-explained "Beer", "when I'm dead sore an' been gettin' it in d' neck, to
-order beer. It's d' sorrowfulest kind of booze, beer is; there's a sob
-in every bottle of it, see!"
-
-Realising Chucky's low spirits by virtue of present beer, I suavely made
-query of his unknown grief and tendered sympathy.
-
-"I've been done for me dough," replied Chucky, softening sulkily. "You
-minds d' races at d' Springs? That's it; I gets t'run down be d' horses.
-I get d' gaff for fifty plunks. Now, fifty plunks ain't all d' money in
-d' woild; but it was wit' me. It was me fortune."
-
-Chucky ruminated bitterly.
-
-"Oh, I'm a good t'ing!" he ejaculated, as he tilted his chair against
-the wall with an air of decision. "I'll play d' jumpers agin, nit!
-
-"W'at's d' use? I can't beat nothin'. Say! I couldn't beat a drum! I'm
-a mut to ever t'ink of it! I ought to give meself up to d' p'lice right
-now an' ast 'em to put me in Bloomin'dale or some other bug house. I'm
-nutty, that's what I am; an' that's for fair! Now, I'd as lief tell you.
-It's d' boss hard luck story, an' that ain't no vision!
-
-"In d' foist place, I was a rank sucker to d' point of deemin' meself a
-wise guy about d' horses. An' it so follows, bein' stuck on meself about
-horses, as I says, that when Skinny Mike blows in wit 'd' idee that he
-can pick d' winner of d' big event, I falls to d' play, an easy mark.
-
-"Mike is an oldtime tout; an' wit' me feelin', as I says, dead fly,
-it ain't a minute before I'm addin' me ignorance to Mike's, an' we're
-runnin' over d' dopes in d' papers seein' what d' horses has done. To
-make a long story short, we settles it for a finish that War Song's out
-to win. Which, after all, ain't such a sucker t'eory.
-
-"'It's a cinch!' says Skinny Mike; 'War Song's got a pushover. Dey can't
-beat him; never in a t'ousand years!'
-
-"It looks a sure tip to me, too; so I digs for me last dollar an' hocks
-me ticker besides, an' makes up d' fifty plunks I mentions. Mike sticks
-in fifty an' then takes d' whole roll an' screws his nut for d' Springs
-to get it up on War Song. Naw; I don't go. Mike's plenty to make d'
-play; an' besides I had me lamps on a sure t'ing for a tenner over on d'
-Bowery.
-
-"Of course, while Mike's gone, I ain't doin' a t'ing but read d' poipers
-all to pieces. War Song's a 20-to-1 shot; I stan's to make a
-killin'--stan's to win a t'ousand plunks, see!
-
-"An', say! War Song win! Mebby I don't give d' yell of d' year when I
-sees it in d' print.
-
-"'W'at's eatin' youse, Chucky?' says me Rag, as I cuts loose me
-warwhoop.
-
-"'O, I ain't got no nut!' I says, givin' meself d' gran' jolly. 'No! not
-at all! I has to ast some mark to tell me me name, I don't t'ink! I'm
-cooney enough to get onto War Song, all d' same! Say! I'm d' soonest
-galoot that ever comes down d' pike!'
-
-"That's d' way I feels an' that's d' way I chins.
-
-"At last I cools off me dampers an' sets in to wait for Mike. Meanwhile
-I begins to figger how I'll blow d' stuff, see! an' settle what I'll
-buy. It's a case of money to boin an' I was gettin' me matches ready
-before even Mike shows up.
-
-"But Mike don't come. 'W'at th' 'ell!' I t'inks; 'Mike ain't crookt it;
-he ain't skipped wit' d' bundle?' An' say! you should a-seen me chew d'
-rag at d' idee.
-
-"But I'm wrong on me lead. Mike hadn't welched, an' he hadn't been
-sandbagged. He comes creepin' along a day behint d' play, an' d' secont
-I gets me lamps on his mug I'm dead on we lose. I don't have to have me
-fortune told to tumble to that. Mike looks like five cents wort' of lard
-in a paper bag. An* here's d' song he sings.
-
-"Mike says he goes to d' Springs all right, all right, an' is organised
-to get War Song for d' limit d' nex' day. It's that night, out be d'
-stables, when he chases up on a horsescraper--a sawed-off coon, he
-is--an 'd' horse-scraper breaks off a great yarn on Mike.
-
-"'I ain't no tout, an' dis ain't no tip,' Mike says d' coon says; 'it's
-a rev'lation. On d' dead! it's a prophecy! It's las' night. I'm sleepin'
-in d' stall nex' to a little horse named Dancer. All at onct I wakes up
-an' listens. It's that Dancer horse in d' nex' stall talkin' to himself.
-Over an' over agin he says: "I'm goin' to win it! I'm goin' to win it!"
-just like that.'
-
-"Well," continued Chucky, "you know Skinny Mike. There's a ghost goes
-wit' Mike, an' he's that sooperstitious, d' nigger's story has him on
-a string in a hully secont. He can't shake it off. Away he wanders an'
-dumps d' entire wad on Dancer, an' never puts a splinter on War Song at
-all.
-
-"W'at do you t'ink of it? On d' level! w'at d' youse really t'ink of it?
-That Mike's a woild-beater; that's right; a woild-beater an' a wonder to
-boot! I'd like to trade him for a yaller dawg, an' do d' dawg!"
-
-"Did Dancer win?" I asked.
-
-"Did Dancer win?" repeated Chucky; and his tones breathed guttural
-scorn; "d' old skate never even finished. Naw; he gets 'round on d' back
-stretch, stops, bites d' boy off his back, chases over be d' fence an'
-goes to eatin' grass; that's what Dancer does. He's a dandy race horse,
-or I don't want a cent! I'll bet me mudder-in-law on that Dancer some
-day. I tells Mike to take a run an' jump on himself. Naw," concluded
-Chucky, with a great gulp, "Dancer don't win; War Song win."
-
-
-
-
-MOLLIE PRESCOTT
-
-(Wolfville)
-
-
-The Cactus" was the name bestowed upon her in Wolfville. Her signature,
-if she had written it, would probably have been Mollie Prescott, at
-least such was the declaration of Cherokee Hall.
-
-"I sees this yere lady a year ago in Tombstone," asserted that veracious
-chronicler, "where she cooks at the stage station; an' she gives it out
-she's Prescott--Mollie Prescott--an' most likely she knows her name, an'
-knows it a year ago."
-
-As Cherokee was a historian of known firmness of statement, no one cared
-to challenge either his facts or his conclusions. The true name of "The
-Cactus" was accepted by the Wolfville public as Prescott.
-
-"The Cactus" was personable, and her advent into Wolfville society
-caused something of a flutter. Her mission was to cook, and in the
-fulfilment of her destiny she presided over the range at the stage
-station.
-
-Being publicly hailed as "The Cactus" seemed in no wise to depress her.
-It was even possible she took a secret glow over an epithet, meant by
-the critical taste awarding it, to illustrate those thorns in her nature
-which repelled and held in check the amorous male of Wolfville.
-
-Women were not frequent in Wolfville, and on her coming, "The Cactus"
-had many admirers. Every man in camp loved her the moment she stepped
-from the Tucson stage; that is, every man save Cherokee Hall. That
-scientist, given wholly to faro as a philosophy, had no time--in a day
-before he met Faro Nell--for so dulcet an affair as love. Also Cherokee
-had scruples born of his business.
-
-"Life behind a deal box is a mighty sight too fantastic," observed
-the thoughtful Cherokee, "for a fam'ly. It does well enough for
-single-footers, which it don't make much difference with when some gent
-they've mortified an' hurt, pulls his six-shooter an' sends them lopin'
-home to heaven all spraddled out. But a lady ain't got no business with
-a sport who turns kyards as a pursoot."
-
-As time unfurled, the train of lovers to sigh on the daily trail of "The
-Cactus" dwindled. There were those who grew dispirited.
-
-"I'm clean-strain enough," said Dan Boggs, in apologetic description of
-his failure to persevere, "but I knows when I've got through. I'll play
-a game to a finish, but when it's down to the turn an' my last chip's
-gone over to the dealer, why! I shoves my chair back an' quits. An' it's
-about that a-way of an' concernin' my yearnin's for this yere Cactus
-girl. I jest can't get her none, an' that settles it. I now drops out
-an' gives up my seat complete."
-
-"That's whatever!" said Texas Thompson, who was an interested listener
-to the defeated Boggs, "an' you can gamble I'm with you on them views!
-Seein' as how my wife in Laredo gets herse'f that divorce, I turns in
-an' loves this Cactus person myse'f to a frightful degree. Thar's times
-I simply goes about sobbin' them sentiments publicly. But yere awhile
-back I comes wanderin' 'round her kitchen, an' bing! arrives a skillet
-at my head. That lets me out! You bet! I don't pursoo them explorations
-'round her no more. I has exper'ence with one, an' I don't aim to get
-any lariat onto a second female who is that callous as to go a-chunkin'
-of kitchen bric-a-brac at a heart which is merely pinin' for her
-smiles."
-
-There were two at the shrine of "The Cactus," who were known to
-Wolfville, respectively, as Cottonwood Wasson and Cape Jinks. These were
-distinguished for the ardour wherewith they made siege to the affection
-of "The Cactus," and the energy of their demands for her capitulation.
-
-That virgin, however, paid neither heed to their court, nor took an
-interest in the comment of onlook-ing Wolfville. She pursued her path
-in life, even and unmoved. She set her tables, washed her dishes, and
-perfected her daily beefsteaks by the ingenious process, popular in the
-Southwest, of burning them on the griddles of the range, and all with a
-composure bordering hard on the stolid.
-
-"All I'm afraid of," said Old Man Enright, the head of the local
-vigilance committee, "is that some of these yere young bucks'll take to
-pawin' 'round for trouble with each other. As the upshot of sech doin's
-would most likely be the stringin' of the survivors by the committee,
-nuptials, which now looks plenty feasible, would be plumb busted an'
-alienated, an' the camp get a setback it would be hard to rally from. I
-wishes this maiden would tip her hand to some discreet gent, so a play
-could be made in advance to get the wrong parties over to Tucson or
-some'ers. Whatever do you think yourse'f, Cherokee?"
-
-"It's a delicate deal," replied that philosopher, "to go tamperin'
-'round a lady for the secret of her soul. But I shorely deems the
-occasion a crisis, an* public interest demands somethin' is done. I wish
-Doc Peets was yere; he knows these skirted cattle like I does an ace.
-But Peets won't be back for a month; pendin' of which, onless we-alls
-interferes, it's my jedgment some of this yere amorousness 'll come off
-in the smoke."
-
-"Thar ought to be statoots," observed Texas Thompson, with a fine air of
-wisdom, "ag'in love-makin' in the far West. The East should be kept
-for sech purposes speshul; same as reservations for Injuns. The Western
-climate's too exyooberant for love."
-
-"S'pose me an' you an' Thompson yere goes to this young person, an' all
-p'lite an' congenial like, we ups an' asks her intentions?" remarked
-Enright. This was offered to Cherokee.
-
-"Excuse me, pards!" said Texas Thompson with eagerness, "but I don't
-reckon I wants kyards in this at all. 'The Cactus' is a mighty fine
-young bein', but you-alls recalls as how I've been ha'ntin' 'round her
-somewhat in the past myse'f. For which reason, with others, she might
-take my comin' on sech errants derisive, an' bust me over the forehead
-with a dipper, or some sech objectionable play. I allows I better keep
-out of this embroglio a whole lot. I ain't aiming to shirk nothin', but
-it'll be a heap more shore to win."
-
-"Thompson ain't onlikely to be plenty right about this," said Cherokee,
-"an' I reckons, Enright, we-alls better take this trick ourse'ves."
-
-The mission was not a success. When the worthy pair of peace-preservers
-appeared in the presence of "The Cactus," and made the inquiries noted,
-the scorn of that damsel was excited beyond the power of words to
-describe.
-
-"What be you-alls doin' in my kitchen?" she cried, her face a-flush
-with rage and noonday cookery. "Who sends you-alls curvin' over to me,
-a-makin' of them insultin' bluffs? I demands to know!"
-
-"An' yere," said Cherokee Hall, relating the exploit in the Red Light
-immediately thereafter, "she stamps her foot like a buck antelope, an'
-lets fly a stovelifter at us; an' all with a proud, high air, which
-reminds me a mighty sight of a goddess."
-
-At the time, it would seem, the duo attempted to show popular cause
-for their presence, and made an effort to point out to "The Cactus" the
-crying public need of some decision on her part.
-
-"You-all don't want the young male persons of this village to take to
-shootin' of each other all up none, do you?" asked Enright.
-
-"I wants you two beasts to get outen my kitchen!" replied "The Cactus"
-vigorously; "an' I wants you to move some hurried, too. Don't never let
-me find your moccasin tracks 'round yere no more, or I'll turn in an'
-mark you up."
-
-[Illustration: 0287]
-
-"Yere, you!" she continued as the ambassadors were about to leave,
-something cast down by the conference; "you-alls can tell the folks of
-this town, that if they're idiots enough to go makin' a gun play over
-me, to make it. They has shore pestered me enough!"
-
-"Which I don't wonder none at Thompson bein' reluctant an' doobious
-about seein' this Cactus lady," said Enright, as the two walked away.
-
-"She's some fiery, an' that's a fact!" observed Cherokee in assent.
-
-The result of the talk with "The Cactus" found its way about Wolfville,
-and in less than an hour bore its hateful fruit. The peaceful quiet of
-the Red Light, which, as a rule, was wounded by no harsher notes than
-the flutter of a stack of chips, was rudely broken.
-
-"Gents who ain't interested, better hunt a lower limb!"
-
-It was the voice of Cottonwood Wasson. The trained instincts of
-Wolfville at once grasped the trouble, and proceeded to hide its many
-heads behind barrels, tables, counters, and anything which promised
-refuge from the bullets.
-
-All but one; Cape Jinks. He knew it meant him the moment Cottonwood
-Wasson uttered the first syllable, and his pistol came bluntly to the
-fore without a word. His rival's was already there, and the shooting set
-in like a hailstorm. As a result, Cottonwood Wasson received an injury
-that crippled his arm for days, while Cape Jinks was picked up with
-a hole in his side, which even the sanguine sentiment of Wolfville,
-inclined to a hardy optimism at all times, called dangerous.
-
-"Well!" said Old Man Enright, drawing a deep, troubled breath, after
-the duellists were cared for at the O. K. House, "yere we be ag'in an'
-nothin' settled! Thar's all this shootin', an' this blood-lettin', an'
-the camp gets all torn up; an' thar's as many of these people now as
-thar is before, an' most likely the whole deal to go over ag'in."
-
-"I shore 'bominates things a-splittin' even that a-way!" said Cherokee.
-
-The next day a new face was given the affair when "The Cactus" was
-observed, clothed in her best frock and with two violent red roses in
-her straw hat, to take the stage for Tucson. The stage company reported,
-in deference to the excited state of the Wolfville mind, that "The
-Cactus" would return in a week.
-
-"Goin' for her weddin' trowsoo, most likely," said Dan Boggs, as he
-gazed after the stage.
-
-"Let's drink to the hope she wins out a red dress!" remarked Texas
-Thompson. "Set up the bottles, bar-keep, an' don't let no gent pass up
-the play. Which red is my fav'rite colour!"
-
-No one seemed to know the intentions of "The Cactus." The shooting would
-appear to have in nowise disturbed her. That may have been her obdurate
-heart, or it may have come from a familiarity with the evanescent tenure
-of human life, born of her years on the border. Be that as one will, she
-expressed not the least concern touching her brace of wounded lovers,
-and took the stage without saying good-bye to any one.
-
-"An' some fools say women is talkers!" remarked Jack Moore, the Marshal,
-in high disgust.
-
-Three days later Old Monte, the stage driver, came in with thrilling
-news. "The Cactus" had wedded a man in Tucson, and would bring him to
-Wolfville in a week.
-
-"When I first hears of it," went on Old Monte with a groan, "an' when
-I thinks of them two pore boys a-layin' in Wolfville, an' their claims
-bein' raffled off in that heartless way, I shore thinks I'll take my
-Winchester an' stop them marriage rites if I has to crease the preacher.
-But, pards, the Tucson marshal wouldn't have it. He stan's me off. So
-she nails him; an' the barkeep at the Oriental Saloon tells me over
-thar, how she's been organisin' to wed this yere prairie dog before she
-ever hops into Wolfville at all. I sees him afterwards; an', gents! for
-looks, he don't break even with horned toads!"
-
-"Thar you be!" said Enright, making a deprecatory gesture, "another case
-of woman, lovely woman! However, even if this Cactus lady has done rung
-in a cold hand onto us, we must still prance 'round an' show her a good
-time when she trails in with her prey. Where the honour of the camp is
-concerned, we whoops it up! Of course the Cactus don't please us none
-with this deal; but most likely she pleases herse'f, which, after all,
-is the next best thing. Gents," concluded Enright, after a pause, "the
-return of the new couple will be the signal of a general upheaval in
-their honour. It's to be hoped our young friends, Cottonwood an' Jinks,
-will by then be healthful enough to participate tharin. Barkeep! the
-liquor, please! Boys, the limit's off; wherefore drink hearty!"
-
-"Which I has preemonitions from the first, this yere Cactus female is
-a brace game," remarked Texas Thompson, as he filled his glass; "that's
-whatever!"
-
-"Oh! I don't know!" replied Cherokee Hall thoughtfully. "She has her
-right to place her bets to please herse'f, an' win or lose, this
-camp should be proud to turn for her. Wolfville can't always make a
-killin'--can't always be on velvet; but as long as the Cactus an' her
-victim pitches camp yere, Wolfville can call herse'f ahead on the deal.
-I sees no room for cavil, an' I yereby freights my glass to the Cactus
-an' the shorthorn she's tied down."
-
-
-
-
-ANNA MARIE
-
-
-Anna Marie was to be a new woman. She had decided that for herself. In
-the carrying out of her destinies, Anna Marie had cut her hair short.
-She also made a specialty of very mannish costumes, and, outwardly, at
-least, became as virile as a woman might be with a make-up the basis of
-which was bound to be a skirt.
-
-Anna Marie was motherless, and at the age of nineteen, when she
-determined to become a new woman, had no advice save her father's to
-depend on. When she discussed an adoption of broader and more masculine
-methods on her girlish part with her father, the old gentleman looked
-puzzled, and said:
-
-"Well, my dear! I have great confidence in your judgment. There is
-nothing like experience, so go ahead. You will find, however, before you
-have gone far, that you labour under many structural defects. The
-great Architect didn't lay you out for a man, Anna Marie; you were not
-intended for such a fate." However, Anna Marie kept on. She was looking
-for a fuller liberty and a wider field. She was too delicately and too
-accurately determined in her tastes to be a fool to cigarettes, or swept
-down in a current of profanity. Bad language she would leave to the real
-man; in her career as a new woman nothing so vigorous was needed.
-
-But men did other things, had other freedoms; and from that long male
-list of liberties Anna Marie proceeded to pick out a line of freedom
-for herself. She had had enough of that pent-up Utica which confines the
-conventional woman. What she wanted was more room: that is, of proper,
-decorous sort.
-
-Of course, as Anna Marie proceeded up the long trail of masculinity, it
-was noted by critics that she still continued essentially feminine as to
-many common male accomplishments. She could not throw a stone, except in
-that vague, pawey, overhand fashion usual with ladies, and which confers
-on the missile neither direction nor force. And when Anna Marie essayed
-to run, she still put everybody in mind of a cow trying to keep an
-engagement.
-
-While others noted those solemn truths, Anna Marie did not. She thought
-she was making strenuous progress, and combed her short hair as a man
-combs his, and walked with long, decided stride.
-
-Anna Marie rode a bike, and decided to don bloomers for this ceremony.
-She came to the bloomer decision hesitatingly, but made up her mind at
-last. Secretly she regarded bloomers as the Rubicon. It was bloomers
-which flowed between herself and the new woman in full standing; and
-once Anna Marie had broken on the world in this ill-considered costume,
-she would feel herself graduated, and no longer at school to Destiny.
-Therefore, there dawned a day when Anna Marie came down the avenue on
-her bike, be-bloomered to heart's content. She had made the plunge; the
-Rubicon was crossed, and Anna Marie felt now like a female Csar who
-must conquer or die.
-
-On the bike-bloomer occasion Anna Marie was weak enough to hurry. She
-put her unbridled steed to fullest speed, and flashed by the onlookers
-like unto some sweet meteor. She blamed herself afterward for being
-such a craven, but concluded that by sticking to her bloomers she would
-acquire heart and slacken speed in time.
-
-The worst feature about the bloomer business was that Anna Marie wotted
-not how hideous she looked. She did not know that a printer on his way
-to his case, caught a fleeting impression of her as she sped by, and
-that he at once "put on a sub.," took a night off, and became dejectedly
-yet fully drunk. Nor did she wist that a nervous person was so affected
-by the awful tout ensemble of herself, bike, and bloomers that he
-repaired to Bloomingdale and sternly demanded admission as a right.
-
-No; Anna Marie rode all too frightened and too fast to reap these
-truths. Still, she might not have altered her system if she had known.
-For Anna Marie was resolute. Bent as Anna Marie was on her completion as
-a new woman, she resolved to inhabit bloomers and ride her two-wheeled
-vehicle even unto a grey old age. How else, indeed, could she be a new
-woman? A girl friend who had stood appalled at the vigour of Anna Marie
-asked her as to the bloomers.
-
-"They are good things," observed Anna Marie. "There's a comfort in
-bloomers which lurks not in the tangled wilderness of the ordinary
-skirt. Their fault is that in donning bloomers one does not put them on
-over one's head. It is a great defect. As it is, one never feels more
-than half-dressed." Anna Marie declared that the great want of the
-day was bloomers, through which one thrust one's arms and head in the
-process of harnessing.
-
-Anna Marie had a brother George. This youth was twelve years of age.
-George was essentially masculine. Anna Marie could see that, and it
-came to her as a thought that in the course of becoming a new woman of
-fullest feather, a good, ripe method would be to study George. Should
-she do as George did, young though he was, she was sure to succeed.
-George would do from instinct what she must do by imitation. Anna Marie
-felt these things without really and definitely thinking them. It so
-fell out that, without telling George, Anna Marie began to take him
-as guide, philosopher and friend. And all without really knowing it
-herself.
-
-Unconsciously, George loved her all the better because of this, and,
-moved by a warm, ingenuous lack of years, began to take Anna Marie into
-his confidence like true comrade. Anna Marie encouraged his frankness.
-
-"George," said Anna Marie, one day, "whenever you are about to do
-anything peculiarly boyish and interesting, always tell me, so that I
-may join you in your sport."
-
-George said he would, and he did.
-
-It so befell one day, as the fruit of this comradeship, that George
-changed the channel of Anna Marie's manly determination, and caused her
-to abandon the rle of a new woman. This is the story, and it all taught
-Anna Marie, with the rush of a landslide, that, however industriously
-she might prune and train her habits to the trellis of the male,
-she would never be able to bring her nature to that state of icy,
-egotistical, cold-blooded hardihood absolutely necessary to the perfect
-man, and therefore indispensable to the new woman. But the story.
-
-"Anna Marie," said George, coming on her one day, "Anna Marie, me and
-Billy Sweet wants you."
-
-"What is it, George?" asked Anna Marie.
-
-"We're going to hang a dog out back of the barn," explained George. "Me
-and Billy are to be the jury, and we want you for judge. Hurry up, now!
-that's a good fellow!"
-
-Anna Marie felt a shock at thought of taking the life of anything. Her
-first feeling was that George was a brute--a mere animal himself. But
-Anna Marie quickly reflected, that, whatever George might be, at least
-his hardened sex was the promontory the new woman must steer by. She put
-down the garment she was sewing and sought the scene of canine trial.
-
-"You see, Anna Marie!" explained George, pointing to a saffron-coloured
-dog, which stood with dolorous tail between his legs and looked very
-repentant, "he murdered a kitten, and we are going to try to convict and
-hang him. You sit down there by the fence, and the trial won't take a
-minute. Billy and me have got our minds made up, and we won't take no
-time to decide. There's the rope, and we're going to hang him to the
-limb of that maple."
-
-Anna Marie felt worried. Still, she allowed herself to be installed, and
-the trial proceeded. It was very brief. George produced the defunct
-kitten,--which looked indeed, very dead,--with the remark, "Say, you
-yellow dog! you're charged with murdering this cat; have you got
-anything to say against being hung?"
-
-The yellow cur feebly wagged his disreputable tail, and looked at Anna
-Marie in a fashion of sneaking appeal. He said as plain as words: "Save
-me!"
-
-"I wouldn't hang the poor thing, George," said Anna Marie, and she began
-to pat the felon yellow cur.
-
-"You're a great judge!" remonstrated George, indignantly. "It ain't for
-you to decide; it's for me and Billy. We are the jury, and in favour of
-hanging him, ain't we, Billy?"
-
-Billy nodded emphatically.
-
-"But, George," expostulated Anna Marie, "it is so cruel! so brutal!"
-
-"Brutal!" scoffed George. "Don't they hang folks for murder every day?
-You wear bloomers and talk of being a new woman and having the rights
-of a man! I have heard you with that Sanford girl! And now you come
-out here and try to talk off a yellow dog who is guilty of murder, and
-admits it by his silence! You would act nice if it was a real man and a
-real murder case! Come on, Billy; let's string him up."
-
-Here George seized on the cowering victim of lynch law, and started
-for the maple, where the rope already dangled for its prey. Anna Marie
-became utterly feminine at this, and burst into tears. Her nineteen
-years and her progress toward a new womanhood did not save her. In her
-distress she turned to the other member of the jury.
-
-Billy Sweet, at the age of thirteen, was an ardent admirer of George's
-sister, loved her dearly, if secretly, and meant to marry her in ten
-or fifteen years, when he grew up. At present he played with George
-and kept a loving eye on his future bride. Anna Marie knew of Billy's
-partiality, so she cunningly turned on this admirer, like a true
-daughter of the olden woman.
-
-"You think as I do, don't you, Billy?" And Anna Marie's tone had a
-caress in it which made Billy's ears a happy red.
-
-"Yes, ma'am!" said Billy.
-
-George was disgusted.
-
-"You are the kind of a juryman," said George, full of contempt, "that
-makes me tired. There, Anna Marie, take your yellow dog, and don't try
-to play with me no more. You are too soft!"
-
-Anna Marie felt that some vast deposit of good, hard sense lay hidden
-in George's last remark. On her way to the house she did a good deal
-of thinking, as girls whose mothers are dead do now and then. The
-development of her cogitations was told in a remark to her girl friend:
-
-"It's so tiresome, this being a new woman! I am going to give it up. I
-am afraid, as father says, I am 'not built right.'"
-
-And thus it ended. Marie is exceedingly the olden woman now. She has
-beaten her sword into a pruning-hook, her bike into a spinning-wheel!
-She no longer walks with long, decided stride. She is a woman in all
-things, and will scream and chase a street car as if it were the last
-going that way for a week, like the tenderest and frailest of her kind.
-She has retracted as to bloomers. Anna Marie has returned to the agency,
-and forever abandoned the warpath of a new and manly womanhood.
-
-
-
-
-THE PETERSENS
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-WHEN Chucky came into the little doggery where we were wont to
-converse, there arrived with him an emphatic odour of kerosene. Also
-Chucky's face was worn and sad, and his hands were muffled with many
-bandages. To add to it all Chucky was not in spirits.
-
-"What's the trouble?" I asked.
-
-"We've been havin 'd' run in' of our lives," replied Chucky, as he
-called to the barkeeper for his usual bracer, "an' our tenement is just
-standin' on its nut right now, an' that's for straight!"
-
-"Tell me about it," I urged.
-
-"D' racket this time over to d' joint," said Chucky, "is about a Swede
-skirt named Petersen who croaks herself be d' gas play last night. D'
-place is full of cops an' hobos an' all sorts of blokes, pipin' off d'
-play, while a corner mug is holdin' an inkwest over d' stiff, see! What
-you smells is d' coal oil on me mits. I soaks me hooks in it to take d'
-boin away. Me Rag gives me d' tip; an' say! it's a winner at that. D'
-boins ain't half so bad as dey was."
-
-"But I don't understand," I replied. "How did you come to burn your
-hands? If the gas was burning, I don't see how the woman could have
-committed suicide."
-
-"Youse is gettin' away on d' wrong hoof," said Chucky. "I don't boin me
-fins over d' Petersen moll croakin' herself. I cremates 'em puttin' out
-d' flames when d' Petersen kid takes fire d' day before. This inkwest
-which d' cor'oner guy is holdin' to-day, is d' secont one. He holds d'
-foist yesterday over d' kid.
-
-"On d' level! I don't catch on to d' need of inkwests anyhow. If a
-mark's dead, he's dead. It don't need no sawbones an' a mob of snoozers
-to be 'panelled for a jury, see! to put youse on. It looks to me like
-a dead case of shakin' down d' public for d' fees; these inkwests do,
-Cor'ners, I s'spose, has to have some excuse for livin', so when some
-poor duck croaks, dey comes chasin' 'round wit' a inkwest to see if
-he's surely done up, an' to put a bit of dough in their kecks. Well! I
-figgers it's law all right, all right, an' mebby it's d' proper caper.
-Anyhow, I passes it up.
-
-"What about this Petersen push? Well, if ever a household strikes it
-hard, I'm here to say it's d' Petersens. When it comes to d' boss hard
-luck story, I'll place me bets wit' that outfit every time.
-
-"It's two spaces back when this Petersen gang comes ashore at Ellis
-Island. There's t'ree of 'em; husband, wife, an' kid, see! Dey comes
-in as steerage, an' naturally, d' Ellis Island gezebos collars 'em
-an' t'rows 'em into hock d' moment dey hits d' pier. Nit; dey ain't
-arrested. But youse is on, how dey puts d' clamps to emigrants. Dey
-'detains' 'em, as it's called.
-
-"Every mug who comes steerage has to spring his plant when he lands, an'
-if he ain't as strong as $30, dey--d' offishuls--don't do a t'ing but
-chase him back on d' nex' boat. He's a pauper, see! an' he gets d'
-razzle dazzle an 'd' gran' rinky dink. Back he goes where he hails from,
-like a bundle of old clothes. Paupers is barred at Ellis Island; dey
-don't go wit' these United States, not on your overshoes!
-
-"So d' Petersens is stood up, like I tells youse, at Ellis Island to see
-be dey tramps. It toins out, nit. Dey ain't paupers. Petersen has more'n
-enough money to get be d' gate, see! Petersen has a hundred an' fifty
-plunks, an' bein' there's only t'ree, it's plenty to go 'round an' show
-$30 for each.
-
-"Still them Ellis Island snoozers detains d' Petersens a week just d'
-same. D' place where dey stays is worse'n any holdover or station house
-I'm ever in; an', bein' d' weather's winter, an' this 'detention' pen
-is wet an' cold, Petersen himself cops off d' pneumonia an' out goes his
-light before ever he leaves Ellis Island at all. Dey plants him in d'
-graveyard dey has for emigrants, an 'd' wife an' kid comes over to d'
-city alone.
-
-"That's d' foist I knows of d' Petersens. D' mother an' kid takes a
-back-room in our tenement; an' after dey gets 'quainted, she tells me
-Rag about her man dyin'. She ain't so old, this Petersen woman, an' only
-she's all broke up about her man croakin', she ain't a bad looker, see!
-wit' blue eyes an' a mop of gold hair. D' kid's name is Hilda, an,'
-except she's only seven years an' no bigger'n a drink of whiskey, she's
-a ringer for her mother.
-
-"Well! like I says, d' Petersens--what's left of 'em after d' man quits
-livin'--organised in d' back room on our floor. An' because folks who
-wants to chew must woik, d' Petersen woman gets a curve on an' goes to
-doin' stunts wit' a tub. She chases 'round doin' washin', see!
-
-"It's when d' old goil is away slingin' suds that I gets nex' wit 'd'
-kid. She's dropped her ragbaby down be a gratin' one day an' her heart
-is broke. She t'inks it's a cinch case of all over wit' d' poor ragbaby,
-an' she's cryin' to beat d' band.
-
-"But she gets it ag'in. Me an' a big fat cop who comes waddlin' along,
-tears up d' gratin' an' fishes out Hilda's doll, an' after that me an'
-her gets to be dead chummy; what youse might call * pals.'
-
-"Hilda's shy at foist, an' a bit leary of me--I ain't no bute at me
-best--but she gets used to seein' me about, an' as I stakes her to
-or'nges onct or twict, at last she gets stuck on me.
-
-"D' Petersens, an' me, an' me Rag is neighbours on d' same floor for
-near two years. An' days when I comes home early, an' me breat' ain't
-smellin' of booze--for d' kid welches every time she sniffs d' lush
-on me, see!--I used to go in an' kiss Hilda same as she's me own. An'
-between youse an' me," and here a drop gathered in Chucky's cold eye,
-"I ain't above tippin' it off on d' quiet, I t'inks a heap of this
-young-one, an' feels better every time I gets me lamps on her.
-
-"D' finish comes t'ree days ago. D' old goil Petersen is away woikin',
-an' Hilda, for all it's so cold, is playin' in d' passage-way. There's
-one of them plumber hold-ups fixin 'd' water pipe where it's sprung a
-leak, an' he's got one of them dinky little fire pots which plumbers lug
-'round wit' em.
-
-"While this plumber stiff is busy wit' his graft, poor little Hilda
-t'inks she'll warm her dolly's mits be d' blaze. She's holdin' her
-ragbaby's hooks over d' plumber's fire as I comes up d' stairs; an' as
-she hears me foot, an' toins smilin' to make sure it's me, her frock
-catches, an' when she chases screechin' into me arms, she's a bundle of
-live flame. Say! I'd sooner ten to one it was me, an' that's no bluff!
-
-"I wraps me coat over her, an' gives d' fire d' quick smother, see! An'
-I boins me dukes until it comes to bein' mighty near a case of stumps
-wit' Chucky d' balance of his joiney to d' tomb.
-
-"But what th' 'ell! It all don't do no good. D' poor kid has swallered d'
-fire, an' she's d' deadest ever before even I takes her out of me coat.
-
-"We lays Hilda out, me Rag an' me, on d' Petersens' bed; an' d' cor'ner
-sucker, as I says at d' be-ginnin', comes sprintin' over an' goes to
-holdin' his inkwests.
-
-"Bimeby, d' mother gets home from her tubs, an' that's where d' hard
-play comes in. Me Rag tells her as easy as she can; but youse could see
-it was a centre shot all d' same. It soaked her where she lived.
-
-"'Foist d' man, an' then d' baby!' says d' Petersen woman, as she sets
-on d' floor an' mourns; 'now I'll soon go hunt for 'em.'
-
-"Me Rag tries to get her to come in wit' us, but she won't stan' for it.
-All t'rough d' night we hears her mournin' an' groanin' on d' floor be
-d' side of little Hilda's coffin.
-
-"D' kid's fun'ral was yesterday, an' a pulpit sharp from one of d'
-Missions gets in on d' play, an' offishiates. Sure! it's a case of
-Potter's Field--for d' mother ain't got d' dough to make good for a
-grave--but me an' me Rag gets a car, an' takes d' mother out to see
-little Hilda planted. No, she don't cry much at that; but me Rag toins
-in an' don't do a t'ing but break d' record for tears. If Hilda was her
-own kid, she couldn't have made more of a row. When it comes to what
-youse might call 'd' outward evidences of grief,' me Rag simply lose d'
-Petersen mother.
-
-"D' mother was feelin' it all d' same. She keeps whisperin' to herself:
-'Soon I'll go find 'em!' like that; an' that's d' limit of what youse
-could get out of her.
-
-"It's last night, after little Hilda's put away,--it's mebby, say, t'ree
-this mornin', when wit'out a woid of warnin' me Rag sets up straight in
-bed an' gives a sniff.
-
-"'Be d' mother of d' Holy Mary! it's gas!' she says, an' nex' she makes
-a straight wake for d' Petersen door.
-
-"An' me Rag guesses right d' very foist time, like d' kid in d' song.
-Gas it was; d' poor Petersen mother toins it on full blast. She's
-croaked an' cold as a wedge, hours before we tumbles to her game.
-
-"That's d' finish. As I states d' foist dash out of d' box, it's d'
-dandy hard luck story of d' year. D' whole Petersen push is wiped out,
-same as that bar-keep would swab off his bar. On d' dead! it's all too
-many for me! What's d' use of folks bein' born at all, if dey's goin' to
-get yanked in like that--t'ree at a clatter, an' all young!
-
-"Do dey have re-latiffs? Some in d' old country, I takes it. There's a
-note d' Petersen woman leaves for me Rag, astin' her to write d' hist'ry
-of d' last round an' wind-up to d' folks at home, an' givin' d' address.
-But me ownliest own says 'nit!' an* chucks d' note in d' stove.
-
-"'Dey's better off not knowin',' says me Rag."
-
-
-
-
-BOWLDER'S BURGLAR
-
-
-Bowlder's wife and offspring were away at the time; and the time was a
-night last summer. Mrs. B. was in Long Branch, and Bowlder, left lonely
-and forlorn, to look after the house and earn money, was having a sad,
-bad time, indeed.
-
-Not that Bowlder really lacked anything; but he missed his wife and
-little ones. Where before the merry prattle of his children made the
-racket of a boiler shop, all was solemn peace and hush. The Bowlder
-mansion was like a graveyard.
-
-Naturally Bowlder felt lonesome; and to avoid, as much as might be,
-having his loneliness thrust upon him by the empty desolation of the
-house, he made it a rule during his wife's absence not to go home until
-3 o'clock A. M.
-
-He was "dead on his legs" by that time, as he expressed it, and went at
-once to sleep, before the absence of Mrs. B. began to prey upon him.
-
-On the night, or more properly morning, in question, Bowlder wended
-homeward at sharp 3. He had been missing Mrs. B. painfully all the
-evening, and, to uphold himself, subscribed to divers drinks. These
-last Bowlder put safely away within his belt, and they cherished him and
-taught him resignation, and he didn't miss his wife as much as he had.
-
-The hoary truth is that as Bowlder drew near his home, he had so far
-conquered his sense of abandonment that he wasn't even thinking of his
-wife. He was plodding along in the middle of the street for fear of
-footpads, whom he fancied might be sauntering in the shadows on either
-side, and was really in quite a happy, fortunate frame of mind. As
-Bowlder turned in toward his door he was softly repeating the lines:
-
- "'Tis sweet to hear the watch dog's honest bark,
-
- Bay deep-mouthed welcome as we draw near home,
-
- 'Tis sweet to know there is an eye will mark
-
- Our coming, and grow brighter when we come."
-
-Not that Bowlder had a watch dog, honest or otherwise, to bay him
-deep-mouthed welcome. And inasmuch as they had discharged the exile from
-Erin, who aforetime did service as the Bowlder maid-of-all-work, when
-Mrs. B. took flight for the summer, there was slight hope of an eye on
-the premises to grow brighter when he came.
-
-No; it was not that Bowlder was really looking for deep-mouthed bays or
-brightening eyes; he was naturally musical and poetical, and the drinks
-he had corralled had unlocked his nature in that behalf. Bowlder was
-reciting the lines quoted for the pleasure he drew from their beauty;
-not from the prophecy they put forth of any meeting to which he looked
-forward. A remark which escaped Bowlder as he climbed his steps and
-dexterously fitted his night key to the day keyhole showed this.
-
-"I ought to have stayed at a hotel," said Bowlder. "There's nobody here
-to rake me over the coals for it, and I'm going to have a great head on
-me when I wake up."
-
-Bowlder at last by mistake got his latchkey into the keyhole to which
-it related, and the door swung inward. This was a distinct success and
-Bowlder heaved a breath of relief. This door, which had grown singularly
-obdurate since Mrs. B.'s departure, had been known to hold Bowlder at
-bay for twenty minutes.
-
-Bowlder had just cast his hat on the hall floor--he intended to hang
-it up in the morning when he would have more time--and got as far on a
-journey to the second story as one step, when a noise in the basement
-dining-room enlisted Bowlder's attention. His curiosity rather than his
-fears was aroused; another happy effect of his libations.
-
-Without one thought of burglars, Bowlder deferred his journey upstairs,
-and repaired instead to the dining-room below. Bowlder would investigate
-the untoward noises which, while soft and light, were still of such
-volume as might tell upon the ear.
-
-"Wonder 'f the houshe is haunted?" observed Bowlder as he went deviously
-below.
-
-It has already been noted that Bowlder not once bethought him of
-burglars. In truth he had often scoffed at burglars while conversing
-with Mrs. B. on this subject so interesting to ladies. Bowlder had said
-that no burglar could make day wages robbing the house.
-
-It had all the thrill of perfect surprise then when, as Bowlder
-turned into his dining-room, he beheld a bull's-eye lantern shedding a
-malevolent stream of light in his face, and caught the shadowy outlines
-of a tall man behind it who seemed engaged in pointing a pistol at him.
-
-"Hold up your hands!" said the tall man, "and don't come a step further,
-or out goes your light!"
-
-[Illustration: 0307]
-
-"Well! I like thish!" squeaked Bowlder, in a tone of querulous
-complaint, at the same time, however, clasping his hands above his head;
-"I like thish! What's the row here?"
-
-The tall man made no reply, but came across and deftly ran his hands
-over Bowlder for possible arms. Bowlder had no gun. The tall man seemed
-satisfied, and stepping back, told Bowlder he might sit down on a chair
-and rest his hands in his lap. Bowlder took advantage of the permission.
-
-"Any 'bjections to me lighting a shegar?" queried Bowlder.
-
-"Not at all," said the tall man.
-
-Bowlder was soon puffing away. Being friendly, not to say polite by
-nature, Bowlder bestowed one on his visitor.
-
-"Is it a mild cigar?" asked the burglar.
-
-"Colorado claro," said Bowlder.
-
-"That's all right!" assented the other. "I don't like a strong smoke; it
-makes my head ache."
-
-As the visitor lighted the cigar, Bowlder noticed that he wore a black
-mask across his eyes, and that the latter shone through the apertures
-cut for their convenience like beads. The mask gave Bowlder a chill
-which the pistol had not evoked. Indeed, it came very near destroying
-the whole force of the drinks he had accumulated.
-
-When the stranger had lighted his cigar, Bowlder and he puffed at each
-other a moment without a word.
-
-"What are you doing in my houshe?" at last demanded Bowlder.
-
-The stranger smiled and puffed on. Then he kicked a large sack with his
-foot. Bowlder had not observed this sack before. As the stranger touched
-it with his foot, it gave out a metallic clinking.
-
-Bowlder's eyes roamed instinctively to the sideboard. There wasn't much
-light; enough, however, to show Bowlder that the sideboard's burden
-of silverware was gone. With such a start, Bowlder was able to infer a
-great deal.
-
-"Made a clean shweep, eh?" remarked Bowlder.
-
-The masked stranger nodded.
-
-"If you've got all there is loose and little in the houshe," said
-Bowlder--he was talking plainer every moment now--"you've got $1,500
-worth. Been up-shtairs yet?"
-
-Again the man of the mask nodded. Also he exhibited symptoms of being
-about to depart.
-
-"Don't go yet!" remonstrated Bowlder. "Want to talk to you. Did you get
-the old lady's jewellery upstairs?"
-
-Again the burglar nodded. He seemed disinclined to use his voice unless
-it was necessary.
-
-"Thash's bad!" remarked Bowlder reflectively; referring to the conquest
-of his wife's jewellery. "The old lady won't do a thing but make me buy
-her some more. And the worst of it is, she'll put up the figures on what
-jimcracks you've got, and insisht they're worth four times their true
-value. I'm lucky if she don't put it higher than $1,000. And they ain't
-worth $200; you'll be lucky if you get that on 'em."
-
-The burglar looked hopeful as well as he could with a mask, but retorted
-nothing to Bowlder. The latter mused sorrowfully over his wife's jewels.
-
-"You see it putsh me in the hole!" said Bowlder. "I get it going and
-coming. You come along and rob me; and then Mrs. B. comes home and robs
-me again. Don't you think that's a little rough?"
-
-The stranger said it was rough. He didn't nod this time, but used his
-voice. Encouraged by the agreement with his views, Bowlder urged the
-return of his wife's jewellery.
-
-"Just gimme back what's hers," said Bowlder, "and you can keep the rest.
-That'll let me out with her, and I don't care for the balance."
-
-But the man of midnight stoutly objected. It would be a dead loss of
-$200, he said, and worse yet, it would be unprofessional.
-
-Bowlder thought deeply a moment. Then he took a new tack.
-
-"Any 'bjections to taking a drink with me?" he asked.
-
-"None in the world!" said the burglar.
-
-Bowlder explored his coat pocket for a bottle he'd brought home to
-restore him after his sleep. He proffered the bottle to the burglar.
-
-"After you is manners!" said that person.
-
-Bowlder drank and then the burglar did the same.
-
-"You a Republican?" demanded Bowlder suddenly. "I s'pose even burglars
-have their politics!"
-
-"Administration Republican!" said the burglar; "that's what I am. I
-believe in Imperialism and a sound currency."
-
-"I'm an Administration Republican, too," remarked Bowlder. "I knew
-we'd find common ground at last. Now, as a member of the same party as
-yourself, I want to ask a favour of you. You've got about $1,500 worth
-of plunder there; and yet, you see yourself, there's a good deal of
-furniture you're leaving behind; piano upstairs and all that. I'll
-play you one game of ten-point seven-up to see whether you take all or
-nothing. Come, now, as a favour!"
-
-The burglar hesitated. He feared there was a trap in it. Bowlder gave
-him his word as a goldbug that he made the proffer in all honesty.
-
-"If you win," said Bowlder, "you can cart the furniture away to-morrow.
-I'll order you a waggon as I go down, and you can sleep in the house and
-see that I don't carry off anything or hold out on you."
-
-"But it ain't worth as much as what I've got," demurred the burglar.
-
-"Well, see here!" said Bowlder--sober he was now--"to avoid spoiling
-sport I'll throw in my watch and $30. That's square!"
-
-The burglar admitted that the proposal was fair, but stuck for seven
-points.
-
-"I like straight seven-up," he said. "Make it a seven-point game and
-I'll go you."
-
-Bowlder produced a deck of cards from the sewing-machine drawer. At the
-burglar's own suggestion they lighted one gas jet.
-
-"Cut for deal!" said Bowlder.
-
-The burglar cut a ten-spot, Bowlder a deuce. The burglar had the deal.
-
-The king of diamonds was turned as trump.
-
-"Beg!" said Bowlder.
-
-"Take it!" remarked the burglar.
-
-The hands were played. Bowlder had the queen and six-spot of diamonds;
-the marauder had the ten, nine, and seven of diamonds. Bowlder took
-high, low and the burglar counted game.
-
-"No jack out!" remarked Bowlder.
-
-"No," said the other. And then in an abused tone; "Say! you don't beg
-nor nuthin', do you? The idee of a gent's beggin' in a two-hand game,
-a-holdin' of the queen and six."
-
-They played three hands; Jack had been out once. Bowlder was keeping
-score. It stood:
-
-"Bowl, I I I I I I."
-
-"Burg, I I I I."
-
-It was Bowlder's deal. He riffled the cards with the deftness of one who
-plays often and well.
-
-"Bound to settle it this time!" said the burglar. "The score stands 6 to
-4. You bet your life! I'll stand on the bare jack if I get it."
-
-Bowlder threw the cards around and turned trump with a snap. It was the
-jack of clubs.
-
-The burglar looked at it wistfully, even sadly.
-
-"That's square, is it?" he said to Bowlder in a tone of half reproach.
-"You ain't the party to go and turn a jack on a poor crook from the
-bottom of the deck, and you only one to go?"
-
-Bowlder assured him the transaction was perfectly honest.
-
-"Yes, I guess it was," said the burglar, rising. "I was watching you,
-and I guess it was straight. It's just my luck, that's all. Well! I must
-go; it's getting along towards 4: 30 o'clock."
-
-"Have a drink!" said Bowlder, "and take another cigar!"
-
-The cracksman took a drink. Then he selected a cigar from Bowlder's
-proffered case.
-
-"If it's all the same to youse," said the burglar, "I'll smoke this
-later on--after breakfast." And he put the cigar in his pocket.
-
-"Here; let me show you out this way," said Bowlder, leading the way to
-the front basement door.
-
-"I hates to ask it of a stranger," said the burglar, as he hesitated
-just outside the door, "but the Eight' Avenoo cars'll be runnin' in a
-little while now, and would you mind lendin' me a nickel? I lives down
-be the Desbrosses Ferry."
-
-Of course Bowlder would lend him car-fare. This somewhat raised the
-burglar's spirits, made sad by seven-up. As he closed the door behind
-him, the burglar looked back at Bowlder.
-
-"Do you know, pard," he said, "if it wasn't for my weakness for
-gamblin', I'd been a rich man a dozen times."
-
-
-
-
-ANGELINA McLAURIN
-
-(By the Office Boy)
-
-
-Angelina McLaurin's was a rare face; a beautiful face. It had but one
-defect: Angelina's nose was curved like the wing of a gull. This gave
-her an air of resolution and command that affected the onlooker like a
-sign which says: "Look out for the engine."
-
-Still, Angelina McLaurin was bewitchingly lovely, a result much aided
-in its coming about by a form so admirably upholstered that to look upon
-her would have made Diana tired.
-
-It was a soft, sensuous September afternoon. Angelina McLaurin was
-impatiently holding down a richly cushioned chair in the library of the
-noble McLaurin mansion--one of those stately piles which are the pride
-of Washington Heights. She was awaiting the coming of her affianced
-husband, George Maurice St. John.
-
-"Why does he prove so dilatory?" she murmured. "Methinks true love would
-not own such leaden feet!"
-
-As Angelina McLaurin arose to gaze from the window she rocked on the
-tail of the ample Angora cat.
-
-The cat made it a point to hang out in the library every afternoon. On
-this occasion, while Angelina McLaurin was dreaming of her lover, the
-cat had taken advantage of her abstraction to deftly bestow his tail
-beneath the rocker of her chair. When Angelina arose, as stated, the cat
-got the worst of it.
-
-As the rocker came down on the cat's tail, the cat exploded into
-observations in Angorese that are unfit for these pages. Angelina was
-not only startled out of herself, but almost out of her frock. Angelina
-and the cat arose hastily, and stood there panting.
-
-As the shrieks of the wronged exile from Angora were uplifted into
-space, the door of the library burst violently open.
-
-"What is the matter, dearest? Are you injured? Why do you cry for help?"
-
-It was George Maurice St. John who asked the question. As he did so, he
-caught Angelina McLaurin in his powerful arms, while the Angora cat, his
-worst fears now realised, chased himself down the hall with tail excited
-to lamp-cleaner size.
-
-"What is it, love?" asked George Maurice St. John, as he tenderly
-unloaded his delicious burden onto a sofa, "Speak! it is the voice of
-your George who bids you. Has any one dared to insult the coming bride
-of a St. John?"
-
-"Bear with me, George!" she whispered. "Believe me, I will be better
-anon!"
-
-After a few moments she recovered, and was able to smile through her
-tears at the alarm of her dear one. Then she told George all: how the
-cat had been ass enough to leave his tail lying around loose while
-asleep; how, in the intensity of her waiting, she had put a crimp in it
-with the fell rocker of the chair; and how the cat had been drawn into
-statements, by sheer dint of agony, which it was impolitic as well as
-useless to repeat.
-
-"So I was just in time, Angelina, to relieve both you and the cat of
-what was doubtless an awkward situation." And George Maurice St. John
-laughed gaily.
-
-Then he kissed her with a fervour that left nothing to be wished for,
-and Angelina took a brace and sat erect on the sofa.
-
-"I feel better now!" she remarked.
-
-George tried to get in another kiss, but she stood him off.
-
-"Don't crowd your luck, dear!" she said, with a sweet softness. "I am
-yours for ever, and there is not the slightest need for any excess of
-osculatory zeal. You are to have me with you always, so set a brake or
-two and take the grades easy."
-
-Thus repulsed, George Maurice St. John sat abashed. A pained look seamed
-his features; he bit his lips and was silent.
-
-*****
-
-Daylight became twilight, and twilight retreated into the darkness of
-a new night. It struck eight o'clock in the adjoining tower, and George
-Maurice St John was a-hungered. His stomach was the first to tip it off
-to him.
-
-"Don't we feed to-night?" asked George Maurice St. John.
-
-The lovers for two hours had chattered aimlessly, as ones wandering in a
-wilderness of bliss. This was the first pointed remark.
-
-"Anon! love; we will feed anon!" replied Angelina McLaurin dreamily.
-"But, George, before we get in our gustatory work, I would a word with
-you--indeed! sundry words."
-
-"Aim low, and send 'em along!" said George. "What is it my Queen would
-learn from her slave?"
-
-In his ecstacy he achieved a "half Nelson" on the lovely girl, and
-caught her in the back of the neck with a kiss.
-
-The Angora cat, who was stealthily threading the hall, intending to play
-a return game with the library rug, gave a great convulsive start,
-at the kiss, which carried him out of the mansion, and over the alley
-fence.
-
-"They're a mark too high for me!" said the Angora to himself.
-
-Then inflating his lungs to the last limit of expansion, the Angora sent
-a song of invitation down the line that set every Tabby in the block to
-washing her face and combing her ears.
-
-"Your Queen wants a square heel-and-toe talk, George," said the sweet
-girl, as she tucked up her silken locks, dishevelled by his caresses
-into querulous little rings. "And your Queen wants straight goods
-this time, and no guff! Oh, darling!" continued Angelina McLaurin in a
-passionate outburst, "be square with me, and make me those promises upon
-which my life's happiness depends!"
-
-George Maurice St. John strained Angelina to his bosom.
-
-"I'll promise anything!" he said. "What wouldst thou have me do? My
-life, my fortune, my honour--my all, I lay at your feet! Monkey with
-them as thou wilt."
-
-"Then listen!" said Angelina.
-
-*****
-
-"George, we are to be wedded in a month, are we not?"
-
-"We are!" he cried exultantly; and again he essayed the "half Nelson,"
-and attempted to bury his nose in her mane.
-
-"Don't get gay, George!" she said mournfully, as she broke George's
-lock, and gently but firmly pushed his bows off a point; "don't get
-funny! but hear me."
-
-"Go on," said George, and his tones showed that his failure pierced him
-like a javelin. "We are to be wedded in a month. What then, lady?"
-
-"George," said Angelina McLaurin, and the tear-jewels shone in her eyes,
-"don't think me unwomanly, but you know how I am fixed;--father and
-mother both dead! I am an orphan, George, and must heel-and-handle
-myself."
-
-"Even so!" said George, and his face showed his sympathy.
-
-"Then, George, before we take that step to the altar," she went on
-steadily enough, but with a quaver in her voice which his ear, made
-sensitive by great love, did not fail to detect: "before we take that
-step, I say, from which there is no retreat, I must know certain things.
-You must make me certain promises."
-
-"Name them," he whispered, and his deep voice overran her like a melody.
-
-"Then, George," she said, "is it too much to ask that $100,000 worth of
-property be settled upon me at this time?"
-
-"My solicitors have already received my instructions to make it
-a million." George Maurice St. John's voice dwelt fondly on the
-settlement. "It is but a beggarly ante in such a game of table-stakes as
-this!" This time Angelina McLaurin did not decline his endearments. When
-he let up, she continued:
-
-"And it's dead sure I go to the Shore each summer?"
-
-"It is a welded cinch," he replied, as he drew her nearer to him. "You
-take in the coast from Bar Harbour to the Florida Keys."
-
-"And servants?"
-
-"A mob shall minister unto thee," he said.
-
-"Then I have but one more boon, George," she murmured, "grant that, and
-I am thine forever."
-
-"Board the card!" cried George; "I promise before you ask."
-
-"Say not so," she said with a sweet sadness; "but muzzle your lips and
-listen. You must quit golf."
-
-"What!" shrieked George, with an energy that sent the Angora backward
-off a shed-roof of dubious repute, from which he was carolling to his
-low companions; "what!" he repeated. "Woman, think!"
-
-"I have thought, George," responded Angelina Mc-Laurin, with an air of
-sorrowful firmness. "There is but one alternative: saw short off,--saw
-short off on golf, or give me up forever!"
-
-"Is this some horrid dream?" he hissed, as he strode up and down the
-library.
-
-At last he paused before her.
-
-"Woman," he said sternly, "look on me! Is this some lightsome bluff, or
-does it go? Dost mean it, woman?"
-
-"Ay! I mean it!" answered Angelina, while her cheek paled and her breath
-came quick and fast. "Don't make any mistake on that; I mean it. My talk
-goes. And my hand is off my chips."
-
-"Is this your love?" he sneered, bitterly.
-
-"It is," she faltered. "I have spoken, and I abide your answer."
-
-"Then, girl," said George Maurice St. John, and his words were cold and
-hard, "all is over between us. You would drive me into a corner and take
-away my golf! I say No! No! a thousand times, No!"
-
-At this outbreak the curve in Angelina's nose became more intense. She
-dried her eyes. Her features, too, became as flint. She even cut loose a
-low, mocking laugh.
-
-"Be it so!" she said; "sirrah, take your ring!"
-
-He seized the bauble and ground it beneath his heel. As he did so her
-strength failed her, and she sank to the floor.
-
-"That knocked her out!" he muttered, and he started to count:
-"One!--Two!--Three--Four!-"
-
-"Oh, not necessarily!" she said, struggling to her feet. "I'm still in
-it; and I say again, give up golf, or give up me!"
-
-"The die is cast!" and as he spoke the fatal words, the eyes of George
-Maurice St. John took on the firm, irrevocable expression of a fish's
-set in death. "I wouldn't give up golf for the best woman that ever put
-a dress on over her head. Maiden, you ask too much; you come too high!
-Damsel, I quit you cold!"
-
-*****
-
-George Maurice St. John rushed from the scene. The ponderous door, as it
-slammed behind him, echoed and re-echoed through the vaulted apartments
-of the McLaurin mansion. Angelina McLaurin listened until his footsteps
-died away far up the street.
-
-"He has flew the coop on me!" she wailed.
-
-Then she gave way to a torrent of tears. In her distress Angelina
-McLaurin was more beautiful than ever. Two minutes! Five minutes! Ten
-minutes went by! Her tears still fell like rain.
-
-"I have turned the hose on my hopes!" she said.
-
-This was the thought that crossed her mind; but she desperately womanned
-(word coined since advent of new woman) herself to bear it.
-
-Still afloat on the sad currents of her tears, her head bowed, a light
-sound beat upon the tympanum of Angelina McLaurin. She looked quickly up
-and squared herself to emit a glad cry, if one should be necessary.
-
-What was it?
-
-Something had come back.
-
-True! it was the Angora cat.
-
-As the Angora flung himself upon the rug with an air of reckless
-abandon, Angelina McLaurin gazed at him with a wistful fixedness. One
-eye was closed, his fur was torn, blood dripped from his lacerated ears.
-He was, in good sooth, but a tattered Angora! Angelina McLaurin laughed
-long and wildly.
-
-"He, too,' has got it in the neck!"
-
-
-
-
-DINKY PETE
-
-(Annals of The Bend)
-
-
-Do we have romances on t' East Side!" and Chucky's voice was vibrant
-with the scorn my doubts provoked. "Do we have romances! Well, I don't
-t'ink! Say! there's days when we don't have nothin' else."
-
-At this crisis Chucky called for another glass; did it without
-invitation. This last spoke of and betrayed a sense of injury.
-
-"Let me tell youse," continued Chucky, "an' d' yarn don't cost you a
-cent, see! how Dinky Pete sends Jimmy d' barkeep back to his wife. It's
-what I calls romantic for a hundred plunks.
-
-"Not that Jimmy ever leaves her, for that matter; that is, he don't
-leave her for fair! But he's sort o' organisin' for d' play when Dinky
-Pete puts d' kybosh on d' notion, an' wit' that Jimmy don't chase at
-all, see!
-
-"Jimmy d' barkeep is some soft in d' nut, see! Nit, he ain't really got
-w'eels; ain't bad enough for d' bug house; but he's a bit funny in his
-cocoa--mostly be way of bein' dead stuck on himself.
-
-"An' bein' weak d' way I says, Jimmy is a high roller for clothes;
-always sports a w'ite t'ree-sheet, wit' a rock blazin' in d' centre, big
-enough to trip a dog. An' say! his necktie's a dream, an' his hat's d'
-limit!
-
-"What's a t'ree-sheet? an' what's a rock? I don't want to give you no
-insultin' tips, but on d' square! youse ought to take a toim at night
-school. Why! a t'ree-sheet is his shirt, an' d' rock I names is Jimmy's
-spark! Of course, d' spark ain't d' real t'ing; only a rhinestone; but
-it goes in d' Bend all d' same for a 2-carat headlight.
-
-"Jimmy makes a tidy bit of dough, see! He gets, mebby it's fifteen bones
-a week, an' I makes no doubt he shakes down d' bar for ten more, which
-is far from bad graft. So it ain't s'prisin' one day when Jimmy gets it
-stuck in his frizzes he'll be married.
-
-"Jimmy's Bundle is all right at that. Her name's Annie, an' she's a
-proper straight chip. An' that ain't no song an' dance; square as a die
-she was. An' a bute! She was d' pick of d' Bowery crush, an' don't youse
-doubt it.
-
-"Well, Jimmy an' Annie goes on wit' their courtships, I takes it, same
-as if dey lives on Fift' Avenoo. Annie's a mil'ner, an' while she don't
-have money to t'row to d' boids, she woiks for enough so it's as good as
-a stan'-off on livin', which is all her hand calls for an' all she asts.
-If she don't quit winner after trimmin' hats a week, at any rate she
-don't get in d' hole, see!
-
-"Oh, yes; she an' Jimmy gets action on d' sights. Now an' then it's
-Coney Island; then ag'in it's a front seat at d' People's; or mebby if
-some of d' squeeze has a dance, dey pulls on their skates an' steps in
-on d' spiel. An' say! as a spieler Annie's a wonder, an' don't youse
-forget it. I has d' woid for it from me own Rag, an' when it comes to
-pickin' out a dancer, you can trust me Rag to be dead on in a minute. D'
-loidy can do a dizzy stunt or two on a wax floor herself when it comes
-to a show-down.
-
-"But about me romance. Jimmy has chased around wit' Annie, say it's
-t'ree mont's. An' all this time his strong play is voylets, see! Annie
-is gone on voylets, so each evenin' Jimmy toins in on Dinky Pete, who
-sells poipers an' peanuts, an' some of this hard, bum candy you breaks
-your teet's on. Dinky also deals a little flower game, wit' about a
-5-cent limit, an' that's what gets Jimmy. Just as I says, each evenin'
-Jimmy sticks in a nickel for a bunch of voylets at Dinky's an' sends
-some kid--Dinky's joint is a great hang-out for d' kids--to take 'em up
-to Annie.
-
-"An' them voylets tickles Annie to death.
-
-"At last all goes well, an' Jimmy an' Annie gets spliced. An' it's
-all right at that! Me Rag, who calls on 'em, says Jimmy an' Annie's d'
-happiest ever, an' gettin 'd' boss run for their money.
-
-"It's about a year when Annie don't do a t'ing but have a kid. At foist
-Jimmy likes it, an' lets on it's d' racket of his career. But after a
-while Jimmy gets chilly--sort o' gets sore on d' kid. Me Rag gives me
-a pointer it's mostly Annie's fault. She stars d' kid too heavy, an' it
-makes Jimmy feel like a deuce in a bum deck; makes him t'ink he ain't so
-strong--ain't so warm as he was. An' it toins out' Annie, bein' always
-busy monkeyin' wit 'd' young-one, an' givin' Jimmy d' languid eye, d'
-nex' news you get, Jimmy is back on d' street when he is off watch,
-tryin' to pipe off some fun.
-
-"I never knows where she catches on wit' Jimmy, but it ain't no time
-when one of them razzle-dazzle blondes has him on d' string. She's doin'
-d' grand at that, see! an' givin' him d' haughty stand-off.
-
-"Mebby Jimmy met her on d' street onct or twict, when for d' foist time,
-Goldie--which is this blonde tart's name--says Jimmy can come an' see
-her.
-
-"It's been mont's since Jimmy's done d' flower act at Dinkey Pete's. But
-d' sucker t'inks it's d' night of his life, an' so he chases in an' goes
-ag'inst Pete's counter for a bunch.
-
-"This Dinky Pete's a dead queer little mug. He's a short, sawed-off
-mark, wit' a humpy back an' a bum lamp. But you can gamble your life
-Dinky Pete's heart is on straight, whether his back is or not.
-
-"It's be chanct I'm in Dinky Pete's meself d' time Jimmy is out to meet
-this blonde mash. Now, at d* time I ain't onto Jimmy's curves; I don't
-tumble to d' play till a week later, when me Rag puts me on.
-
-"W'at was I doin' in Dinky Pete's? Flowers? Nit; not on your life!
-Naw; I wants to change me luck. I'd got d' gaff at draw poker d' night
-before, an' I'm layin' for Dinky Pete for to rub his hump on d' sly.
-Sure! Youse'll have luck out of sight. Only you mustn't let d' humpback
-guy get on. If he notices you rubbin' his hump it'll give youse bad
-luck, see!
-
-"Jimmy comes in, an' at foist, be force of habit, I s'spose, he's goin'
-to plunge on voylets. But he t'inks of Annie, an' he can't stand for it.
-Wit' that, Jimmy shifts his brush an' tells Dinky Pete to toin him out
-some roses.
-
-"'An' make 'em d' reddest in d' joint, see!' says Jimmy.
-
-"Dinky Pete's got his mits on some voylets, but when Jimmy says 'roses'
-Dinky comes to a stan' still.
-
-"' W'at! roses?' says Dinky Pete, an' his ratty eyes--one of 'em on d'
-hog, as I states--looks dead sharp at Jimmy. 'Roses?' he repeats.
-
-"'That's what I says!' is d' way Jimmy comes back.
-
-"' Better take voylets,' says Dinky, an' he stops foolin' wit 'd'
-flowers an' gives Jimmy d' gimlet eye.
-
-"'Nit,' declares Jimmy; * I'm dead onto me needs. Give me roses.'
-
-"'But roses won't last,' says Dinky, an' his look is sharp an' soft an'
-sad all at onct. 'Roses won't last, an' that's for fair,' says Dinky,
-'while voylets is stayers. Better take voylets, Jimmy!'
-
-"But Jimmy gets sullen an' won't have no voylets, see! An' he swings an'
-rattles wit' Dinky that he wants roses--roses red as blood.
-
-"'Roses has thorns,' goes on Dinky, still holdin' his lamps on Jimmy
-in d' same queer way; 'you don't want roses, Jimmy; you just t'inks you
-want roses! Be a square bloke, Jimmy; be yourself an' take voylets!'
-
-"An' I'm damned!" declares Chucky, "if Jimmy don't begin to look like a
-whipped kid, an' d' foist t'ing I knows, he welches on roses, grabs off
-a bunch of voylets big enough to make a salad, an' goes chasin' home to
-Annie. Me Rag is there when Jimmy pours in.
-
-"Say! It's d' finish of d' blonde! She ain't in it! Me rag, on d' quiet,
-gives Annie d' chin-chin of her existence, an' shows her Jimmy ain't
-gettin' a square deal. An' Annie--who, for all she's nutty about d' kid,
-is a dead wise fowl just d' same--takes a tumble, an' from that time
-she makes d' bettin' even money on* bot 'd' young-one an' Jimmy. D' last
-time I sees Jimmy he stops to tell me that Annie's a peach, an' d' kid's
-a wonder. An' he's lookin' like a nine-times winner himself. Now don't
-youse call that a romance for Dinky Pete to get onto Jimmy's game so
-quick, an' stickin' to him till he takes d' voylet steer? Ain't it a
-romance? Well! I should kiss a pig!"
-
-
-
-
-CRIB OR COFFIN?
-
-
-I
-
-YOUNG Jones stood in the telegraph office--the one at Twenty-third
-Street and Broadway. There was an air of triumph about Jones, an
-atmosphere of insolent sagacity, which might belong to one who, by some
-sudden, skilful sleight had caught a starling. Yet Jones's victory was
-in nowise uncommon. Others had achieved it many a time and oft. It was
-simply a baby; young Jones had become a papa, and it was this that gave
-him those frills which we have chronicled. The presence of young Jones
-in the telegraph office might be explained by looking over his shoulder.
-This is the message he wrote:
-
-New York City, Dec. 8,'99.
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps,
-
-Albany, N. Y.
-
-I still take it you are interested in the census of your family. Recent
-events in this city have altered the figures. Don't attempt to write a
-history of the tribe of Van Epps without consulting Sanford Jones.
-
-"There!" said young Jones, "that ought to fetch him. He won't know
-whether I mean the birth of a baby or Mary's death. If he doesn't come
-to see her now, I will mark him off my list for good. I would as it
-stands, if it were not for Mary."
-
-"Won't father worry, dear?" asked Mary, when young Jones repeated the
-ambiguous message he had aimed at his up-the-State father-in-law.
-
-"I expect him to shed apprehensive tears all the way to New York,"
-replied young Jones. "But don't fret, Mary; I am sure he will come; and
-a tear or two won't hurt him. They will help his eyes, even though
-they do his heart no good. I don't resent his treatment of me, but his
-neglect of you is not so easy to forgive."
-
-
-II
-
-This was the story:
-
-Back four years, Albany would have shown you young Jones opening his law
-office in that hamlet. Mary was "Mary Van Epps." At that time seventeen
-years was all the family register allowed to her for age.
-
-Her father, Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps, was one of the leading citizens
-of Albany. While not a millionaire, he was of sufficient wealth to
-dazzle the local eye, and he was always mentioned by the denizens of his
-native place as "rich."
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps had a weakness. He was slave to the pedigree
-habit. Never a day went by but he called somebody's attention to those
-celebrities who aforetime founded and set flowing the family of Van
-Epps; and he proposed at some hour in the future to write a history of
-that eminent house. With his wealth and his family pride to prompt him,
-it came easy one day for Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps to object with
-decision and vigour to a match between young Jones and his daughter
-Mary.
-
-"They were both fools!" he said.
-
-Then he pointed out that the day would never dawn when a plebeian like
-unto Jones, without lineage or lucre, boasting nothing better than a law
-office vacant of practice, and on which the rent was in arrears three
-months, would wed a daughter of the Van Epps. Colonel Stuyvesant Van
-Epps, in elaboration of his objection, showed that beyond a taste to
-drink whiskey and a speculative bent toward draw poker, he knew of
-nothing which young Jones possessed. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps closed,
-as he began, with the emphatic announcement that no orange blossoms
-would ever blow for the nuptials of young Jones and Mary Van Epps.
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps in his attitude will have the indorsement
-of all good Christian people. He was right as a father. As a prophet
-touching orange blossoms, however, he was what vulgar souls call "off."
-Of that anon.
-
-
-III
-
-YOUNG Jones more than half believed that Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps
-was right. So far as whiskey and draw poker were concerned, he went with
-him; but with Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps' objections to him, based on
-the lack of pedigree and a failure of pocket-book, he didn't sympathise.
-
-"I may be poor, and my family tree may be a mullein stalk, but I am
-still a fitting mate for any member of the Van Epps tribe."
-
-Thus spake young Jones to Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. He then took the
-earliest private occasion to kiss Mary good-bye, give her his picture,
-and make her his promise to wed her within five years.
-
-"Would she wait?"
-
-"I would wait a century," said Mary.
-
-Young Jones kissed Mary again after that. The next day Albany was short
-one citizen, and that citizen was young Jones. Albany is short to this
-day.
-
-
-IV
-
-Let us drop details. Good luck came to young Jones, hard on the lonely
-heels of his evacuation of Albany. He was named a junior partner of
-a New York City law firm. His income equalled his hope. He dismissed
-whiskey and draw poker, and he wrote to Mary Van Epps:
-
-"Could he claim her now?"
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps said "No" again. Young Jones still lacked
-ancestry, and a taste for whiskey and four aces still lurked in his
-blood. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps would not consent. This served for a
-time to abate the bridal preparations.
-
-
-V
-
-Two years deserted the future for the past. A great deal of water will
-run under a bridge in two years. Mary Van Epps was nineteen. She went on
-a visit to a Trenton relative. Young Jones became abundant in Trenton
-at that very time. They took in a parson while on a stroll one day, and
-when that experienced divine got through with them they were man and
-wife. They wired their entangled condition to Colonel Stuyvesant Van
-Epps. He sent them a message of wrath.
-
-"I cast Mary off for ever! Never let me see her face again!"
-
-"Very well!" remarked young Jones as he read the wire; "I shall need
-Mary myself, in New York. Casting her off, therefore, at Albany, cuts no
-great figure. As for Mary's face, I will look at it all the more to make
-up for her brutal dad's abatement of interest therein."
-
-Then he kissed Mary as if the feat were entirely fresh. And while Mary
-wept, she still felt very happy. Next they came to a modest home in the
-city.
-
-
-VI
-
-Two years more trailed the otners into history. Young Jones was held a
-fortunate man. His work was a success. Whiskey and poker were now so far
-astern as to be hull-down in the horizon. And he loved Mary better than
-ever. She was the triumph of his life, and he told her so every day.
-
-"It is certainly wonderful," he said, "how much more beautiful you
-become every day."
-
-This pleased Mary; and while her heart turned to her hard old father,
-she did not repent that episode at Trenton, which changed her name to
-Jones.
-
-Once a month Mary faithfully addressed a letter, new and fresh each time
-with the love that fails and fades not, to "Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps,
-Albany, N. Y." And once a month Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps read it,
-gulped a little, and made no reply.
-
-"I will never see her again!" Colonel Stuyvesant
-
-Van Epps remarked to himself on these letter occasions.
-
-All the time he knew he lived for nothing else. But he thought of his
-family and mustered his pride, and of course became a limitless fool at
-once, as do those who give way to an attack of pedigree.
-
-But the Jones baby was born; and young Jones concluded to try his
-hand on Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. Mary wanted him to come, and that
-settled the whole matter so far as young Jones was concerned. In his
-new victory as a successful father, he felt that he could look down on
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. He therefore wrote the message referred
-to in our first chapter with perfect confidence, that, turn as matters
-might, he had nothing to fear.
-
-"The past, at least, is secure!" said young Jones; "and, come what may,
-I have Mary and the baby." Both Mary and young Jones, however, awaited
-the returns from Albany with anxiety;--Mary, because she loved her
-father and mourned for his old face, and young Jones because he loved
-Mary. They were relieved when the bell rang at 7 P. M., and a bicycle
-boy handed in a yellow paper, which read: "Will be there to-morrow on
-the 8:30.--Stuyvesant Van Epps."
-
-Mary was all gladness. Young Jones was calm, but gave way sufficiently
-to say:
-
-"Mary, we will call the cub 'Stuyvesant Van Epps Jones.'"
-
-[Illustration: 0335]
-
-
-VII
-
-YOUNG Jones met Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps at the Forty-Second
-Street station. The old gentleman had been torn by doubts and grievous
-misgivings all the way down. What did young Jones' ambiguous message
-mean? Was Mary dead? Was he bound to a funeral? or a christening?
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps knew that something tremendous had happened.
-But what?
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps walked up to young Jones at the station, and
-without pausing to greet him, remarked:
-
-"Crib or coffin?"
-
-"Crib!" said young Jones.
-
-[Illustration: 0335]
-
-Then Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps fell into a storm of tears, and began
-to shake young Jones by the hand for the first time in his life.
-
-
-VIII
-
-The three happiest people in the world that night were Colonel
-Stuyvesant Van Epps, Mary and young Jones. The baby was the one
-member of the family who did not give way to emotion. He received his
-grandfather with a stolid phlegm which became a Van Epps.
-
-"And his name is Stuyvesant Van Epps Jones," said Mary.
-
-Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps kissed Mary again at this cheering news, and
-shook hands with young Jones for the second time in his life.
-
-That is all there is to a very true story. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps
-lives now in New York City, and Albany is shy a second citizen. Mary is
-happy, young Jones feels like a conqueror, and the infant, Stuyvesant
-Van Epps Jones, beneath the eye of his grandsire, waxes apace.
-
-
-
-
-OHIO DAYS
-
-
-
-
-I--AT THE LEES
-
-Aunt Ann, be we goin' to the spellin' to-night at the Block
-schoolhouse?"
-
-Jim Lee always called his wife "Aunt Ann." So did everybody except her
-daughter Lydia. She called Aunt Ann "Mother." But to Jim Lee and the
-other inhabitants of Stowe Township, she was "Aunt Ann Lee."
-
-As Jim Lee asked Aunt Ann the question, he threw down the armful of
-maple wood and retreated to the back door to stamp the snow off his
-boots.
-
-"I want to know," he said, "so's to do the chores in time."
-
-Aunt Ann was chopping mince-meat. She was a clean, beautiful woman of
-the buxom sort. Her eyes were very blue, while her hair was very black
-with not a strand of silver, for all her forty-seven years. Jim Lee held
-Aunt Ann in great respect. Aunt Ann on her part was a tender soul and
-true, although Jim Lee had found her quite firm at times.
-
-"Now and then she's a morsel hard on the bit," said Jim Lee,
-descriptively.
-
-Perhaps the two old-maid Spranglers meant the same thing when they said:
-"There never was a body with blue eyes and black hair who didn't have
-the snap in 'em."
-
-"Yes," replied Aunt Ann to Jim Lee's question "yes, of course we'll go.
-I've got to see Mrs. Au about some rag carpets she's weavin' for me, and
-she be there. Better get the Morgan colt and the cutter ready, father;
-we'll go in that."
-
-"That'll only hold two," said Jim Lee. "How Lide goin' to go?"
-
-"Lide's goin' with Ed Church. She's over to Jenn Ruple's now; she and
-Jen are goin' to choose up for the spellin' bee. But she'll be back in
-time, and Ed Church is comin' for her at half-past seven."
-
-Jim Lee's face showed that he didn't like Ed Church He said nothing for
-five minutes, and pulling off his kip-skin boots began to give them a
-coat of tallow.
-
-"Where's Ezra?" at last he asked. Ezra was the heir of the house of Lee.
-His age was eleven; he was twenty.
-
-"Ezra's down cellar sortin' over that bin of peach blows," said Aunt
-Ann, busy with her mince-me; and chopping-bowl; "they'd started to rot."
-
-"I wanted to send him to the Corners for the mail," suggested Jim Lee,
-as he kneaded the wax tallow into the instep of his boot to soften the
-leather.
-
-[Illustration: 0341]
-
-"You'd better hitch up the colt a mite early," answered
-
-Aunt Ann, "and go to the Corners before we start to the spellin'. Ezra's
-got to churn as soon; he's done the peachblows."
-
-There was another pause. Jim Lee softly drew on his freshly tallowed
-boots, and then stood up an tried them by raising his heels one after
-the other bending the boots at the toes as if testing a couple of
-Damascus sword blades.
-
-"I don't like this here Ed Church sparkin' our Lide," remarked Jim Lee
-at last; "bimeby they'll want to get married."
-
-"Father!" said Aunt Ann, raising her blue eyes with a look of cold
-criticism from the mince-meat she was massacring.
-
-"Has he asked Lide yet?" said Jim Lee.
-
-"No, he ain't," replied Aunt Ann, "but he's goin' to."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"How do I know?" repeated Aunt Ann, as she set the chopping-bowl on the
-kitchen table, and turned to put a few select sticks of maple into the
-oven to the end that they become kiln-dried and highly inflammable; "how
-do I know Ed Church is goin' to marry Lide? Humph! I can see it."
-
-"I'm goin' to put a stop to it," said Jim Lee. "This Church boy is goin'
-to keep away from Lide."
-
-"Father, you're goin' to do nothing of the kind," and Aunt Ann's eyes
-began to sparkle. "You can run the farm and Ezra, father; I'll run Lide
-and the house. The only person who's goin' to have a syllable to say
-about Lide's marryin' when the time comes, is Lide herself. If she wants
-Ed Church she's goin' to have him."
-
-"Aunt Ann, I'm s'prised at you upholdin' for this Church boy!" Jim Lee
-threw into his tone a strain of strong reproof. "Ed Church drinks."
-
-"Ed Church don't drink," retorted Aunt Ann sharply.
-
-"How about that time two years ago last summer? Waren't Ed Church drunk
-over at the Royalton Fair?"
-
-"Yes, he was," answered Aunt Ann, "and that's the only time. But so was
-my father drunk once at a barn-raisin' when he was a boy, for I've heerd
-him tell it; and I guess my father, William H. Pickering, was as good as
-any Lee who ever greased his boots. One swallow don't make a summer, and
-one drunk don't make a drunkard. Ed Church told me himself that he ain't
-took a drop since."
-
-"I'm goin' to break up this nonsense between him and Lide, at any rate,"
-said Jim Lee. His mood was dogged, and it served to irritate Aunt Ann.
-
-"All you've got ag'inst Ed Church, father," said Aunt Ann, "is that his
-father voted ag'in you for pathmaster, and I'm glad he did. What under
-the sun you ever wanted to be pathmaster for, and go about ploughin'
-up good roads to make 'em bad, was more'n I could see. I'm glad you was
-beat."
-
-"I'm goin' to stop this Church boy hangin' 'round Lide, jest the same,"
-was the closing remark of Jim Lee. At this point he went out to the barn
-to put some straw in the cutter and harness the Morgan colt. Aunt Ann
-turned again to her duties.
-
-"Father is so exasperatin'," remarked Aunt Ann, as she poured some
-boiling water over a dozen slices of salt pork to "freshen it," in the
-line of preparing them for the evening frying-pan. "He'll find out,
-though, that I'll have a tolerable lot to say about Lide's marriage."
-
-
-
-
-II--ED CHURCH AND LIDE
-
-At half-past seven, Ed Church swung into Jim Lee's yard, with a horse
-all bells, and a cutter a billow of buffalo robes. He did not dare leave
-Grey Eagle, his pet colt, for Grey Eagle was restless with the wintry
-evening air and wanted to go. So Ed Church notified Lide of his coming
-by shouting, "House!" with a great voice.
-
-Grey Eagle made a plunge at the sound, but was brought up by the bit.
-
-"How'dy do, Ed," said Lide, as she came out the side door. She looked
-rosy and pretty with her muskrat muff and cape.
-
-"Hello, Lide," said Ed. "You'll have to scramble in yourself. I can
-hardly hold the colt this weather, when he don't have nothin' to do but
-eat."
-
-Lide scrambled in. As Ed Church stood up in the cutter to allow Lide a
-chance to be seated, her face came close to his. Taking his eyes from
-Grey Eagle for the mere fraction of a second, he kissed her dexterously.
-Lide received the caress with the most admirable composure, and Ed
-Church himself did not act as if the idea was a discovery or the
-experiment new.
-
-"Let him out, Ed!" said Lide, when they were well into the road.
-
-There was a foot of snow on the ground. The fence corners showed great
-drifts, while each rail of the fence had a ruffle of its own of cold,
-white snow. As far as one could see in the moonlight, the fields to
-each side were like milk. In the background stood the grey woods laced
-against the sky. Here and there a lamp shone in a neighbour's window
-like an eye of fire.
-
-Stowe Township was out that night. The steady beat of the bells could
-be heard ahead and behind. Ed Church sent Grey Eagle forward with long
-strides, the cutter following over the hard, packed snow with no more of
-resistance than a feather. Lide held her muff to her face, so that
-she might open her mouth to talk without catching any of the flying
-snowballs from Grey Eagle's nervous hoofs.
-
-"It'll be a big spellin'-school to-night," said Lide.
-
-"Yes, I guess it will," replied Ed. "I hear folks are comin' clear from
-Hammond Corners."
-
-"If that Gentry girl comes," said Lide, "mind! you're not to speak to
-her, Ed. If you do, you can go home alone."
-
-Ed grinned with an air of pleased superiority.
-
-"Get up," he said to Grey Eagle. Then to Lide: "Go on! You're jealous!"
-
-"No, I ain't!" said Lide, with a lofty intonation. "Speak to her if you
-want to! What do I care!"
-
-"I won't speak to her, Lide."
-
-Ed looked at his sweetheart to see how she received his submission. As
-the road was level and straight at this point, and Grey Eagle had worn
-away the wire edge of his appetite to "go," Ed put his face in behind
-the muskrat muff and kissed Lide again. The victim abetted the outrage.
-
-"I saw ye!" yelled a happy voice behind. It was Ben Francis with Jennie
-Ruple. They also were enthroned in a cutter.
-
-"What if you did?" retorted Lide with a toss.
-
-"Do it again if I want to!" shouted Ed Church with much joyous
-hardihood.
-
-"I never asked you to marry me yet, did I, Lide?" observed Ed Church,
-after two minutes of silence.
-
-"No, you didn't," said Lide from behind the muskrat muff. The words
-would have sounded hard, if it were not for the sudden soft sweetness of
-the voice, which was half a whisper.
-
-"Well, I'll do it now," said Ed, with much resolution, but a little
-shake in the tone. "You'll marry me, Lide, when we get ready?"
-
-"Ed, what do you think father 'll say?"
-
-Ed Church knew Lide's father found no joy in him. The next time his
-voice took on a moody, half-sullen sound.
-
-"Don't care what he says! I ain't marryin' the hull Lee family."
-
-"But s'pose he says we can't?"
-
-"If he does, I'll run away with you, Lide," and Ed Church's tones were
-touched with storm. "I'm goin* to marry you even if all the Lees in the
-state stand in the way!"
-
-Lide crowded a bit closer to Ed at this, and, holding the muskrat muff
-against her face to keep her nose from getting red, said nothing. Lide
-was thinking what a noble fellow Ed was, and how much she admired him.
-
-
-
-
-III--THE SPELLING SCHOOL
-
-The Block schoolhouse was crowded. Lide and Ed made their way toward the
-back benches. Jim Lee spoke to his daughter and growled gruffly at Ed.
-
-The latter half growled back. Aunt Ann was all smiles and approval
-of Ed. At this, Ed thought her the best woman on earth except his own
-mother, and mentally put her next that excellent old lady in his heart.
-
-It was a Mr. Parker who taught at the Block school-house. At 8 o'clock
-he rapped on the teacher's desk with a ruler, and everybody who was
-standing up hunted for a seat. Those who could find none--they were all
-young men and boys--crouched down along the walls of the big school-room
-and made seats of their heels. Mr. Parker came down from his desk
-and opened the stove door with the end of the ruler. The stove--a
-long-bodied air-tight--was raging red hot from the four-foot wood
-blazing in its interior. When the door was opened the heat almost singed
-Mr. Parker's eyebrows. At this he started back nervously, and Ben Weld
-and Will Jenkins, two very small boys, laughed. The stove on its part
-began to cool off and the cherry colour faded from its hot sides,
-leaving them brown and rusty.
-
-"Lydia Lee and Jennie Ruple have been selected to choose sides for the
-spelling contest," said Mr. Parker.
-
-Lide and Jennie seated themselves side by side on the bench which ran
-along the rear of the room. It was Lide's first choice.
-
-"Ed Church," called Lide in a low voice.
-
-Several young persons giggled, while Ed, blushing deeply to have his
-sweetheart's preference thus forced into prominence, blundered along the
-aisle and sat down by Lide. It was Jennie's choice. Jennie selected Ben
-Francis.
-
-"Of course!" said Ada Farr in a loud whisper to
-
-Myrtle Jones, "they'd choose their beaux first, so as to sit by 'em."
-
-There was no gainsaying the Farr girl's statement. The "choosing up,"
-however, went on. At last everybody, young and old, from the grey-headed
-grandpa to the five-year-old just sent to his first school that winter,
-had been chosen by Lide or Jennie. Then Mr. Parker began to give out the
-words.
-
-Ed Church failed on the first word. It was "emphasis." Ed thought there
-was an "f" in it. He straightway sat down and spelled no more that
-night. Lide made a better showing, and lasted through five words. She
-tripped on "suet" upon which she conferred an "i." Lide then joined Ed
-among the silenced ones.
-
-"Lide Lee missed on purpose," whispered the Farr girl to her neighbour
-Myrtle Jones, "so she could sit and talk with Ed."
-
-Jim Lee spelled well, but fell a prey to "moustache."
-
-At last only three were left standing--Nellie Brad-dock, a girl from
-Hammond Corners, and Aunt Ann. Mr. Parker turned over to the back part
-of the spelling book where the hard words lived. Nellie Braddock fell
-before "umbrageous."
-
-The struggle between the girl from Hammond Corners and Aunt Ann was a
-battle of the giantesses. The girl from Hammond Corners was the champion
-speller of her region, and had spelled down every school so far that
-winter. The interest was intense, as first to Aunt Ann and then to the
-girl from Hammond Corners, Mr. Parker put out:
-
-"Fantasy."
-
-"Autobiographer."
-
-"Thaumaturgie."
-
-"Cosmography."
-
-At last the girl from Hammond Corners tripped on:
-
-"Sibylline."
-
-She made it "syb." Mr. Parker had to show her the spelling book to
-convince the girl from Hammond Corners that she had missed. She glanced
-in the spelling book where Mr. Parker's finger pointed, and then burst
-into tears. At this an unknown young man, presumably from Hammond
-Corners, got up and excitedly declared the book to be wrong. Nobody took
-any notice of him, however, and Aunt Ann Lee was named the victor. She
-had spelled down the school.
-
-
-
-
-IV--THE FIGHT
-
-Ed CHURCH left Lide talking with the girls in the schoolhouse while
-he went back to the waggon shed to get Grey Eagle and bring him and the
-cutter to the door. As Ed was in the entry of the schoolhouse he was
-stopped by little Joe Barnes.
-
-"Say! Fan Brown's out there waitin' for you."
-
-"What about Fan Brown?" asked Ed Church.
-
-Fan Brown was the bully of Hinckley. He boasted that he could thrash any
-man between Bath Lakes and the Hinckley Ridge.
-
-"He says he's goin' to wallop you for shootin' his dawg last summer,"
-said little Joe Barnes.
-
-"Joe, will you do something for me?" asked Ed.
-
-"Yep!"
-
-"You go and tell Lide Lee in there that I'm goin' over to Square
-Chanler's to get a neck-yoke he borrowed and I'll be right back. Tell
-her to wait in the school-house till I come."
-
-"He's afraid of Fan Brown and is runnin' over to Square Chanler's to get
-the constable," said little Joe Barnes to himself. For this he despised
-Ed Church very much, but went in and delivered the message.
-
-"All right!" said Lide, and then went on gossiping with the girls.
-
-Ed Church stepped out of the schoolhouse and started for the
-horse-sheds.
-
-He noticed a knot of men standing at the rear corner of the building;
-among them he discerned the stocky, bull-necked bully of Hinckley, Fan
-Brown.
-
-"Here he comes now!" said one, as Ed approached.
-
-"Let him come!" gritted the bully; "I'll fix him! I'll show him whose
-dog he's been shootin! As fine a coon dog, boys, as ever went into a
-corn field. He shot him, and I ain't goin' back to Hinckley till I mash
-his face."
-
-"What's the row here?" said Ed Church, walking straight to the little
-huddle about Fan Brown. His tones were brittle and bold; a note of ready
-war ran through them. Not at all the voice in which he talked to Lide.
-"I understand somebody's lookin' for me. Who is it?"
-
-"It's me, by G--d! You killed my dog last summer, and I'm goin'----"
-
-"No, you ain't," said Ed, interrupting; "you ain't goin' to do a thing.
-You may be the bully of Hinckley, Fan Brown, but you can't scare me.
-Your dog was killin' sheep; he was a good deal like you; but bein' a dog
-I could shoot him."
-
-"Yes, and I ain't goin' back to Hinckley until I maul you so you won't
-shoot another dog as long as you live."
-
-"Enough said!" replied Ed, "come right down in the hollow back of the
-horse sheds, where the folks won't see, and do it."
-
-Just then a small, meagre man approached. He walked with a lounging
-gait, and when he spoke he had a thin, mealy voice.
-
-"What's the matter here?" piped the meagre little man.
-
-His name was Dick Bond. He was renowned widely as a wrestler. Gladiators
-had come from far and near, and at town meetings and barn raisings,
-wrestled with little Dick Bond. Where a hundred tried not one succeeded.
-
-He had not lost a "fall" for four years. His skill had given birth to a
-half proverb, and when somebody said he would do something, and somebody
-else doubted it, the latter would observe with laughing scorn: "Yes;
-you'll do it when somebody throws Dick Bond."
-
-Such was the fell repute of this invincible little man that when his
-shrill, light voice made the inquiry chronicled, a silence fell on the
-crowd and no one answered.
-
-"Who's goin' to fight?" asked Dick Bond more pointedly.
-
-"I'm goin' to fight Fan Brown," said Ed.
-
-There was a load of ferocity in the way he said it, which showed that
-Ed, himself, had a latent hunger for battle.
-
-"I guess I'll go 'long and see it," said Dick Bond pipingly.
-
-"How do you want to fight?" asked Ed of Fan Brown when each had buttoned
-up his coat tight to the chin. "Stand up, or rough and tumble?"
-
-"Rough and tumble," said Fan Brown savagely.
-
-"All right!"
-
-"Now, boys," said Dick Bond when all was ready, "I'll give the word and
-then you're goin' to fight until one of you says 'enough.' And remember!
-there's no bitin' no gougin', no scratchin'."
-
-"Bitin' goes?" declared Fan Brown, in a fashion of savage interrogatory.
-
-"Bitin' don't go!" replied the lean little referee, "and if you offer to
-bite or gouge, Fan Brown, I'll break your neck. You'll never go back to
-Hinckley short of being carried in a blanket."
-
-[Illustration: 0353]
-
-The battle was brief and bloody. It didn't last ten minutes. When it was
-over, Ed Church, bleeding, but victorious, walked back to the sheds to
-get Grey Eagle. Fan Brown was unable to rise from the snow without help.
-His face was beaten badly, and he was a thoroughly whipped person. Dick
-Bond expressed great satisfaction, and in his high voice said it was a
-splendid fight.
-
-"But, Brown," said Dick Bond to the beaten one, "I can't see how you got
-it into your head you could lick Ed Church. Why, man! he was all over
-you like a panther."
-
-The news of the fight ran like wildfire. Everybody knew of it before an
-hour passed. It was a source of general satisfaction that Ed Church had
-whipped Fan Brown, the Hinckley bully, yet no one failed to stamp the
-whole proceeding as disgraceful; that is, among the older men at least.
-
-Lide, however, when she heard of the valour of her lover felt a great
-tenderness for him, and was never kinder than when they drove Grey Eagle
-back from the Block schoolhouse spelling-bee that crisp winter night.
-
-
-
-
-V--JIM LEE INTERFERES
-
-MOTHER," sobbed Lide, as she threw herself down on the chintz lounge
-without pausing to take off her hat or cape, "father has just told Ed
-never to come to the house nor speak to me again."
-
-Jim Lee and Aunt Ann got home before the lovers. The news of the broil
-overtook them, however. Jim Lee declared it a scandal and a scorn.
-
-"Now you see," he said to Aunt Ann, "what sort of ruffian the Church boy
-is!"
-
-"Well, I'm glad he whipped that miserable Fan Brown," said Aunt Ann.
-"He's done nothin' for ten years but come over here to Stowe Township
-and raise a fuss. I'm glad somebody's at last spunked up and thrashed
-him. I'd done it years ago if I had been a man."
-
-"Aunt Ann Lee!" said Jim Lee, hitting the Morgan colt a blow with the
-whip which set that sprightly animal almost astride the thills--"Aunt
-Ann, do you tell me you approve of Ed Church lickin' Fan Brown?"
-
-"Yes, I do," retorted Aunt Ann, stoutly, "and so will Lide. If you
-imagine, father, a woman finds fault with a man because he'll fight
-other men you don't know the sex."
-
-Jim Lee moaned. Absolutely! for the first time in his life Aunt Ann had
-shocked him. Not another word was spoken by Jim Lee all the way home.
-
-Aunt Ann went into the house when they arrived, while Jim Lee remained
-to put up the Morgan colt. He was busy in the barn when Ed and Lide
-drove into the yard.
-
-"Father came up to Ed," sobbed Lide, as she lay on the lounge, "and
-called him a brawler and a drunkard, and said he'd got to keep away from
-me."
-
-"What did Ed say?" asked Aunt Ann, as she sat down by her daughter and
-began, with kind hands, to take off her hat and cape. Every touch was
-full of motherly love and tenderness.
-
-"Oh! Ed didn't say much," said Lide, giving way to long-drawn sighs; a
-fashion of dead swell following the storm of sobs. "He said he'd marry
-me whether father was willing or not. Then he drove away."
-
-Aunt Ann smiled.
-
-"I guess Ed Church is pretty high strung," said Aunt Ann, "but that
-won't hurt him any."
-
-Jim Lee came in at that moment, looking a bit sheepish and guilty; but
-over it all an atmosphere of victory.
-
-"That Church boy will stay away now, I guess!" said Jim Lee, as he got
-the bootjack and began pulling off his boots.
-
-"Jim Lee, you're an awful fool!" observed Aunt Ann with the air of
-a sibyl settling all things. "You're the biggest numbskull in Stowe
-Township!"
-
-"Why?" asked Jim Lee.
-
-He was disturbed because Aunt Ann addressed him by his full name.
-Experience had taught him that defeat ever followed hard on the heels of
-his full name, when Aunt Ann made use of it.
-
-"Never mind why!" said Aunt Ann.
-
-And not another word could Jim Lee get from her.
-
-
-
-
-VI--THEY DECORATE
-
-It was a month after the spelling-school. Stowe Township was decorating
-the Church for Christmas. For time out of mind Stowe Township had had a
-Christmas tree at the Church, and everybody, rich or poor, high or low,
-young or old, great or small, got a present if it were nothing but a
-gauze stocking full of painted popcorn.
-
-Aunt Ann, as usual, was at the head of the decorating committee.
-The Church was full of long strings of evergreen, which Aunt Ann's
-satellites were festooning about the walls, and to that end there was
-much climbing of step-ladders, much standing on tip-toe, much pounding
-of thumbs with caitiff tack-hammers, vilely wielded by girlish hands.
-Occasionally some fair step-ladder maid gave the public a glimpse of a
-well-filled woollen stocking as she went up and down, or stood on her
-toes on the top step. At this, the young men present always blushed,
-while the maidens tittered. Most people don't know it, but the male of
-our species is more modest, more easily embarrassed, than the female.
-
-The Christmas tree had just arrived. It had been contributed by "Square"
-Chanler. The tree was a noble hemlock; thick and feathery of bough,
-perfect of general outline. Old Curl, the Rip Van Winkle of Stowe, had
-cut it down and hauled it to the church on "Square" Chanler's bob-sleds.
-All the smallfry of the Corners had gone with Old Curl after the
-Christmas tree, and were faithful to him to the last. Every one of them
-was clamorously forward in unloading the tree and getting it into the
-Church.
-
-Then it was taken charge of by Aunt Ann, who put the smallfry to flight.
-They were to be beneficiaries of the tree, and it was held that their
-joy would be enhanced if they were not allowed to remain while the tree
-was decorated, and were debarred all sight thereof until Christmas Eve,
-when the presents would be cut from the boughs and bestowed upon their
-owners.
-
-One little boy had a cold, and Aunt Ann let him remain in the Church.
-This little boy perched himself in a window where his fellows outside
-might see and envy him. There was a three-cornered hole in the window
-pane near him, and the little boy was wont every few moments to place
-his mouth to this crevice and say to the boys outside:
-
-"My! but you ought to see what Aunt Ann's tyin' on the tree now!"
-
-"What is it?" would chorus the outside boys.
-
-"Can't tell you!"
-
-The boy with the cold became the most unpopular child in Stowe Township,
-and several of his fellows outside in their agony threatened him with
-personal violence.
-
-"I'll lick you when I ketch you!" shouted children in the rabble rout to
-the lucky child with the cold.
-
-"I don't care!" said the child inside, "you just ought to see the tree
-now!"
-
-Lide Lee was aiding the others to festoon the church. Under the maternal
-direction she was fitting tawdry little wax candles among the branches
-of the Christmas tree, and tying on Barlow knives for all the little
-boys, and "Housewives" for all the little girls.
-
-Lide had not seen Ed save once since the spelling-school, and then she
-met him in the village drug-store by chance. But they wrote to each
-other, and some progress in this way had been made toward an elopement
-which was scheduled for the coming Spring. Aunt Ann in the depths of her
-sagacity, suspected the arrangement, but it gave her no alarm. As
-for Jim Lee, so fatuous was he that he believed he had ended all ties
-between his daughter and Ed Church.
-
-While decorations were in progress in the church, Jim Lee suddenly drove
-up.
-
-"Aunt Ann," said Jim Lee, after pausing to admire the garish display,
-"Aunt Ann, I've just got a line from Ludlow, and there's goin' to be a
-special meetin' of the board of directors of our Ice Company, and I've
-got to mosey into the city."
-
-Jim Lee had an air of importance. He liked to appear before Aunt Ann in
-the attitude of a much-sought-for man of business.
-
-"Pshaw! father, that's too bad!" said Aunt Ann. "Can't you be back by
-Christmas Eve?"
-
-"No; Christmas Eve is only day after to-morrow, and the Ice Company
-business ought to last a week, so Ludlow says."
-
-"Well!" said Aunt Ann, "if you must go, you must. Ezra can do most of
-the chores while you're away, and I'll have Old Curl come and do the
-heaviest of 'em."
-
-So Jim Lee kissed Aunt Ann, and then kissed Lide. This latter caress
-was a trifle strained, for Jim Lee felt guilty when he looked at his
-daughter; and Lide hadn't half forgiven him his actions toward her
-idolised Ed. Since Ed had been forbidden her society, Lide loved him
-much better than before.
-
-Thus started Jim Lee for the city on Ice Company matters, Tuesday
-afternoon. Christmas Eve was the following Thursday. Jim Lee would
-return on the Monday or Tuesday after. He was fated to find some
-startling changes on his coming back.
-
-
-
-
-VII--AUNT ANN PLOTS
-
-AUNT Ann found much to occupy her during the hours before Christmas
-Eve. There were forty-eight of these hours. Aunt Ann needed them all.
-
-For one matter she made Ezra drive her over to the County Seat. She
-wanted to see her brother, Will Pickering, who was Probate Judge of the
-County. Aunt Ann also dispatched a letter by trusty messenger to her
-sister, Mary Newton, who lived at Eastern Crossroads, some seven miles
-from Stowe. As a last assignment, Aunt Ann told Ezra to go over and ask
-Ed to come up to the house.
-
-"You'll be at the Christmas tree at the church tonight, won't you, Ed?"
-asked Aunt Ann, after making some excuse for sending for him. She put
-the question quite casually.
-
-"Well! be sure and come, Ed," said Aunt Ann. "And more'n that, be sure
-and dress yourself up. I think I'll need you to help me get things off
-the high limbs."
-
-Aunt Ann, as she led Lide to his side. "Now, Brother Crandall, if you
-will perform the ceremony--the short form, please, and leave out the
-word 'obey'--the distribution will be complete."
-
-"But the licence!" gasped the Rev. Crandall.
-
-"There it is," said Aunt Ann, "with my brother Will's seal and signature
-as Probate Judge on it. You don't s'pose I had Ezra drive me clear to
-the County Seat in the dead of winter for nothing?"
-
-The ceremony was over. Ed and Lide were "Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Church;"
-and the entire population of Stowe, some in tears, all in earnest, were
-kissing the bride and shaking hearty hands with the groom. That latter
-young gentleman was dazed and happy, and looked both.
-
-"Now, Ed," said Aunt Ann, after kissing him and then kissing Lide, "I'm
-your mother; and I'll begin to tell you what to do. You put Lide in your
-cutter and head Grey Eagle for Eastern Cross-roads. I sent Mary word you
-were coming, and there's a trunk full of Lide's things gone over. Stay
-a week. If you need collars, or shirts or anything, Mary will give you
-some of John's. Stay a week and then come home. Father will be back from
-the Ice Company Tuesday, and by Thursday of next week, when you return,
-I'll have him fully convinced that all is ordered for the best, and
-whatever is, is right. So kiss your mother again, children, and start.
-I hear Grey Eagle's bells a-jingling, where Dick Bond's brought him to
-the door."
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Sandburrs, by Alfred Henry Lewis
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sandburrs and Others, by Alfred Henry Lewis
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Sandburrs and Others
-
-Author: Alfred Henry Lewis
-
-Illustrator: Horace Taylor and George B. Luks
-
-Release Date: May 3, 2016 [EBook #51981]
-Last Updated: March 12, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SANDBURRS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- SANDBURRS
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By Alfred Henry Lewis
- </h2>
- <h4>
- Author of &ldquo;Wolfville,&rdquo; etc.
- </h4>
- <h3>
- Illustrated by Horace Taylor and George B. Luks
- </h3>
- <h5>
- Second Edition
- </h5>
- <h4>
- New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company
- </h4>
- <h3>
- 1898
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0001.jpg" alt="0001 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0001.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0008.jpg" alt="0008 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0008.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <h3>
- TO
- </h3>
- <h3>
- JAMES ROBERT KEENE
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>CONTENTS</b>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> SANDBURRS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> SPOT AND PINCHER. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> MULBERRY MARY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> SINGLETREE JENNINGS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> JESS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> THE HUMMING BIRD </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> GASSY THOMPSON, VILLAIN </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> ONE MOUNTAIN LION </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> MOLLIE MATCHES </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> THE ST. CYRS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> McBRIDE'S DANDY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> RED MIKE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> HAMILTON FINNERTY'S HEART </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER I </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER VI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> SHORT CREEK DAVE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> CRIME THAT FAILED </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> THE BETRAYAL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> FOILED </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER I </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER VI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> POLITICS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0038"> ESSLEIN GAMES </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> THE PAINFUL ERROR </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0040"> THE RAT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0041"> CHEYENNE BILL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0042"> BLIGHTED </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0043"> THE SURETHING </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0044"> GLADSTONE BURR </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0045"> THE GARROTE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0046"> O'TOOLE'S CHIVALRY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0047"> WAGON MOUND SAL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0048"> JOE DUBUQUE'S LUCK </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0049"> BINKS AND MRS. B. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0050"> ARABELLA WELD </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0051"> THE WEDDING </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0052"> POINSETTE'S CAPTIVITY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0053"> TIP FROM THE TOMB </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER I </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0059"> TOO CHEAP </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER I. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER VI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0066"> HENRY SPENY'S BENEVOLENCE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0067"> JANE DOUGHERTY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0068"> MISTRESS KILLIFER </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0069"> BEARS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0070"> THE BIG TOUCH </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0071"> THE FATAL KEY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0072"> AN OCEAN ERROR </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0073"> SKINNY MIKE'S UNWISDOM </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0074"> MOLLIE PRESCOTT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0075"> ANNA MARIE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0076"> THE PETERSENS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0077"> BOWLDER'S BURGLAR </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0078"> ANGELINA McLAURIN </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0079"> DINKY PETE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0080"> CRIB OR COFFIN? </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0081"> OHIO DAYS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0082"> I&mdash;AT THE LEES </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0083"> II&mdash;ED CHURCH AND LIDE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0084"> III&mdash;THE SPELLING SCHOOL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0085"> IV&mdash;THE FIGHT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0086"> V&mdash;JIM LEE INTERFERES </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0087"> VI&mdash;THEY DECORATE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0088"> VII&mdash;AUNT ANN PLOTS </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- PREFACE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> SANDBURR is a
- foolish, small vegetable, irritating and grievously useless. Therefore
- this volume of sketches is named Sandburrs. Some folk there be who
- apologize for the birth of a book. There's scant propriety of it. A book
- is but a legless, dormant creature. The public has but to let it alone to
- be safe. And a book, withal! is its own punishment. Is it a bad book? the
- author loses. Is it very bad? the publisher loses. In any case the public
- is preserved. For all of which there will be no apology for SAND-BURRS.
- Nor will I tell what I think of it. No; this volume may make its own
- running, without the handicap of my apology, or the hamstringing of my
- criticism. There should be more than one to do the latter with the least
- of luck. The Bowery dialect&mdash;if it be a dialect&mdash;employed in
- sundry of these sketches is not an exalted literature. The stories told
- are true, however; so much may they have defence.
- </p>
- <h3>
- A. H. L.
- </h3>
- <p>
- New York, Nov. 15, 1899.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- SANDBURRS
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- SPOT AND PINCHER.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>artin is the
- barkeeper of an East Side hotel&mdash;not a good hotel at all&mdash;and
- flourishes as a sporting person of much emphasis. Martin, in passing, is
- at the head of the dog-fighting brotherhood. I often talk with Martin and
- love him very much.
- </p>
- <p>
- Last week I visited Martin's bar. There was &ldquo;nothin' doin',&rdquo; to quote from
- Martin. We talked of fighting men, a subject near to Martin, he having
- fought three prize-fights himself. Martin boasted himself as still being
- &ldquo;an even break wit' any rough-and-tumble scrapper in d' bunch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come here,&rdquo; said Martin, in course of converse; &ldquo;come here; I'll show you
- a bute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Martin opened a door to the room back of the bar. As we entered a
- pink-white bull terrier, with black spots about the eyes, raced across to
- fawn on Martin. The terrier's black toe-nails, bright and hard as agate,
- made a vast clatter on the ash floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is Spot,&rdquo; said Martin. &ldquo;Weighs thirty-three pounds, and he's a hully
- terror! I'm goin' to fight him to-night for five hundred dollars.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- I stooped to express with a pat on his smooth white head my approbation of
- Spot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pick him up, and heft him,&rdquo; said Martin. &ldquo;He won't nip you,&rdquo; 'he
- continued, as I hesitated; &ldquo;bulls is; d' most manful dogs there bees.
- Bulls won't bite nobody.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thereupon I picked up Spot &ldquo;to heft him.&rdquo; Spot smiled widely, wagged his
- stumpy tail, tried to lick my face, and felt like a bundle of live steel.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spot's goin' to fight McDermott's Pincher,&rdquo; said Martin. &ldquo;And,&rdquo;
- addressing this to Spot, &ldquo;you want to watch out, old boy! Pincher is as
- hard as a hod of brick. And you want to look out for your Trilbys;
- Pincher'll fight for your feet and legs. He's d' limit, Spot, Pincher is!
- and you must tend to business when you're in d' pit wit' Pincher, or he'll
- do you. Then McDermott would win me money, an' you an' me, Spot, would
- look like a couple of suckers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spot listened with a pleased air, as if drinking in every word, and wagged
- his stump reassuringly. He would remember Pincher's genius for crunching
- feet and legs, and see to it fully in a general way that Pincher did not
- &ldquo;do&rdquo; him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spot knows he's goin' to fight to-night as well as you and me,&rdquo; said
- Martin, as we returned to the bar. &ldquo;Be d' way! don't you want to go?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- It was nine o'clock that evening. The pit, sixteen feet square, with board
- walls three feet high, was built in the centre of an empty loft on
- Bleecker street. Directly over the pit was a bunch of electric lights. All
- about, raised six inches one above the other, were a dozen rows of board
- seats like a circus. These were crowded with perhaps two hundred sports.
- They sat close, and in the vague, smoky atmosphere, their faces, row on
- row, tier above tier, put me in mind of potatoes in a bin.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fincher was a bull terrier, the counterpart of Spot, save for the markings
- about the face which gave Spot his name. Pincher seemed very sanguine and
- full of eager hope; and as he and Spot, held in the arms of their
- handlers, lolled at each other across the pit, it was plain they
- languished to begin. Neither, however, made yelp or cry or bark. Bull
- terriers of true worth on the battle-field were, I learned, a tacit,
- wordless brood, making no sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Martin &ldquo;handled&rdquo; Spot and McDermott did kindly office for Pincher in the
- same behalf. Martin and McDermott &ldquo;tasted&rdquo; Spot and Pincher respectively;
- smelled and mouthed them for snuffs and poisons. Spot and Pincher
- submitted to these examinations in a gentlemanly way, but were glad when
- they ended.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the word of the referee, Spot and Pincher were loosed, each in his
- corner. They went straight at each other's throats. They met in the exact
- centre of the pit like two milk-white thunderbolts, and the battle began.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spot and Pincher moiled and toiled bloodily for forty-five minutes without
- halt or pause or space to breathe. Their handlers, who were confined to
- their corners by quarter circles drawn in chalk so as to hem them in,
- leaned forward toward the fray and breathed encouragement.
- </p>
- <p>
- What struck me as wonderful, withal, was a lack of angry ferocity on the
- parts of Spot and Pincher. There was naught of growl, naught of rage-born
- cry or comment. They simply blazed with a zeal for blood; burned with a
- blind death-ardour.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Spot and Pincher began, all was so flash-like in their motions, I
- could hardly tell what went on. They were in and out, down and up, over
- and under, writhing like two serpents. Now and then a pair of jaws clicked
- like castanets as they came together with a trap-like snap, missing their
- hold. Now and then one or the other would get a half-grip that would tear
- out. Then the blood flowed, painting both Spot and Pincher crimson.
- </p>
- <p>
- As time went on my eyes began to follow better, and I noted some amazing
- matters. It was plain, for one thing, that both Spot and Pincher were as
- wise and expert as two boxers. They fought intelligently, and each had a
- system. As Martin had said, Pincher fought &ldquo;under,&rdquo; in never-ending
- efforts to seize Spot's feet and legs. Spot was perfectly aware of this,
- and never failed to keep his fore legs well back and beneath him, out of
- Pinchers reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spot, on his part, set his whole effort to the enterprise of getting
- Pincher by the throat. A dog without breath means a dead dog, and Spot
- knew this. Pincher appeared clear on the point, too; and would hold his
- chin close to his breast, and shrug his head and shoulders well together
- whenever Spot tried to work for a throat hold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now and then Spot and Pincher stood up to each other like wrestlers, and
- fenced with their muzzles for &ldquo;holds&rdquo; as might two Frenchmen with foils.
- In the wrestling Spot proved himself a perfect Whistler, and never failed
- to throw Pincher heavily. And, as I stated, from the beginning, the two
- warriors battled on without cry. Silent, sedulous, indomitable; both were
- the sublimation of courage and fell purpose. They were fighting to the
- death; they knew it, joyed in it, and gave themselves to their destiny
- without reserve. Each was eager only to kill, willing only to die. It was
- a lesson to men. And, as I looked, I realised that both were two of the
- happiest of created things. In the very heat of the encounter, with
- throbbing hearts and heaving sides, and rending fangs and flowing blood,
- they found a great content.
- </p>
- <p>
- All at once Spot and Pincher stood motionless. Their eyes were like coals,
- and their respective stump tails stood stiffly, as indicating no abatement
- of heart or courage. What was it that brought the halt? Spot had set his
- long fangs through the side of Pinchers head in such fashion that Pincher
- couldn't reach him nor retaliate with his teeth. Pincher, discovering
- this, ceased to try, and stood there unconquered, resting and awaiting
- developments. Spot, after the manner of his breed, kept his grip like
- Death. They stood silent, motionless, while the blood dripped from their
- gashes; a grim picture! They had fought, as I learned later, to what is
- known in the great sport of dog fighting as &ldquo;a turn.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a turn!&rdquo; decided the referee.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this Martin and McDermot seized each his dog and parted them
- scientifically. Spot and Pincher were carried to their corners and
- refreshed and sponged with cold water. At the end of one minute the
- referee called:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Time!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this point I further added to my learning touching the kingly pastime
- of dog-fighting. When two dogs have &ldquo;fought to a turn,&rdquo; that is, locked
- themselves in a grip, not deadly to either if persisted in, and which
- still prevents further fighting,&mdash;as in the case of Spot and Pincher,&mdash;a
- responsibility rests with the call of &ldquo;Time&rdquo; on the dog that &ldquo;turns.&rdquo; In
- this instance, Pincher. At the call of &ldquo;Time&rdquo; Spot would be held by his
- handler, standing in plain view of Pincher, but in his corner. It was
- incumbent on Pincher&mdash;as a proof of good faith&mdash;to cross the pit
- to get at him. If Pincher failed when released on call of &ldquo;Time&rdquo; to come
- straight across to Spot, and come at once; if he looked to right or left
- or hesitated even for the splinter of a second, he was a beaten dog. The
- battle was against him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Time!&rdquo; called the referee.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just prior to the call I heard Martin whisper huskily over his shoulder to
- a rough customer who sat just back of and above him, at Spot's corner of
- the pit:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stand by wit' that glim now!&rdquo; Martin muttered without turning his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the call &ldquo;Time!&rdquo; McDermot released Pincher across in his corner.
- Pincher's eyes were riveted on Spot, just over the way, and there's no
- doubt of Pincher's full purpose to close with him at once. There was no
- more of hesitation in his stout heart than in Spot's, who stood mouth open
- and fire-eyed, waiting.
- </p>
- <p>
- But a strange interference occurred. At the word &ldquo;Time!&rdquo; the rough
- customer chronicled slipped the slide of a dark lantern and threw the
- small glare of it squarely in Pincher's eyes. It dazed Pincher; he lost
- sight of Spot; forgot for a moment his great purpose. There stood poor
- Pincher, irresolute, not knowing where to find his enemy; thrall to the
- glare of the dark lantern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spot win!&rdquo; declared the referee.
- </p>
- <p>
- At that moment the dark-lantern rough-customer closed the slide and
- disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- Few saw the trick or its effects. Certainly the referee was guiltless. But
- McDermot, who had had the same view of the dark lantern Pincher had, and
- on whom for a moment it had similar effect, raised a great clamour. But it
- was too late; Martin had claimed the thousand dollars from the
- stake-holder, and with it in his pocket was already in a carriage driving
- away, with Spot wrapped up in a lap robe occupying the front seat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let McDermot holler!&rdquo; said Martin, with much heat, when I mentioned the
- subject the next day. &ldquo;Am I goin' to lose a fight and five hundred
- dollars, just because some bloke brings a dark lantern to d' pit and takes
- to monkeyin' wit' it? Not on your life!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- MULBERRY MARY
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">C</span>hucky d' Turk&rdquo; was
- the <i>nom de guerre</i> of my friend. Under this title he fought the
- battles of life. If he had another name he never made me his confidant
- concerning it. We had many talks, Chucky and I; generally in a dingy
- little bar on Baxter Street, where, when I wearied of uptown sights and
- smells, I was wont to meet with Chucky. Never did Chucky call on me nor
- seek me. From first to last he failed not to conduct himself towards me
- with an air of tolerant patronage. When together I did the buying and the
- listening, and Chucky did the drinking and the talking. It was on such
- occasion when Chucky told me the story of Mulberry Mary.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary was born in Kelly's Alley,&rdquo; remarked Chucky, examining in a
- thoughtful way his mug of mixed ale; &ldquo;Mary was born in Kelly's Alley, an'
- say! she wasn't no squealer, I don't t'ink.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When Mary grows up an' can chase about an' chin, she toins out a dead
- good kid an' goes to d' Sisters' School. At this time I don't spot Mary in
- p'ticler; she's nothin' but a sawed-off kid, an' I'm busy wit' me graft.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' foist I really knows of Mary is when she gets married. She hooks up
- wit' Billy, d' moll-buzzard; an' say! he's bad.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He gets his lamps on Mary at Connorses spiel, Billy does; an' he's stuck
- on her in a hully secont. It's no wonder; Mary's a peach. She's d' belle
- of d' Bend, make no doubt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Billy's graft is hangin' round d' Bowery bars, layin' for suckers. An' he
- used to get in his hooks deep an' clever now an' then, an' most times
- Billy could, if it's a case of crowd, flash quite a bit of dough.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So when Billy sees Mary at Connorses spiel, like I says, she's such a
- bute he loses his nut. You needn't give it d' laugh! Say! I sees d' map of
- a skirt&mdash;a goil, I means&mdash;on a drop curtain at a swell t'eatre
- onct, an' it says under it she's Cleopatra. D' mark nex' me says, when I
- taps for a tip, this Cleopatra's from Egypt, an' makes a hit in d' coochee
- coochee line, wit' d' high push of d' old times, see! An' says this
- gezeybo for a finish: 'This Cleopatra was a wonder for looks. She was d'
- high-roller tart of her time, an' d' beauti-fulest.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, all I got to say is,&rdquo; continued Chucky, regarding me with a
- challenging air of decision the while; &ldquo;all I has to utter is, Mary could
- make this Cleopatra look like seven cents!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; resumed Chucky, as I made no comment, &ldquo;Billy chases up to Mary an'
- goes in to give her d' jolly of her life. An', say! she's pleased all
- right, all right; I can see it be her mug.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' Billy goes d' limit. He orders d' beers; an' when he pays, Billy
- springs his wad on Mary an' counts d' bills off slow, Linkin' it'll
- razzle-dazzle her. Then Billy tells Mary he's out to be her steady.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I've got money to boin,' says Billy, 'an' what you wants you gets, see!'
- An' Billy pulls d' long green ag'in to show Mary he's dead strong, an 'd'
- money aint no dream.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Mary says 'Nit! couple of times nit!' She says she's on d' level, an'
- no steady goes wit' her. It's either march or marry wit' Mary. An' so she
- lays it down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's how it stands, when d' nex' news we hears Billy an' she don't do a
- t'ing but chase off to a w'ite-choker; followin' which dey grabs off a
- garret in d' Astorbilt tenement, an' goes to keepin' house.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Mary breaks in on Billy's graft. She says he's got to go to woik;
- he'll get lagged if he don't; an' she won't stand for no husband who
- spends half d' time wit' her an 'd' rest on d' Island. So he cuts loose
- from d' fly mob an' leaves d' suckers alone, an' hires out for a tinsmith,
- see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' here's d' luck Billy has. It's d' secont day an' he's fittin' in d'
- tin flashin' round a chimbley on a five-story roof; an' mebby it's because
- he aint used to woik, or mebby he gets funny in his cupolo, bein' up so
- high; anyhow he dives down to d' pavement, an' when he lands, you bet your
- life! Billy's d' deadest t'ing that ever happened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary goes wild an' wrong after that. In half of no time Mary takes to
- chasin' up to Mott Street an' hittin' d' pipe. There's a Chink up there
- who can cook d' hop out o' sight, an' it aint long before Mary is hangin'
- 'round his joint for good. It's then dey quits callin' her Mulberry Mary,
- an' she goes be d' name of Mollie d' Dope.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary don't last in d' Chink swim more'n a year before there's bats in her
- belfry for fair; any old stiff wit' lamps could see it; an' so folks gets
- leary of Mary.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0027.jpg" alt="0027 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0027.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It runs on mebby two years after Billy does that stunt from d' roof, see!
- when there's a fire an' all d' kids run an' screeched, an' all d' folks
- hollered, an' all d' engines comes an' lams loose to put it out. D' fire's
- in a tenement, an 'd' folks who was in it has skipped, so it's just d'
- joint itself is boinin'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All at onct a kid looks out d' fort' story window wit 'd' fire shinin'
- behint him. You can see be d' little mark's mug he's got an awful scare
- t'run into him, t'inkin' he's out to boin in d' buildin*.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'It's McManuses' Chamsey!' says one old Tommy, lettin' her hair down her
- back an' givin' a yell, 'Somebody save McManuses' Chamsey!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Let me save him!' says Mary, at d' same time laughin' wild. 'Let me save
- him; I want to save him! I'm only Mollie d' Dope&mdash;Mollie d' hop fiend&mdash;an'
- if I gets it in d' neck it don't count, see!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary goes up in d' smoke an 'd' fire, no one knows how, wit' d' water
- pourin' from d' hose, an 'd' boards an' glass a-fallin' an' a-crashin',
- an' she brings out McManuses' Chamsey, Saves him; on d' dead! she does;
- an' boins all d' hair off her cocoa doin' it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, of course d' fire push stan's in an' gives Mary all sorts of guff
- an' praise. Mary only laughs an' says, while d' amb'lance guy is doin' up
- her head, that folks ain't onto her racket; that she d' soonest frail that
- ever walks in d' Bend.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture Chucky desired another mixed ale. He got it, and after a
- long, damp pause he resumed his thread.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now what do youse t'ink of this for a finish? It's weeks ago d' fire is.
- Mary meets up wit' McManuses' Chamsey to-day&mdash;she's been followin'
- him a good deal since she saves him&mdash;an' as Chamsey is only six years
- old, he don't know nothin', an' falls to Mary's lead. It's an easy case of
- bunk, an' Chamsey only six years old like that!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary gives Chamsey d' gay face an' wins him right off. She buys him
- posies of one Dago an' sugar candy of another; an' then she passes Chamsey
- a strong tip, he's missin' d' sights be not goin' down to d' East River.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here's what Mary does&mdash;she takes Chamsey down be d' docks&mdash;a
- longshoreman loafin' hears what she says. Mary tells Chamsey to look at
- all d' chimbleys an 'd' smoke comin' out!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'An' in every one there's fire makin 'd' smoke,' says Mary. 'T'ink of all
- d' fires there must be, Chamsey! I'll bet Hell ain't got any more fires in
- it than d' woild! Do youse remember, Chamsey, how d' fire was goin' to
- boin you? Now, I'll tell you what we'll do, so d' fire never will boin us;
- we'll jump in,&mdash;you an' me!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' wit' that, so d' longshoreman says, Mary nails Chamsey be d' neck
- wit' her left hook an' hops into d' drink. Yes, dey was drowned&mdash;d'
- brace of 'em. Dey's over to d' dead house now on a slab&mdash;Mary an'
- McManuses' Chamsey.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What makes me so wet? I gets to d' dock a minute too late to save 'em,
- but I'm right in time to dive up d' stiffs. So I dives 'em up. It's easy
- money. That's what makes me cuffs look like ruffles an' me collar like a
- corset string.&rdquo; And here Chucky called for a third mixed ale, as a sign
- that his talk was done.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- SINGLETREE JENNINGS
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was evening in
- Jordan Hollow, and Singletree Jennings stood leaning on his street gate.
- Singletree Jennings was a coloured man, and, to win his bread, played many
- parts in life. He was a whitewasher; he sold fish; he made gardens; and
- during the social season he was frequently the &ldquo;old family butler,&rdquo; in
- white cotton gloves, at the receptions of divers families.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm a pore man, honey!&rdquo; Singletree Jennings was wont to say; &ldquo;but dar was
- a time when me an' my ole Delia was wuf $1,800. Kase why? Kase we brought
- it at auction, when Marse Roundtree died&mdash;didn't we, Delia?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This was one of Singletree Jennings's jokes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But pore man or no!&rdquo; Singletree Jennings would conclude, &ldquo;as de Lamb
- looks down an' sees me, I never wronged a man outen so much as a
- blue-laiged chicken in my life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This evening Singletree Jennings was a prey to dejection. Nor could he
- account for his gloom. His son opened the gate and went whistling up the
- street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Clambake Jennings, whar yo' gwine?&rdquo; asked Singletree Jennings.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gwine ter shoot craps.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have yo' got yer rabbit's foot?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yassir.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' de snake's head outen de clock?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yassir.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Singletree Jennings relapsed into moody silence, and Clambake passed on
- and away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shouts and cries of some storm-rocked multitude was heard up the
- street. The Columbia College boys were taking home their new eight-oared
- boat. The shouts settled into something like the barking of a dog. It was
- the crew emitting the college cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's dat?&rdquo; demanded Delia Jennings, coming to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;De Lawd save us ef I knows!&rdquo; said Singletree Jennings; &ldquo;onless it's one
- of dem yar bond issues dey's so 'fraid'll happen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The tones of Singletree Jennings showed that he was ill at ease.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's de matter, Daddy Singletree?&rdquo; demanded the observant Delia.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've got a present'ment, I reckon!&rdquo; said Singletree Jennings. &ldquo;I'm
- pow'ful feard dar'll somethin' bust loose wrong about dat Andrew Jackson
- goat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Singletree Jennings was the owner and business manager of a goat named
- Andrew Jackson. In the winter Singletree Jennings never came home without
- an armful of straw for Andrew Jackson. In the summer there was no need of
- straw. Andrew Jackson then ate the shirts off the neighbour's
- clothes-lines. Andrew Jackson had been known to eat the raiment off a
- screaming child, and then lower his frontlet at the rescue party. Andrew
- Jackson was a large, impressive goat; yet he never joked nor gave way to
- mirth. Ordinarily, Andrew Jackson was a calm, placid goat; aroused, he was
- an engine of destruction.
- </p>
- <p>
- All of these peculiarities were explained by Singletree Jennings when Sam
- Hardtack and Backfence Randolph, a committee acting on behalf of the
- Othello Dramatic Club, desired the loan of Andrew Jackson. The church to
- which Singletree Jennings belonged was programming a social this very
- night, and divers and sundry tableaux, under the direction of the Othello
- Dramatic Club, were on the card. It was esteemed necessary by those in
- control to present as a tableau Abraham slaying Isaac. There was a paucity
- of sheep about, and Andrew Jackson, in this dearth of the real thing, was
- cast to play the character of the Ram in the Bush.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' Andrew Jackson is boun' to fetch loose,&rdquo; reflected Singletree
- Jennings, with a shake of his head; &ldquo;an' when he does, he'll jes' go
- knockin' 'round among de congregashun like a blind dog in a meat shop!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Singletree Jennings's worst fears were realised. It was nine o'clock now,
- and he and Delia had come down to the social. Andrew Jackson had been
- restrained of his liberty for the previous four hours and held captive in
- a drygoods' box. He was now in a state of frenzy. When the curtain went up
- on Abraham and Isaac, Andrew Jackson burst his bonds at the rear of the
- stage and bore down on the Hebrew father and son like the breath of
- destiny. Andrew Jackson came, dragging his bush with him. The bush was, of
- course, a welcome addition. Abraham saw him coming, and fled into the lap
- of a fiddler. Isaac, however, wasn't faced that way. Andrew Jackson smote
- Isaac upon the starboard quarter. It was a follow shot, rather than a
- carom, and Andrew Jackson and his prey landed in the middle of the
- audience together. For two minutes Andrew Jackson mingled freely with the
- people present, and then retired by the back door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I knowed destrucshun was a-comin'!&rdquo; murmured Singletree Jennings. &ldquo;I
- ain't felt dat pestered, Delia, since de day I concealed my 'dentity in
- Marse Roundtree's smokehouse, an' dey cotched me at it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Singletree Jennings!&rdquo; observed the Reverend Handout F. Johnson, in a tone
- of solemn anger, while his pistol pocket still throbbed from the
- visitation of Andrew Jackson, &ldquo;Elder Shakedown Bixby is in pursuit of dat
- goat of your'n with a razor. He has orders to immolate when cotched. At de
- nex' conference dar'll be charges ag'in you for substitutin' a deboshed
- goat for de Ram of Holy Writ. I keers nothin' for my pussonel sufferin's,
- but de purity of de Word mus' be protected. De congregashun will now join
- in singin' de pestilential Psalms, after which de social will disperse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- JESS
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was sunset at
- the Cross-K ranch. Four or five cowboys were gloomily about outside the
- adobe ranch house, awaiting supper. The Mexican cook had just begun his
- fragrant task, so a half hour would elapse before these Arabs were fed.
- Their ponies were &ldquo;turned&rdquo; into the wire pasture, their big Colorado
- saddles reposed astride the low pole fence which surrounded the house, and
- it was evident their riding was over for the day.
- </p>
- <p>
- Why were they gloomy? Not a boy of them could tell. They had been partners
- and <i>campaneros</i>, and &ldquo;worked&rdquo; the Cross-K cattle together for
- months, and nothing had come in misunderstanding or cloud. The ranch house
- was their home, and theirs had been the unity of brothers.
- </p>
- <p>
- The week before, a pretty girl&mdash;the daughter she was of a statesman
- of national repute&mdash;had come to the ranch from the East. Her name was
- Jess.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jess, the pretty girl, was protected in this venture by an old and gnarled
- aunt, watchful as a ferret, sour as a lime. Not that Jess, the pretty
- girl, needed watching; she was, indeed! propriety's climax.
- </p>
- <p>
- No soft nor dulcet reason wooed Jess, the pretty girl, to the West; she
- came on no love errand. The visitor was elegantly tired of the East, that
- was all; and longed for western air and western panorama.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jess, the pretty girl, had been at the Cross-K ranch a week, and the boys
- had met her, everyone. The meeting or meetings were marked by awkwardness
- as to the boys, indifference as to Jess, the pretty girl. She encountered
- them as she did the ponies, cows, horned-toads and other animals, domestic
- and <i>fero naturo</i>, indigenous to eastern Arizona. While every cowboy
- was blushingly conscious of Jess, the pretty girl, she was serenely
- guiltless of giving him a thought.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before Jess, the pretty girl, arrived, the cowboys were friends and the
- tenor of their calm relations was rippleless as a mirror. Jess was not
- there a day, before each drew himself insensibly from the others, while a
- vague hostility shone dimly in his eyes. It was the instinct of the
- fighting male animal aroused by the presence of Jess, the pretty girl.
- Jess, however, proceeded on her dainty way, sweetly ignorant of the
- sentiments she awakened.
- </p>
- <p>
- Men are mere animals. Women are, too, for that matter. But the latter are
- different animals from men. The effort the race makes to be other, better
- or different than the mere animal fails under pressure. It always failed;
- it will always fail. Civilisation is the veriest veneer and famously thin.
- A year on the plains cracks this veneer&mdash;this shell&mdash;and the
- animal issues visibly forth. This shell-cracking comes by the expanding
- growth of all that is animalish in man&mdash;attributes of the physical
- being, fed and pampered by a plains' existence.
- </p>
- <p>
- To recur to the boys of the Cross-K. The dark, vague, impalpable
- differences which cut off each of these creatures from his fellows, and
- inspired him with an unreasoning hate, had flourished with the brief week
- of their existence. A philosopher would have looked for near trouble on
- the Cross-K.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever did you take my saddle for, Bill?&rdquo; said Jack Cook to one Bill
- Watkins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I allows I'll ride it some,&rdquo; replied Watkins; &ldquo;thought it might
- like to pack a sure-'nough long-horn jest once for luck!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, don't maverick it no more,&rdquo; retorted Cook, moodily, and ignoring
- the gay insolence of the other. &ldquo;Leastwise, don't come a-takin' of it, an'
- sayin' nothin'. You can <i>palaver Americano</i>, can't you? When you aims
- to ride my saddle ag'in, ask for it; if you can't talk, make signs, an' if
- you can't make signs, shake a bush; but don't go romancin' off in silence
- with no saddle of mine no more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever do you reckon is liable to happen if I pulls it ag'in to-morry?&rdquo;
- inquired Bill in high scorn.
- </p>
- <p>
- Watkins was of a more vivacious temper than the gloomy Cook.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which if you takes it ag'in, I'll shorely come among you a whole lot. An'
- some prompt!&rdquo; replied Cook, in a tone of obstinate injury.
- </p>
- <p>
- These boys were brothers before Jess, the pretty girl, appeared. Either
- would have gone afoot all day for the other. Going afoot, too, is the last
- thing a cowboy will consent to.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you-all fail to come among me none,&rdquo; said Bill with cheerful
- ferocity, &ldquo;on account of it's bein' me. I crosses the trail of a hold-up
- like you over in the Panhandle once, an' makes him dance, an' has a
- chuck-waggon full of fun with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop your millin' now, right yere!&rdquo; said Tom Rawlins, the Cross-K range
- boss, who was sitting close at hand. &ldquo;You-alls spring trouble 'round yere,
- an' you can gamble I'll be in it! Whatever's the matter with you-alls
- anyway? Looks like you've been as <i>locoed</i> as a passel of sore-head
- dogs for more'n a week now. Which you're shorely too many for me, an' I
- plumb gives you up!&rdquo; And Rawlins shook his sage head foggily.
- </p>
- <p>
- The boys started some grumbling reply, but the cook called them to supper
- just then, and, one animalism becoming overshadowed by another, they
- forgot their rancour in thoughts of supplying their hunger. Towards the
- last of the repast, Rawlins arose, and going to another room, began
- overlooking some entries in the ranch books.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jess, the pretty girl, did not sit at the ranch table. She had small
- banquets in her own room. Just then she was heard singing some tender
- little song that seemed born of a sigh and a tear. The boys' resentment of
- each other began again to burn in their eyes. None of these savages was in
- the least degree in love with Jess, the pretty girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- The singing went on in a cooing, soft way that did not bring you the
- words; only the music.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What I says about my saddle a while back, goes as it lays!&rdquo; said Jack
- Cook.
- </p>
- <p>
- The song had ceased.
- </p>
- <p>
- As Cook spoke he turned a dark look on Watkins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;See yere!&rdquo; replied Watkins in an exasperated tone&mdash;he was as vicious
- as Cook&mdash;&ldquo;if you're p'intin' out for a war-jig with me, don't go
- stampin' 'round none for reasons. Let her roll! Come a-runnin' an' don't
- pester none with ceremony.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which a gent don't have to have no reason for crawlin' you!&rdquo; said Cook.
- &ldquo;Anyone's licenced to chase you 'round jest for exercise!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can gamble,&rdquo; said Watkins, confidently, &ldquo;any party as chases me
- 'round much, will regyard it as a thrillin' pastime. Which it won't grow
- on him none as a habit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As you-all seem to feel that a-way,&rdquo; said the darkly wrathful Cook, &ldquo;I'll
- sorter step out an' shoot with you right now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' I'll shorely go you!&rdquo; said Watkins.
- </p>
- <p>
- They arose and walked to the door. It was gathering dark, but it was light
- enough to shoot by. The other cowboys followed in a kind of savage
- silence. Not one word was said in comment or objection. They were grave,
- but passive like Indians. It is not good form to interfere with other
- people's affairs in Arizona.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jess, the pretty girl, began singing again. The strains fell softly on the
- ears of the cowboys. Each, as he listened, whether onlooker or principal,
- felt a licking, pleased anticipation of the blood to be soon set flowing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nothing was said of distance. Cook and Watkins separated to twenty paces
- and turned to face each other. Each wore his six-shooter, the loose pistol
- belt letting it rest low on his hip. Each threw down his big hat and stood
- at apparent ease, with his thumbs caught in his belt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shall you give the word, or me?&rdquo; asked Cook.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You says when!&rdquo; retorted Watkins. &ldquo;It'll be a funny passage in American
- history if you-all gets your gun to the front any sooner than I do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be you ready?&rdquo; asked Cook.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I'm shorely ready!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, go!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bang! Bang!! Bang!!!&rdquo; went both pistols together.
- </p>
- <p>
- The reports came with a rapidity not to be counted. Cook got a crease in
- the face&mdash;a mere wound of the flesh. Watkins blundered forward with a
- bullet in his side.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0041.jpg" alt="0041 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0041.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- Rawlins ran out. His experience taught him all at a look. Hastily
- examining Cook, he discovered that his hurt was nothing serious. The
- others carried Watkins into the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Take my pony saddled at the fence, Jack,&rdquo; said Rawlins, &ldquo;an' pull your
- freight. This yere Watkins is goin' to die. You've planted him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I shorely hopes I has!&rdquo; said Cook, with bitter cheerfulness. &ldquo;I
- ain't got no use for cattle of his brand; none whatever!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Cook took Rawlins's pony. When he paused, the pony hung his head while his
- flanks steamed and quivered. And no marvel! That pony was one hundred
- miles from the last corn, as he cooled his nervous muzzle in the Rio San
- Simon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some deviltry about their saddles, Miss; that's all!&rdquo; reported Rawlins to
- Jess, the pretty girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Isn't it horrible!&rdquo; shuddered Jess, the pretty girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next morning Jess and the gnarled aunt paid the injured Watkins a
- visit. This civility affected the other three cowboys invidiously. They at
- once departed to a line of Cross-K camps in the Northwest. This on a
- pretence of working cattle over on the Cochise Mesa. They looked black
- enough as they galloped away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which it's shore a sin Jack Cook ain't no better pistol shot!&rdquo; observed
- one, as the acrid picture of Jess, the pretty girl, sympathising above the
- wounded Watkins, arose before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whatever!&rdquo; assented the others.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then, in moods of grim hatefulness, they bled their tired ponies with the
- spur by way of emphasis.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE HUMMING BIRD
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>IT; I'm in a hurry
- to chase meself to-night,&rdquo; quoth Chucky, having first, however, taken his
- drink. &ldquo;I'd like to stay an' chin wit' youse, but I can't. D' fact is I've
- got company over be me joint; he's a dead good fr'end of mine, see!
- Leastwise he has been; an' more'n onct, when I'm in d' hole, he's reached
- me his mit an' pulled me out. Now he's down on his luck I'm goin' to make
- good, an' for an even break on past favours, see if I can't straighten up
- <i>his</i> game.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who is your friend?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;Does he live here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naw,&rdquo; retorted Chucky; &ldquo;he's a crook, an' don't live nowhere. His name's
- Mollie Matches, an 'd' day was when Mollie's d' flyest fine-woiker on
- Byrnes's books. An' say! that ain't no fake neither.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he do?&rdquo; I inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Leathers, supers an' rocks,&rdquo; replied Chucky. &ldquo;Of course, d' supers has to
- be yellow; d' w'ite kind don't pay; an' d' rocks has to be d' real t'ing.
- In d' old day, Mollie was d' king of d' dips, for fair! Of all d' crooks
- he was d' nob, an' many's d' time I've seen him come into d' Gran' Central
- wit' his t'ree stalls an' a Sheeny kid to carry d' swag, an' all as swell
- a mob as ever does time.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he's fell be d' wayside now, an' don't youse forget it! Not only is
- he broke for dough, but his healt' is busted, too.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's one of the strange things to me, Chucky,&rdquo; I said, for I was
- disposed to detain him if I could, and hear a bit more of his devious
- friend; &ldquo;one of the very strange things! Here's your friend Mollie, who
- has done nothing, so you say, but steal watches, diamonds and pocket-books
- all his life, and yet to-day he is without a dollar.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh! as for that,&rdquo; returned Chucky wisely, &ldquo;a crook don't make so much. In
- d' foist place, if he's nippin' leathers, nine out of ten of 'em's bound
- to be readers&mdash;no long green in 'em at all; nothin' but poi-pers,
- see! An' if he's pinchin' tickers an' sparks, a fence won't pay more'n a
- fort' what dey's wort'&mdash;an' there you be, see! Then ag'in, it costs a
- hundred plunks a day to keep a mob on d' road; an' what wit' puttin' up to
- d' p'lice for protection, an' what wit' squarin' a con or brakey if youse
- are graftin' on a train, there ain't, after his stalls has their bits,
- much left for Mollie. Takin' it over all, Mollie's dead lucky to get a
- hundred out of a t'ousand plunks; an' yet he's d' mug who has to put his
- hooks on d' stuff every time; do d' woik an' take d' chances, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I'll tip it off to youse,&rdquo; continued Chucky, at the same time
- lowering his tone confidentially; &ldquo;I'll put you on to what knocks Mollie's
- eye out just now. He's only a week ago toined out of one of de western
- pens, an' I reckon he was bad wit' 'em at d' finish&mdash;givin' 'em a
- racket. Anyhow, dey confers on Mollie d' Hummin' Boid, an dey overplays.
- Mollie's gettin' old, and can't stand for what he could onct; an', as I
- says, these prison marks gives him too much of 'd Hummin' Boid and it
- breaks his noive.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure! Mollie's now what youse call hyster'cal; got bats in his steeple
- half d' time. If it wasn't for d' hop I shoots into him wit' a dandy
- little hypodermic gun me Rag's got, he'd be in d' booby house. An' all for
- too much Hummin' Boid! Say! on d' level! there ought to be a law ag'inst
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What in heaven's name is the Humming Bird?&rdquo; I queried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's d' prison punishment,&rdquo; replied Chucky. &ldquo;Youse see, every pen has its
- punishment. In some, it's d' paddles, an' some ag'in don't do a t'ing but
- hang a guy up be a pair of handcuffs to his cell door so his toes just
- scrapes d' floor. In others dey starves you; an' in others still, dey
- slams you in d' dark hole.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! if youse are out to make some poor mark nutty for fair, just give
- him d' dark hole for a week. There he is wit' nothin' in d' cell but
- himself, see! an* all as black as ink. Mebby if d' guards is out to keep
- him movin', dey toins d' hose in an' wets down d' floor before dey leaves
- him. But honest to God! youse put a poor sucker in d' dark hole, an' be d'
- end of ten hours it's apples to ashes he ain't onto it whether he's been
- in a day or a week. Keep him there a week, an' away goes his cupolo&mdash;he
- ain't onto nothin'. On d' square! at d' end of a week in d' dark, a mut
- don't know lie's livin'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' cat-o'nine-tails, which dey has at Jeff City, ain't a marker to d'
- dark hole! D' cat'll crack d' skin all right, all right, but d' dark hole
- cracks a sucker's nut, see! His cocoa never is on straight ag'in, after
- he's done a stunt or two in d' dark hole.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But the Humming Bird?&rdquo; I persisted. &ldquo;What is it like?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why! as I relates,&rdquo; retorted Chucky, &ldquo;d' Hummin Boid is what dey does to
- a guy in d' pen where Mollie was to teach him not to be too gay. It's like
- this: Here's a gezebo doin' time, see! Well, he gets funny. Mebby he soaks
- some other pris'ner; or mebby he toins loose and gives it to some guard in
- d' neck; or mebby ag'in he kicks on d' lock-step. I've seen a heap of mugs
- who does d' last.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anyhow, whatever he does, it gets to be a case of Hummin' Boid, an' dey
- brings me gay scrapper or kicker, whichever he is, out for punishment. An'
- this is what he gets ag'inst:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey sets him in a high trough, same as dey waters a horse wit', see!
- Foist dey shucks d' mark&mdash;peels off his make-up down to d' buff. An'
- then dey sets him in d' trough, like I says, wit' mebby its eight inches
- of water in it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then he's strapped be d' ankles, an' d' fins, and about his waist, so he
- can't do nothin' but stay where he is. A sawbones gets him be d' pulse,
- an' one of them 'lectrical stiffs t'rows a wire, which is one end of d'
- battery, in d' water. D' wire, which is d' other end, finishes in a wet
- sponge. An' say! hully hell! when dey touches a poor mark wit' d' sponge
- end on d' shoulder, or mebby d' elbow, it completes d' circuit, see! an'
- it'll fetch such a glory hallelujah yelp out of him as would bring a deef
- an' dumb asylum into d' front yard to find out what d' row's about.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's d' same t'ing as d' chair at Sing Sing, only not so warm. It's
- enough, though, to make d' toughest mug t'row a fit. No one stands for a
- secont trip; one touch of d' Hummin' Boid! an' a duck'll welch on anyt'ing
- you says&mdash;do anyt'ing, be anyt'ing; only so youse let up and don't
- give him no more. D' mere name of Hummin' Boid's good enough to t'run a
- scare into d' hardest an' d' woist of 'em, onct dey's had a piece.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I says about Mollie: it seems them Indians gives him d' Hummin' Boid;
- an' dey gives him d' gaff too deep. But I've got to chase meself now, and
- pump some dope into him. I ought to land Mollie right side up in a week.
- An' then I'll bring him over to this boozin' ken of ours, an' cap youse a
- knock-down to him. Ta! ta!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- GASSY THOMPSON, VILLAIN
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ESTERN humour is
- being severely spoken of by the close personal friends of Peter Dean. Less
- than a year ago, Peter Dean left the paternal roof on Madison Avenue and
- plunged into the glowing West. On the day of his departure he was
- twenty-three; not a ripe age. He had studied mining and engineering, and
- knew in those matters all that science could tell. His purpose in going
- West was to acquire the practical part of his chosen profession. Peter
- Dean believed in knowing it all; knowing it with the hands as well as with
- the head.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus it befell that young Peter Dean, on a day to be remembered, tossed a
- careless kiss to his companions and fled away into the heart of the
- continent. Then his hair was raven black. Months later, when he returned,
- it was silver white. Western humour had worked the change; therefore the
- criticism chronicled. Peter Dean tells the following story of the
- bleaching:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At Creede I met a person named Thompson; 'Gassy' Thompson he was called
- by those about him, in testimony to his powers as a conversationist. A
- barkeeper, who seemed the best-informed and most gentlemanly soul in town,
- told me that Gassy Thompson was a miner full of practical skill, and that
- he was then engaged in sinking a shaft. I might arrange with Gassy and
- learn the business. At the barkeeper's hint, I proposed as much to Gassy
- Thompson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'All right!' said Gassy; 'come out to the shaft to-morrow.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The next day I was at the place appointed. The shaft was already fifty
- feet deep. Besides myself and this person, Gassy, who was to tutor me,
- there was a creature named Jim. This made three of us.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At the suggestion of Gassy, he and I descended into the shaft; Jim was
- left on the surface. We went down by means of a bucket, Jim unwinding us
- from a rickety old windlass.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Once down, Gassy and I, with sledge and drill, perpetrated a hole in the
- bottom of the shaft. I held the drill, Gassy wielding the sledge. When the
- hole met the worshipful taste of my tutor, he put in a dynamite cartridge,
- connected a long, five-minute fuse therewith, and carefully thumbed it
- about and packed it in with wet clay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At Gassy's word, I was then hauled up from the shaft by Jim. I added my
- strength to the windlass, Gassy climbed into the bucket, lighted the fuse,
- and was then swiftly wound to the surface by Jim and myself. We then
- dragged the windlass aside, covered the mouth of the shaft, and quickly
- scampered to a distance, to be out of harm's reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At the end of five minutes from the time that Gassy lighted the fuse, and
- perhaps three minutes after we had cleared away, the shot exploded with a
- deafening report. Tons of rock were shot up from the mouth of the shaft,
- full fifty feet in the air. It was all very impressive, and gave me a
- lesson in the tremendous power of dynamite. I was much pleased, and felt
- as if I were learning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Following the explosion Gassy and I again repaired to the bottom of the
- shaft. After clearing away the débris and sending it up and out by the
- bucket, we resumed the sledge and drill. We completed another hole and
- were ready for a second shot. This was about noon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was at this point that the miscreant, Gassy, began to put into action
- a plot he had formed against me, and to carry out which the murderer, Jim,
- lent ready aid. You must remember that I had perfect confidence in these
- two villains.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I never seed no tenderfoot go along like you do at this business,' said
- Gassy Thompson to me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This was flattery. The miscreant was fattening me for the sacrifice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Looks like you was born to be a miner,' he went on. 'Now, I'm goin' to
- let you fire the next shot. Usual, I wouldn't feel jestified in allowin' a
- tenderfoot to fire a shot for plumb three months. But you has a genius for
- minin'; it comes as easy to you as robbin' a bird's nest. I'd be doin'
- wrong to hold you back.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, I naturally felt pleased. To be allowed to fire a dynamite
- shot on my first day in the shaft I felt and knew to be an honour. I
- determined to write home to my friends of this triumph.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gassy said he'd put in the shot, and he selected one of giant size. I saw
- the herculean explosive placed in the hole; then he attached the fuse and
- thumbed the clay about it as before. He gave me a few last words.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'After I gets up,' he said, 'an' me an' Jim's all ready, you climb into
- the bucket an' light the fuse. Then raise the long yell to me an' Jim, an'
- we'll yank ye out. But be shore an' light the fuse. There's nothin' more
- discouragin' than for to wait half an* hour outside an' no cartridge goin'
- off. Especial when it goes off after you comes back to see what's the
- matter with her. So be shore an' light the fuse, an' then Jim an' me'll
- run you up the second follerin'. This oughter be a great day for you,
- young man! firin' a shot this away, the first six hours you're a miner!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jim and Gassy were at the windlass and yelled:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'All ready below?'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was in the bucket and at the word scratched a match and lit the fuse.
- It sputtered with alarming ardour, and threw off a shower of sparks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Hoist away!' I called.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The villains ran me up about twenty-five feet, and came to a dead halt.
- At this they seemed to get into an altercation. They both abandoned the
- windlass, and I could hear them cursing, threatening, and shooting;
- presumably at each other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I'll blow your heart out!' I heard Gassy say.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My alarm was without a limit. I'd seen one dynamite cartridge go off.
- Here I was, swinging some twenty-five feet over a still heavier charge,
- and about to be blown into eternity! Meanwhile the caitiffs, on whom my
- life depended, were sacrificing me to settle some accursed feud of their
- own.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I cannot tell you of my agony. The fuse was spitting fire like forty
- fiends; the narrow shaft was choked with smoke. I swung helpless, awaiting
- death, while the two monsters, Gassy and Jim, were trying to murder each
- other above. Either from the smoke or the excitement, I fainted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I came to myself I was outside the shaft, safe and sound, while
- Gassy and his disreputable assistant were laughing at their joke. There
- had been no shot placed in the drill-hole; the heartless Gassy had palmed
- it and carried it with him to the surface.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At my very natural inquiry, made in a weak voice&mdash;for I was still
- sick and broken&mdash;as to what it all meant, they said it was merely a
- Colorado jest, and intended for the initiation of a tenderfoot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'It gives 'em nerve!' said Gassy; 'it puts heart into 'em an' does 'em
- good!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As soon as I could walk I severed my relations with Gassy Thompson and
- his outlaw adherent, Jim. The next morning my hair had turned the milky
- sort you see. The Creede people with whom I discussed the crime, laughed
- and said the drinks were on me. That was all the sympathy, all the
- redress, I got.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After that I came East without delay. When I leave the city of New York
- again it will not be for Creede. Nor will my next mining connection be
- formed with such abandoned barbarians as Gassy Thompson and Jim.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- ONE MOUNTAIN LION
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>ard! would you
- like to shoot at that lion?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bob usually gave me no title at all. But when in any stress of our
- companionship he was driven to it, I was hailed as &ldquo;pard!&rdquo; Once or twice
- on some lighter occasion he had addressed me by the Spanish &ldquo;<i>Amigo</i>.&rdquo;
- In business hours, however, my rank was &ldquo;pard!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Sundown in the hills. The scene was a southeast spur of the Rockies; call
- the region the Upper Red River or the Vermejo, whichever you will for a
- name. Forty miles due west from the Spanish Peaks would stand one on the
- very spot.
- </p>
- <p>
- I had been out all day, ransacking the canyons, taking a Winter's look at
- the cattle to note how they were meeting the rigours of a season not yet
- half over. I had witnessed nothing alarming; my horned folk of the hills
- still made a smooth display as to ribs, and wore the air of cattle who had
- prudently stored up tallow enough the autumn before to carry them into the
- April grass.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Many a day have I dwelt in a wet saddle, only to crawl into a wetter
- blanket at night; and all for cows!&rdquo; It was Bob Ellis who fathered this
- rather irrelevant observation. I had cut his trail an hour before, and we
- were making company for each other back to camp. I put forth no retort.
- Bob and I abode in the same small log hut, and I saw much of him, and
- didn't feel obliged to reply to those random utterances which fluttered
- from him like birds from a bush.
- </p>
- <p>
- It had been snowing for three days. This afternoon, however, had shaken
- off the storm. It is worth while to see the snow come down in the hills;
- flakes soft and clinging and silently cold; big as a baby's hand. Out in
- the flat valleys free of the trees the snow was deep enough to jade and
- distress our ponies. Therefore Bob and I were creeping home among the
- thick sown pines which bristled on the Divide like spines on a pig's back.
- There was very little snow under the trees. What would have made an easy
- depth of two feet had it been evenly spread on the ground over which our
- broncos picked their tired way, was above our heads in the pines. That was
- the reason why the trees were so still and silent. Your pine is a most
- garrulous vegetable in a sighing fashion, and its complaining notes sing
- for ever in your ears; sometimes like a roar, sometimes like a wail. But
- the three-days' snow in their green mouths gagged them; and never a tree
- of them all drew so much as a breath as we pushed on through their ranks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like the Winchester you're packin?&rdquo; asked Bob.
- </p>
- <p>
- I confessed a weakness for the gun.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Had one of them magazine guns once myse'f,&rdquo; Bob remarked. &ldquo;Model of '78.
- Never liked it, though; always shootin' over. As you pump the loads outen
- 'em and empty the magazine, the weight shifts till toward the last the
- muzzle's as light as a feather. Thar you be! shootin' over and still over,
- every pull.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Having no interest in magazine guns beyond the act of firing them, I paid
- no heed to Bob's assault on their merits.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now a single-shot gun,&rdquo; continued Bob, as he rode an oak shrub underfoot
- to come abreast of me, &ldquo;is the weepon for me. Never mind about thar bein'
- jest one shot in her! Show me somethin' to shoot, an' I'll sling the
- cartridges into her frequent enough for the most impatient gent on earth.
- This rifle I'm packin' is all right&mdash;all except the hind sight.
- That's too coarse; you could drag a dog through it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bob's dissertation on rifles was entertaining enough. My mood was
- indifferent, and his wisdom ran through my wits like water through a
- funnel, keeping them employed without filling them up. Bob had just begun
- again&mdash;all about a day far away when muzzle loaders were many in the
- hills&mdash;when my pony made sudden shy at something in the bushes. The
- muzzle of my gun instantly pointed to it, as if by an instinct of its own.
- Even as it did I became aware of the harmless cause of my pony's devout
- breathings&mdash;one of those million tragedies of nature which makes the
- wilderness a daily slaughter pen. It was the carcass of a blacktail deer.
- Its torn throat and shoulders, as well as the tracks of the giant cat in
- the snow, told how it died. The panther had leaped from the big bough of
- that yellow pine.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mountain lion!&rdquo; observed Bob, sagely, as he con templated the torn deer.
- &ldquo;The deer come sa'nterin' down the slope yere, an' the lion jest naturally
- jumps his game from that tree. This deer was a bigger fool than most. You
- wouldn't ketch many of 'em as could come walkin' down the wind where the
- brush and bushes is rank, and gives the cats a chance to lay for 'em and
- bushwhack 'em!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was becoming shadowy in among the pines by this time, and, having
- enough of Bob's defence of the dead buck and apology for its errors, I
- pushed on through the bushes for the camp. As we crossed a burnt strip
- where the fires had made a meal of the trees, the sun was reluctantly
- blinking his last before going to bed in the Sangre de Christo Range,
- which rolled upward like some tremendous billow in an ocean of milk full
- five scores of miles to the west.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bob and I were smoking our pipes in our log home that evening. Perhaps it
- was nine o'clock. A pitch-pine fire&mdash;billets set up endwise in the
- fireplace&mdash;roared in one corner. Our chimney was a vast success. Out
- back of our log habitat the surveyors had peeled the base of a pine and
- made a red-paint statement to the effect that even in the bottom of our
- little valley we were over 8,000 feet above the sea. This rather derogated
- from the pride of our chimney's performance; because, as Bob with justice
- urged, &ldquo;a chimney not to 'draw' at an altitude of 8,000 feet would have to
- be flat on the ground.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- I was sprawled on a blanket, softly taking in the smoke of a meerschaum.
- My eyes, fascinated by the glaring, pitch-pine blaze, were boring away at
- the fire as if it guarded a treasure. But neither the tobacco smoke nor
- the flames were in my thoughts; the latter were idly going back to the
- torn deer.
- </p>
- <p>
- As if in deference to a fashion of telepathy, Bob would have been thinking
- of the deer, also. It's possible, however, he had the cat in his
- meditations.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly he broke into my quiet with the remark which opens this yarn.
- Then he proceeded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; Bob continued, as I turned an eye on him through my tobacco
- smoke, &ldquo;you might get it easy. He's shorely due to go back to-night an'
- eat up some of that black-tail, unless he's got an engagement. It's even
- money he's right thar now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- I stepped to the door and looked out. The roundest of moons in the
- clearest of skies shone down. Then there was the snow; altogether, one
- might have read agate print by the light. I picked up my rifle and sent my
- eye through the sights.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But how about it when we push in among the pines; it'll be darker in
- there?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar'll be plenty of light,&rdquo; declared Bob. &ldquo;You don't have to make a
- tack-head shot. It ain't goin' to be like splittin' a bullet on a bowie.
- This mountain lion will be as big as you or me. Thar'll be light enough to
- hit a mark the size of him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Our ponies were heartily scandalised at being resaddled so soon; but they
- were powerless to enforce their views, and away we went, Indian file, with
- souls bent to slay the lion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I shorely undertakes the view that we'll get him,&rdquo; observed Bob as
- we rode along.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you ever hear the Eastern proverb which says, 'The man who sold the
- lion's hide while yet upon the beast was killed in hunting him'?&rdquo; I asked
- banteringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who says so?&rdquo; demanded Bob, defiantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is an Eastern proverb.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it may do for the East,&rdquo; responded Bob, &ldquo;but you can gamble it
- ain't had no run west of the Mississippi. Why! I wouldn't be afraid to bet
- that one of these panthers never killed a human in the world. They do it
- in stories, but never in the hills. Why, shore! if you went right up an'
- got one by his two y'ears an' wrastled him, he'd have to fight. You could
- get a row out of a house cat, an' play that system. But you can write
- alongside of the Eastern proverb, that 'Bob Ellis says that the lion them
- parties complain of as killin' their friend, must have been plumb <i>locoed</i>,
- an' it oughtn't to count.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the edge of the trees we left the ponies standing. They pointed their
- ears forward as if wondering what all this mysterious night's work meant.
- It was entirely beside their experience. We left them to unravel the
- puzzle and passed as quietly among the trees as needles into cloth.
- </p>
- <p>
- Both Bob and I had served our apprenticeship at being noiseless, and
- brought the noble trade of silence to a science. It wasn't distant now to
- the field of the deer's death. Soon Bob pointed out the yellow pine. Bob
- was a better woodsman than I. Even in the daylight I would have owned
- trouble in picking out the tree at that distance among such a piney
- throng.
- </p>
- <p>
- What little wind we had was breathing in our faces. Bob hadn't made the
- black-tail's blunder of giving the lion the better of the breeze. Bob took
- the lead after he pointed out the yellow pine. Perhaps it was 150 yards
- away when he identified it. We didn't cover five yards in a minute. Bob
- was resolutely deliberate. Still, I had no thought of complaint. I would
- have managed the case the same way had I been in the lead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Every ten feet Bob would pause and listen. There was now and then the
- sound of a clot of snow falling in the tops of the pines, as some bough
- surrendered its burden to the influence of the slight breeze. That was all
- my ears could detect of voices in the woods.
- </p>
- <p>
- We were within forty yards of the yellow pine, when Bob, after lingering a
- moment, turned his face toward me and made a motion of caution. I bent my
- ear to a profound effort. At last I heard it; the unctuous sound of
- feeding jaws!
- </p>
- <p>
- The oak bushes grew thick in among the pine trees. It did not seem
- possible to make out our game on account of this shrub-screen. At this
- point, instead of going any nearer the yellow pine, Bob bore off to the
- left. This flank movement not only held our title to the wind, but brought
- the moon behind us. After each fresh step Bob turned for a further survey
- of that region at the base of the yellow pine, where our lion, or some one
- of his relatives, was busy at his new repast.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the climax of search arrived. To give myself due credit, I saw the
- panther as soon as did Bob. A fallen pine tree opened a lane in the
- bushes. Along this aisle I could dimly make out the body of the beast. His
- head and shoulders were protected by the trunk of the yellow pine, from
- the limb of which he had ambuscaded the black-tail. A cat's mouth serves
- vilely as a knife; the teeth are not arranged to cut well. His inability
- to sever a morsel left nothing for our lion to do, but gnaw at the carcass
- much as a dog might at a bone. This managed to keep his head out of harm's
- way behind the tree.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nothing better was likely to offer, and I concluded to try what a bullet
- would bring, on that part of the panther we could see. I found as I raised
- my Winchester that there was to be a strong element of faith in the shot.
- It was dim and shadowy in the woods, conditions which appeared to increase
- the moment you tried to point a gun. The aid my aim received from the
- gun-sights was of the vaguest. Indeed, for that one occasion they might as
- well have been left off the rifle. But as I was as familiar with the
- weapon as with the words I write, and could tell to the breadth of a hair
- where to lay it against my face to make it point directly at an object,
- there was nothing to gain by any elaboration of aim. As if to speed my
- impulse in the matter, a far-off crashing occurred in the bushes to the
- rear. A word suffices to read the riddle of the interruption. Our ponies,
- tired of being left to themselves, were coming sapiently forward to join
- us.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the first blundering rush of the ponies I unhooked my Winchester. The
- panther had no chance to take stock of the ponies' careless approach. If
- they had started five minutes earlier he might have owed them something.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the crack of the Winchester, the panther gave such a scream as, added
- to the jar of the gun&mdash;I was burning 120 grains of powder&mdash;served
- to make my ears sing. There were fear, amazement and pain all braided
- together in that yell. The flash of the discharge and the night shadows so
- blinded me that I did not make a second shot. I pumped in the cartridge
- with the instinct of precedent, but it was of no use. On the heels of it,
- our ponies, as if taking the shot to be an urgent invitation to make
- haste, came up on a canter, tearing through the bushes in a way to lose a
- stirrup if persisted in.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bob had run forward. There was blood on the snow to a praiseworthy extent.
- As we gazed along the wounded animal's line of flight there was more of
- it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's too hard hit to go far,&rdquo; said Bob. &ldquo;We'll find him in the next
- canyon, or that blood's a joke.&rdquo; Bob walked along, looking at the
- blood-stained snow as if it were a lesson. Suddenly he halted, where the
- moonlight fell across it through the trees.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You uncoupled him,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Broke his back plumb in two. See where he
- dragged his hind legs!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He can't run far on those terms,&rdquo; I suggested.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know,&rdquo; said Bob, doubtfully. &ldquo;A mountain lion don't die easy.
- Mountain lions is what an insurance sharp would call a good resk. But I'll
- tell you how to carry on this campaign: I'll take the horses and scout
- over to the left until I get into the canyon yonder. Then I'll bear off up
- the canyon. If he crosses it&mdash;an' goin' on two legs that away, I
- don't look for it&mdash;I'll signal with a yell. If he don't, I'll circle
- him till I find the trail. Meanwhile you go straight ahead on his track
- afoot. Take it slow an' easy, for he's likely to be layin' somewhere.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The trail carried me a quarter of a mile. As nearly as I might infer from
- the story the panther's passage had written in the snow, his speed held
- out. This last didn't look much like weakness. Still, the course was a
- splash of blood in red contradiction. The direction he took was slightly
- uphill.
- </p>
- <p>
- The trail ended sharp at the edge of a wide canyon. There was a shelf of
- scaly rock about twelve feet down the side. This had been protected from
- the storm by the overhanging brink of the canyon, and there was no snow on
- the shelf. That and the twelve feet of canyon side above it were the
- yellow colour of the earth.
- </p>
- <p>
- Below the shelf the snow again was deep, as the sides took an easier slope
- toward the bottom of the canyon. The panther had evidently scrambled down
- to the shelf. It took me less than a second to follow his wounded example.
- Once down I looked over the edge at the snow a few feet below to catch the
- trail again. The unmarred snow voiced no report of the game I hunted. I
- stepped to the left a few paces, still looking over for signs in the snow.
- There were none. As the shelf came to an end in this direction, I returned
- along the ledge, still keeping a hawk's eye on the snow below for the
- trail. I heard Bob riding in the canyon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you struck his trail?&rdquo; I shouted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar's been nothin' down yere!&rdquo; shouted Bob in reply. &ldquo;The snow's as
- unbroken as the cream-cap on a pan of milk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Where was my panther? I had begun to regard him as a chattel. As my eye
- journeyed along the ledge the mystery cleared up. There lay my yellow
- friend close in against the wall. I had walked within a yard of him,
- looking the other way while earnestly reading the snow.
- </p>
- <p>
- The panther was sprawled flat like a rug, staring at me with green eyes. I
- had broken his back, as Bob said. As I brought the Winchester to my face,
- his gaze gave way. He turned his head as if to hide it between his
- shoulder and the wall. I was too near to talk of missing, even in the dim
- light, and the next instant he was hiccoughing with a bullet in his brain.
- Six and one-half feet from nose to tip was the measurement; whereof the
- tail, which these creatures grow foolishly long, furnished almost
- one-half.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- MOLLIE MATCHES
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of the Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was clear and
- cold and dry&mdash;excellent weather, indeed, for a snowless Christmas.
- Everywhere one witnessed evidences of the season. One met more gay clothes
- than usual, with less of anxiety and an increase of smiling peace in the
- faces. Each window had its wreath of glistening green, whereof the red
- ribbon bow, that set off the garland, seemed than common a deeper and more
- ardent red. Or was the elevation in the faces, and the greenness of the
- wreaths, and the vivid sort of the ribbon, due to impressions, impalpable
- yet positive, of Christmas everywhere?
- </p>
- <p>
- All about was Christmas. Even our Baxter Street doggery had attempted
- something in the nature of a bowl of dark, suspicious drink, to which the
- barkeeper&mdash;he was a careless man of his nomenclature, this barkeeper&mdash;gave
- the name of &ldquo;apple toddy.&rdquo; Apple toddy it might have been.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Chucky came in, an uncertain shuffle which was company to his rather
- solid tread showed he was not alone. I looked up. Our acquaintance, Mollie
- Matches, expert pickpocket,&mdash;now helpless and broken, all his one
- time jauntiness of successful crime gone,&mdash;was with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was lonesome over be me joint,&rdquo; vouchsafed Chucky, &ldquo;wit' me Bundle
- chased over to do her reg'lar anyooal confession to d' priest, see! an' so
- I fought youse wouldn't mind an' I bring Mollie along. Me old pal is still
- a bit shaky as to his hooks,&rdquo; remarked Chucky, as he surveyed his
- tremulous companion, &ldquo;an' a sip of d' booze wouldn't do him no harm. It
- ain't age; Mollie's only come sixty spaces; it's that Hum-min' Boid about
- which I tells youse, that's knocked his noive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Drinks were ordered; whiskey strong and straight for Matches. No; I've no
- apology for buying these folk drink. &ldquo;Drink,&rdquo; observed Johnson to the
- worthy Boswell, &ldquo;drink, for one thing, makes a man pleased with himself,
- which is no small matter.&rdquo; Heaven knows! my shady companions, for the
- reason announced by the sagacious doctor, needed something of the sort.
- Besides, I never molest my fellows in their drinking. I've slight personal
- use for breweries, distilleries, or wine presses; and gin mills in any
- form or phase woo me not; yet I would have nothing of interference with
- the cups of other men. In such behalf, I feel not unlike that fat,
- well-living bishop of Westminster who refused to sign a memorial to
- Parliament craving strict laws in behalf of total abstinence. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said
- that sound priest, stoutly, &ldquo;I will sign no such petition to Parliament. I
- want no such law. I would rather see Englishmen free than sober.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It took five deep draughts of liquor, ardently raw, to put Matches in half
- control of his hands. What with the chill of the day, and what with the
- torn condition of his nerves, they shook like the oft-named aspen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Them don't remind a guy,&rdquo; said Matches, as he held up his quivering
- fingers, &ldquo;of a day, twenty-five years ago, when I was d' pick of d' swell
- mob, an 'd' steadiest grafter that ever ringed a watch or weeded a
- leather! It would be safe for d' Chief to take me mug out of d' gallery
- now, an' rub d' name of Mollie Matches off d' books. Me day is done, an'
- I'll graft no more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was plaintiveness in the man's tones as if he were mourning some
- virtue, departed with his age and weakness. Clearly Matches, off his guard
- and normal, found no peculiar fault with his past.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How came you to be a thief?&rdquo; I asked Matches bluntly. I had counted the
- sixth drink down his throat, which meant that he wouldn't be sensitive.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's too far off to say,&rdquo; retorted Matches. &ldquo;I can't t'row back to d'
- time when I wasn't a crook. Do youse want to know d' foist trick I loined?
- Well, it wasn't t'ree blocks from here, over be d' Bowery. I couldn't be
- more'n five. There was a fakir, sellin' soap. There was spec'ments of d'
- long green all over his stand, wit' cakes of soap on 'em, to draw d'
- suckers. Standin' be me side was a kid; Danny d' Face dey called him. He
- was bigger than me, an' so I falls to his tips, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'When you see him toin round,' said Danny d' Face, 'swipe a bill, an'
- chase yourself up d' alley wit' it.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Danny goes behint, an' does a sneak on d' fakir's leg wit' a pin. Of
- course, he toins an' cuts loose a bluff at Danny, who's ducked out of
- reach. As he toins, up goes me small mit, an' d' nex' secont I'm sprintin'
- up d' alley wit 'd' swag.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit; d' mug wit' d' soap don't chase. He never even makes a holler; I
- don't t'ink he caught on. But Danny cuts in after me, an 'd' minute he
- sees we ain't bein' followed, or piped, he gives me d' foot, t'rows me in
- a heap, an' grabs off d' bill. I don't get a smell of it. An 'd' toad
- skin's a fiver at that!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' foist real graft I recalls,&rdquo; continued Matches, as he took a
- meditative sip of the grog, &ldquo;I'm goin' along wit' an old fat skirt, called
- Mother Worden, to Barnum's Museum down be Ann Street an' Broadway. Mebbe
- I'm seven or eight then. Mother Worden used to make up for d' respectable,
- see! an' our togs was out of sight. There was no flies on us when me an'
- Mother Worden went fort' to graft. What was d' racket? Pickin' women's
- pockets. Mother Worden would go to d' museum, or wherever there was a
- crush, an' lead me about be me mit. She'd steer me up to some loidy, an'
- let on she's lookin' at whatever d' other party has her lamps on.
- Meanwhile, I'm shoved in between d' brace of 'em, an' that's me cue to dip
- in wit' me free hook an' toin out d' loidy's pocket, see! An' say! it was
- a peach of a play; an' a winner. We used to take in funerals, an'
- theaytres, an' wherever there was a gang. Me an' Mother Worden was d'
- whole t'ing; there was nobody's bit to split out; just us. We was d'
- complete woiks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now an' then there was a squeal. Once in a while I'd bungle me stunt, an'
- d' loidy I was friskin' would tumble an' raise d' yell. But Mother Worden
- always 'pologised, an' acted like she's shocked, an' cuffed me an' t'umped
- me, see! an' so she'd woik us free. I stood for d' t'umpin', an' never
- knocked. Mother Worden always told me that if we was lagged, d' p'lice
- guys would croak me. An' as d' wallopin's she gives me was d' real t'ing,&mdash;bein'
- she was hot under d' collar for me failin' down wit' me graft,&mdash;d'
- folks used to believe her, an' look on me fin in their pocket, that way,
- as d' caper of a kid. Oh, d' old woman Worden was dead flossy in her day,
- an' stood d' acid all right, all right, every time.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But like it always toins out, she finds her finish. One day she makes a
- side-play on her own account, somethin' in d' shopliftin' line, I t'ink;
- an' she's pinched, an' takes six mont's on d' Island. I never sees her
- ag'in; at which I don't break no record for weeps. She's a boid, was
- Mother Worden; an' dead tough at that. She don't give me none d' best of
- it when I'm wit' her, an' I'm glad, in a kid fashion, when she gets put
- away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' start I gets. Some other time I'll unfold to youse how I takes
- me name of Mollie Matches. Youse can hock your socks! I've seen d' hot end
- of many an alley! I never chases be Trinity buryin' ground, but I t'inks
- of a day when I pitched coppers on one of d' tombstones, heads or tails,
- for a saw-buck, wit' a party grown, before I was old enough an' fly enough
- to count d' dough we was tossin' for. But we'll pass all that up to-night.
- It's gettin' late an' I'll just put me frame outside another hooker an'
- then I'll hunt me bunk. I can't set up, an' booze an' gab like I onct
- could; I ain't neither d' owl nor d' tank I was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE ST. CYRS
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>rançois St. Cyr is
- a Frenchman. He is absent two years from La Belle France. He and his
- little wife, Bebe, live not far from Washington Square. They love each
- other like birds. Yet François St. Cyr is gay, and little Bebe is jealous.
- Once a year the Ball of France is held at the Garden. Bebe turns up a nose
- and will not so belittle herself. So François St. Cyr attends the Ball of
- France alone. However, he does not repine. François St. Cyr is permitted
- to be more <i>de gage</i>; the ladies more <i>abandon</i>. At least that
- is the way François St. Cyr explains it.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is the night of the Ball of France. François St. Cyr is there. The
- Garden lights shine on fair women and brave men. It is a masque. The
- costumes are fancy, some of them feverishly so. A railroad person present
- says there isn't enough costume on some of the participants to flag a
- hand-car. No one has any purpose, however, to flag a hand-car; the
- deficiency passes unnoticed. Had the railroader spoken of flagging a beer
- waggon&mdash;<i>mon Dieu!</i> that would have been another thing!
- </p>
- <p>
- A prize, a casket of jewels, is to be given to the best dressed lady. A
- bacchante in white satin trimmed with swans' down and diamonds the size
- and lustre of salt-cellars is appointed the beneficiary by popular
- acclaim. François St. Cyr, as one of the directors of the ball, presents
- the jewels in a fiery speech. The music crashes, the mad whirl proceeds. A
- supple young woman, whose trousseau would have looked lonely in a
- collar-box, kicks off the hat of François St. Cyr. <i>Sapriste!</i> how
- she charms him! He drinks wine from her little shoe!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he morning papers
- told of the beauty in swans' down; the casket of jewels, and the
- presentation rhetoric of François St. Cyr, flowing like a river of oral
- fire. Bebe read it with the first light of dawn. <i>Peste!</i> Later, when
- François St. Cyr came home, Bebe hurled the clock at him from an upper
- window. Bebe followed it with other implements of light housekeeping.
- François St. Cyr fled wildly. Then he wept and drank beer and talked of
- his honour.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he supple person
- who kicked the hat of François St. Cyr was a chorus girl. The troop in
- whose outrages she assisted was billed to infuriate Newark that evening.
- François St. Cyr would seek surcease in Newark. He would bind a new love
- on the heart bruised and broken by the jealous Bebe. <i>Mon Dieu!</i> yes!
- </p>
- <p>
- The curtain went up. François St. Cyr inhabited a box. He was very still;
- no mouse was more so. No one noticed François St. Cyr. At last the chorus
- folk appeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Brava! mam'selle, brava!&rdquo; shouted François St. Cyr, springing to his
- feet, and performing with his hands as with cymbals.
- </p>
- <p>
- What merited this outburst? The chorus folk had done nothing; hadn't slain
- a note, nor murdered a melody. The audience stared at the shouting
- François St. Cyr. What ailed the man? At last the audience admonished
- François St. Cyr.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sit down! Shut up!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Those were the directions the public gave François St. Cyr.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I weel not sit down! I weel not close up!&rdquo; shouted François St. Cyr,
- bending over the box-rail and gesticulating like a monkey whose reason was
- suffering a strain. Then again to the chorus girl:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Brava! mam'selle, brava!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The other chorus girls looked disdainfully at the chorus girl whom
- François St. Cyr honoured, so as to identify her to the contempt of the
- public.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>rancois St. Cyr
- suddenly discharged a bouquet at the stage. It was the size of a butter
- tub. It mowed a swath through the chorus like a chain shot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Put him out!&rdquo; commanded the public.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poot heem out!&rdquo; repeated François St. Cyr with a shriek of sneering
- contempt. &ldquo;<i>Canaille!</i> I def-fy you! I am a Frenchman; I do not
- fee-ar to die!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Wafted to his duty on the breath of general opinion, a <i>gend'arme</i> of
- Newark acquired François St. Cyr, and bore him vociferating from the scene
- of his triumph.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he was carried through the foyer, he raised his voice heroically:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Vive le Boulanger!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he next public
- appearance of François St. Cyr was in the Newark Police Court. He was pale
- and limp, and had thoughts of suicide. He was still clothed in his dress
- suit, which clung to him as if it, too, felt &ldquo;<i>des-pond</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- François St. Cyr was fined $20.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bebe, the jealous, the faithful little Bebe, was there to pay the money.
- <i>Mon Dieu!</i> how he loved her! He would be her bird and sing to her
- all her life! Never would he leave his Bebe more! As for the false one of
- the chorus: François St. Cyr &ldquo;des-spised&rdquo; her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Also Bebe had brought the week-day suit of François St. Cyr. Could an
- angel have had more forethought? François St. Cyr changed his clothes in a
- jury room, and Bebe and he came home cooing like turtle doves.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>y virtue of the
- every-day suit, the St. Cyrs were home by 4 o'clock in the afternoon.
- Otherwise, under the rules, being habited in a dress suit, François St.
- Cyr could not have returned until 6,
- </p>
- <p>
- And they were happy!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- McBRIDE'S DANDY
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>lbert Edward
- Murphy is a high officer in one of the departments of the city. He holds
- his position with credit to the administration, and to his own celebration
- and renown. He has a wife and a family of children; and sets up his Lares
- and Penates in a home of his own in Greenwich Village.
- </p>
- <p>
- Among other possessions of a household sort, Albert Edward Murphy, until
- lately, numbered one pug dog. It was a dog of vast spirit and but little
- wit. Yet the children loved it, and its puggish imbecility only seemed to
- draw it closer to their baby hearts.
- </p>
- <p>
- The pug's main delusion went to the effect that he could fight. Good
- judges say that there wasn't a dog on earth the pug could whip. But he
- didn't know this and held other views. As a result, he assailed every dog
- he met, and got thrashed. The pug had taken a whirl at all the canines in
- the neighbourhood, and been wickedly trounced in every instance. This only
- made him dearer, and the children loved him for the enemies he made.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- The pug's name was John.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day, John, the pug, fell heir to a frightful beating at the paws and
- jaws of the dog next door. All that saved the life of John, the pug, on
- this awful occasion, was the lucky fact that he could get between the
- pickets of the line fence, and the neighbour's dog could not. The
- neighbour's dog was many times the size and weight of John, the pug; but,
- as has been suggested, what John didn't know about other dogs would fill a
- book; and he had gone upon the neighbour's premises and pulled off a
- fight.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now these divers sporting events in which John, the pug, took disastrous
- part worried Albert Edward Murphy. They worried him because the children
- took them to heart, and wept over the wounds of John, the pug, as they
- bound them with tar and other medicaments. At last Albert Edward Murphy
- resolved upon a campaign in favour of John, the pug. His future should
- have a protector; his past should be avenged.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a forty-pound bulldog resident of Philadelphia. He whipped every
- dog to whom he was introduced. His name was Alexander McBride. He was
- referred to as &ldquo;McBride's Dandy&rdquo; in his set, whenever his identification
- became a conversational necessity. Of the many dogs he had met and
- conquered, Alexander McBride had killed twenty-three.
- </p>
- <p>
- Albert Edward Murphy resolved to import Alexander McBride. He knew the
- latter's owner. A letter adjusted the details. The proprietor of Alexander
- McBride was willing his pet should come to the metropolis on a visit.
- Alexander McBride had fought Philadelphia to a standstill, and his owner's
- idea was that, if Alexander McBride were to go on a visit and remain away
- for a few months, Philadelphia would forget him, and on his return he
- might ring Alexander in on the town as a stranger, and kill another dog
- with him. *****
- </p>
- <p>
- Alexander McBride got off the cars in a chicken crate. The expressmen were
- afraid of him. Albert Edward Murphy was notified. He hired a coloured
- person, who looked on life as a failure, to convey Alexander McBride to
- his new home. They tied him to a bureau when they got him there.
- </p>
- <p>
- Alexander McBride was a gruesome-looking dog, with a wide, vacant head,
- when his mouth was open, like unto an empty coal scuttle. Albert Edward
- Murphy looked at Alexander McBride, and after saying that he &ldquo;would do,&rdquo;
- went to dinner. During the prandial meal he explained to his family the
- properties and attributes of Alexander McBride; and then he and the
- children went over the long list of neighbour dogs who had oppressed John,
- the pug, and settled which dog Alexander McBride should chew up first.
- Alexander McBride should begin on the morrow to rend and destroy the
- adjacent dogs, and assume toward John, the pug, the rôle of guide,
- philosopher and friend. Albert Edward Murphy and his children were very
- happy.
- </p>
- <p>
- After dinner they went back to take another look at Alexander McBride. As
- they stood about that hero in an awed but admiring circle, John, the pug,
- rushed wildly into the ring, and tackled Alexander McBride. The
- coal-scuttle head opened and closed on John, the Pug.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a moment of frozen horror, and then Albert Edward Murphy and his
- household fell upon Alexander McBride in a body.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was too late. It took thirteen minutes and the family poker to open the
- jaws of Alexander McBride. Then John, the pug, fell to the floor, dead and
- limp as a wet bath towel.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Alexander McBride had slain his twenty-fourth dog, and John, the pug, is
- only a memory now.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- RED MIKE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of the Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>ay!&rdquo; remarked
- Chucky as he squared himself before the greasy doggery table, &ldquo;I'm goin'
- to make it whiskey to-day, 'cause I ain't feelin' a t'ing but good, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- I asked the cause of Chucky's exaltation. Chucky's reason as given for his
- high spirits was unusual.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Red Mike gets ten spaces in Sing Sing,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;an' he does a dead
- short stretch at that. He oughter get d' chair&mdash;that bloke had.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Red Mike croaks his kid,&rdquo; vouchsafed Chucky in further elucidation. &ldquo;Say!
- it makes me tired to t'ink! She was as good a kid, this little Emmer which
- Mike does up, as ever comes down d' Bend. An' only 'leven!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell me the story,&rdquo; I urged.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This Red Mike's a hod carrier,&rdquo; continued Chucky, thus moved, &ldquo;but ain't
- out to hoit himself be hard woik at it; he don't woik overtime. Hit! Not
- on your life insurance!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What Red Mike sooner do is bum Mulberry Street for drinks, an' hang
- 'round s'loons an' sling guff about d' wrongs of d' woikin'man. Then he'd
- chase home, an' bein' loaded, he'd wallop his family.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On d' level! I ain't got no use ford' sort of a phylanthrofist who goes
- chinnin' all night about d' wrongs of d' labour element an 'd' oppressions
- of d* rich an' then goes home an' slugs his wife. Say! I t'ink a bloke
- who'd soak a skirt, no matter what she does&mdash;no matter if she is his
- wife! on d' square! I t'ink he's rotten.&rdquo; And Chucky imbibed deeply,
- looking virtuous.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, at last,&rdquo; said Chucky, resuming his narrative, &ldquo;Mike puts a crimp
- too many in his Norah&mdash;that's his wife&mdash;an' d' city 'torities
- plants her in Potters' Field.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did Mike kill her?&rdquo; I queried, a bit horrified at this murderous
- development of Chucky's tale.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure!&rdquo; assented Chucky, &ldquo;Mike kills her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shoot her?&rdquo; I suggested.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit!&rdquo; retorted Chucky disgustedly. &ldquo;Shoot her! Mike ain't got no gun. If
- he had, he'd hocked it long before he got to croak anybody wit' it. Naw,
- Mike does Norah be his constant abuse, see! Beats d' life out of her be
- degrees.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When Norah's gone,&rdquo; resumed Chucky, &ldquo;Emmer, who's d' oldest of d' t'ree
- kids, does d' mudder act for d' others. She's 'leven, like I says. An'
- little!&mdash;she ain't bigger'n a drink of whiskey, Emmer ain't.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But youse should oughter see her hustle to line up an' take care of them
- two young-ones. Only eight an' five dey be. Emmer washes d' duds for 'em,
- and does all sorts of stunts to get grub, an' tries like an old woman,
- night an' day, to bring 'em up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' neighbours helps, of course, like neighbours do when it's a case of
- dead hard luck; an' I meself has t'run a quarter or two in Emmer's lap
- when I'm a bit lushy. Say! I'm d' easiest mark when I've been hit-tin' d'
- bottle!&mdash;I'd give d' nose off me face!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If d' neighbours don't chip in, Emmer an' them kids would lots of times
- have had a hard graft; for mostly there ain't enough dough about d' joint
- from one week's end to another to flag a bread waggon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Finally Red Mike gets woise. After Norah goes flutterin' that time,
- Mike's been goin' along as usual, talkin' about d' woikin'man, an' doin'
- up Emmer an 'd' kids for a finish before he rolls in to pound his ear.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At foist it ain't so bad. He simply fetches one of d' young ones a
- back-handed swipe across d' map wit' his mit to see it swap ends wit'
- itself; or mebbe he soaks Emmer in d' lamp an' blacks it, 'cause she's
- older. But never no woise. At least, not for long.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But as I says, finally Red Mike gets bad for fair. He lams loose oftener,
- an' he licks Emmer an 'd' kids more to d' Queen's taste&mdash;more like
- dey's grown-up folks an' can stan' for it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Emmer, day after day chases 'round quiet as a rabbit, washin' d' kids an'
- feedin' 'em when there's any-t'ing, an' she don't make no holler about
- Mike's jumpin' on 'em for fear if she squeals d' cops'll pinch Mike an'
- give him d' Island.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Emmer was a dead game all right. Not only she don't raise d' roar on
- Mike about his soakin' 'em, but more'n onct she cuts in an' takes d' smash
- Mike means for one of d' others.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, of course, you can see poor Emmer's finish. She's little, an' weak,
- an' t'in, not gettin' enough to chew&mdash;for she saws d' food off on d'
- others as long as dey makes d' hungry front&mdash;an 'd' night Mike puts
- d' boots to her an' breaks t'ree of her slats, that lets her out! She
- croaks in four hours, be d' watch.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'at does Red Mike do it for? Well, he never needs, much of a hunch to
- pitch into Emmer an' d' rest. But I hears from me Rag who lives on d' same
- floor that it's all 'cause Mike gets d' tip that Emmer's got two bits, an'
- he wants it for booze. Mike comes in wit' a t'irst an' he ain't got d'
- price, an' he puts it to Emmer she's got stuff. Mike wants her to spring
- her plant an' chase d' duck.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Emmer welched an' won't have it. She's dead stubborn an' says d' kids
- must eat d' nex' day; and so Mike can't have d' money. Mike says he'll
- kick d' heart out of her if he don't get it. Emmer stan's pat, an' so Mike
- starts in.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's 'most an hour before I gets there. D' poor baby&mdash;for that's all
- Emmer is, even if she was dealin' d' game for d' joint&mdash;looks awful,
- all battered to bits. One of d' city's jackleg sawbones is there, mendin'
- Emmer wit' bandages. But he says himself he's on a dead card, an' that
- Emmer's going to die. Mike is settin' on a stool keepin' mum an' lookin'
- w'ite an' dopey, an' a cop is wit' him. Oh, yes! he gets d' collar long
- before I shows up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! d' scene ain't solemn, oh, no! nit! Emmer lays back on d' bed&mdash;she
- twigs she's goin' to die; d' doctor puts her on. Emmer lays back an' as
- good as she can, for her valves don't woik easy an' she breathes hard, she
- tells 'em what to do. She says there's d' washboiler she borry's from d'
- Meyers's family, an' to send it back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'An' I owes Mrs. Lynch,' says Emmer&mdash;she's talkin' dead faint&mdash;'a
- dime for sewin' me skirt, an' I ain't got d' dough. But when dey takes dad
- to d' coop, tell her to run her lamps over d' plunder, an' she has her
- pick, see! An' when I'm gone,' goes on Emmer, 'ast d' Gerries to take d'
- kids. Dey tries to get their hooks on 'em before, but I wanted to keep
- 'em. Now I can't, an' d' Gerries is d' best I can do. D' Gerries ain't so
- warm, but dey can lose nothin' in a walk. An' wit' dad pinched an' me
- dead, poor Danny an' Jennie is up ag'inst it for fair.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit; Emmer never sheds a weep. But say! you should a seen me Rag! She was
- d' terror for tears! She does d' sob act for two, an' don't you forget it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Emmer just lays there when she's quit chinnin' an' gives Mike d' icy eye.
- If ever a bloke goes unforgiven, it's Red Mike.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Don't youse want d' priest, or mebby a preacher?' asts me Rag of Emmer
- between sobs. Emmer's voice is most played when she comes back at her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'W'at's d' use?' says Emmer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then she toins to d' two kids who's be d' bed cryin', an' tries to kiss
- 'em, but it's a move too many for her. She twists back wit 'd' pain, an'
- bridges herself like you see a wrestler, an' when she sinks straight wit
- 'd' bed ag'in, d' red blood is comin' out of her face. Emmer's light is
- out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tumbles to it d' foist. As I leads me Rag back to our room&mdash;for I
- can see she's out to t'row a fit&mdash;d' cop takes Red Mike down be d'
- stairs.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- HAMILTON FINNERTY'S HEART
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>ar up in Harlem,
- on a dead swell street, the chance pedestrian as he chases himself by the
- Ville Finnerty, may see a pale, wrung face pressing itself against the
- pane. It is the map of Hamilton Finnerty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'at's d' matter wit' d' bloke?&rdquo; whispered Kid Dugan, the gasman's son,
- to his young companion, as they stood furtively piping off the Ville
- Finnerty. &ldquo;Is it 'D' Pris'ner of Zenda' down to date?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stash!&rdquo; said his chum in a low tone. &ldquo;Don't say a woid. That guy was
- goin' to be hitched to a soubrette. At d' las' minute d' skirt goes back
- on him&mdash;won't stan' for it; see! Now d' sucker's nutty. Dey's
- thrunning dice for him at Bloomin'dale right now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a sad, sad story of how two loving hearts were made to break away;
- of how in their ignorance the police declared themselves in on a play of
- which they wotted nit, and queered it.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hen the betrothal
- of Isabelle Imogene McSween to Hamilton Finnerty was tipped off to their
- set, the élite of Harlem fairly quivered with the glow and glory of it.
- The Four Hundred were agog.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's d' swiftest deal of d' season!&rdquo; said De Pygstyster.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hammy won't do a t'ing to McSween's millions, I don't t'ink!&rdquo; said Von
- Pretselbok.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hammy'll boin a wet dog. An' don't youse forget it, I'll be in on d'
- incineration!&rdquo; said Goosevelt.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>amilton Finnerty
- embarked for England. The beautiful Isabelle Imogene McSween had been
- plunging on raiment in Paree. The wedding was to be pulled off in two
- weeks at St. Paul's, London. It was to be a corker; for the McSweens were
- hot potatoes and rolled high. Nor were the Finnerties listed under the
- head of Has-beens. It is but justice to both families to say, they were in
- it with both feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Hamilton Finnerty went ashore at Liverpool he communed with himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's five days ere dey spring d' weddin' march in me young affairs,&rdquo;
- soliloquised Hamilton Finnerty, &ldquo;an' I might as well toin in an' do d'
- village of Liverpool while I waits. A good toot will be d' t'ing to allay
- me natural uneasiness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus it was that Hamilton Finnerty went forth to tank, and spread red
- paint, and plough a furrow through the hamlet of Liverpool. But Hamilton
- was a dead wise fowl. He had been on bats before, and was aware that they
- didn't do a thing to money.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For fear I'll blow me dough,&rdquo; said Hamilton, still communing with
- himself, &ldquo;I'll buy meself an' chip d' retoin tickets, see! It's a
- lead-pipe cinch then, we goes back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And the forethoughtful Hamilton sprung his roll and went against the
- agent, for return tickets. They were to be good on the very steamer he
- chased over in. They were for him and the winsome Isabelle Imogene
- McSween, soon to be Mrs. Finnerty. The paste-boards called for the
- steamer's trip three weeks away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There!&rdquo; quoth Hamilton Finnerty, as he concealed the tickets in his
- trousseau, &ldquo;I've sewed buttons on the future. We don't walk back, see! I
- can now relax an' toin meself to Gin, Dog's Head and a general whizz. I
- won't have no picnic,&mdash;oh, no! not on your eyes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was early
- darkness on the second day. One after another the windows were showing a
- glim. Liverpool was lighting up for the evening. A limp figure stood
- holding to a lamp-post. The figure was loaded to the guards. It was
- Hamilton Finnerty, and his light was out. He had just been fired from that
- hostelry known as The Swan with the Four Legs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I 'opes th' duffer won't croak on me doorstep,&rdquo; said the blooming
- barmaid, as she cast her lamps on Hamilton Finnerty from the safe vantage
- of a window of The Swan with the Four Legs.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no danger of Hamilton Finnerty dying, not in a thousand years.
- But he was woozy and tumbled not to events about him. He knew neither his
- name, nor his nativity, Nor could he speak, for his tongue was on a spree
- with the Gin and the Dog's Head.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>s Hamilton
- Finnerty stood holding the lamp-post, and deeming it his &ldquo;only own,&rdquo; two
- of the Queen's constabulary approached.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0085.jpg" alt="0085 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0085.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Ere's a bloomin' gow, Jem!&rdquo; said the one born in London. &ldquo;Now '00 d' ye
- tyke the gent to be?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They were good police people, ignorant but innocent; and disinclined to
- give Hamilton Finnerty the collar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Frisk 'un, Bill,&rdquo; advised the one from Yorkshire; &ldquo;it's loike th' naime
- bees in 'uns pawkets.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The two went through the make-up of Hamilton Finnerty. Jagged as he was,
- he heeded them not. They struck the steamer tickets and noted the
- steamer's name, but not the day of sailing.
- </p>
- <p>
- As if anxious to aid in the overthrow of Hamilton Finnerty, the steamer
- was still at her dock, with preparations all but complete for the return
- slide to New York.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now 'ere's a luvely mess!&rdquo; said London Bill, looking at the tickets. &ldquo;The
- bloody bowt gows in twenty minutes, an' 'ere's this gent a-gettin' 'eeself
- left! An' th' tickets for 'ees missus, too! It's punds t' peanuts, th'
- loidy's aboard th' bowt tearin' 'er blessed heyes out for 'im. Hy, say
- there, kebby! bear a 'and! This gent's got to catch a bowt!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hamilton Finnerty, dumb with Gin and Dog's Head, was tumbled into the cab,
- and the vehicle, taking its hunch from the excited officers, made the run
- of its life to the docks. They were in time.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It tak's th' droonken 'uns t'av th' loock!&rdquo; remarked Yorkshire Jem
- cheerfully to London Bill, as they stood wiping their honest faces on the
- dock, while the majestic steamer, with Hamilton Finnerty aboard, worked
- slowly out.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hen Hamilton
- Finnerty came to his senses he was one hundred miles on his way to New
- York. For an hour he was off his trolley. It was six days before he
- landed, and during that period he did naught but chew the rag.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hamilton Finnerty chased straight for Harlem and sought refuge in the
- Ville Finnerty. He must think; he must reorganise his play! He would
- compile a fake calculated to make a hit as an excuse with Isabelle Imogene
- McSween, and cable it. All might yet be well.
- </p>
- <p>
- But alas! As Hamilton Finnerty opened the door of the Ville Finnerty the
- butler sawed off a cablegram upon him. It was from Isabelle Imogene
- McSween to Hamilton Finnerty's cable address of &ldquo;Hamfinny.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Hamilton Finnerty read the fatal words, he fell all over himself with a
- dull, sickening thud. And well he might! The message threw the boots into
- the last hope of Hamilton Finnerty. It read as follows:
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>Hamfinny:&mdash;Miscreant! Villain! A friend put me onto your skip from
- Liverpool. It was a hobo trick. But I broke even with you. I was dead
- aware that you might do a sneak at the last minute, and was organised with
- a French Count up me sleeve; see! Me wedding came off just the same. Me
- hubby's a bute! I call him Papa, and he's easy money. Hoping to see you on
- me return, nit, and renew our acquaintance, nit, I am yours, nit.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>Isabelle Imogene McSween-Marat de Rochetwister.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- Outside the Ville Finnerty swept the moaning winds, dismal with November's
- prophecy of snow. At intervals the election idiot blew his proud horn in
- the neighbouring thoroughfare. It was nearly morning when the doctor said,
- that, while Hamilton Finnerty's life would be spared, he would be mentally
- dopey the balance of his blighted days.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- SHORT CREEK DAVE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Wolfville)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>hort Creek Dave
- was one of Wolfville's leading citizens. In fact his friends would not
- have scrupled at the claim that Short Creek Dave was a leading citizen of
- Arizona. Therefore when the news came over from Tucson that Short Creek
- Dave, who had been paying that metropolis a breezy visit, had, in an
- advertant moment, strolled within the radius of a gospel meeting then and
- there prevailing, and suffered conversion, Wolfville became spoil and prey
- to some excitement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tells him,&rdquo; said Tutt, who brought the tidings, &ldquo;not to go tamperin'
- 'round this yere meetin'. But he would have it. He simply keeps pervadin'
- about the 'go-in' place, an' it looks like I can't herd him away. Says I:
- 'Dave, you don't onderstand this yere game they're turnin' inside. Which
- you keep out a whole lot, you'll be safer!' But warnin's ain't no good;
- Short Creek don't regard 'em a little bit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This yere Short Creek is always speshul obstinate that a-way,&rdquo; said Dan
- Boggs, &ldquo;an' he gets moods frequent when he jest won't stay where he is nor
- go anywhere else. I don't marvel none you don't do nothin' with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let it go as it lays!&rdquo; observed Cherokee Hall, &ldquo;I reckons Short Creek
- knows his business, an* can protect himse'f in any game they opens on him.
- I ain't my-se'f none astonished by these yere news. I knows him to do some
- mighty <i>locoed</i> things, sech as breakin' a pair to draw to a
- three-flush; an' it seems like he's merely a pursooin' of his usual system
- in this relig'ous lunge. However, he'll be in Wolfville to-morry, an' then
- we'll know a mighty sight more about it; pendin' of which let's irrigate.
- Barkeep, please inquire out the beverages for the band!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Those of Wolfville there present knew no cause to pursue the discussion so
- pleasantly ended, and drew near the bar. The debate took place in the Red
- Light, so, as one observed on the issuance of Cherokee's invitation: &ldquo;They
- weren't far from centres.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Cherokee himself was a suave suitor of fortune who presided behind his own
- faro game. Reputed to possess a &ldquo;straight&rdquo; deal box, he held high place in
- the Wolfville breast.
- </p>
- <p>
- Next day; and Wolfville began to suffer an increased exaltation. Feeling
- grew nervous as the time for the coming of the Tucson stage approached. An
- outsider might not have detected this fever. It found its evidence in the
- unusual activity of monte, high ball, stud and kindred relaxations. Faro,
- too, displayed some madness of spirit.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last out of the grey and heat-shimmer of the plains a cloud of dust
- announced the coming of the stage. Chips were cashed and games cleaned up,
- and presently the population of Wolfville stood in the street to catch as
- early a glimpse as might be of the converted one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't reckon now he's goin' to look sech a whole lot different
- neither!&rdquo; observed Faro Nell. She stood near Cherokee Hall, awaiting the
- coming stage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wonder would it 'go' to ask Dave for to drink?&rdquo; said Tutt, in a tone of
- general inquiry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shore!&rdquo; argued Dan Boggs; &ldquo;an' why not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, nothin' why not!&rdquo; replied Tutt, as he watched the stage come up;
- &ldquo;only Dave's nacherally a peevish person that a-way, an' I don't reckon
- now his enterin' the fold has redooced the restlessness of that
- six-shooter of his'n, none whatever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All the same,&rdquo; said Cherokee Hall, &ldquo;p'litenes 'mong gents should be
- observed. I asks this yere Short Creek to drink so soon as ever he
- arrives; an' I ain't lookin' to see him take it none invidious, neither.&rdquo;
- With a rattle of chains and a creaking of straps the stage and its six
- high-headed horses pulled up at the postoffice door. The mail bags were
- kicked off, the express boxes tumbled into the street, and in the general
- rattle and crash the eagerly expected Short Creek Dave stepped upon the
- sidewalk.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was possibly a more eager scanning of his person in the thought that
- the great inward change might have its outward evidences; a more vigorous
- shaking of his hand, perhaps; but beyond these, curious interest did not
- go. Not a word nor a look touching Short Creek's religious exploits
- betrayed the question tugging at the Wolfville heart. Wolfville was too
- polite. And, again, Wolfville was too cautious. Next to horse-stealing,
- curiosity is the greatest crime. It's worse than crime, it's a blunder.
- Wolfville merely expressed its polite satisfaction in Short Creek Dave's
- return, and took it out in handshaking. The only incident worth record was
- when Cherokee Hall observed in a spirit of bland but experimental
- friendship:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't reckon, Dave, you-all is objectin' to whiskey none after your
- ride?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I ain't done so usual,&rdquo; observed Dave cheerfully, &ldquo;but this yere
- time, Cherokee, I'll have to pass. Confidin' the trooth to you-all, I'm
- some off on nose-paint now. I'm allowin' to tell you the win-an'-lose
- tharof later on. Now, if you-alls will excuse me, I'll go wanderin' over
- to the O. K. House an' feed myse'f a whole lot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shore reckons he's converted!&rdquo; said Tutt, and he shook his head
- gloomily. &ldquo;I wouldn't care none, only it's me as prevails on Dave to go
- over to Tucson that time; an' so I feels responsible.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever of it?&rdquo; responded Dan Boggs, with a burst of energy, &ldquo;I don't
- see no reecriminations comin', nor why this yere's to be regarded. If Dave
- wants to be relig'ous an' sing them hymns a heap, you bet! that's his
- American right! I'll gamble a hundred dollars, Dave splits even with every
- deal, or beats it. I'm with Dave; his system does for me, every time!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day the excitement began to subside. Late in the afternoon a
- notice posted on the postoffice door caused it to rise again. The notice
- announced that Short Creek Dave would preach that evening in the warehouse
- of the New York Store.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckons we-alls better go!&rdquo; said Cherokee Hall. &ldquo;I'm goin' to turn up
- my box an' close the game at first drink time this evenin', an' Hamilton
- says he's out to shut up the dance hall, seein' as how several of the
- ladies is due to sing a lot in the choir. We-alls might as well turn loose
- an' give Short Creek the best whirl in the wheel&mdash;might as well make
- the play to win, an* start him straight along the new trail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whatever!&rdquo; agreed Dan Boggs. He had recovered from his first
- amazement, and now entered into the affair with spirit.
- </p>
- <p>
- That evening the New York Store's warehouse was as brilliantly a-light as
- a mad abundance of candles could make it. All Wolfville was there. As a
- result of conferences held in private with Short Creek Dave, and by that
- convert's request, Old Man Enright took a seat by the drygoods box which
- was to serve as a pulpit. Doc Peets, also, was asked to assume a place at
- the Evangelist's left. The congregation disposed itself about on the
- improvised benches which the ardour of Boggs had provided.
- </p>
- <p>
- At 8 o'clock Short Creek Dave walked up the space in the centre reserved
- as an aisle, carrying a giant Bible. This latter he placed on the drygoods
- box. Old Man Enright, at a nod from Short Creek Dave, called gently for
- attention, and addressed the meeting briefly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This yere is a prayer meetin' of the camp,&rdquo; said Enright, &ldquo;an' I'm asked
- by Dave to preside, which I accordin' do. No one need make any mistake
- about the character of this gatherin', or its brand. This yere is a
- relig'ous meetin'. I am not myse'f given that a-way, but I'm allers glad
- to meet up with folks who be, an' see that they have a chance in for their
- ante, an' their game is preserved. I'm one, too, who believes a little
- religion wouldn't hurt this yere camp much. Next to a lynchin', I don't
- know of a more excellent inflooence in a western camp than these meetin's.
- I ain't expectin' to cut in on this play none myse'f, an' only set yere,
- as does Peets, in the name of order, an' for the purposes of a squar'
- deal. Which I now introdooces to you a gent who is liable to be as good a
- preacher as ever thumps a Bible&mdash;your old pard, Short Creek Dave.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Pres'dent!&rdquo; said Short Creek Dave, turning to Enright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Short Creek Dave!&rdquo; replied Enright sententiously, bowing gravely in
- recognition.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' ladies an' gents of Wolfville!&rdquo; continued Dave, &ldquo;I opens this racket
- with a prayer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The prayer proceeded. It was fervent and earnest; replete with unique
- expression and personal allusion. In the last, the congregation took a
- warm interest.
- </p>
- <p>
- Towards the close, Dave bent his energies in supplication for the
- regeneration of Texas Thompson, whom he represented in his orisons as by
- nature good, but living a misguided and vicious life. The audience was
- listening with approving attention, when there came an interruption. It
- was from Texas Thompson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Pres'dent,&rdquo; said Texas Thompson, &ldquo;I rises to ask a question an' put
- for'ard a protest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The gent will state his p'int,&rdquo; responded Enright, rapping on the
- drygoods box.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which the same is this,&rdquo; resumed Texas Thompson, drawing a long breath.
- &ldquo;I objects to Dave a-tacklin' the Redeemer for me. I protests ag'in him
- makin' statements that I'm ornery enough to pillage a stage. This yere
- talk is liable to queer me on High. I objects to it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prayer is a device without rools or limit,&rdquo; responded Enright. &ldquo;Dave
- makes his runnin' with the bridle off; an* the chair, tharfore, decides
- ag'in the p'int of order.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' the same bein' the case,&rdquo; rejoined Texas Thompson with heat,
- &ldquo;a-waivin' of the usual appeal to the house, all I've got to say is, I'm a
- peaceful gent; I has allers been the friend of Short Creek Dave. Which I
- even assists an' abets Boggs in packin' in these yere benches, an' aids to
- promote this meetin'. But I gives notice now, if Short Creek Dave persists
- in malignin' of me to the Great White Throne, as yeretofore, I'll shore
- call on him to make them statements good with his gun as soon as ever the
- contreebution box is passed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The chair informs the gent,&rdquo; said Enright with cold dignity, &ldquo;that Dave,
- bein' now a Evangelist, can't make no gun plays, nor go canterin' out to
- shoot as of a former day. However, the chair recognises the rights of the
- gent, an', standin' as the chair does in the position of lookout to this
- game, the chair nom'nates Dan'l Boggs, who's officiatin' as deacon hereof,
- to back these yere orisons with his six-shooter as soon as ever church is
- out, in person.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It goes!&rdquo; responded Boggs. &ldquo;I proudly assoomes Dave's place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0097.jpg" alt="0097 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0097.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Pres'dent,&rdquo; interrupted Short Creek Dave, &ldquo;jest let me get my views
- in yere. It's my turn all right, as I makes clear, easy. I've looked up
- things some, an* I finds that the Apostle Peter, who was a great range
- boss of them days, scroopled not to fight. Which I trails out after Peter
- in this. I might add, too, that while it gives me pain to be obleeged to
- shoot up brother Texas Thompson in the first half of the first meetin' we
- holds in Wolfville, still the path of dooty is plain, an' I shall shorely
- walk tharin, fearin' nothin'. I tharfore moves we adjourn ten minutes, an'
- as thar is plenty of moon outside, if the chair will lend me its gun&mdash;I'm
- not packin' of sech frivolities no more, regyardin' of 'em in the light of
- sinful bluffs&mdash;I trusts to Providence to convince brother Texas
- Thompson that he's followed off the wrong waggon track. You-alls can
- gamble! I knows my business. I ain't 4-flushin' none when I lines out to
- pray!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Onless objection is heard, this meetin' will stand adjourned for ten
- minutes,&rdquo; said Enright, at the same time passing Short Creek Dave his
- pistol.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fifteen paces were stepped off, and the opponents faced up in the moonlit
- street. Enright, Peets, Hall, Boggs, Tutt, Moore and the rest of the
- congregation made a line of admiration on the sidewalk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I counts one! two! three! an' then I drops the contreebution box,&rdquo; said
- Enright, &ldquo;whereupon you-alls fires an' advances at will. Be you ready?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The shooting began on the word. When the smoke blew away, Texas Thompson
- staggered to the sidewalk and sat down. There was a bullet in his hip, and
- the wound, for the moment, brought a feeling of sickness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The congregation will now take its seats in the sanctooary,&rdquo; remarked
- Enright, &ldquo;an' play will be re-soomed. Tutt, two of you-alls carry Texas
- over to the hotel, an' fix him up all right. Yereafter, I'll visit him an'
- p'int out his errors. This shows concloosive that Short Creek Dave is
- licensed from Above to pray any gait for whoever he deems meet, an' I'm
- mighty pleased it occurs. It's shore goin' to promote confidence in Dave's
- ministrations.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The concourse was duly in its seats when Short Creek Dave again reached
- the pulpit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will now resoome my intercessions for our onfortunate brother, Texas
- Thompson,&rdquo; said Short Creek Dave.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know'd he would,&rdquo; commented Dan Boggs, as twenty dollars came over
- addressed by the wounded Thompson to the contribution box. &ldquo;Texas Thompson
- is one of the reasonablest sports in Wolfville. Also you can bet!
- relig'ous trooths allers assert themse'ves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CRIME THAT FAILED
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of the Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>ay! Matches,&rdquo; said
- Chucky, removing his nose from his glass, &ldquo;youse remember d' Jersey Bank?
- I means d' time youse has to go to cover an 'd' whole mob is pinched in d'
- hole. Tell us d' story; it's dead int'restin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This last was to me in a husky whisper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That play was a case of fail,&rdquo; remarked Mollie Matches thoughtfully. Then
- turning to me as chief auditor, he continued. &ldquo;It's over twenty years ago;
- just on d' heels of d' Centenyul at Phil'delfy. D' graft was fairly flossy
- durin 'd' Centenyul, an' I had quite a pot of dough.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One day a guy comes to me; he's a bank woiker, what d' fly people calls
- 'a gopher man'; he's a mug who's onto all d' points about safes an' such.
- Well, as I says, this soon guy comes chasin' to me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Matches,' he says, 'don't say a woid; I'll put youse onto an easy trick.
- Come wit' me to Jersey, an' I'll show you a bin what's all organised to be
- cracked. Any old hobo could toin off d' play; it's a walk-over.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit' that, for I had confidence in this mark, see! We skins over to
- Jersey, an' he steers me out to a nearby town an' points me out a bank.
- What makes it a good t'ing is a vacant joint, wit' a 'To Rent' sign in d'
- window, built dost ag'inst d' side of d' bank.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Are youse on?' says d' goph, pointin' his main hook at d' empty house,
- an' then at d' bank.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bein' I'm no farmer meself, I takes no time to tumble. We screws our
- nuts, me an' d' goph, to d' duck who owns d' house, an 'd' nex' news is we
- rents it. D' duck who does d' rentin' says he can see we're on d' level d'
- moment we floats in; but all d' same, if we can bring him a tip or two on
- d' point of our bein' square people from one or two high rollers whose
- names goes, he'll take it kindly. We says, suttenly; we fills him to d'
- chin wit' all d' ref-runces he needs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'We won't do a t'ing but send our pastor to youse,' puts in d' goph.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good man, me pal was, as ever draws slide on a dark lantern, but always
- out to be funny.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We rents d' joint, as I states, an' no more is said about refrunces. Now,
- when it comes to d' real woik, I ain't goin' to do none, see! I ain't down
- to dig an' pick; it spoils me hooks for dippin'. What I does is furnish d'
- tools an 'd' dough.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I goes back an' gets a whole kit of bank tools&mdash;drills, centre-bits,
- cold-chisels, jointed-jimmies, wedges, pullers, spreaders, fuse, powder,
- mauls an' mufflers&mdash;I gets d' whole t'ing, see! Me pal knows a brace
- of pards who'll stand in on d' play. He calls 'em in, an' one night d'
- entire squeeze, wit 'd' tools, goes over an' plants themselfs in d 'empty
- house. Yes; dey takes grub an' blankets an' all dey needs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Before this I goes ag'inst d' bank janitor; an' while he's a fairly downy
- party, I wins him. D' janitor of d' bank gets a hundred bones, an' I gets
- a map of d' bank, which shows where d* money is planted an' all about it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's d' idee? Our racket is to tunnel from d' cellar of d' joint we
- rents, under d' sidewall of d' bank, an' keep on until we reaches d'
- stuff, see! We're out to do all d' woik we can wit'out lettin' d'
- bank-crush twig d' graft. Then we waits till Saturday noon. D' bank shuts
- up on Saturday noon, understan'! An' then we has till Monday at 9 o'clock
- to finish d' woik. An' say! it's time plenty! It gives us time to boin!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I states, I don't do any of d' woik. D' gopher an' his two pals is all
- d' job calls for. So I lays dead in d' town, ready to split out me piece
- of d' plunder, an' waits results.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To hurry me yarn, everyt'ing woiks like it's greased to fit d' play. D'
- mob gets d' tunnel as far as it'll go. Saturday noon comes an 'd' last
- sucker who belongs to d' bank skips out. It's then me gopher an' his two
- pals t'rows themselfs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All t'rough Saturday afternoon an' all d' night till daylight Sunday
- mornin', them gezebos woiks away like dogs. An' say! don't youse ever
- doubt it! dey was winnin' in a walk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But all this time d' pins was set up to do 'em. It was d' same old story.
- There's always some little nogood bet a crook is sure to overlook, an' it
- goes d' wrong way an' downs him. Here's what happens:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In d' foist place, we forgets to take d' 'To Rent' sign out of d' window,
- see! That's d' beginnin'. Nex,' me goph an' his side-partners digs so much
- dirt out of d' tunnel it fills d' cellar. Honest! it won't hold no more.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At this last, dey takes to shovelin 'd' dirt into a bushel basket. Then
- dey carries it up d' back stairs and dumps it on d' floor of a summer
- kitchen. Be 7 o'clock Sunday, mebby dey dumps as many as six basketfuls;
- dumps it, as I tells youse, in this lean-to, which is built on d' rear.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, right at this time there's an old Irish Moll who keeps a boardin'
- house not far away who is flyin' along to early Mass, bein' dead religious
- an' leary about her soul, see! This old goil, as she comes sprintin'
- along, gets her bleary old lamps on d' 'To Rent' card. All at onct d' idee
- fetches her a t'ump in d' cocoa that d' house would be out of sight for a
- boardin' joint. Wit' that she steers herself in to take a squint an' size
- up d' crib.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' door is locked, so d' old goil can't come in. Wit' that she leads d'
- nex' best card an' goes galumpin' round, pipin' off d' place t'rough d'
- windows. An' say! she gets stuck on it. She t'inks if she can rent it, she
- can run d' dandy boardin' house of d' ward in it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As d' old frail goes round d' place, among all d' rest, she looks t'rough
- d' windows into d' summer kitchen. She gets onto d' dirt that's dumped, as
- I states, in one corner. But she don't see none of d' gang, bein' dey's
- down in d' hole at d' time, so she don't fasten to nothin'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At last she's seen enough an' sherries her nibs to d' cat'edral.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right if it's only d' end; but it ain't. When it gets to about
- 2 o'clock, this old skate in petticoats goes toinin' nutty ag'in about d'
- empty house. Over she spins to grab another glimpse, see! When she strikes
- d' summer kitchen she comes near to throwin' a faint. D' pile of rubbidge
- is twenty times as big!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That settles it! d' joint is ha'nted! an' wit' that notion all tangled up
- in her frizzes d' old mut makes a straight wake for d' priest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'D' empty house nex' to d' bank is full of ghosts!' she shouts, an' then
- she flings her apron over her nut an' comes a fit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, this priest is about as sudden a party as ever comes over d' ocean.
- Youse can't give him no stiff about spooks, see! Bein' nex' to d' bank is
- a hot tip, an' he takes it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit! he don't go surgin' round for his prayer-books an d' hully water. It
- would have been a dead good t'ing if he had. Nixie weedin'! D' long-coat
- sucker don't even come over to d' house.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What does he do? He sprints for d' nearest p'lice station at a 40 clip,
- an' fills up d' captain in charge wit 'd' story till youse can't rest.
- After that, it takes' d' p'lice captain about ten seconts to line up his
- push; an' be coppin' a sneak, he pinches me gopher an' his two pals right
- in d' hole. Dey was gettin' along beautiful at d' time, an' in ten hours
- more dey would have had that bank on d' hog for fair.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dey was dead games at that. While dey gets d' collar, not one of 'em
- coughs on me, an' me name ain't never in it from start to finish. Dey was
- game, true pals from bell to bell, an' stayed d' distance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was d' bummest finish, all d' same, for what looked like d' biggest
- trick, an' d' surest big money, that I ever goes near. Youse may well peel
- your peeps! If it wasn't for that old Irish keener an' her ghost stories,
- in less than ten hours more we wouldn't have got a t'ing but complete
- action on more'n a million plunks! There was a hay-mow full of money in
- that bin!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' last round an' wind-up, as d' pugs puts it. Me gopher an' his
- pals is handed out ten spaces each, an' I lose me kit of tools. Take it
- over all, I'm out some four t'ousand dollars on d' deal. A tidy lump of
- dough to be done out of be a priest, a p'liceman an' an old Irish boardin'
- boss! D' old loidy lands wit' bot' her trilbys, though; d' bank chucks her
- a bundle of fly-paper big enough to stan' for all her needs until she
- croaks, forcuttin' in on our play, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE BETRAYAL
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he boys had
- resolved on revenge, and nothing could turn them from their purpose. The
- trouble was this: Some one not otherwise engaged had fed the furnace an
- overshoe which it did not need. As incident to its consumption the
- overshoe had filled the building with an odour of which nothing favourable
- could be said. The professor afterwards, in denouncing the author of the
- outrage, had referred to it as &ldquo;effluvia.&rdquo; It had as a perfume much force
- of character, and was stronger and more devastating than the odour which
- goes with an egg in its old age, when it has begun to hate the world and
- the future holds nothing but gloom.
- </p>
- <p>
- As stated, the schoolhouse reeked and reeled with this sublimated
- overshoe. It all pleased the boys excessively. They made as much as
- possible of the odour; they coughed, and sneezed, and worried the
- professor by holding up their hands one after the other with the remark:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Teacher, may I go out?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The professor, after several destructive whiffs of the overshoe, made a
- fiery speech. He said that could he once locate the boy who lavished this
- overshoe on mankind in a gaseous form, that boy's person would experience
- a rear-end collision. He would be so badly telescoped that weeks would
- elapse before the boy could regard himself as being in old-time form. The
- professor said the boy who founded the overshoe odour was a &ldquo;miscreant&rdquo;
- and a &ldquo;vandal.&rdquo; He demanded his name of the boys collectively; and failing
- to get it, the professor said they were all miscreants and vandals, and
- that it would be as balm to his spirits were he to wade in and larrup the
- entire outfit.
- </p>
- <p>
- After school the boys held a meeting.
- </p>
- <p>
- Frank Payne, aged fourteen, the boy who could lick any boy in school,
- denounced the professor. He referred to the fact that his father was a
- school trustee; and that under the rules the professor had no right to
- bestow upon them the epithets of miscreants and vandals. Frank Payne
- advised that they whip the professor; who must, he said, while a large,
- muscular man, yield to mob violence.
- </p>
- <p>
- The proposition to whip the professor was carried unanimously under a
- suspension of the rules.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the ardour of this crusade for their rights the boys did not feel as if
- they could await the slow approach of trouble in the natural way. It was
- decided by them to bring matters to a focus. It was planned to have Tony
- Sanford stick a pin in John Dayton. That would be a splendid start! John
- Dayton, thus stuck, would yell; and when the professor asked the cause of
- his lamentations, John Dayton would point to Tony Sanford as his assassin.
- When the professor laid corrective hands on Tony all of the conspirators
- were to rush upon the professor and give him such a rough-and-tumble
- experience that succeeding ages would date time from the emeute. The boys
- were filled with glee; they regarded the business, so they said, as &ldquo;a
- pushover.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The hour for action had arrived.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tony Sanford had no pin. But Tony was a fertile boy; if there was a picket
- off Tony's mental fence at all, it was his foresight. Lacking a pin, the
- ingenious Tony stuck the small blade of his knife into John Dayton. The
- victim howled like a dog at night.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Please, sir, Tony Sanford's stabbed me,&rdquo; was John Dayton's explanation of
- his shrieks.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tony Sanford was paraded for punishment. The cold-blooded enormity of the
- crime seemed to strike the professor dumb. He did not know how to take
- hold of the situation. But Tony pursued a course which not only invited
- but suggested action. As Tony approached, he dealt the professor an
- uppercut in the bread-basket, and with the cry, &ldquo;Come on, boys!&rdquo; closed
- doughtily with the foe.
- </p>
- <p>
- The boys beheld the deeds of the intrepid Tony; they heard his cry and
- knew it for their cue. Nevertheless, notwithstanding, not a boy moved.
- They sat in their seats and gazed fixedly at Tony and the professor. With
- the call of Tony to his fellow-conspirators the professor saw it all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tony Sanford,&rdquo; quoth the professor, &ldquo;we will adjourn to the library. When
- I get through, you will be of no further use to science.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The door closed on Tony Sanford, and a professor weighing 211 pounds. The
- sounds which came welling from the library showed that some strong,
- emotional work was being done within. Tony and the professor sounded at
- times like a curlew at night, and anon like unto a man falling downstairs
- with a stove. Tony Sanford said afterward that he would never again attach
- himself to a plot which did not show two green lights on the rear platform
- of its caboose.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- FOILED
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>ARLING, I fear
- that man! The cruel guy can from his place as umpire do you up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Gwendolin O'Toole who spoke. She was a beautiful blonde angel, and
- as she clung to her lover, Marty O'Malley, they were a picture from which
- a painter would have drawn an inspiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Take courage, love!&rdquo; said Marty O'Malley tenderly; &ldquo;I'm too swift for the
- duck.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know, dearest,&rdquo; murmured the fair Gwendolin, &ldquo;but think what's up on
- the game! Me brother, you know him well! the rooter prince, the bleachers'
- uncrowned king! he is the guardian of me vast estates. If I do not marry
- as he directs, me lands and houses go to found an asylum for decrepit ball
- tossers. And to-day me brother Godfrey swore by the Banshee of the
- O'Tooles that me hand should belong to the man who made the best average
- in to-morrow's game. Can you win me, love?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will win you or break the bat!&rdquo; said Marty O'Malley, as he folded his
- dear one in his arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>HEN that villain,
- O'Malley, goes to bat to-morrow, pitch the ball ten feet over his head. No
- matter where it goes I'll call a 'strike.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Dennis Mulcahey who spoke; the man most feared by Gwendolin
- O'Toole. He was to be the next day's umpire, and as he considered how
- securely his rival was in his grasp, he laughed the laugh of a fiend.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dennis Mulcahey, too, loved the fair Gwendolin, but the dear girl scorned
- his addresses. His heart was bitter; he would be revenged on his rival.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've got it in for the mug!&rdquo; replied Terry Devine, to whom Dennis
- Mulcahey had spoken. Devine was the pitcher of the opposition, and like
- many of his class, a low, murdering scoundrel. &ldquo;But, say! Denny, if you
- wants to do the sucker, why don't youse give him a poke in d' face? See!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Such suggestions are veriest guff,&rdquo; retorted Dennis Mulcahey. &ldquo;Do as I
- bid you, caitiff, an' presume not to give d' hunch to such as I! A wild
- pitch is what I want whenever Marty O'Malley steps to the plate. I'll do
- the rest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll t'row d' pigskin over d' grand stand,&rdquo; said Terry Devine as he and
- his fellow-plotter walked away.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the conspirators drifted into the darkness a dim form arose from behind
- a shrub. It was Marty O'Malley.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! I'll fool you yet!&rdquo; he hissed between his clinched teeth, and turning
- in the opposite direction he was soon swallowed by the darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>ou'll not fail me,
- Jack!&rdquo; said Marty O'Malley to Jack, the barkeeper of the Fielders' Rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not on your sweater!&rdquo; said Jack, &ldquo;Leave it to me. If that snoozer pitches
- this afternoon I hopes d' boss'll put in a cash-register!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Marty O'Malley hastened to the side of his love. Jack, the faithful
- barkeeper, went on cleaning his glasses.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That hobo, Devine, will be here in a minute,&rdquo; said Jack at last, &ldquo;an' I
- must organise for him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack took a shell glass and dipped it in the tank behind the bar. Taking
- his cigar from between his finely chiselled lips, he blew the smoke into
- the moistened interior of the glass. This he did several times.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll smoke a glass on d' stiff,&rdquo; said Jack softly. &ldquo;It's better than a
- knockout drop.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a moment later when Terry Devine came in. With a gleam of almost
- human intelligence in his eye Jack, the barkeeper, set up the smoked
- glass. Terry Devine tossed off the fiery potation, staggered to a chair,
- and sat there glaring. A moment later his head fell on the table, while a
- stertorous snore proclaimed him unconscious.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That fetched d' sucker,&rdquo; murmured Jack, the barkeeper, and he went on
- cleaning his glasses. &ldquo;His light's gone out for fourteen hours, an' he
- don't make no wild pitches at Marty O'Malley to-day, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>en thousand people
- gathered to witness the last great contest between the Shamrocks and the
- Shantytowns.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwendolin O'Toole, pale but resolute, occupied her accustomed seat in the
- grand stand. Far away, and high above the tumult of the bleachers she
- heard the hoarse shouts of her brother, Godfrey O'Toole, the bleachers'
- king.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Remember, Gwendolin!&rdquo; he had said, as they parted just before the game,
- &ldquo;the mug who-makes the best average to-day wins your hand. I've sworn it,
- and the word of an O'Toole is never broken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Make it the best fielding average, oh, me brother!&rdquo; pleaded Gwendolin,
- while the tears welled to her glorious eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never!&rdquo; retorted Godfrey O'Toole, with a scowl; &ldquo;I'm on to your curves!
- You want to give Marty O'Malley a better show. But if the butter-fingered
- muffer wants you, he must not only win you with his fielding, but with the
- stick.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>erry Devine wasn't
- in the box for the Shantytowns. With his head on the seven-up table, he
- snored on, watched over by the faithful barboy Jack. He still yielded to
- smoked glass and gave no sign of life.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Curse him!&rdquo; growled Umpire Mulcahey hoarsely beneath his breath &ldquo;has he
- t'run me down? If I thought so, the world is not wide enough to save him
- from me vengeance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And the change pitcher took the box for the Shantytowns.
- </p>
- <p>
- Marty O'Malley, the great catcher of the Shamrocks, stepped to the plate.
- Dennis Mulcahey girded up his false heart, and registered a black, hellish
- oath to call everything a strike.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never! never shall he win Gwendolin O'Toole while I am umpire!&rdquo; he
- whispered, and his face was dark as a cloud.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the last word that issued from the clam-shell of Dennis Mulcahey
- for many a long and bitter hour; the last crack he made. Just as he
- offered his bluff, the first ball was pitched. It was as wild and high as
- a bird, as most first balls are. But Marty O'Malley was ready. He, too,
- had been plotting; he would fight Satan with fire!
- </p>
- <p>
- As the ball sped by, far above his head, Marty O'Malley leaped twenty feet
- in the air. As he did this he swung his unerring timber. Just as he had
- planned, the flying, whizzing sphere struck the under side of his bat, and
- glancing downward with fearful force, went crashing into the dark,
- malignant visage of Dennis Mulcahey, upturned to mark its flight. The
- fragile mask was broken; the features were crushed into complete confusion
- with the awful inveteracy of the ball.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dennis Mulcahey fell as one dead. As he was borne away another umpire was
- sent to his post. Marty O'Malley bent a glance of intelligence on the
- change pitcher of the Shantytowns, who had taken the place of the
- miscreant Dermis, and whispered loud enough to resell from plate to box:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, gimme a fair ball!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>nd so the day was
- won; the Shamrocks basted the Shantytowns by the score of 15 to 2. As for
- Marty O'Malley, his score stood:
- </p>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
- Ab. R. H. Po. A. E.
-
- O'Malley, c,....4 4 4 10 14 0
-</pre>
- <p>
- No such record had ever been made on the grounds. With four times at bat,
- Marty O'Malley did so well, withal, that he scored a base hit, two
- three-baggers and a home-run.
- </p>
- <p>
- That night Marty O'Malley wedded the rich and beautiful Gwendolin O'Toole.
- Jack, the faithful bar-boy of the Fielders' Rest, officiated as groomsman.
- Godfrey O'Toole, haughty and proud, was yet a square sport, and gave the
- bride away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rich notes of the wedding bells, welling and swelling, drifted into
- the open windows of the Charity Hospital, and smote on the ears of Dennis
- Mulcahey, where he lay with his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Curse 'em!&rdquo; he moaned.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then came a horrible rattle in his throat, and the guilty spirit of Dennis
- Mulcahey passed away.
- </p>
- <p>
- Death caught him off his base.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- POLITICS
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>ixie! I ain't did
- nothin', but all de same I'm feelin' like a mut, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Chucky was displeased with some chapter in his recent past. I could tell
- as much by the shifty, deprecatory way in which he twiddled and fiddled
- with his beer-stein.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is d' way it all happens,&rdquo; exclaimed Chucky. &ldquo;Over be Washin'ton
- Square there's an old soak, an' he's out to go into pol'tics&mdash;wants
- to hold office; Congress, I t'inks, is what this gezeybo is after. Anyhow
- he's nutty to hold office.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, I figgers that a guy who wants to hold office is a sucker; for
- meself, I'd sooner hold a baby. Still, when some such duck comes chasin'
- into pol'tics, I'm out for his dough like all d' rest of d' gang.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So I goes an' gets nex' to this mucker an' jollies his game. I tells him
- all he's got to do is to fix his lamps on d' perch that pleases him, blow
- in his stuff an' me push'll toin loose, an' we'll win out d' whole box of
- tricks in a walk, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right; d' Washin'ton Square duck is of d' same views. An' some
- of it ain't no foolish talk at that. I'm dead strong wit' d' Dagoes, an'
- d' push about d' Bend, an' me old chum&mdash;if he starts&mdash;is goin'
- to get a run for his money.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It ain t this, however, what wilts me d' way you sees to-night. It's that
- I'm 'shamed, see! In d' foist place, I'm bashful. That's straight stuff;
- I'm so bashful that if I'm in some other geezer's joint&mdash;par-tic'ler
- if he's a high roller an' t'rowin' on social lugs, like this Washin'ton
- Square party&mdash;I feels like creep-in' under d' door mat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' other night this can'date for office says, says he, 'Chucky, I'm goin
- to begin my money-boinin' be givin' a dinner over be me house, an' youse
- are in it, see! in it wit' bot' feet.*
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Be I comin' to chew at your joint?' I asts; 'is that d' bright idee?'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'That's d' stuff,' he says; 'youse are comin' to eat wit' me an' me
- friends. An' you can gamble your socks me friends is a flossy bunch at
- that.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I says I'll assemble wit' 'em.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit, I ain't stuck on d' play. I'd sooner eat be meself. But if I'm goin'
- to catch up wit' his Whiskers an' sep'rate him from some of d' long green,
- I've got to stay dost to his game, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's at d' table me troubles begins. I does d' social double-shuffle in
- d' hall all right. D' crush parts to let me t'rough, an' I woiks me way up
- to me can'date&mdash;who, of course, is d' main hobo, bein' he's d'
- architect of d' blowout&mdash;an' gives him d' joyful mit; what you calls
- d' glad hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Glad to see youse, Chucky,' says d' old mark. 'Tummas, steer Chucky to
- his stool be d' table.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's at d' table I'm rattled, wit' all d' glasses an' dishes an 'd'
- lights overhead. But I'm cooney all d' same. I ain't onto d' graft meself,
- but I puts it up on d' quiet I'll pick out some student who knows d' ropes
- an' string me bets wit' his.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I sets there, I flashes me lamps along d' line, an' sort o' stacks up
- d' blokes, for to pick out d' fly guys from d' lobsters, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Over'cross'd table I lights on an old stiff who looks like he could teach
- d' game. T'inks I to meself, 'There's a mut who's been t'rough d' mill
- many a time an' oft. All I got to do now is to pipe his play an' never let
- him out o' me sight. If I follows his smoke, I'll finish in d' front
- somewheres, an' none of these mugs 'll tumble to me ignorance.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! on d' level! there was no flies on that for a scheme, was there? An'
- it would have been all right, me system would; only this old galoot I goes
- nex' to don't have no more sense than me. Why! he was d' ass of d'
- evening! d' prize pig of d' play, he was! Let me tell youse.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' foist move, he spreads a little table clot' across his legs. I ain't
- missin' no tricks, so I gets me hooks on me own little table clot' and
- spreads it over me legs also.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'This is good enough for a dog, I t'inks, an' easy money! Be keepin' me
- eye on Mr. Goodplayer over there I can do this stunt all right.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' so I does. I never lets him lose me onct.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'How be youse makin' it, Chucky?' shouts me can'date from up be d' end of
- d' room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Out o' sight!' I says. 'I'm winner from d' jump; I'm on velvet.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Play ball!' me can'date shouts back to encourage me, I suppose because
- he's dead on I ain't no Foxy Quiller at d' racket we're at; 'play ball,
- Chucky, an' don't let 'em fan youse out. When you can't bat d' ball, bunt
- it,' says me can'date.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course gettin 'd' gay face that way from d' boss gives me confidence,
- an' as a result it ain't two seconts before I'm all but caught off me
- base. It's in d' soup innin's an 'd' flunk slams down d' consomme in a tea
- cup. It's a new one on me for fair! I don't at d' time have me lamps on d'
- mark 'cross d' way, who I'm understudyin', bein' busy, as I says, slingin
- 'd' bit of guff I tells of wit' me can'date. An' bein' off me guard, I
- takes d' soup for tea or some such dope, an' is layin' out to sugar it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Stan' your hand!' says a dub who's organised be me right elbow, an'
- who's feedin' his face wit' both mits; 'set a brake!' he says. 'That's
- soup. Did youse t'ink it was booze?'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After that I fastens to d' old skate across d' table to note where he's
- at wit' his game. He's doin' his toin on d' consomme wit' a spoon, so I
- gets a spoon in me hooks, goes to mixin' it up wit 'd' soup as fast as
- ever, an' follows him out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' say! I'm feelin' dead grateful to this snoozer, see! He was d'
- ugliest mug I ever meets, at that. Say! he was d' limit for looks, an'
- don't youse doubt it. As I sizes him up I was t'inking to meself, what a
- wonder he is! Honest! if I was a lion an' that old party comes into me
- cage, do youse know what I'd do? Nit; you don't. Well, I'll tip it to
- youse straight. If any such lookin' monster showed up in me cage, if d'
- door was open, I'd get out. That's on d' square, I'd simply give him d'
- cage an' go an' board in d' woods. An' if d' door was locked an' I
- couldn't get out, I'd t'row a fit from d' scare. Oh! he was a dream! He's
- one of them t'ings a mark sees after he's been hittin' it up wit 'd' lush
- for a mont'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'But simply because he looks like a murderer,' I reflects, 'that's no
- reason why he ain't wise. He knows his way t'rough this dinner like a
- p'liceman does his beat, an' I'll go wit' him.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a go! When he plays a fork, I plays a fork; when he boards a shave,
- I'm only a neck behint him. When he shifts his brush an' tucks his little
- table clot' over his t'ree-sheet, I'm wit' him. I plays nex' to him from
- soda to hock.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' every secont I'm gettin' more confidence in this gezebo, an' more an'
- more stuck on meself. On d' dead! I was farmer enough to t'ink I'd t'ank
- him for bein' me guide before I shook d' push an' quit. Say! he'd be a
- nice old dub for me to be t'ankin 'd' way it toins out. I was a good t'ing
- to follow him, I don't t'ink.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I was onto it early that me old friend across d' table had w'eels an'
- was wrong in his cocoa, I wouldn't have felt so bad, see! But I'd been
- playin' him to win, an' followin' his lead for two hours. An' I was so
- sure I was trottin' in front, that all d' time I was jollyin' meself, an'
- pattin' meself on d' back, an' tellin' meself I was a corker to be gettin'
- an even run wit 'd' 400 d' way I was, d' foist time I enter s'ciety. An'
- of course, lettin' me nut swell that way makes it all d' harder when I
- gets d' jolt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's at d' finish. I'd gone down d' line wit' this sucker, when one of
- them waiter touts, who's cappin' d' play for d' kitchen, shoves a bowl of
- water in front of him. Now, what do youse t'ink he does? Drink it? Nit;
- that's what he ought to have done. I'm Dutch if he don't up an' sink his
- hooks in it. An' then he swabs off his mits wit' d' little table clot'.
- Say! an' to t'ink I'd been takin' his steer t'rough d' whole racket! It
- makes me tired to tell it!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'W'at th' 'ell!' I says to meself; 'I've been on a dead one from d'
- start. This stiff is a bigger mut than I be.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It let me out. Me heart was broke, an' I ain't had d' gall to hunt up me
- can'date since. Nit; I don't stay to say no 'good-byes.' I'm too bashful,
- as I tells you at d' beginnin'. As it is, I cops a sneak on d' door,
- side-steps d' outfit, an' screws me nut. The can'date sees me oozin' out,
- however, an' sends a chaser after me in d' shape of one of his flunks. He
- wants me to come back. He says me can'date wants to present me to his
- friends. I couldn't stan' for it d' way I felt, an' as d' flunk shows
- fight an' is goin' to take me back be force, I soaks him one an' comes
- away. On d' dead! I feels as'shamed of d' entire racket as if some sucker
- had pushed in me face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- ESSLEIN GAMES
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>or generations the
- Essleins have been fanciers of game chickens. The name &ldquo;Esslein&rdquo; for a
- century and a half has had honourable place among Virginians. In his day,
- they, the Essleins, were as well known as Thomas Jefferson. As this is
- written they have equal Old Dominion fame with either the Conways, the
- Fairfaxes, the McCarthys or the Lees. And all because of the purity and
- staunch worth of the &ldquo;Esslein Games.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the broad Esslein boast that no man had chickens of such feather or
- strain. And this was accepted popularly as truth. The Essleins never
- loaned, sold, nor gave away egg or chicken. No one could produce the
- counterpart of the Esslein chickens for looks or warlike heart; no one
- ever won a main from the Essleins. So at last it was agreed generally,
- that no one save the Essleins did have the &ldquo;Esslein Games;&rdquo; and this
- belief went unchallenged while years added themselves to years.
- </p>
- <p>
- But there came a day when a certain one named Smith, who dwelt in the
- region round about the Essleins, and who also had note for his fighting
- cocks, whispered to a neighbour that he, as well as the Essleins, had the
- &ldquo;Esslein Games.&rdquo; The whisper spread into talk, and the talk into general
- clamour; everywhere one heard that the long monopoly was broken, and that
- Smith had the &ldquo;Esslein Games.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This startling story had half confirmation by visitors to the Smith walks.
- Undoubtedly Smith had chickens, feather for feather, twins of the famous
- Essleins. That much at least was true. The rest of the question might have
- evidence pro or con some day, should Smith and the Essleins make a main.
- </p>
- <p>
- But this great day seemed slow, uncertain of approach. Smith would not
- divulge the genesis of his fowls, nor tell how he came to be possessed of
- the Esslein chickens. Smith confined himself to the bluff claim:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've got 'em, and there they be.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Beyond this Smith wouldn't go. On' their parts, the Essleins, at first
- maintained themselves in silent dignity. They said nothing; treating the
- Smith claim as beneath contempt.
- </p>
- <p>
- As man after man, however, went over to the Smith side, the Essleins so
- far unbent from their pose of tongue-tied hauteur as to call Smith &ldquo;a
- liar!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Still this failed of full effect; the talk went on, the subject was in
- mighty dispute, and the Essleins at last, to settle discussion, defied
- Smith to a main.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Smith refused to fight his chickens against the Essleins. Smith said
- it was conscience, but failed to go into details. This was damaging.
- Meanwhile, however, as Smith challenged the world of fighting cocks, and,
- moreover, won every match he ever made, and barred only the Essleins in
- his campaigning, there arose, in spite of his steady objection to fighting
- the Essleins, many who believed Smith and stood forth for it that Smith
- did have the far-famed &ldquo;Esslein Games.&rdquo; It is to the credit of the
- Essleins that they did all that was in their power to bring Smith and his
- chickens to the battlefield. They offered him every inducement known in
- chicken war, and tendered him a duel for his cocks to be fought for
- anything from love to money.
- </p>
- <p>
- Firm to the last, Smith wouldn't have it; and so, discouraged, the
- Essleins, failing action, nailed as it were their gauntlet to Smith's
- hen-coop door, and thus the business stood for months.
- </p>
- <p>
- It came about one day that a stranger from Baltimore accepted Smith's
- standing challenge to fight anybody save the Essleins. The stranger
- proposed and made a match with Smith to fight him nine battles, $500 on
- each couple and $2,500 on the general main. And then the news went 'round.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was high excitement in chicken circles. The day came and the sides
- of the pit were crowded. Smith was in his corner with his handler, getting
- the first of his champions ready for the struggle. As Smith was holding
- the chicken for the handler to fasten on the gaffs&mdash;drop-socket, they
- were, and keen as little scimetars&mdash;he chanced to glance across the
- pit.
- </p>
- <p>
- There stood John, chief of the Essleins.
- </p>
- <p>
- Smith saw it in a moment; he had been trapped. But it was too late. The
- match was made and the money was up; there was no chance to retrace, even
- if Smith had wanted. As a fact to his glory, however, he had no desire so
- to do.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're up against the Essleins, Bill,&rdquo; Smith said to his trainer; &ldquo;and
- it's all right. I didn't want to make a match with them, because I got
- their chickens queer. And if I'd fought them and won, I'd felt like I'd
- got their money queer; and that I couldn't stand. But this is different.
- We'll fight the Essleins now they're here, and 'if they can win over me,
- they're welcome.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the main began. The first battle was short, sharp, deadly; and
- glorious for Smith. The Esslein chicken got a stab in the heart the first
- buckle. Smith smiled as his handler pulled his chicken's gaff out of its
- dead victim, and set it free.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Smith entries won the second and third battle. Triumph rode on the
- glance of Smith, while the Esslein brows were bleak and dark.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Smith's got the 'Esslein Games,' sure!&rdquo; was whispered about the pit.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the fourth and fifth battles the tide ran the other way, the Esslein
- chickens killing their rivals. Each battle, for that matter, had so far
- been to the death.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sixth battle went to Smith and the seventh to the Essleins. Thus it
- stood four for Smith to three for the Essleins, just before the eighth
- battle. It didn't look as if Smith could lose.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was at this juncture so hopeful for the coops of Smith, that Smith did
- a foolish thing. Yielding to the appeals of his trainer, Smith let that
- worthy man put up a chicken of his own to face the Esslein entry for the
- eighth duel. It was a gorgeous shawl-neck that Smith's trainer produced;
- eye bright as a diamond, and beak like some arrow-head of jet. His legs
- looked as strong as a hod-carrier's. It was a horse to a hen, so everybody
- said, that the Esslein chicken,&mdash;which was but a small, indifferent
- bird,&mdash;would lose its life, the battle, and the main at one and the
- same time.
- </p>
- <p>
- Popular conjecture was wrong, as popular conjecture often is. The Esslein
- chicken locked both gaffs through the shawl-neck's brain in the second
- buckle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That teaches me a lesson,&rdquo; said Smith. &ldquo;Hereafter should an angel come
- down from heaven and beg me to let him fight a chicken in a main of mine,
- I'll turn him down!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the ninth battle and the score stood four for Smith and four for
- the Essleins. As the slim gaffs, grey and cruelly sharp, were being placed
- on the feathered gladiators for the last deadly joust, Smith called across
- the pit to John Esslein:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Esslein,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;no matter how this last battle may fall, I reckon
- I've convinced you and everybody looking on, that, just as I said, I've
- got the 'Esslein Games.' To show you that I know I have, and give you a
- chance for revenge as well, I'll make this last fight for $10,000 a cock.
- The main so far has been an even break, and neither of us has won or lost.
- The last battle decides the tie and wins or loses me $3,000. To make it
- interesting, I'll raise the risk both ways, if you're willing, just
- $7,000, and call the bundle ten. And,&rdquo; concluded Smith, as he glanced
- around the pit, &ldquo;there isn't a sport here but will believe in his heart,
- when I, a poor man, offer to make this last battle one for $20,000, that I
- know that, even if I'm against, I'm at least behind an 'Esslein Game.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Make it for $10,000 a cock, then!&rdquo; said John Esslein bitterly. &ldquo;Whether I
- win or lose main and money too, I've already lost much more than both
- to-day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the fight began. The chickens were big and strong and quick and as
- dauntlessly savage as ospreys. And feather and size, eye, and beak and
- leg, they were the absolute counterparts of each other.
- </p>
- <p>
- For ten minutes the battle raged. Either the spurred fencers had more of
- luck or more of caution than the others. Buckle after buckle occurred, and
- after ten minutes' fighting the two enemies still faced each other with
- angry, bead-like eyes, and without so much as a drop of blood spilled.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0127.jpg" alt="0127 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0127.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- They fronted each other balefully while one might count seven. Their beaks
- travelled up and down as evenly as if moved by the same impulse. Then they
- clashed together.
- </p>
- <p>
- This time,-as they drew apart, Smith's chicken fell upon its side, its
- right leg cut and broken well up toward the hip, with the bone pushing
- upward and outward through the slash of the gaff.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get your chicken and wring its neck, Smith,&rdquo; said someone. &ldquo;It's all
- over!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let them fight!&rdquo; responded Smith. &ldquo;It's not 'all over!' That chicken of
- Esslein's has a long row to hoe to kill that bird of mine.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hardly were the words uttered when a strange chance befell. Smith's
- prostrate cripple reached up as its foe approached, seized it with its
- beak, and struggled to its one good foot. In the buckle that followed, the
- one gaff by some sleight of the cripple slashed the Esslein chicken over
- the eyes and blinded it. The muscles closed down and covered the eyes.
- Otherwise the Esslein cock was unhurt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then began a long, fierce, yet feeble fight. One chicken couldn't stand
- and the other couldn't see. The Smith chicken would lie on its side and
- watch its rival with eyes blazing hate, while the Esslein chicken, blind
- as a bat, would grope for him. When he came within reach of Smith's
- chicken, that indomitable bird would seize him with his bill; there would
- be some weak, aimless clashing, and again they'd be separated, the blind
- one to grope, the cripple to lie and wait.
- </p>
- <p>
- The war limped on in this fashion for almost two hours. But the end came.
- As the Esslein chicken strayed blindly within reach, its enemy got a
- strong, sudden grip, and in the collision that was the sequel, the Esslein
- chicken had its head half slashed from its body. It staggered a step with
- blood spurting, tottered and fell dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Smith said never a word, but from first to last his face had been cold and
- grimly indifferent. His heart was fire, but no one could see it in his
- face. Evidently the man was as clean-strain as his chickens.
- </p>
- <p>
- That's all there is to the story. What became of the victor with the
- broken leg? Smith looked him over, decided it was &ldquo;no use,&rdquo; and wrung his
- dauntless neck. The great main was over. Smith had won, everybody knew, as
- Smith went home that night, that he wras $10,000 better off, and that fast
- and sure, beyond denial or doubt, Smith had the &ldquo;Esslein Games.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE PAINFUL ERROR
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>his is a tale of
- school life. Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton are scholars in
- the same school. The name of this seminary is withheld by particular
- request. Suffice it that all three of these youths come and go and have
- their bright young beings within the neighbourhood of Newark. The age of
- each is thirteen years. Thirteen is a sinister number. They are all
- jocund, merry-hearted boys, and put in many hours each day thinking up a
- good time.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day during the noon hour the school building was all but deserted.
- Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Benjamin Clayton, however, were there. They
- had formed plans for their entertainment which demanded the desertion of
- the school building as chronicled. The coast being fairly clear, the
- conspiring three proceeded to one of the upper recitation rooms of the
- building. This room did not appertain to the particular school favoured by
- the attendance of Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton as
- scholars. This, however, only added zest to the adventure.
- </p>
- <p>
- The room to which our heroes repaired was the recitation stamping ground
- of a high school class in physiology. The better to know anatomy, the
- class was furnished with the skeleton of some dead gentleman, all nicely
- hung and arranged with wires so as to look as much like former days as
- possible. During class hours the framework of the dead person stood in a
- corner of the room, and the students learned things from it that were
- useful to know. When off duty it reposed in a box.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton had heard of deceased. Their
- purpose this noon was to call on him. They gained entrance to the room by
- the burglarious method of picking the lock. Once within they took the
- skeleton from its box home and stood it in the window where the public
- might revel in the spectacle. To take off any grimness of effect they
- fixed a cob pipe in its bony jaws and clothed the skull in a bad hat,
- pulled much over the left eye, the whole conferring upon the remains a
- highly gala, joyous air indeed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Benjamin Clayton withdrew from the scene.
- </p>
- <p>
- The skeleton in the window was very popular. Countless folk had assembled
- to gaze upon it at the end of the first ten minutes, and armies were on
- their way.
- </p>
- <p>
- The principal of the school as he came from lunch saw it and was much
- vexed. He put the skeleton back in its box, and the hydra-headed public
- slowly dispersed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton secretly gloated over the
- transaction in detail and entirety. But the principal began to make
- inquiries; the avenger was on the track of the criminal three. Some big
- girls had witnessed the felonious entrance of the guilty ones into the den
- of the skeleton. The big girls imparted their knowledge to the principal,
- hunting these felons of the school. But the big girls slipped a cog on one
- important point. They did not know the recreant Benjamin Clayton. After
- arguing it all over they decided that &ldquo;the third boy&rdquo; was a very innocent
- young person named Albert Weed, and so gave in the names of the guerillas
- as:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Albert Weed!&rdquo; That afternoon the indignant
- principal demanded that Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Albert Weed attend him
- to the study. They were there charged with the atrocity of the skeleton in
- the window. Charles Roy and Fred Avery confessed and asked for mercy.
- Albert Weed denied having art, part or lot in the outrage. The principal
- was much shocked at his prompt depravity in trying to lie himself clear.
- The principal, in order to be exactly just, and evenly fair, craved to
- know of Charles Roy and Fred Avery:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Was Albert Weed with you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Please, sir, we would rather be excused from answering,&rdquo; they said,
- hanging down their heads.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the principal knew that Albert Weed was guilty. Fred Avery and
- Charles Roy were forgiven, and were complimented on their straightforward,
- manly course in refusing to tell a lie to shield themselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As for you, Albert,&rdquo; observed the principal, as he seized Albert Weed by
- the top of his head, &ldquo;as for you, Albert, I do not punish you for being
- roguish with the skeleton, but for telling me a lie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- The principal thereupon lambasted the daylights out of Albert Weed.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE RAT
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>e d' cops at d'
- Central office fly?&rdquo; Chucky buried his face in his tankard in a polite
- effort to hide his contempt for the question. &ldquo;Be dey fly! Say! make no
- mistake! d' Central Office mugs is as soon a set of geezers as ever looked
- over d' hill. Dey're d' swiftest ever. On d' level! I t'ink t'ree out of
- every four of them gezebos could loin to play d' pianny in one lesson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just to put youse onto how quick dey be, an' to give you some idee of
- their curves, let me tell you what dey does to Billy d' Rat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Youse never chases up on d' Rat? Nit! Well, Cully, you don't miss much.
- Yes, d' Rat's a crook all right. He's a nipper, but a dead queer one, see!
- He always woiks alone, an' his lay is diamonds.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I don't want no pals or stalls in mine,&rdquo; says d' Rat. &ldquo;I can toin all
- needful tricks be me lonesome. Stalls is a give-away, see! Let some sucker
- holler, an' let one of your mob get pinched, an' what then? Why, about d'
- time he's stood up an' given d' secont degree be Mc-Clusky, he coughs.
- That's it! he squeals, an' d' nex' dash out o' d' box youse don't get a
- t'ing but d' collar. Nine out o' ten of d' good people doin' time to-day,
- was t'rown into soak be some pal knockin'. I passes all that up! I goes it
- alone! If I nips a rock it's mine; I don't split out no bits for no
- snoozer, see! I'm d' entire woiks, an' if I stumbles an' falls be d'
- wayside, it's me's to blame. Which last makes it easier to stan' for.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' way d' Rat lays out d' ground for me one day,&rdquo; continued
- Chucky, &ldquo;an' he ain't slingin' no guff at that. It's d' way he always
- woiked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But to skin back to d' Central Office cops an' how flydey be: One of d'
- Rat's favourite stunts is dampin' a diamond. What's that? Youse'll catch
- on as me tale unfolds, as d' nov'lists puts it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here's how d' Rat would graft. Foist he'd rub up his two lamps wit'
- pepper till dey looks red an', out of line. When he'd got t'rough doin' d'
- pepper act to 'em, d' Rat's peeps, for fair! would do to understudy two
- fried eggs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then d' Rat would pull on a w'ite wig, like he's some old stuff; an' wit'
- that an' some black goggles over his peeps, his own Rag wouldn't have
- known him. To t'row 'em down for sure, d' Rat would wear a cork-sole shoe,&mdash;one
- of these 6-inch soles,&mdash;like he's got a game trilby. Then when he's
- all made up in black togs, d' Rat is ready.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bein' organised, d' Rat hobbles into a cab an' drives to a diamond shop.
- D' racket is this: Of course it takes a bit of dough, but that's no
- drawback, for d' Rat is always on velvet an' dead strong. As I say, d'
- play is this: D' Rat being well dressed an' fitted up wit' his cork-soles,
- his goggles an' his wig, comes hobblin' into d' diamond joint an' gives d'
- impression he's some rich old mark who ain't got a t'ing but money, an'
- that he's out to boin a small bundle be way of matchin' a spark which he
- has wit' him in his mit. D' Rat fills d' diamond man up wit' a yarn, how
- he's goin' to saw a brace of ear-rings off on his daughter an' needs d'
- secont rock, see! Of course it's a dead case of string. D' Rat ain't got
- no kid, an' would be d' last bloke to go festoonin' her wit' diamonds if
- he had.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naturally, d' mut who owns d' store is out an' eager to do business. D'
- Rat won't let d' diamond man do d' matchin'; not on your life! he's goin'
- to mate them sparks himself. So he gives d' stiff wit' d' store d' tip to
- spread a handful of stones, say about d' size of d' one he's holdin' in
- his hooks&mdash;which mebby is a 2-carat&mdash;on some black velvet for
- him to pick from. D' diamond party ain't lookin' for no t'row down from an
- old sore-eyed, cork-sole hobo like d' Rat, so he lays out a sprinklin' of
- stones. D' Rat, who all this time is starring his bum lamps, an' tellin'
- how bad an' weak dey be, an' how he can hardly see, gets his map down dost
- to d' lay-out of sparks, so as he can get onto em an' make d' match.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's now d' touch comes in. When d' Rat's got his smeller right among d'
- diamonds, he sticks out his tongue, quick like a toad for a honey-bee, an'
- nails a gem. That's what dey calls 'dampin' a diamond.' Yes, mebby if
- there's so many of 'em laid out, he t'inks d' mark behint d' show case
- will stan' for it wit'out missin' 'em, d' Rat gets two. Then d' Rat goes
- on jollyin' an' chinnin' wit' d' sparks in his face; an' mebby for a
- finish an' to put a cover on d' play, he buys one an' screws his nut.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit' his cab, as I says, d' Rat is miles away, an' has time to shed his
- wig an' goggles an' cork-sole before d' guy wit' d' diamonds tumbles to it
- he's been done. That's how d' Rat gets in his woik. Now I'll tell youse
- how d' Central Office people t'run d' harpoon into him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One day d' Rat makes a play an' gets two butes. He tucks 'em away in back
- of his teet', an' is just raisin' his nut to say somethin', when d' store
- duck grabs him an' raises a roar. Two or t'ree cloiks an' a cop off d'
- street comes sprintin' up, an' away goes d' Rat to d' coop.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit 'd' foist yell of d' sucker who makes d' front for d' store&mdash;naw,
- he ain't d' owner, he's one of d' cloiks&mdash;d' Rat goes clean outside
- of d' sparks at a gulp; swallows 'em; that's what he does. There bein' no
- diamond toined up, an' no one at headquarters bein' onto him&mdash;for
- he's always laid low an' kept out of sight of d' p'lice&mdash;d' Rat makes
- sure dey'll have to t'run him loose.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But d' boss cop is pretty cooney. He figgers it all out, how d' Rat's a
- crook, an' how he's eat d' diamonds, just as I says. So he cons d' Rat an'
- t'rows a dream into him. He tells him there'll be no trouble, but he'll
- have to keep him for an hour or two until his 'sooperior off'cer,' as he
- calls him, gets there. He's d' main squeeze, this p'lice dub dey're
- waitin' for, an' as soon as he shows up an' goes over d' play, d' Rat can
- screw out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' sort of song an' dance d' high cop gives d' Rat; an' say! I'm a
- lobster if d' Rat don't fall to it, at that. On d' dead! this p'lice duck
- is so smooth an' flossy d' Rat believes him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just for appearances d' Rat registers a big kick; an' then&mdash;for dey
- don't lock him up at all&mdash;he plants himself in a easy chair to do a
- toin of wait. D' Rat couldn't have broke an' run for it, even if he'd took
- d' scare, for d' cops is all over d' place. But he ain't lookin' for d'
- woist of it nohow. He t'inks it's all as d' boss cop has told him; he'll
- wait there an hour or two for d' main guy an' then dey'll cut him free.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After a half hour d' boss cop says: 'It's no use you bein' hungry, me
- frien', an' as I'm goin' to chew, come wit' me an' feed your face. D'
- treat's on me, anyhow, bein' obliged to detain a respect'ble old mucker
- like you. So come along.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit' that d' Rat goes along wit 'd' boss cop, an' all d' time he's
- t'inkin' what a Stoughton bottle d' cop is.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's nex' door, d' chop-house is. D' cop an 'd' Rat sets down an' breasts
- up to d' table. Dey gives d' orders all right, all right. But say! d' grub
- never gets to 'em. D' nex' move after d' orders, d' Rat, who's got a
- t'irst on from d' worry of bein' lagged, takes a drink out of a glass.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I'm poisoned!' yells d' Rat as he slams down d' tumbler; 'somebody's
- doped me!' an' wit' that d' Rat toins in, t'rows a fit, an' is seasick to
- d' limit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's what that boss cop does. He sends over an' doctors a glass while
- d' Rat is settin' in his office waitin', an' then gives him a bluff about
- chewin' an' steers d' Rat ag'inst it. Say! it was a dandy play. D' dope or
- whatever it was, toins me poor friend d' Rat inside out, like an old
- woman's pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' them sparks is recovered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, d' Rat does a stretch. As d' judge sentences him, d' Rat gives d'
- cop who downs him his mit. 'You're a wonder,' says d' Rat to d' cop;
- 'there's no flies baskin' in d' sun on you. When I reflects on d' way you
- sneaks d' chaser after them sparks, an' lands 'em, I'm bound to say d'
- Central Office mugs are onto their job.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHEYENNE BILL
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Wolfville)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">C</span>heyenne Bill is
- out of luck. Ordinarily his vagaries are not regarded in Wolfville. His
- occasional appearance in its single street in a voluntary of nice feats of
- horsemanship, coupled with an exhibition of pistol shooting, in which old
- tomato cans and passé beer bottles perform as targets, has hitherto
- excited no more baleful sentiment in the Wolfville bosom than disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shootin' up the town a whole lot!&rdquo; is the name for this engaging pastime,
- as given by Cheyenne Bill, and up to date the exercise has passed
- unchallenged.
- </p>
- <p>
- But to-day it is different. Camps like individuals have moods, now light,
- now dark; and so it is with Wolfville. At this time Wolfville is
- experiencing a wave of virtue. This may have come spontaneously from those
- seeds of order which, after all, dwell sturdily in the Wolfville breast.
- It may have been excited by the presence of a pale party of Eastern
- tourists, just now abiding at the O. K. Hotel; persons whom the rather
- sanguine sentiment of Wolfville credits with meditating an investment of
- treasure in her rocks and rills. But whatever the reason, Wolfville virtue
- is aroused; a condition of the public mind which makes it a bad day for
- Cheyenne Bill.
- </p>
- <p>
- The angry sun smites hotly in the deserted causeway of Wolfville. The
- public is within doors. The Red Light Saloon is thriving mightily. Those
- games which generally engross public thought are drowsy enough; but the
- counter whereat the citizen of Wolfville gathers with his peers in
- absorption of the incautious compounds of the place, is fairly sloppy from
- excess of trade. Notwithstanding the torrid heat this need not sound
- strangely; Wolfville leaning is strongly homoeopathic. &ldquo;<i>Similia
- similibus curantur</i>,&rdquo; says Wolfville; and when it is blazing hot,
- drinks whiskey.
- </p>
- <p>
- But to-day there is further reason for this consumption. Wolfville is
- excited, and this provokes a thirst. Cheyenne Bill, rendering himself
- prisoner to Jack Moore, rescue or no rescue, has by order of that
- sagacious body been conveyed by his captor before the vigilance committee,
- and is about to be tried for his life.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was Cheyenne Bill's immediate crime? Certainly not a grave one. Ten
- days before it would have hardly earned a comment. But now in its spasm of
- virtue, and sensitive in its memories of the erratic courses of Cheyenne
- Bill aforetime, Wolfville has grimly taken possession of that volatile
- gentleman for punishment. He has killed a Chinaman. Here is the story:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yere comes that prairie dog, Cheyenne Bill, all spraddled out,&rdquo; says Dave
- Tutt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dave Tutt is peering from the window of the Red Light, to which lattice he
- has been carried by the noise of hoofs. There is a sense of injury
- disclosed in Dave Tutt's tone, born of the awakened virtue of Wolfville.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It looks like this camp never can assoome no airs,&rdquo; remarks Cherokee Hall
- in a distempered way, &ldquo;but this yere miser'ble Cheyenne comes chargin' up
- to queer it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0141.jpg" alt="0141 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0141.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- As he speaks, that offending personage, unconscious of the great change in
- Wolf ville morals, sweeps up the street, expressing gladsome and ecstatic
- whoops, and whirling his pistol on his forefinger like a thing of light.
- One of the tourists stands in the door of the hotel smoking a pipe in
- short, brief puffs of astonishment, and reviews the amazing performance.
- Cheyenne Bill at once and abruptly halts. Gazing for a disgruntled moment
- on the man from the East, he takes the pipe from its owner's amazed mouth
- and places it in his own &ldquo;smokin' of pipes,&rdquo; he vouchsafes in condemnatory
- explanation, &ldquo;is onelegant an' degradin'; an' don't you do it no more in
- my presence. I'm mighty sensitive that a-way about pipes, an' I don't aim
- to tolerate 'em none whatever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This solution of his motives seems satisfactory to Cheyenne Bill. He sits
- puffing and gazing at the tourist, while the latter stands dumbly staring,
- with a morsel of the ravished meerschaum still between his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- What further might have followed in the way of oratory or overt acts
- cannot be stated, for the thoughts of the guileless Cheyenne suddenly
- receive a new direction. A Chinaman, voluminously robed, emerges from the
- New York store, whither he has been drawn by dint of soap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever is this Mongol doin' in camp, I'd like for to know?&rdquo; inquires
- Cheyenne Bill disdainfully. &ldquo;I shore leaves orders when I'm yere last, for
- the immejit removal of all sech. I wouldn't mind it, but with strangers
- visitin' Wolf ville this a-way, it plumb mortifies me to death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh well!&rdquo; he continues in tones of weary, bitter reflection, &ldquo;I'm the
- only public-sperited gent in this yere outfit, so all reforms falls
- nacheral to me. Still, I plays my hand! I'm simply a pore, lonely white,
- but jest the same, I makes an example of this speciment of a sudsmonger to
- let 'em know whatever a white man is, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then comes the short, emphatic utterance of a six-shooter. A puff of smoke
- lifts and vanishes in the hot air, and the next census will be short one
- Asiatic.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a moment arrives a brief order from Enright, the chief of the vigilance
- committee, to Jack Moore. The last-named official proffers a Winchester
- and a request to surrender simultaneously, and Cheyenne Bill, realizing
- fate, at once accedes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, gents,&rdquo; says Enright, apologetically, as he convenes the
- committee in the Red Light bar; &ldquo;I don't say this Cheyenne is held for
- beefin' the Chinaman sole an' alone. The fact is, he's been havin' a
- mighty sight too gay a time of late, an' so I thinks it's a good, safe
- play, bein' as it's a hot day an' we has the time, to sorter call the
- committee together an' ask its views, whether we better hang this yere
- Cheyenne yet or not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Pres'dent,&rdquo; responds Dave Tutt, &ldquo;if I'm in order, an' to get the
- feelin' of the meetin' to flowin' smooth, I moves we takes this Cheyenne
- an' proceeds with his immolation. I ain't basin' it on nothin' in
- partic'lar, but lettin' her slide as fulfillin' a long-felt want.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do I note any remarks?&rdquo; asks Enright. &ldquo;If not, I takes Mr. Tutt's very
- excellent motion as the census of this meetin', an' it's hang she is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not intendin' of no interruption,&rdquo; remarks Texas Thompson, &ldquo;I wants to
- say this: I'm a quiet gent my-se'f, an' nacheral aims to keep Wolfville a
- quiet place likewise. For which-all I shorely favours a-hangin' of
- Cheyenne. He's given us a heap of trouble. Like Tutt I don't make no p'int
- on the Chinaman; we spares the Chink too easy. But this Cheyenne is allers
- a-ridin', an' a-yellin', an' a-shootin' up this camp till I'm plumb tired
- out. So I says let's hang him, an' su'gests as a eligible, as well as
- usual nook tharfore, the windmill back of the dance hall.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; says Enright, &ldquo;the windmill is, as experience has showed, amply
- upholstered for sech plays; an' as delays is aggravatin', the committee
- might as well go wanderin' over now, an' get this yere ceremony off its
- mind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;See yere, Mr. Pres'dent!&rdquo; interrupts Cheyenne Bill in tones of one
- ill-used, &ldquo;what for a deal is this I rises to ask?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can gamble this is a squar' game,&rdquo; replies Enright confidently.
- &ldquo;You're entitled to your say when the committee is done. Jest figure out
- what kyards you needs, an' we deals to you in a minute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I solely wants to know if my voice is to be regarded in this yere play,
- that's all,&rdquo; retorts Cheyenne Bill.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gents,&rdquo; says Doc Peets, who has been silently listening. &ldquo;I'm with you on
- this hangin'. These Eastern sharps is here in our midst. It'll impress 'em
- that Wolfville means business, an' it's a good, safe, quiet place. They'll
- carry reports East as will do us credit, an' thar you be. As to the
- propriety of stringin' Cheyenne, little need be said. If the Chinaman
- ain't enough, if assaultin' of an innocent tenderfoot ain't enough, you
- can bet he's done plenty besides as merits a lariat. He wouldn't deny it
- himse'f if you asks him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There is a silence succeeding the rather spirited address of Doc Peets, on
- whose judgment Wolfville has been taught to lean. At last Enright breaks
- it by inquiring of Cheyenne Bill if he has anything to offer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckons it's your play now, Cheyenne,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;so come a-runnin.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why!&rdquo; urges Cheyenne Bill, disgustedly, &ldquo;these proceedin's is ornery an'
- makes me sick. I shore objects to this hangin'; an' all for a measly
- Chinaman too! This yere Wolfville outfit is gettin' a mighty sight too
- stylish for me. It's growin' that per-dad-binged-'tic'lar it can't take
- its reg'lar drinks, an'&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop right thar!&rdquo; says Enright, with dignity, rapping a shoe-box with his
- six-shooter; &ldquo;don't you cuss the chair none, 'cause the chair won't have
- it. It's parliamentary law, if any gent cusses the chair he's out of
- order, same as it's law that all chips on the floor goes to the house.
- When a gent's out of order once, that settles it. He can't talk no more
- that meetin'. Seein' we're aimin' to eliminate you, we won't claim nothin'
- on you this time. But be careful how you come trackin' 'round ag'in, an'
- don't fret us! <i>Sabe?</i> Don't you-all go an' fret us none!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ain't allowin' to fret you,&rdquo; retorts Cheyenne Bill. &ldquo;I don't have to
- fret you. What I says is this: I s'pose, I sees fifty gents stretched by
- one passel of Stranglers or another between yere an' The Dalis, an' I
- never does know a party who's roped yet on account of no Chinaman. An' I
- offers a side bet of a blue stack, it ain't law to hang people on account
- of downin' no Chinaman. But you-alls seems sot on this, an' so I tells you
- what I'll do. I'm a plain gent an' thar's no filigree work on me. If it's
- all congenial to the boys yere assembled&mdash;not puttin' it on the
- grounds of no miser'ble hop slave, but jest to meet public sentiment half
- way&mdash;I'll gamble my life, hang or no hang, on the first ace turned
- from the box, Cherokee deal. Does it go?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Wolfville tastes are bizarre. A proposition original and new finds in its
- very novelty an argument for Wolfville favour. It befalls, therefore, that
- the unusual offer of Cheyenne Bill to stake his neck on a turn at faro is
- approvingly criticised. The general disposition agrees to it; even the
- resolute Enright sees no reason to object.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cheyenne,&rdquo; says Enright, &ldquo;we don't have to take this chance, an' it's
- a-makin' of a bad preceedent which the same may tangle us yereafter; but
- Wolfville goes you this time, an' may Heaven have mercy on your soul.
- Cherokee, turn the kyards for the ace.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Turn squar', Cherokee!&rdquo; remarks Cheyenne Bill with an air of interest.
- &ldquo;You wouldn't go to sand no deck, nor deal two kyards at a clatter, ag'in
- perishin' flesh an' blood?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I should say, no!&rdquo; replies Cherokee. &ldquo;I wouldn't turn queer for money,
- an' you can gamble! I don't do it none when the epeesode comes more onder
- the head of reelaxation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which the same bein' satisfact'ry,&rdquo; says Cheyenne Bill, &ldquo;roll your game.
- I'm eager for action; also, I plays it open.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I dunno!&rdquo; observes Dan Boggs, meditatively caressing his chin; &ldquo;I'm
- thinkin' I'd a-coppered;&mdash;that's whatever!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The deal proceeds in silence, and as may happen in that interesting sport
- called faro, a split falls out. Two aces appear in succession.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ace lose, ace win!&rdquo; says Cherokee, pausing. &ldquo;Whatever be we goin' to do
- now, I'd like to know?&rdquo; There is a pause.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gents,&rdquo; announces Enright, with dignity, &ldquo;a split like this yere creates
- a doubt; an' all doubts goes to the pris'ner, same as a maverick goes to
- the first rider as ties it down, an' runs his brand onto it. This camp of
- Wolfville abides by law, an' blow though it be, this yere Cheyenne Bill,
- temp'rarily at least, goes free. However, he should remember this yere
- graze an' restrain his methods yereafter. Some of them ways of his is
- onhealthful, an' if he's wise he'll shorely alter his system from now on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which the camp really lose! an' this person Bill goes free!&rdquo; says Jack
- Moore, dejectedly. &ldquo;I allers was ag'in faro as a game. Where we-all misses
- it egreegious, is we don't play him freeze-out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know, Cherokee,&rdquo; whispers Faro Nell, as her eyes turn softly to
- that personage of the deal box, &ldquo;I don't like killin's none! I'd sooner
- Cheyenne goes loose, than two bonnets from Tucson!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this Cherokee Hall pinches the cheek of Faro Nell with a delicate
- accuracy born of his profession, and smiles approval.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- BLIGHTED
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>s it hauteur, or
- is it a maiden's coyness which causes you to turn away your head, love?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- George D'Orsey stood with his arm about the willowy form of Imogene
- O'Sullivan. The scene was the ancestral halls of the O'Sullivans in the
- fashionable north-west quarter of Harlem. George D'Orsey had asked Imogene
- O'Sullivan to be his bride. That was prior to the remark which opened our
- story. And the dear girl softly promised. The lovers stood there in the
- gloaming, drinking that sweet intoxication which never comes but once.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't hauteur, George,&rdquo; replied Imogene O'Sullivan, in tones like
- far-off church bells. &ldquo;But, George!&mdash;don't spurn me&mdash;I have
- eaten of the common onion of commerce, and my breath, it is so freighted
- with that trenchant vegetable, it would take the nap from your collar like
- a lawn mower. It is to spare the man she loves, George, which causes your
- Imogene to hold her head aloof.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look up, darling!&rdquo; and George D'Orsey's tones held a glad note of
- sympathy, &ldquo;I, too, have battened upon onions.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The lovers clung to each other like bats in a steeple.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But we'll have to put toe-weights on pa, George; he'll step high and
- lively when he hears of this!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The lovers were seated on the sofa, now; the prudent Imogene was taking a
- look ahead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doesn't your father love me, pet?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't think he does,&rdquo; replied the fair girl tenderly. &ldquo;I begged him to
- ask you to dinner, once, George; that was on your last trip. He said he
- would sooner dine with a wet dog, George, and refused. From that I infer
- his opposition to our union.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'll make a monkey of him yet!&rdquo; and George D'Orsey hissed the words
- through his set teeth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And my brother?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As for him,&rdquo; said George D'Orsey (and at this he began pacing the room
- like a lion), &ldquo;as for your brother! If he so much as looks slant-eyed at
- our happiness, he goes into the soup! From your father I would bear much;
- but when the balance of the family gets in on the game, they will pay for
- their chips in advance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can we not leave them, George; leave them, and fly together?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your father is rich, Imogene; that is a sufficient answer.&rdquo; There was a
- touch of sternness in George D'Orsey's tones, and the subject of flying
- was dropped.
- </p>
- <p>
- George D'Orsey lived in the far-off hamlet of Hoboken. He returned to his
- home. In three months he was to wed Imogene O'Sullivan. Benton O'Sullivan
- had a fit when it was first mentioned to him. At last he gave his sullen
- consent.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I had planned a title for you, Imogene.&rdquo; That was all he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three months have elapsed. It was dark when the ferryboat came to a
- panting pause in its slip. George D'Orsey picked his way through the crowd
- with quick, nervous steps. It was to be his wedding-night. He wondered if
- Imogene would meet him at the ferry. At that moment he beheld her dear
- form walking just ahead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To-night, dearest, you are mine forever!&rdquo; whispered George D'Orsey
- tenderly, seizing the sweet young creature by her arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shrieks which emanated from the young woman could have defied the best
- efforts of a steam siren.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not Imogene O'Sullivan!
- </p>
- <p>
- The police bore away George D'Orsey. They turned a deaf ear to his
- explanations.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You make me weary!&rdquo; remarked the brutal turnkey, to whom George D'Orsey
- told his tale.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cell door slammed; the lock clanked; the cruel key grated as it
- turned. George D'Orsey was a prisoner. The charge the blotter bore against
- him was: &ldquo;Insulting women on the street.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When George D'Orsey was once more alone, he cursed his fate as if his
- heart would break. At last he was calm.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Oh, woman, in our hour of ease,
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Uncertain, coy, and hard to please;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- But, seen too oft, familiar with her face;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- We first endure, then pity, then embrace!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- The Chateau O'Sullivan was a flare and a glare of lights. The rooms were
- jungles of palms and tropical plants. Flowers were everywhere, while the
- air tottered and fainted under the burden of their perfume. Imogene
- O'Sullivan never looked more beautiful.
- </p>
- <p>
- But George D'Orsey did not come.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hour followed hour into the past. The guests moved uneasily from room to
- room. The preacher notified Benton O'Sullivan that he was ready.
- </p>
- <p>
- And still George D'Orsey came not.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The villain has laid down on us, me child!&rdquo; whispered Benton O'Sullivan
- to the weeping Imogene; &ldquo;but may me hopes of heaven die of heart failure
- if I have not me revenge! No man shall insult the proud house of.
- O'Sullivan and get away with it; not without blood!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The guests cheerfully dispersed, talking the most scandalous things in
- whispers.
- </p>
- <p>
- Imogene O'Sullivan's dream was over.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the next night. George D'Orsey stood on the O'Sullivan porch,
- ringing the bell. His eye and his pocket and his stomach were alike wildly
- vacant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sic him, Bull! Sic him!&rdquo; said Benton O'Sullivan, bitterly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bull tore several specimens from the quivering frame of George D'Orsey,
- who vanished in the darkness with a hoarse cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- Years afterward George D'Orsey and Imogene O'Sullivan met, but they gave
- each other a cold, meaningless stare.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE SURETHING
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ohn Sparrowhawk
- was a sporting man of the tribe of &ldquo;Surethings.&rdquo; He was fond of what has
- Cherry Hill description as a &ldquo;cinch.&rdquo; He never let any lame, slow trick
- get away. John Sparrowhawk's specialty was racing; and he always referred
- to this diversion with horses as his &ldquo;long suit.&rdquo; He kept several rather
- abrupt animals himself, and whenever he found a man whose horse wasn't as
- sudden as some horse he owned, John Sparrowhawk would lay plots for that
- man, and ultimately race equines with him, and become master of such sums
- as the man would bet. John Sparrowhawk wandered through life in his
- &ldquo;surething&rdquo; way and amassed wealth. He was rich, and was wont to boast to
- very intimate friends:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never spent a dollar which I honestly earned.&rdquo; This gave John
- Sparrowhawk a vast deal of vogue, and he was looked up to and revered by a
- circle which is always impressed by the genius of one who can rob his
- fellow-worms, and do it according to law.
- </p>
- <p>
- It befell one day that the Brooklyn Jockey Club offered a purse for a
- running race, but demanded five entries. In no time at all, three horses
- were entered. Their names and capacities were well known to the sagacious
- John Sparrowhawk. He had a horse that could beat them all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He would run by them like they was tied to a post!&rdquo; remarked John
- Sparrowhawk, in a chant of ungrammatical exultation.
- </p>
- <p>
- It burst upon him that the time was ripe to pillage somebody. His latest
- larceny was ten days old, and John Sparrowhawk oft quoted the Bowery poet
- where he said:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Count that day lost whose low, descending sun
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Sees at thy hands no worthy sucker done.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- And John Sparrowhawk did business that way. If he might only get another
- horse entered, and then complete the quintet with his own, John
- Sparrowhawk would possess &ldquo;a snap.&rdquo; Which last may be defined as a
- condition of affairs much famed for its excellence.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture John Sparrowhawk had the idea of his career. The idea
- made &ldquo;a great hit&rdquo; with him. He had a friend who had a horse, which, while
- not so swiftly elusive as &ldquo;Tenbroeck&rdquo; and &ldquo;Spokane&rdquo; in their palmy days,
- could defeat such things as district messenger boys, Fifth avenue stages,
- and many other enterprises which do not attain meteoric speed. John
- Sparrowhawk's horse could beat it, he was sure. He would explain the
- situation to his friend, and cause his snail of a horse to be entered.
- This would fill the race, and then John Sparrowhawk's horse would win
- &ldquo;hands down,&rdquo; and thereby empty everybody's pockets in favour of John
- Sparrowhawk's, which was a very glutton of a pocket, and never got enough.
- </p>
- <p>
- John Sparrowhawk's friend was lying ill at the Hoffman. John Sparrowhawk
- went into that hostelry and climbed the stairs, softly humming that
- optimistic ballad, which begins: &ldquo;There's a farmer born every second!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The sick friend took little interest in the deadfall proposed by John
- Sparrowhawk. He was suffering from a mass-meeting on the part of divers
- boils, which had selected a trysting place on his person, where their
- influence would be felt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Locked, as it were, in conflict with his afflictions, John Sparrowhawk's
- friend was indifferent to his horse. He cared not what traps were set with
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- John Sparrowhawk entered the friend's horse and paid the entrance money&mdash;$150.
- Then he lavished $15 on a &ldquo;jock&rdquo; to ride him. The field was full, the
- conditions of the purse complied with, and the race a &ldquo;go.&rdquo; Of course,
- John Sparrowhawk's horse would win; and, acting on it as the chance of his
- life, John Sparrowhawk went craftily about wagering his dollars, even unto
- his bottom coin; and all to the end that he deplete the &ldquo;jays&rdquo; about him
- and become exceeding rich.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm out for the stuff!&rdquo; observed John Sparrow-hawk, and acted
- accordingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the race started John Sparrowhawk had everything up but his eyes, his
- ears, and other bric-à-brac of a personal sort, which would mean
- inconvenience to be without a moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- There could be no purpose other than a cruel one, so far as John
- Sparrowhawk is concerned, to dwell on the details of this race. Suffice it
- that they started and they finished, and the horse of the sick friend made
- a fool of the horse of John Sparrowhawk. He beat him like rocking a baby,
- so said the sports, and thereby dumped the unscrupulous yet sapient John
- Sparrow-hawk for every splinter he possessed. It shook every particle of
- dust out of John Sparrowhawk. He called to relate his woe to his sick
- friend. That suffering person's malady had temporarily taken a recess from
- its labours, and for the nonce he was resting easy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know'd it, and had four thousand placed that way, John,&rdquo; observed the
- invalid. &ldquo;I win almost thirteen thousand on the trick. My horse could do
- that skate of yours on three legs. I tumbled to it the moment you came in
- the other day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why didn't you put me on?&rdquo; remonstrated John Sparrowhawk, almost in
- tears, as he thought of the dray-load of money he had lost.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Put you on!&rdquo; repeated the Job of the Hoffman, scornfully; &ldquo;not none! I
- wanted to see how it would seem to let a 'surething' sharp like you open a
- game on a harmless sufferer and 'go broke' on it. No, John; it will do you
- good. You won't have so much money as the result of this, but you will be
- a heap more erudite.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- GLADSTONE BURR
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">G</span>ladstone Burr is a
- small, industrious, married man. His little nest of a home is in Brooklyn.
- Perhaps the most emphasised feature of the Burr family home is Mrs. B. She
- is a large woman, direct as Bismarck in her diplomacy, and when Gladstone
- Burr does wrong, she tells him of it firmly and fully for his good. There
- is but one bad habit which can with slightest show of truth be charged to
- Gladstone Burr. The barriers of his nature, yielding to social pressure,
- at intervals give way. At such times the soul of Gladstone Burr issues
- forth on a sea of strong drink.
- </p>
- <p>
- But, as he says himself, &ldquo;these bats never last longer than ten days.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Notwithstanding this meagre limit, Mrs. B. does not approve of Gladstone
- Burr when thus socially relaxed. And from time to time she has left
- nothing unsaid on that point. Indeed, Mrs. B. has so fully defined her
- position on the subject, that Gladstone Burr, while he in no sense fears
- her, does not care to go home unless he is either very drunk or very
- sober. There is no middle ground in tippling where Gladstone Burr and Mrs.
- B. can meet with his consent. He is not superstitious, but he avers that
- whenever he has been drinking and meets Mrs. B. he has had bad luck. His
- only safety lies in either being sober and avoiding it, or in taking
- refuge in a jag too thick for wifely admonitions to pierce.
- </p>
- <p>
- There arose last week in the life of Gladstone Burr some event that it was
- absolutely necessary to celebrate. For two days he gave himself up to his
- destiny in that behalf, and being very busy with his festival Gladstone
- Burr did not go home.
- </p>
- <p>
- Toward the close of the third day he was considering with himself how best
- to approach his domicile so as to avoid the full force of the storm. He
- was not so deep in his cups at that moment, but Mrs. B.'s opinions gave
- him concern. Still, he felt the need of going home. He was tired and he
- was sick. Gladstone Burr knew he would be a great deal sicker in the
- morning, but he felt of a four-bit piece in his pocket, and remarking
- something about the hair of a dog, took courage, and was confident he
- carried the means of restoring himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- But how to get home!
- </p>
- <p>
- It was at this crisis in the affairs of Gladstone Burr that his friend,
- Frederick Upham Adams, came up. An inspiration seized Gladstone Burr.
- Adams should take him home in a carriage. Mrs. B. didn't know Adams, being
- careful of her acquaintances. They would say that he, Gladstone Burr, had
- been ill, almost dead from apoplexy, or sunstroke, during the recent hot
- spell, and that &ldquo;Dr. Adams&rdquo; was bringing him home.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a most happy thought.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't be alarmed, Mrs. Burr,&rdquo; said Adams, as an hour later he supported
- the drooping Gladstone Burr through the hall and stowed him away on a
- sofa. &ldquo;I am Dr. Adams, of Williamsburg. Mr. Burr has suffered a great
- shock, but he is out of danger now. All he needs is rest&mdash;perfect
- rest!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gladstone Burr gasped piteously from the sofa. Mrs. B. was deceived
- perfectly. The ruse worked like a charm.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0159.jpg" alt="0159 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0159.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How long must he be kept quiet, Doctor?&rdquo; asked Mrs. B., as she wrung her
- hands over Gladstone Burr's danger. She was bending above the invalid at
- the time, and he was unable to signal his friend to be careful how he
- prescribed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh! ahem!&rdquo; observed &ldquo;Dr. Adams,&rdquo; looking at the ceiling, professionally,
- &ldquo;about three days! That is right! Perfect rest for three days, and Mr.
- Burr will be a well man again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are there directions as to what medicines to give him?&rdquo; asked Mrs. B.,
- passing her hand gently over Gladstone Burr's heated dome of thought; &ldquo;any
- directions about the food, Doctor?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He needs no medicine,&rdquo; observed the wretched Adams, closing his eyes
- sagaciously, and sucking his cane. &ldquo;As for food, we must be careful. I
- should advise nothing but milk. Give him milk, Mrs. Burr, milk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- After this Frederick Upham Adams drove away. And at the end of three days
- Gladstone Burr was almost dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE GARROTE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>ell youse
- somethin' about d' worser side of d' Bend!&rdquo; retorted Chucky. His manner
- was resentful. I had put my question in a fashion half apologetic and as
- one who might be surprised at anything bad in the Bend. It was this
- lamblike method of being curious that Chucky didn't applaud. Evidently he
- gloried a bit in the criminal vigour of certain phases of a Bend
- existence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mebby you t'inks there is no worser side to d' Bend! Mebby you takes d'
- Bend for a hotbed of innocence! Don't string no stuff on d' milky
- character of d' Bend. Youse would lose it one, two, t'ree, keno! see!
- There's dead loads of t'ings about d' Bend what's so tough it 'ud make
- youse sore on yourself to get onto 'em.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be d' way! while youse is chinnin' concernin' d' hard lines of d' Bend,
- I'm put in mind about Danny d' Face, who shows up from Sing Sing to-day.
- Say! d' Face wasn't doin' a t'ing but put up a roar all d' morn-in', till
- a cop shows up an' lays it out cold if d' Face don't cork, he'll pinch
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was d' squeal about? Why! it's like this,&rdquo; continued Chucky,
- settling himself where the barkeeper might know when his glass was empty.
- &ldquo;It's all about d' Face's Bundle. When d' victim takes his little ten
- spaces, his Bundle mourns 'round for a brace of mont's, see! An' then she
- marries another guy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What else could youse look for? That's what I say; what could d' Face
- expect? Ten spaces ain't like a stretch, it's 'life,' see! D' mug who
- chases in an' takes a trip for ten, he's a lifer. An' you knows as well as
- me, even if youse ain't done time, that when a duck gets life, it's d'
- same as a divorce. That's dead straight! his Bundle is free to get married
- ag'in.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' that's just what d' Face's Rag does; she hooks up wit' another skate,
- after d' Face has had his stripes for a couple of mont's. She's no
- tree-toad to live on air an' scenery, so she gets hitched. I was right
- there, pipin' off d' play meself, when d' w'ite choker ties 'em. It was a
- good weddin', wit' a dandy lot of lush; d' can was passin' all d' time,
- an' so d' mem'ry of it is wit' me still.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I says, d' Face comes weavin' in this mornin', an' tries to break up
- what d' poipers call 'existin' conditions.' It don't go, though; d' cop
- cuts in on d' play an' makes it a cinch case of nit, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What'll d' Face do? What can he do but screw his nut an' stan' for it? He
- ain't got no licence to interfere. It's a case of 'nothin' doin',' as far
- as d' Face's end goes. Let him charge 'round an' grab off another skirt.
- There's plenty of 'em; d' Face can find another wife if he goes d' right
- way down d' line. But he don't make no hit be hollerin', he can take a
- tumble to that.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it railroads d' Face? He does a stunt garrotin', see! I'll tell
- youse d' story. Of course, d' Face is a crook.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, understan' me! I ain't no crook. I'm a fakir, an' a grafter; an'
- I've been fly in me time an' I ain't no dub to-day, but I never was no
- crook, see! But, of course, born as I was in Kelly's Alley, an' always
- free of d' Bowery push, I hears a lot about crooks, an' has more'n one of
- d' swell mob on me visitin' list.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naw; d' Face was never in d' foist circles, nothin' fine to him. He never
- was d' real t'ing as a dip, an 'd' best he could do was to shove an'
- stall. Now an' then he toins a trick as a porch climber; but even at that
- I never gets a tip of any big second-story woik d' Face does.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' Face's best trick is d' garrote, an' it's on d' gar-rote lay dey downs
- d' Face when dey puts him away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now-days there's a lot of sandbaggin'. Some mug comes wanderin' along,
- loaded to d' guards wit* booze, an' some soon duck lends him a t'ump back
- of d' nut wit' a sandbag, or mebby it's a lead pipe or a bar of rubber.
- Over goes d' slewed mug, on his map, an' d' rest is easy money, see!
- That's d' way it's done now.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But in d' old times, when I'm a kid, it ain't d' sandbag; it's d'
- garrote. An' d' patient can be cold sober, still d' garrote goes all
- right. It takes two to woik it; but even at that it beats d' sandbag hands
- down. It's smoother, cleaner, and more like a woik-man, see! d' garrote
- is.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Besides, there's more apt to be stuff on a sober party than on some stiff
- who's tanked. I know d' poipers is always talkin' about people gettin' a
- load, wit' money all over 'em; but youse can gamble! such talk is a song
- an' dance. I'm more'n seven years old, an' me exper'ence is, that it's a
- four-to-one shot a drunk is every time broke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But to go to d' story of how d' Face gets pinched. As I states, it's way
- back; not quite ten spaces (for d' Face shortens his stay at d' pen wit'
- good conduct time see!), an 'd' Face an' a pal, Spot Casey, who's croaked
- now, is out on d' garrote lay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' Face is followin', an' Spot is sluggin'. Here's how dey lays out d'
- game. It's on Fift' Avenoo, down be Nint'. Spot's playin' round d' corner
- on Nint'; d' Face is woikin' about a block away on Fift' Avenoo, on d'
- lookout for a sucker, see! Along he comes walkin' fast, this sucker. As he
- passes, d' Face gives him d' size-up. He's got a spark, an' a yellow
- chain, an' looks like he's good for a hundred in d' long green. That does
- for d' Face. He lets this guy get good an' by, an' then toins an' shadows
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' Face walks faster than d' sucker. It's his play to be nex', be d' time
- dey hits Nint', where Spot is layin' dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As dey chases up, d' Face an 'd' snoozer he's out to do is bot' walkin'
- fast, wit 'd' Face five foot behint.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just before dey makes d' corner, d' Face gives d' office to Spot be
- stampin' onct wit' his trilby on d' sidewalk. Then he moves right up
- sharp, claps his right arm about d' geezer's t'roat, at d' same time
- grabbin' his right hook wit' his left an' yankin' his arm in tight. It
- shuts off d' duck's wind.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As d' Face clenches his party, as I says, he gives him d' knee behint,
- an' sort o' lifts him up. At d' same instant, Spot comes chasin' round d'
- corner in front an' smashes his right duke into what d' prize fighters
- calls 'd' mark.' Yes, it's d' same t'ump that does for Corbett that day
- wit' Fitz.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'That's d' stuff, Spot!' says d' Face, as d' party is slugged, an' then
- he sets him down be d' fence all limp an' quiet, an' goes t'rough him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey gets a super, a pin, an' quite a healt'y roll besides. He's so done
- up dey even gets a di'mond off one of his hooks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure! d' garrote almost puts a mark's light out. Youse can bet! after
- youse has been t'rough d' mill onct, youse won't t'ink, travel, nor raise
- d' yell for half an hour. A mark's lucky to be alive who's been t'rough d'
- garrote. It ain't so bad as d' sandbag at that, neither.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How was it d' Face is took? Nit; d' cop don't get in on d' play; dey win
- easy. It's two weeks later when he's collared. D' Face's pal, Spot, gets
- too gabby wit' a skirt, who's stoolin' for d' p'lice on d' sly, an' she
- goes an' knocks to d' Chief!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0046" id="link2H_4_0046"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- O'TOOLE'S CHIVALRY
- </h2>
- <p class="indent15">
- A woman, a spaniel, and a walnut tree;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- The more you beat them, the better they be.
- </p>
- <p class="indent30">
- Irish Proverb.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hus sadly sang P.
- Sarsfield O'Toole to himself, as he readjusted the bandage to his wronged
- eye. He believed it, too; at least in the case of Madame Bridget Burke,
- the wife of one John Burke.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Burkes were the neighbours of P. Sarsfield O'Toole; they lived next
- door. The intimacy, however, went no further; O'Toole and the Burkes were
- not friends.
- </p>
- <p>
- This is the story of the damaged eye. It offers the reason why P.
- Sarsfield O'Toole comforted himself with the vigorous Irish proverb.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the evening before. P. Sarsfield O'Toole was sitting on his back
- porch, cooling himself after a day's work at his profession of bricklayer,
- by reading the history of Ireland. The Burkes were holding audible
- converse just over the division fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Sarsfield O'Toole closed the history of his native land to listen. This
- last was neither an arduous nor a painful task, for the Burkes, with the
- splendid frankness of a household willing to stand or fall by its record,
- could be heard a block.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me family was noble!&rdquo; P. Sarsfield O'Toole overheard John Burke remark.
- &ldquo;The Burkes wanst lived in their own cashtle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They did not,&rdquo; observed Madame Burke. &ldquo;They lived woild in the bog of
- Allen, and there was mud on their shanks from wan ind of the year to the
- other. Divvil a cashtle did a Burke ever see; barrin' a jail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Woman! av yez arouse me,&rdquo; said John Burke, threateningly, &ldquo;I'll break the
- bones of ye, an' fling yez in the corner to mend. Don't exashperate me,
- woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I exashperate yez!&rdquo; retorted Madame Burke, scornfully. &ldquo;For phwat wud I
- exashperate yez! Wasn't your own uncle transhpoorted? Answer me that, John
- Burke?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me uncle suffered to free Ireland, woman!&rdquo; responded the husband.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;May the divvil hould him!&rdquo; said Madame Burke. &ldquo;He was transhpoorted as a
- felon, for b'atin' the head off Humpy Pete, the cripple, at the Fair. He
- was an illygant speciment of a Burke! always b'atin' cripples an' women!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The last would seem to have been an unfortunate remark, in so far as it
- contained a suggestion. The next heard by the listening P. Sarsfield
- O'Toole was the loud lament of Madame Bridget Burke as her husband, John
- Burke, submitted her to that correction which he afterwards described to
- the police justice as, &ldquo;givin' her a tashte av the sthrap.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cries of Madame Bridget Burke were at their highest when P. Sarsfield
- O'Toole looked over the fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shtop b'atin' the leddy, John Burke!&rdquo; commanded P. Sarsfield O'Toole.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Phwat's it to yez! ye Far-down!&rdquo; demanded John Burke, looking up from his
- labours. &ldquo;Av yez hang your chin on that line fince ag'in, I'll welt the
- life out av yez! D'ye moind it now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it to me yez apploies the word 'Far-down!&rdquo; shouted P. Sarsfield
- O'Toole, wrathfully. &ldquo;Phwat are yez yerself but a rascal of a
- Stonethrower? Don't timpt me with your names, John Burke, an' shtop
- b'atin' the leddy. If I iver come over wanst to yez, I'll return a
- criminal!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shtop b'atin' me own lawful Bridget,&rdquo; retorted John Burke, in tones of
- scorn, &ldquo;when she's been teasin' for the sthrap a month beyant! Well, I
- loike that! I'll settle with yez, O'Toole, when I tache me woife to
- respect the name of Burke.&rdquo; Here the representative of that honourable
- title smote Madame Bridget lustily. &ldquo;Av I foind yez in me yarud, O'Toole,
- ye'll lay no bricks to-morry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Sarsfield O'Toole cleared the fence at a bound. He was chivalrous, and
- would rescue Madame Burke. He was proud and would resent the opprobrious
- epithet of &ldquo;Far-down.&rdquo; He was sensitive, and would teach John Burke never
- to threaten him with disability as a bricklayer.
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Sarsfield O'Toole, as stated, cleared the fence at a bound, and closed
- with John Burke as if he were a bargain.
- </p>
- <p>
- What might have been the finale of this last collision will never be
- known. As P. Sarsfield O'Toole and John Burke danced about, locked in a
- deadly embrace, the emancipated Madame Burke suddenly selected a piece of
- scantling from the general armory of the Burke backyard and brought it
- down, not on the head of her oppressor, but on that of the gallant P.
- Sarsfield O'Toole, who had come to her rescue.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, ye murtherin' villyun!&rdquo; shouted Madame Burke. &ldquo;W'ud yez kill a
- husband befure the eyes of his lawful widded woife! An' due yez think I'd
- wear his ring and see yez do it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this point in the conversation Madame Bridget Burke cut a long,
- satisfactory gash in P. Sarsfield O'Toole, just over the eye.
- </p>
- <p>
- The police came.
- </p>
- <p>
- John Burke was fined twenty dollars.
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Bridget Burke, present lovingly in court, paid it with a composite
- air, breathing insolence for the judge and affection for John Burke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The ijee av that shpalpeen, O'Toole,&rdquo; said Madame Burke that evening to
- John Burke, and her words floated over the fence to P. Sarsfield O'Toole,
- as he nursed his wounds on his porch; &ldquo;the ijee av that shpalpeen,
- O'Toole, comin' bechuxt man and woife! D' yez moind th' cheek av 'im!
- Didn't the priest say, 'Phwat hivin has j'ined togither, let no man put
- asoonder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He did, Bridget, he did,&rdquo; replied John Burke. &ldquo;An' yez have the
- particulars av a foine woman about yez, yerself, Bridget!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Troth! an' I have,&rdquo; said Madame Burke, giving full consent to this view
- of her merits. &ldquo;But, John, phwat a rapscallion yer uncle they
- transhpoorted must av been, to bate the loife out o' poor Humpy Pete, the
- cripple-fiddler, that toime at the Fair!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For the second time the strap fell, and the shrieks of Madame Burke filled
- the neighbourhood. P. Sarsfield O'Toole, still on his porch, sat unmoved,
- and bestowed no interest on the doings of the Burkes. As the strap was
- plied and the yells of the victim uplifted, P. Sarsfield O'Toole repeated
- the proverb which stands at the head of this story.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0047" id="link2H_4_0047"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- WAGON MOUND SAL
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Wolfville)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was Wagon Mound
- Sal&mdash;she got the prefix later and was plain &ldquo;Sal&rdquo; at the time&mdash;who
- took up laundry-labours when Benson Annie became a wife. And this tells of
- the wooing and wedding of Riley Bent with Sallie of Wagon Mound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wagon Mound Sal prevailed, as stated, the mistress of a laundry. And it
- was there Riley Bent first beheld her, as she was putting a tubful of the
- blue woollen shirts affected by the males of her region through a second
- suds. On this occasion Riley's appearance was due to a misunderstanding.
- He was foggy with drink, and looked in on a theory that the place was a
- store which made a specialty of the sale of shirts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What for a j'int is this?&rdquo; asked Riley as he entered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a laundry,&rdquo; replied Sal; and then observing that Riley Bent was in
- his cups, she continued with delicate firmness; &ldquo;an' if you-all ain't
- mighty keerful how you line out, you'll shorely get a smoothin' iron
- direct.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Nothing daunted by the lady's candour, Riley Bent sat down on a furloughed
- tub which reposed bottom up in one corner. In the course of a
- conversation, whereof he furnished the questions, and Sal the short,
- inhospitable replies, it occurred that she and Riley Bent became mutually,
- albeit dimly, known to one another.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the three months following, Riley Bent was much and persistently in
- the laundry of Wagon Mound Sal. Wolfville, eagle-eyed in the softer and
- more dulcet phenomena of life, looked confidently for a wedding. So in
- truth did Sal, emulous of Benson Annie. Also Sal was a clear-minded,
- resolute young lady; and having one day concluded to take Riley Bent for
- better or for worse, she lost no time in bringing matters to a focus.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a maverick?&rdquo; she one day asked, suddenly looking up from her
- ironing. Sal's tones were steady and cool, but it was noticed that she
- burnt a hole in the bosom of Doc Peets's shirt while waiting a reply.
- &ldquo;You-all ain't married none?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar ain't no squaw has ever been able to rope, throw an' run her brand
- on me!&rdquo; said Riley Bent. &ldquo;Which I'm shorely a maverick!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever then is the matter of you an' me dealin'?&rdquo; asked Sal, coming
- around to Riley Bent's side of the ironing table.
- </p>
- <p>
- That personage surveyed her in a thoughtful maze.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a long horn, an' for that much so be I,&rdquo; he said at last, as one
- who meditates. &ldquo;Neither of us would grade for corn-fed in anybody's
- yards!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then came another long pause, during which, with his eyes fixedly gazing
- into Wagon Mound Sal's, Riley Bent gave himself to the unwonted employment
- of thinking. At last he shook his head until the little gold bells on his
- bullion hatband tinkled in a dubious, uncertain way, as taking their tone
- from the wearer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which the idee bucks me plumb off!&rdquo; he remarked, with a final deep
- breath; and then with no further word Riley repaired to the Red Light
- Saloon and became dejectedly yet deeply drunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a month Wolfville saw naught of Riley Bent. He was supposed to be
- two-score miles away on the range with his cattle. Wagon Mound Sal, with a
- trace of grimness about the mouth, conducted her laundry, and, in the
- absence of competition, waxed opulent. She looked confidently for the
- return of Riley Bent; as what woman, knowing her spells and powers, would
- have not.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last he came. Sal, as well as Wolfville, learned of his presence by a
- mellow whoop at the far end of the single street. Sal was subsequently
- gratified by a view of him as he and a comrade, one Rice Hoskins, slid
- from their saddles and entered the Red Light Saloon.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wagon Mound Sal was offended at this; he should have come straight to her.
- But beyond slamming her irons unreasonably as she replaced them on the
- range, she made no sign.
- </p>
- <p>
- To give Riley Bent justice, he had done little during the month of his
- absence save think of Wagon Mound Sal. Whether he pursued the evanescent
- steer, or organised the baking powder biscuit of his day and kind, Wagon
- Mound Sal ran ever in his thoughts like a torrent. But he couldn't bring
- himself to the notion of a wife; not even if that favoured woman were
- Wagon Mound Sal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Seems like bein' married that a-way,&rdquo; he explained to Rice Hoskins, as
- they discussed the business about their camp-fire, &ldquo;is so onnacheral.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whatever!&rdquo; assented Rice Hoskins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Riley Bent after a pause; &ldquo;I reckon I'd better ride in an'
- tell her she don't get me none, an' end the game.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whatever!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was deference to this view which gained Wolfville the pleasure of the
- presence of Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins on the occasion named. It had been
- Riley Bent's plan&mdash;having first acquired what stimulant he might
- crave&mdash;to leave Rice Hoskins to the companionship of the barkeeper,
- while he repaired briefly to Wagon Mound Sal, and expressed a
- determination never to wed. But after the first drink he so far modified
- the programme as to decide, instead, to write a letter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;writin' a letter shows a heap more respect. An' then
- ag'in, if I goes personal, she might get all wrought up an' lay for me
- permiscus a whole lot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The flaw in this letter plan became apparent. Neither Riley Bent nor Rice
- Hoskins could write. They made application to Black Jack, the barkeeper,
- to act as amanuensis. But he saw objection, and hesitated.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckon I'll pass the deal, gents,&rdquo; said Black Jack, &ldquo;if you-alls don't
- mind. The grand jury is goin' to begin their round-up over in Tucson next
- week, an' they'd jest about call it forgery.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At last as a solution, Rice Hoskins drew a rude picture in ink of a woman
- going one way, and a man with a big hat and disreputable spurs, going the
- other; what he called an &ldquo;Injun letter.&rdquo; This work of art he regarded with
- looks of sagacity and satisfaction.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If she was an Injun,&rdquo; said the artist, &ldquo;she'd <i>sabe</i> that picture
- mighty quick. That means: 'You-all take your trail an' I'll take mine.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which it does seem plain as old John Chisholm's 'Fence-rail Brand,'&rdquo;
- remarked Riley Bent. &ldquo;Now jest make a tub by her, an' mark me with a
- 4-bar-J, the same bein' my brand; then she'll shorely tumble. Thar's
- nothin' like ropin' with a big loop; then if you miss the horns, you're
- mighty likely to fasten by the feet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The missive was despatched to Wagon Mound Sal by hand of a Mexican. Then
- Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins restored their flagged spirits with liquor.
- </p>
- <p>
- Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins drank a vast deal. And it came to pass, by
- virtue of this indiscretion, that Rice Hoskins later, while Riley Bent was
- still thoughtfully over his cups at the Red Light, rode his broncho into
- the New York Store. In the plain line of objection to this, Jack Moore,
- the Marshal, shot Rice Hoskins' pony. As the animal fell it pinned Rice
- Hoskins to the floor by his leg; in this disadvantageous position he
- emptied his pistol at Jack Moore, and of course missed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Moore was in no sort an idle target. He was a painstaking Marshal, and
- showed his sense of duty at this time by putting four bullets through the
- reckless bosom of Rice Hoskins; the staccate voices of their Colt's
- six-shooters melted into each other until they sounded as one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never could shoot none with a pony on my laig,&rdquo; observed Rice Hoskins.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0177.jpg" alt="0177 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0177.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- Then a splash of blood stained his sun-coloured moustache; his empty
- pistol rattled on the board floor; his head dropped on his arm, and Rice
- Hoskins was dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was at this crisis that Riley Bent, startled by the artillery as he sat
- in the Red Light, came whirling to the scene on his pony. The duel was
- over before he set foot in stirrup. He saw at a glance that Rice Hoskins
- was only a memory. Had he been romantic, or a sentimentalist, Riley Bent
- would have shot out the hour with Jack Moore, the Marshal. And had there
- been one spark of life in the heart of Rice Hoskins to have fought over,
- Riley Bent would have stood in the smoke of his own six-shooter all day
- and taken what Fate might send. As it was, however, he curbed his broncho
- in mid-speed so bluntly, the Spanish bit filled its mouth with blood. It
- spun on its hind hoofs like a top. Then, as the long spurs dug to its
- ribs, it whizzed off in the opposite direction; out of camp like an arrow.
- The last bullet in Jack Moore's pistol splashed on a silver dollar in
- Riley Bent's pocket as he turned his pony.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whenever I reloads my pistol,&rdquo; said Jack Moore to Old Man Enright, who
- had come up, &ldquo;I likes to reload her all around; so I don't regyard that
- last cartridge as no loss.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Wagon Mound Sal was deep in a study of Rice Hoskins' &ldquo;Injun letter&rdquo; when
- the shooting took place. The missive's meaning was not so easy to make out
- as its hopeful authors had believed. When the deeds of Jack Moore were
- related to her, however, the brow of Wagon Mound Sal took on an angry
- flush. She sent a message to Jack Moore asking him to call at once.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever do you mean?&rdquo; she demanded of Jack Moore, as he entered the
- laundry, &ldquo;a-stampedin' of Riley Bent out of camp that a-way? Don't you
- know I was intendin' to marry him? Yere he's been gone a month, an' yet
- the minute he shows up you have to take to cuttin' the dust 'round his
- moccasins with your six-shooter, an' away he goes ag'in. He jest
- nacherally seizes on your gun-play for a good excuse. It's shore enough to
- drive one plumb loco!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack Moore looked decidedly bothered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, Sal,&rdquo; he said at last in a deprecatory way, &ldquo;you-all
- onderstands that when I takes to shakin' the loads outen my six-shooter at
- Riley Bent, I does it offishul. An' I'm free to say, that I was that
- wropped and preoccupied like with my dooties as Marshal at the time, I
- never thinks once of them nuptials you med'tates with Riley Bent. If I had
- I would have downed his pony with that last shot an' turned him over to
- you. But perhaps it ain't too late.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the next afternoon. Riley Bent was reclining in his camp in the <i>Très
- Hermanas</i>. Grey, keen eyes watched him from behind a point of rocks.
- Suddenly a mouthful of white smoke puffed from the point of rocks, and
- something hard and positive broke Riley Bent's leg just above the knee.
- The blow of the bullet shocked him for a moment, but the next, with a
- curse in his mouth, and a six-shooter in each hand, he tumbled in behind a
- boulder to do battle with his assailant. With the crack of the Winchester
- which accompanied the phenomena of smoke-puff and broken leg, came the
- voice of Jack Moore, Marshal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold up your hands, thar!&rdquo; said Moore. &ldquo;Up with 'em; I shan't say it
- twice!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Riley Bent could not obey; he had taken ten seconds off to faint.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he revived Jack Moore had claimed his pistols and was calmly setting
- the bones of the broken leg; devoting the woollen shirts in the war-bags
- on his saddle to be bandages, and making splints of cedar bark. These folk
- of the plains and mountains, far from the surgeon, often set each other's,
- or, for that matter, their own bones, when a fall from a pony, or some
- similar catastrophe, furnishes the call.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you-all needed me,&rdquo; observed Riley Bent peevishly, when a little later
- Jack Moore was engaged over bacon and flap-jacks for the sundown meal,
- &ldquo;whatever was the matter of sayin' so? Thisyere idee of shootin' up a gent
- without notice or pow-wow is plumb onlegal. An' I'll gamble on it, ten to
- one!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well!&rdquo; said Jack Moore, as he deftly tossed a flap-jack in the air and
- caught it in the frying-pan again, &ldquo;I didn't aim to take no chances of
- chagrinin' one who loves you, by lettin' you get away. Then, ag'in, my own
- notion is that it might sorter hasten the bridal some. Thar's nothin' like
- a bullet in a party's frame for makin' him feel romantic an' sentimental.
- It softens his nature a heap, an' sets him to yearnin' for female care.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which you've been shootin me up to be married!&rdquo; responded Riley Bent in
- tones of disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's straight!&rdquo; retoited Jack Moore, as he slid the last flap-jack into
- the invalid's tin plate. &ldquo;You've been pesterin' 'round Wagon Mound Sal
- ontil that lady has become wropped in you. She confides to me cold that
- she's anxious to make a weddin' of it, which is all the preliminary
- necessary in Arizona. You are goin' back to Wolfville with me tomorry on a
- buck-board,&mdash;which will be sent on yere from the stage station,&mdash;an'
- after Doc Peets goes over your laig ag'in, you an' Wagon Mound Sal are
- goin' to become man an' wife like a landslide. You have bred hopes in that
- lady's bosom, an' you've got to make 'em good. That's all thar is to this
- play; an' you don't get your guns ag'in ontil you're a married man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack Moore, firm, direct and decided, had a great effect in fixing the
- wandering fancies of Riley Bent. He thoughtfully masticated his flap-jack
- a moment, and then asked:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;S'pose I arches my back an' takes to buckin' at these yere abrupt methods
- in my destinies; s'pose I quits the deal cold?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In which eevent,&rdquo; responded Jack Moore, with an air of iron confidence,
- &ldquo;we merely convenes the Stranglers an' hangs you for luck.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But Riley Bent was softened and his mind made fully up. Whether it was the
- sentimental influence of Jack Moore's bullet, which Doc Peets subsequently
- dug out; or whether Riley was touched by the fact that Wagon Mound Sal,
- herself, brought over the buckboard to convey him to Wolfville, may never
- be known. What was certain, however, was that Riley Bent came finally to
- the conclusion to wed. He told Wagon Mound Sal so while on the buckboard
- going back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which it's shorely doubtful,&rdquo; said Wagon Mound Sal, &ldquo;if any man is worth
- the trouble. An' this yere is my busiest day, too!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was great rejoicing in the wareroom of the New York Store. A whole
- box of candles blazed gloriously from the walls. Old Man Enright gave the
- bride away, Benson Annie appeared to look on, while Faro Nell supported
- Sal as bridesmaid. As usual, in any hour of sacred need, a preacher was
- obtained from Tucson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' you can bet that pastor knows his business!&rdquo; said Old Monte, the
- stage driver, who had been commissioned to bring one over. &ldquo;He's a
- deep-water brand, an' he's all right! I takes my steer when I seelects him
- from the barkeep of the Golden Rod saloon, an' he'd no more give me the
- wrong p'inter, that a-way, than he'd give me the wrong bottle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Doc Peets's offering to the bride was a bullet. It was formerly the
- property of Jack Moore. It was the one he conferred on Riley Bent that
- evening in the foothills of the <i>Très Hermanas</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keep it!&rdquo; said Doc Peets to the bride. &ldquo;It's what sobers him, an' takes
- the frivolity outen him, an' makes him know his own heart.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' I shorely reckons you're right that a-way, Doc,&rdquo; said Jack Moore,
- some hours after the wedding as the two turned from the laundry whither
- Moore had repaired to return Riley Bent his pistols; &ldquo;I shore reckons
- you're right a whole lot. I knows a gent in the states, an' he tells me
- himse'f how he goes projectin' 'round, keepin' company with a lady for a
- year, an' ain't thinkin' none speshul of marryin' her. One day somebody
- gets plumb tired of the play an' shoots him some, after which he simply
- goes about pantin' to lead that lady to the altar; that's straight!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0048" id="link2H_4_0048"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- JOE DUBUQUE'S LUCK
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>OUSE can soak your
- super,&rdquo; said Chucky, &ldquo;some dubs has luck! I've seen marks who could fall
- into d' sewer, see! an' come out wit' a bunch of lilacs in each mit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit; it wasn't all luck wit' Joe Dubuque. His breakin' out of hock that
- time is some luck, but mostly 'cause Joe himself is a dead wise guy an*
- onto his job. Tell youse about it? In a secont&mdash;in a hully second!
- Just say 'gin fizz!' to d' barkeep an' I'll begin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never mind d' preeliminaries, as d' story writers says, but Joe's in
- jail, see! Joe win out ten spaces for touchin' a farmer for his bundle.
- Was it a wad? D' roll Joe gets is big enough to choke a cow&mdash;'leven
- t'ousand plunks, if it's a splinter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wherefore, as I relates, Joe gets ten years, an' is layin' in jail while
- d' gezebo, who's his lawyer, sees can he woik d' high court to give Joe a
- new trial.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Joe don't feel no sort chirpy; he's onto it d' high court's dead sure to
- t'run him down. Then he goes to d' pen to do them ten spaces. An' onct
- there, wit' all that time ahead, he sees his finish all right, all right.
- He might as well be a lifer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So Joe puts it up he'll break himself out. Joe's goil comes every day to
- see him. Say! she's a bute, Joe's Rag is; d' crooks calls her 'Wild
- Willie,' 'cause now an' then she toins dopey an' acts like she's got doves
- in her eaves. But anyhow she's on d' square wit' Joe, an' sticks to him
- like a postage stamp.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Joe sends out d' woid be his Rag about what he's goin' to do, to d' push
- outside; an' tells 'em how to help. Yes; d' job is put up as fine as silk.
- Every mark knows what he's to do.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, here's d' trick dey toins; here's how Joe beats d' jail for good.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It comes round to d' night. Joe's cell&mdash;it's a big cell, a reg'lar
- corker, wit' gas into it&mdash;is on d' fort' corridor. D' guard comes
- round at 9 o'clock orderin' out d'lights. Joe's gas is boinin' away to
- beat d' band, an' Joe is lay in' on his bunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Dowse d' glim, Joe!' says d' guard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What th' 'ell!' says Joe. 'Dowse d' glim, yourself, you Sheeny hobo!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' guard makes a bluff about what he'll do, an' cusses Joe out. All d'
- same he unlocks d' door an' comes chasin' in to put out Joe's gas.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, what does Joe do? As d' guard toins to d' gas to dowse it, Joe sets
- up on his bunk, an' all at onct he soaks this gezebo of a guard wit' a
- rubber billy his Moll sneaks in to him d' day before. Does he land d'
- sucker? Say! he almost cracks his nut, an' that's for fair!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' guard drops an' in a minute Joe winds him all up tight in a bedtick
- rope he's made. Then he stoppers his jaw an' t'rows d' mucker on d' bunk,
- takes his keys, locks him in d' cell an' goes galumpin' off to let himself
- t'rough d' doors, so he can try a sprint for it. Yes, Joe makes some row
- when he t'umps this party, but d' captiffs in d' nex' cells hears d'
- racket an' half tumbles to it; an' so dey starts singin' 'Rock of Ages,'
- an' makes a noise so as to cover Joe's play, see! Oh! dey was some fly
- guys locked up in that old coop.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As Joe lines out for d' doors, he's t'inkin' to himself, how on eart' is
- he goin' to make it? Nit; it wouldn't be no trouble to get outside d'
- doors of what youse might call d' jail proper. But after that, Joe's got
- to go t'rough four offices wit' a mob of dep'ties into 'em. An' he's on
- it's goin' to be a squeak if some of 'em don't recognize him. Joe's mug
- was well known.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You know how dey woiks d' doors to a jail? Youse don't? It's this way.
- Joe, when he comes up, has d' key to d' inside door, which he nips off d'
- guard as I says when he slugs him wit 'd' billy. Joe lets himself into d'
- cage wit' that.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, d' key to d' outside door ain't in d' coop at all. There's an old
- stiff of a dep'ty sheriff planted outside wit' that. As Joe opens d'
- inside door, he raps on d' bars of d' cage wit' his key, an' it's d' tip
- for this outside snoozer to unlock his door. Of course he plays Joe for d'
- guard coinin' out from his rounds.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's at this door-slammin' pinch where Joe's luck comes in, an' relieves
- him of d' chanct of d' gang of dep'ties in d' office tumblin' to him. Just
- as Joe raps to d' sucker on d' outside door, an' then lets himself into d'
- cage, a gun goes off inside d' jail. It's Joe's guard. Joe forgets to
- pinch d' pop, see! an' this gezebo gets his hooks onto it, all tied like
- he is, an' bangs away wit' it in his pockets so as to warn d' gang Joe's
- loose.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'That does me for fair!' t'inks Joe when he hears d' gun; ''dey gets me
- dead to rights!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! it was d' one trick that saves him! At d' bang of d' gun every
- dep'ty leaps to his trilbys an' comes chasin'. D' outside mark has just
- unslewed his door. He flings it wide open an' scoots inside d' cage. Joe
- t'rows d' inside door open&mdash;for Joe's dead swift to take a hunch that
- way&mdash;an 'd' outside guard an 'd' entire bunch of dep'ties goes
- sprintin' into d' jail. Then Joe locks 'em all in an' loafs t'rough d'
- offices into d' street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; Joe knows where he's goin'. He toins into d' foist stairway an'
- climbs one story to a law office, which d' crooks outside has fixed to be
- open, waitin' for him. Nixie; d' law guy ain't in on d' play. A dip named
- Jim Butts comes an' touts this law sharp away, an' cons him into goin' out
- six miles to d' country to draw d' last will an' test'ment of a galoot he
- says is on d' croak, an' can't wait for mornin'. Yes, Butts has one of his
- mob faked up for sick, an' dey detains d' law guy four hours makin' d'
- will. This stall of Butts, who's doin' d' sick act, sets up between gasps
- an' gives away more'n twenty million dollars wort' of wealt'. This crook
- who's fakin' sick is on his uppers at d' time, an' don't really have d'
- price of beer; but to hear him make his will that night, you'd say he was
- d' richest ever; d' Astors was monkeys to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I states, Joe skips into this lawyer's office, d' same bein' open for
- d' poipose, an' one of d' 'fambly' holdin' it down. While Joe's in there
- he hears d' chase runnin' up an' down in d' street below d' window.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not for long, though. Fifteen minutes after Joe is outside d' jug, one of
- d' crooks calls up d' Central Office be telephone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Who's talkin'?' asts d' captain at d' Central Office.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'It's Doyle, lieutenant o' police, Fourt' Precinct,' says d' crook who's
- on d' wire. Me man on d' station house beat just reports Joe Dubuque
- drivin' west on Detroit street wit' a horse an' buggy. He was on d' dead
- run, lamin' loose to beat four of a kind. Send all d' men youse can
- spare.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' that's what d' captain at d' Central Office does. In ten minutes
- every cop an' fly cop is on d' chase, a mile away from Joe, an' gettin'
- furder every secont, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After a while it settles down all quiet an' dead about d' jail, an 'd'
- little old law office where Joe lies buried. He, an' d' crook who's
- waitin' for him, is chinnin' each other in whispers. All d' time Joe's got
- his lamps to d' window pipin' off d' other side of d' street. At last a
- cab drives up opposite d' law office an' stops. A w'ite han'kerchief shows
- flutterin' be d' window. It's Wild Willie who's inside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Joe's pal gets up an' goes down to d' street. All's clear an' he w'istles
- up to Joe. When he gets d' office Joe sort of loafs down an' saunters over
- to d' cab. D' door opens an' in one move Joe's inside, an' d' nex' his arm
- is 'round his Moll. She's all right, this Wild Willie is, an' Joe does d'
- correct t'ing to give her d' fervent squeeze.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' end. Joe Dubuque runs clear away, goes under cover, an' d'
- sheriff never gets his hooks on him ag'in. As Joe drives be d' jail he can
- still hear them captiffs singin' 'Rock of Ages.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Say!' says Joe to Wild Willie as he toins her mug to his an' smacks her
- onct for luck, 'I won't do a t'ing but make it a t'ousand dollars in d'
- kecks of them ducks who's doin' that song. I'll woik d' dough to 'em be
- some of d' boys, see!'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0049" id="link2H_4_0049"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- BINKS AND MRS. B.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>INKS was an
- excellent man, hard-working and sober. He made good money and took it home
- to his wife for her judgment to settle its fate; every dollar of it. Mrs.
- Binks was a woman among a thousand. When taken separate and apart from his
- wife and questioned, Binks said she was a &ldquo;corker.&rdquo; Binks declined all
- attempts at definition, and beyond insisting that Mrs. Binks was and would
- remain a &ldquo;corker,&rdquo; said nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- From what was told of Mrs. Binks by herself, it would seem that she was a
- true, loving wife to Binks, and that, aside from the duty every woman owed
- to her sex and the establishment of its rights in all avenues of life, she
- held that with the wedding ring came a list of duties due from a good
- woman to her husband, which could not be avoided nor gone about.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some women,&rdquo; quoth Mrs. B., &ldquo;worry their husbands with a detail of small
- matters. A woman who is to be a helpmeet to her husband, such as I am to
- Binks, will be self-reliant and decide things for herself. In the little
- cares of life which fall to her share, let her go forward in her own
- strength. What is the use of adding her troubles to his? If she has plans,
- let her execute them. If problems confront her, let her solve them. If she
- tells her husband aught of the thousand little enterprises of her daily
- home life, then let it be the result. When success has come to her, she
- may call her husband to witness the victory. Aside from that she should
- face her responsibilities alone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course Mrs. B. did not mean by all this that she would not be open and
- frank with Binks, and confide in him if a burglar were in the house, or if
- the roof took fire in the night that she would not arouse Binks and
- mention it. What she did mean was that when it came to such things as
- dismissing the servant girl, the wife should gird up her loins and &ldquo;fire&rdquo;
- the maiden singlehanded, and not ring her husband in on a play, manifestly
- disagreeable, and likely to subject him to great remorse.
- </p>
- <p>
- It chanced recently that an opportunity opened like a gate for Mrs. B. to
- illustrate her doctrine that wives should proceed in a plain duty alone,
- without imposing needless anxiety on the head of the family.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Binks had decided to visit her sister in Hoboken. She was to go
- Thursday, and Binks, who was paid his sweat-bought stipend on Monday, was
- to furnish the money Monday evening wherewith to make the trip.
- </p>
- <p>
- It chanced, unfortunately, that pay-day this particular week was deferred.
- The head partner was sick, or out of town; checks could not be drawn, or
- something like that.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But your money will come on Saturday, boys,&rdquo; said the other partner.
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks was obliged to wait.
- </p>
- <p>
- The money was all right; it would be accurately on tap Saturday, so Binks
- took no fret on that point.
- </p>
- <p>
- But what was he to do about Mrs. B.? That good woman was to go Thursday,
- and in order to organise for the descent upon her relative would need the
- money&mdash;$40&mdash;on Tuesday. What was Binks to do?
- </p>
- <p>
- Clearly he must do something. He could not ask Mrs. B. to put off her trip
- a week; indeed, his reluctance to take such course came almost to the
- point of superstition.
- </p>
- <p>
- In his troubles Binks suddenly bethought him of a gold watch, once his
- father's, with a rich chain and guard attached. These precious heirlooms
- had been given to Binks by the elder Binks' executor, and were cherished
- accordingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Rather than disappoint Mrs. B. the worthy Binks decided, that just for
- once in his life he would seek a pawnbroker and do business with that
- common relative of all.
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks felt timid and ashamed, but the case was urgent. There was no risk,
- for his money would float in all right on the tides of Saturday. Binks
- would then redeem these pledges from disgraceful hock; all would be well.
- Mrs. B. would be in Hoboken on redemption day, and it would not be
- necessary to tell her anything about the matter. It would save her pain,
- and Binks bravely determined to keep the whole transaction dark.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again, if he told her he had not been paid at the store, the brave woman
- would indubitably wend to his employer's house and demand the reason why.
- This would be useless and embarrassing. Therefore, Binks would say
- nothing. He would pawn the ancestral super, and get it again when his
- money came in, and his wife was away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The watch and its appertainments were snug in the far corner of a bureau
- drawer; away over and behind Mrs. B.'s lingerie. Binks had a watch of his
- own, a Waterbury, with a mainspring as endless as a chain pump. Mrs. B.
- saw, therefore, no reason why he should carry the gold watch of his
- progenitor. Binks might lose it. Mrs. Binks strongly advised that it be
- kept in the bureau where it would be safe and naturally, in an affair of
- that sort Binks took his wife's advice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks reflected that he must secure the watch and pawn it that night. To
- do this he must plot to get Mrs. B. out of the house. Binks thought
- deeply. At last he had it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks sent a message home in the afternoon and asked Mrs. B. to meet him
- in a store down town at six o'clock. Then he had himself released at 5:30,
- and went hotfoot homeward.
- </p>
- <p>
- The coast was clear; Mrs. B. was down town in deference to his stratagem,
- no doubt believing that Binks meditated soda water, or some other
- delicacy, as the cause of his sudden summons of the afternoon. She little
- wotted that she was the victim of deceit. If she had, there would have
- been woe.
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks rushed at once to the bureau and secured the treasure. He did not
- wait a moment, but plunged off to a store where the three balls over the
- door bore testimony to the commerce within. Binks would explain to Mrs. B.
- on his return, how he had missed her and so failed to keep his date with
- her down town.
- </p>
- <p>
- The merchant of loans and pledges looked over Binks' timepiece, and then,
- as Binks requested, gave him a ticket for it and $40. It was to be
- redeemed in thirty days or sooner. And Binks was to pay $44 to get it
- again. Binks was very willing. Anything was wiser and better than to
- permit Mrs. B.'s visit to her sister to be interrupted.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Binks got home Mrs. B. had already returned.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a bad light in her eye. She accepted Binks' excuses and
- explanations as to &ldquo;how he missed her down town&rdquo; with an evil grace. She
- as good as told Binks that he deceived her; that if the phenomenon were
- treed she would find another woman in the case.
- </p>
- <p>
- However, Binks had the presence of mind to turn over the $40 he reaped on
- the watch; and as he expressed it later:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That sort of hushed her up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day Binks returned to his labours, while Mrs. B. repaired to the
- marts to plunge moderately on what truck she stood in want of for her
- trip.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Mrs. B. got back to the house it chanced that the first thing she
- needed was in the fatal drawer. She opened it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Horrors! The watch was gone!
- </p>
- <p>
- There was naught of hesitation; Mrs. B. knew it had been stolen. Anybody
- could see that from the way every garment had been carefully laid back to
- hide the loss.
- </p>
- <p>
- What should she do? The police must at once be notified. Mrs. B. pulled on
- her shaker and scooted for the police station. She told her story out of
- breath. She left her house at three o'clock and was back at four o'clock,
- and in that short hour her home had been entered and looted of its
- treasures. Made to be specific, Mrs. B. said the treasures were a watch
- and chain, and described them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What were they worth?&rdquo; asked the sergeant of the detectives.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. B. considered a bit, and then said they would be dog cheap at $1,000.
- She reflected that the sum, if published in the papers, would be a source
- of pride.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sergeant of detectives told Mrs. B. his men would look about for her
- property, and should they hear of it or find it they would at once notify
- her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet your gum boots! ma'am,&rdquo; said the sleuth confidently, &ldquo;whatever
- crook's got your ticker, he's due to soak it or plant it some'ers in a
- week. Mebby he'll turn it over to his Moll. But the minute we springs it,
- ma'am, or turns it up, we'll be dead sure to put you on in a jiff.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said Mrs. B.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then Mrs. Binks went home and, true to her determination to save Binks
- from unnecessary worry, she told him nothing of the loss nor of her
- arrangements for the watch's recovery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the use of bothering Binks?&rdquo; she asked herself. &ldquo;All he could do
- would be to notify the police, and I've done that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thursday came and Mrs. B. set forth for Hoboken. No notice had come from
- the police. Binks was glad to see her go. He had lived in fear lest she
- come across the departure of the watch. He breathed easier when she was
- gone. As for Mrs. B., as she had not heard from the police, there was
- nothing to tell Binks; wherefore, like a self-reliant woman who did not
- believe in making her husband unhappy to no purpose, she left without word
- or sign as to her knowledge of the watch's disappearance.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Friday; ever an unlucky day. Binks was walking swiftly homeward.
- Binks was thinking some idle thing when a hand came down on his shoulder,
- heavy as a ham.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on, me covey; I want you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks looked around, scared and startled. He had been halted by a stocky,
- bluff man in citizen's clothes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; gasped Binks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Suttenly, sech a fly guy as you don't know!&rdquo; said the bluff man, with a
- glare. &ldquo;Well! never mind why I wants you; I'm a detective, and you comes
- with me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Binks went with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not only that, Binks went in a noisy patrol wagon which the detective rang
- for; and it kept gonging its way along and attracting everybody's
- attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- The word went about among his friends that Binks was drunk and had been
- fighting.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And to think a man would act like that,&rdquo; said one lady, who knew Binks by
- sight, &ldquo;just because his wife is away on a visit! If I were his wife I'd
- never come back to him!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the station Binks was solemnly looked over by the chief.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's the duck!&rdquo; said the chief at last. &ldquo;Exactly old Goldberg's
- description of the party who spouts the ticker. Where did you collar him,
- Bill?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I sees him paddin' along on Broadway,&rdquo; replied the bluff man, &ldquo;and I
- tumbles to the sucker like a hod of brick. I knowed he was a sneak the
- first look I gives; and the second I says to meself, 'he's wanted for a
- watch!' Then I nails him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know who he is?&rdquo; asked the chief.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My name,&rdquo; said Binks, who was recovering from the awful daze that had
- seized him, &ldquo;my name is B&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shet up!&rdquo; roared the bluff man. &ldquo;Don't give us any guff! It'll be the
- worse for you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know the mark,&rdquo; said an officer looking on.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;His name is 'Windy Joe, the Magsman.' His mug's in the gallery all right
- enough; number 38, I think.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's correct!&rdquo; said the chief. &ldquo;I knowed he was familiar to me, and I
- never forgets a face. Frisk him, Bill, and lock him up!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But my name's Binks!&rdquo; protested our hero. &ldquo;I'm an innocent man!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's what they all says,&rdquo; replied the chief. &ldquo;Go through him, Bill, and
- lock him up; I want to go to me grub.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks was cast into a dungeon. Next door to him abode a lunatic, who
- reviled him all night. On the blotter the ingenuity of the chief detective
- inscribed: &ldquo;Windy Joe, the Magsman, alias Binks. Housebreaking in
- daytime.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- There is scant need of spinning out the agony. Binks got free of the
- scrape some twelve hours later. But it was all very unfortunate. He came
- near dismissal at the store, and the neighbours don't understand it yet.
- They shake their heads and say:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's very strange if he's so innocent, why he was locked up. When the
- police take a man, he's generally done something.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not sorry a bit!&rdquo; said Mrs. B., when she was brought back from
- Hoboken on Saturday by a wire the police allowed Binks to send her. &ldquo;And
- when I saw him with the officers, I was as good a mind to tell them to
- keep him as ever I had to eat. To think how he deceived me about that
- watch, allowing me to break my heart with thoughts of it being stolen! I
- guess the next time Binks sneaks off to pawn his dead father's watch,
- he'll let me know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0050" id="link2H_4_0050"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- ARABELLA WELD
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was a chill
- Harlem evening. The Undertaker sat in his easy chair smoking his pipe of
- clay. About him were ranged the tools and trappings of his gruesome art.
- On trestles, over in the corner's gliding shadows, lay the remains he had
- just been monkeying with.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last, as one who reviews his work, the Undertaker arose, and scanned
- the wan map of the Departed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He makes a great front,&rdquo; mused the Undertaker. &ldquo;He looks out of sight,
- and it ought to fetch her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Back to his chair roamed the Undertaker. As he seated himself he touched a
- bell. The Poet of the establishment glided dreamily in. The Undertaker,
- not only straightened the kinks out of corpses to the Queen's taste, but
- he furnished epitaphs, and as well, verses for those grief-bitten. These
- latter were to run in the papers with the funeral notice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have youse torn off that epitaph for his jiblets?&rdquo; asked the Undertaker,
- nodding towards Deceased.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was it you listed for?&rdquo; asked the Poet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' epitaph for William Henry Weld,&rdquo; replied the Undertaker. The Poet
- passed over the desired epitaph.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- William Henry Weld.
- </p>
- <p class="indent30">
- (Aged 26 years.)
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- His race he win with pain and sin,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- At Satan he did mock;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- St. Peter said as he let him in:
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- &ldquo;It's Willie, in a walk!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a wonder!&rdquo; cried the Undertaker, when he had finished the perusal,
- and he gave the Poet the glad hand. &ldquo;Here's d' price. Go and fill your
- tank.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That should win her,&rdquo; reflected the Undertaker, when the poet had wended
- his way; &ldquo;that ought to leave her on both sides of d' road. What I've done
- for Deceased, and that epitaph should knock her silly. She shall be mine!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>UBLIC interest
- having been aroused in the corpse, it may be well to tell how it became
- that way.
- </p>
- <p>
- Deceased was William Henry Weld. Five days before the opening of our
- story, William donned his skates and lined out on one of his periodicals.
- For four days he debauched to beat four kings and an ace.
- </p>
- <p>
- And William had adventures. He paid a fine; he fell down a coal hole; he
- invaded a laundry and administered the hot wallops to the presiding
- Chinaman. On the fourth day he declared himself in on a ball not far from
- Sixth Avenue.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, there!&rdquo; quoth William, archly, to a beautiful being to whom he had
- not been introduced. &ldquo;Ah, there! Tricksey; I choose youse for d' next
- waltz.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit; not on your life!&rdquo; murmured the beautiful one.
- </p>
- <p>
- As William Henry Weld was about to make fitting response, a coarse, vulgar
- person approached.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What for be youse jimmin' 'round me pick?&rdquo; asked this person.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' stuff, Barney!&rdquo; said the beautiful one. &ldquo;Don't do a t'ing to
- him!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The next instant William Henry Weld was cast into outer darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all right, Old Man!&rdquo; said the friend who rescued William Henry Weld,
- &ldquo;I'm goin' to take youse home. Your wife ain't on to me, an' I'll fake it
- I'm a off'cer, see! I'll give her d' razzle dazzle of her existence, an'
- square youse wit' her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's Willie!&rdquo; said the friend to Arabella Weld, as he supported her
- husband into the sitting-room. &ldquo;It's Willie, an' he's feelin' O. K. but
- weedy. Me name, madam, is Jackson&mdash;Jackson, of d' secret p'lice.
- Willie puts himse'f in me hands as a sacred trust to bring him home.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is he sick?&rdquo; moaned Arabella Weld, as she began to let her hair down,
- preparatory to a yell.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never touched him!&rdquo; assured the friend. &ldquo;Naw; Willie's off his feed a
- bit. You sees, madam, Willie hired out to a hypnotist purely in d'
- interest of science, an' he's been in a trance four days, see! That's why
- he ain't home. Bein' in a trance, he couldn't send woid. Now all he needs
- is a rest for, say, a week. Oughtn't to let him get out of his crib for a
- week.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At 4 o'clock the next morning William Henry Weld began to see blue-winged
- goats. Arabella Weld &ldquo;sprung&rdquo; a glass of water on him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Give it a chase!&rdquo; shrieked William Henry Weld, wildly waving the false
- beverage aside.
- </p>
- <p>
- In his ratty condition he didn't tumble to the pure element's identity,
- but thought it was one of those Things.
- </p>
- <p>
- At 5 o'clock A. M. William Henry Weld didn't do a thing but perish. When
- the glorious sun again poured down its golden mellow beams, the Undertaker
- had his hooks on him and Arabella Weld was a widow.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>UT to return to
- the Undertaker, the real hero of our tale. We left him in his studio
- poring over the epitaph of William Henry Weld, while Departed rehearsed
- his dumb and silent turn for eternity in the corner's lurking shadow. At
- last the Undertaker roused himself from his reveries.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I must to bed!&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;it waxeth late, and tomorrow I propose for her
- in wedlock.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Next morning the Undertaker arose refreshed. He had smote his ear for full
- eight hours. He felt fit to propose for his life, let alone the delicate
- duke of Arabella Weld.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Undertaker's adored one was to come at noon. She wanted to size up
- Departed prior to the obsequies.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although it was but 9 o'clock, the Undertaker had to get a curve on
- himself to keep his date with Arabella Weld at midday. He had an invalid
- to measure for a coffin&mdash;it was a riveted cinch the party would die&mdash;and
- then there was a corpse to shave in the next block. These duties were
- giving him the crowd.
- </p>
- <p>
- But our hero made it; played every inning without an error, and was
- organised for Arabella Weld when she arrived.
- </p>
- <p>
- As they stood together&mdash;Arabella and the man who, all unknown to her,
- loved her so madly&mdash;looking down at Deceased, she could not repress
- her admiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On d' dead! I never saw Willie look so well,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He's very much
- improved. You must have taken a woild of pains wit' Willie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Undertaker was silent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Struck by this, Arabella Weld turned her full lustrous lamps on the
- Undertaker and saw it all. It was for her, the loving heart beside her had
- toiled over Deceased like an artist over a picture.
- </p>
- <p>
- Swift is Love, and the Undertaker, quivering with his great passion,
- twigged in an instant that Arabella was onto him. A vast joy swept his
- heart like a torrent.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wanted him to make a hit for your sake,&rdquo; he whispered, stealing his arm
- about her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Arabella softly put his arm away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not now,&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;It would be too soon a play. We must wait until
- we've got Willie off our hands&mdash;we must wait a year.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait a year!&rdquo; and the pain of it bent the Undertaker like a willow. &ldquo;Wait
- a year, dearest! Now, what's d' fun of that? You must take me for a
- farmer!&rdquo; and his tones showed that the Undertaker was hurt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But in Herkimer County they wait a year,&rdquo; faltered Arabella, wistfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure! in Herkimer!&rdquo; consented the Undertaker; &ldquo;but that's Up-the-state. A
- week in Harlem is equal to a year in Herkimer. Let it be a week, love!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This isn't a game for Willie's life insurance?&rdquo; and great crystals of
- pain and doubt swam in Arabella's glorious eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, me love!&rdquo; cried the Undertaker, fondly, yet desperately, &ldquo;plant d'
- policy wit' Willie! Send it back to d' company if youse doubts me, an'
- tell 'em to call d' whole bluff a draw.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The bit of paper, containing the epitaph, fluttered to the floor from her
- nerveless mits, her beautiful head sank on the broad shoulder of the
- Undertaker, and her tears flowed unrestrained.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>ne week had passed
- since William Henry Weld was solemnly pigeon-holed for eternal reference.
- </p>
- <p>
- The preacher received the couple in his study.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shall I marry you with the prayer-book, or would youse prefer the short
- cut?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Marry us on a deck of cards, if you choose!&rdquo; faltered Arabella. Her eyes
- sought the floor, while the tell-tale blushes painted her lovely
- prospectus. &ldquo;Only cinch the play, an' do it quick!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0051" id="link2H_4_0051"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE WEDDING
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>aw; I'm on I'm
- late all right, all right; but I couldn't help it, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Chucky was thirty minutes behind our hour. I'd been sitting in the little
- bar in sickening controversy with one of the vile cigars of the place
- waiting for Chucky. For which cause I was moved to mention his dereliction
- sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sorry to keep an old pal playin' sol'taire, wit' nothin' better to amuse
- him than d' len'th of rope youse is puffin',&rdquo; continued Chucky in furtive
- excuse, &ldquo;but I was to a weddin' an' couldn't breakaway. That's w'y I've
- got on me dress soote.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! on d' dead! of course I ain't in on many nuptials; but all d' same I
- likes to go. I always comes away feelin' so wise an* flossy an* cooney.
- Why, I don't know, unless it's 'cause d' guys gettin' hitched looks so
- much like a couple of come-ons&mdash;so dead sure life is such a cinch,
- such a sight of confidence like one sees at a weddin', be d' parts of d'
- two suckers who's bein' starred, never omits to make me feel too cunnin'
- to live for d' whole week after.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure! this weddin' was a good t'ing; what youse might call d' real t'ing;
- an' it's a spark to a rhinestone it toins out all hunk for d' folks
- involved. Who's d' two gezebos who gets nex' to each other? D' groom is d'
- boss gunner of one of our war boats, an 'd' skirt is d' cash goil in d'
- anti-Chink laundry on Great Jones street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' say! that little skirt's a wonder, an' don't youse forget it! She's
- good any day for any old t'ing I've got; an' all she's got to do is just
- rap, an' she takes it, see! It was me Rag sees d' goil foist one time when
- she's down be d' laundry puttin' in me t'ree-sheets for their weekly dose
- of suds.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is me Rag an' me married? Say! I likes that, I don't t'ink! Youse is
- gettin' fanciful in your cupolo. 4 Be me little Bundle an' me married?'
- says you. Well, I should kiss a pig! Youse can take me tip for it, if we
- ain't man an' wife be d' longest system d' Cat'lic Choich could play&mdash;for
- me Rag told d' father who 'fficiates that we're out for d' limit&mdash;then
- all I got to stutter is there ain't a mug who's married in d' entire city
- of Noo York.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cert! we're married!&rdquo; Chucky went on after cheering himself with the
- tankard which the barkeeper placed before him. &ldquo;If youse had let your
- lamps repose on this horseshoe scar over d' bridge of me smeller, youse
- would have tumbled to d' fac wit'out astin'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do I win it? I'm comin' up d' stairs like a sucker, just followin' a
- difference of opinion between me an' me loidy (I soaked her a little one,
- an' that's for fair! to show her she's off her trolley about d' subject in
- dispoote), when she cuts loose d' coal bucket at me. Say! she spoiled me
- map for a mont'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But to get back to d' little laundry goil. Me Rag, as I says, was in this
- tub-joint where d' goil woikswit' me linen one day; an' just as she chases
- in, a fresh stiff who's standin' there t'run some raw bluff at d' little
- laundry goil she couldn't stand for, see! an' she puts up a damp eye an'
- does d' weep act.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This little laundry goil is one of them meek, harmless people&mdash;rabbits
- is bull-terriers to 'em&mdash;an' so when me onliest own beholds d' tears
- come chasin down her nose at d' remarks of this fly guy, she chucks me
- shirts in d' corner an' mounts him in a hully secont.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' say! me Rag can scrap, an' that's no dream! I don't want none of it.
- When she an' me has carried d' conversation to d' point where she takes
- out her hairpins, an' gives her mane to d' breeze, that's me cue to cork.
- Youse can't get another rise out of me after that: I knows her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well! me Rag lights into this hobo who's got gay wit 'd' little goil, an'
- when she takes her hooks out of his make-up, an' he goes surgin' into d'
- street, honest! he looks like he's been fightin' a dog. Some lovers of
- true sport who's there an' payin' attention to d' mill, says this galoot
- wasn't in it wit' me Rag. She has him on d' blink from d' jump; she win in
- a loiter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Takin' her part that way makes d' little laundry goil confidenshul wit'
- me Rag. It's about two weeks later when she sprints over an' tells Missus
- Chuck (she makes her promise to lay dead about it, too, but still she
- passes d' woid to me)&mdash;she tells me Rag, as I'm sayin', that she's in
- trouble. Her steady, she says, is one of d' top notch gunners of one of
- our big boats; he's d' main squeeze in histurrent, see! an' way up in d'
- paint. His boat's been layin' at d' Navy Yard, an' now he's ordered to
- sail for Cuba in a week an' help straighten up d' Dagoes we're havin' d'
- recent run in wit'. Meanwhiles, she says, dey won't let her beloved have
- shore leave; an' neither dey won't stand for her to come aboard an' see
- him. There youse be! a case of dead sep'ration between two lovin' hearts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' little laundry goil gives it out cold, she'll croak if she don't get
- to see her Billy before he skates off for d' wars. She says she knows he's
- out to be killed anyhow. D' question wit' her is&mdash;what's she goin' to
- do? Dey won't let her aboard d' boat, an' dey won't let him aboard d'
- land; now, what's d' soon move for her to make?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, me Rag&mdash;who's got a nut on her for cert&mdash;says for her to
- skip down to Washin'ton an' go ag'inst d' Sec'tary himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Make him a strong talk,' says me Rag; 'give him a reg'lar razzle-dazzle,
- an' he'll write youse a poiper to them blokes aboard d' boat to let youse
- see your Billy.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Do youse t'ink for sure he will?' says d' little laundry goil.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Why, it's a walkover!' says me Rag. 'If he toins out a hard game, give
- him d' tearful eye, see! an' cough a sob or two, an' he'll weaken! You
- can't miss it,' says me ownliest; 'it's easy money.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But d' little goil was awful leary of d' play.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;' Washin'ton is so far away,' she says.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;' It's like goin' to Harlem,' says me Rag. 'All youse has to do to go, is
- to take some sandwidges an' apples to sort o' jolly d' trip, an' then
- climb onto d' cars an' go. When d' Con. comes t'rough, pass him your
- pasteboard, see! an' if any of them smooth marks try to make a mash, t'run
- 'em down an' t'run 'em hard. I'll go over an' do your stunt at d' laundry,
- so that needn't give youse a scare. An' be d' way! if that lobster I win
- from d' other day shows up, I'll make a monkey of him ag'in. I didn't
- spend enough time wit' him on d' occasion of our mix-up, anyway.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At last d' little laundry goil makes d' brace of her life. She's so
- bashful an' timid she can't live; but she's dead stuck on seein' her Billy
- before he sails away, an' it gives her nerve. As I says, she takes me
- Rag's steer an' skins out for d' Cap'tal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' what do youse t'ink? D' old mut who's Sec'tary won't chin wit' her.
- Toins her down cold, he does; gives her d' grand rinky-dink wit'out so
- much as findin' out what's her racket at all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At d' finish, however, d' little goil lands one of d' push&mdash;he's a
- cloik in d' office, I figgers&mdash;an' he hears her yarn between weeps,
- an' ups an' makes a pass or two, an' she gets d' writin'. It says to toin
- Billy loose every afternoon till d' boat pulls out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! him an 'd' little goil, when she gets back, was as happy as a couple
- of kids; dey has more fun than a box of monkeys. On d' level! I was proud
- of me Rag for floor managin' d' play. She wasn't solid wit' Billy an 'd'
- little goil! Oh, no!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's how me an' me loidy was in on this weddin' to-day wit' bot'
- trilbys. Me Rag's 'It' wit' d' little goil; youse can gamble on that!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course d' war's over now, an' two weeks ago d' little goil's Billy
- comes home. An' what wit' pay, an' what wit' prize money, he hits d' Bend
- wit' a bundle of d' long green big enough to make youse t'row a fit, an'
- he ain't done a t'ing but boin money ever since.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit; it ain't much of a story, but d' whole racket pleases me out o'
- sight, see! Considerin' d' hand me Rag plays, when I'm at that weddin'
- to-day I feels like a daddy to Billy an 'd' little goil. On d' level! I
- feels that chesty about it, that when d' priest is goin' to bat an says,
- 'Is there any duck here to give d' bride away?' I cuts in on d' game wit
- 'd' remark, 'I donates d' bride meself.' I s'pose I was struck dopey, or
- nutty, or somethin'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But me Rag fetches me to all c'rrect. She clinches her mit an' whispers:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me catch youse makin' another funny break like that an' I'll cop a
- sneak on your neck.' An' then she stands there chewin' d' quiet rag an'
- pipin' me off wit' an eye of fire. 'Such an old bum as youse,' she says,
- 'is a disgrace to d' Bend.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0052" id="link2H_4_0052"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- POINSETTE'S CAPTIVITY
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>his is a tale of
- last August. Poinsette was to be left alone for four weeks. Mrs. Poinsette
- had settled on Cape May as a good thing for the hot spell. She would hie
- her thither and leave Poinsette to do his worst without her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette did not care. He bravely told Mrs. P. she needed an outing. The
- ozone and the salty, ocean breeze would do her good. So he encouraged Cape
- May, and bid Mrs. P. go there by all means.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was decided by the Poinsettes discussing Cape May to have Poinsette
- room up town while Mrs. P. was thus Cape Maying. The Poinsette house in
- the suburbs might better be locked up during Mrs. P.'s absence from the
- city. It would be more economical; indeed, it was not esteemed safe to
- leave the Poinsette lares and penates to the unwatched ministrations of
- the Congo who performed in the Poinsette kitchen. It would be wiser to
- dismiss the servant, bolt and bar the house, obtain Poinsette apartments,
- and let him browse for food among the bounteous restaurants of the city.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette found a room to suit in a house on West 87th Street. It was one
- of a long row of houses. Poinsette reported his victory in room-hunting to
- Mrs. P. Poinsette was now all right, and ready for what might come. Mrs.
- P. might bend her course to Cape May without further hesitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. P. was glad to learn of Poinsette's apartment success. She went out
- and looked at his find to make sure that Poinsette would be comfortable.
- Incidentally, Mrs. P. kept her eye about her, to note whether the
- boarding-house books carried any pretty girls. Mrs. P. did not care to
- have Poinsette too comfortable.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were no pretty girls. Mrs. P. approved the selection. The very next
- day she kissed Poinsette good-bye and rumbled and ferried to the station,
- from which arena of smoke and noise a train leaped forth like a greyhound
- and bore her away to Cape May.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette did not accompany his spouse to the station. Ten years before he
- would have done this, but experience had taught him that Mrs. P. could
- care for herself. Therefore he remained behind to fasten up the house.
- Soberly he went about locking doors, and fastening windows, and thinking
- rather sadly,&mdash;as all husbands so deserted do,&mdash;of the long,
- lonely months before him. At last all was secure, and Poinsette turned the
- key in the big front door and came away.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette did not feel like work that afternoon, or the trifling fragment
- of it that was left after Mrs. P. had wended and he had locked up the
- house. He bought a few good books and several of the more solid
- periodicals. They would serve during the weary nights while Mrs. P. was
- away at the Cape. These Poinsette sent to his rooms, and, as it was
- growing six o'clock now, he turned into Sherry's for his dinner.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just where Poinsette went that evening following Sherry's, and what he saw
- and did, and who assisted at such enterprises as he embarked in, would be
- nothing to the present point and may be skipped. They are the private
- affairs of Poinsette, and not properly the subjects of a morbid curiosity.
- However, lest Mrs. P. see this and argue aught herefrom to feed distrust,
- it should be said that Poinsette saw nobody, did nothing, went no place
- unbecoming an officer and a gentleman.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was four o'clock in the morning when Poinsette, the sole passenger
- aboard a foaming night-liner, toiled through the Park and bore away for
- his new abode. Poinsette stopped the faithful night-liner two blocks from
- the door and went forward on foot. Poinsette did not care to clatter
- ostentatiously to his rooms at four in the morning the first day he
- inhabited them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette found the house without trouble, and stepped lightly to the
- door. He put the pass-key his landlady had bestowed upon him in the lock,
- but it would not turn. The bolt would not yield to his wooing. Do all he
- might, and work he never so wisely, there had sprung up a misunderstanding
- between key and lock which would not be reconciled. Poinsette could not
- get &ldquo;action;&rdquo; the sullen door still barred him from his bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last Poinsette gave up in despair. He might ring the bell and arouse
- the house; but he hesitated. It was his first day; the hour needed
- apology. Poinsette thought it would be better to walk gently to a hotel
- and abide for the remainder of the night. He would solve this
- incompatibility of key and lock the next afternoon.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette turned away and started softly for the street. As he did so a
- policeman stepped from behind a tree and stopped him. The policeman had
- been watching Poinsette for five minutes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wot was you a-doin' at the door?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette, in a low, hurried voice, explained. He didn't care to awaken
- his landlady by a tumult of talk, and have that excellent woman discover
- him in the hands of the law.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If your key don't work,&rdquo; said the policeman, &ldquo;why don't you ring the
- bell?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette cleared up that mystery. The officer was not satisfied.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be free with you, my man,&rdquo; he said, seizing Poinsette's collar, &ldquo;I
- think you're a burglar. If that's your boarding-house you're goin' in. If
- it isn't, you're goin' to the station.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the policeman, with one hand wound about in Poinsette's neckwear,
- made trial of the key with the other hand. The effort was futile. The lock
- was obdurate; the key was stranger to it. Then the blue guardian of the
- city's slumbers stepped back a pace and took a mighty pull at the
- door-bell. It was a yank which brought forth a wealth of jingle and ring.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette was glad of it. He had grown desperate and wanted the thing to
- end. Bad as it was, it would be better to face his landlady than be locked
- up in a burglar's cell. Poinsette was resigned, therefore, when a
- second-story window lifted and a night-capped head was made to overhang
- the sill and blot its silhouette against the star-lit sky.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be you the landlady?&rdquo; asked the policeman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I am!&rdquo; quoth the night-cap in a snappy, snarly way. &ldquo;What do you
- want?&rdquo; This with added sourness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This party says his name is Poinsette and that he rooms here,&rdquo; replied
- the officer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No such thing!&rdquo; retorted the night-cap. &ldquo;No such man rooms here. Don't
- even know the name!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the window came down with a grievous bang. It was as if it descended
- on Poinsette's heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a crook!&rdquo; said the policeman, &ldquo;and now you come with me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette essayed to explain that the night-cap was not his landlady; that
- he had made a mistake in the house. The policeman laughed in hoarse scorn
- at this.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D'ye think I'm goin' all along the row, yankin' door-bells out by the
- roots on such a stiff as you're givin' me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- That was the reply of the policeman to Poinsette's pleadings to try next
- door.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette was led sadly off, with the grip of the law on his collar. At
- the station he was searched and booked and bolted in. On the hard plank,
- which made the sole furnishings of his narrow cell, Poinsette threw
- himself down; not to sleep, but to give himself to bitter consideration of
- his fate.
- </p>
- <p>
- As Poinsette sat there waiting for the sun to rise and friends to come to
- his rescue, the station clock struck five. It rang dismally in the cell of
- Poinsette.
- </p>
- <p>
- At Cape May, clocks of correct habits were also telling the hour of five.
- Mrs. P. was not yet asleep. The vigorous aroma of the ocean swept the
- room. The half-morning was beautiful; Mrs. P., loosely garbed, sat in an
- easy-chair at the window and enjoyed it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wonder what Poinsette's been doing,&rdquo; said Mrs. P. to herself; and there
- was a colour of jealousy in the tone. Then Mrs. P. snorted as in contempt.
- &ldquo;I'll warrant he's been having a good time,&rdquo; she continued. &ldquo;This idea
- that married men when their wives are away for the summer have a dull
- time, never imposed on me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0053" id="link2H_4_0053"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- TIP FROM THE TOMB
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>. Jefferson Bender
- was a doctor; that is, he was not a real, legal doctor as yet, but he was
- a hard student, and looked hopefully toward a day when, in accordance with
- the statutes in such cases made and provided, he would be cantered through
- the examination chute, and entitled to write &ldquo;M. D.&rdquo; following his name,
- with all that it implied.
- </p>
- <p>
- Each morning T. Jefferson Bender arose with the lark, and, seizing his
- dissecting knife, plunged into whatever subject was spread before him. In
- the afternoon he attended lectures, bending a hungry ear and watching with
- eager eye, while the lecturer, in illustration of his remarks, tortured
- poor people, free of charge. At night, when the day's carvings, and
- listenings, and lookings were over, T. Jefferson Bender sat in his easy
- chair and peered down the long aisle of coming time.
- </p>
- <p>
- The world was bright to the glance of T. Jefferson Bender; the future full
- of promise. In his musings he saw himself striding towards surgical fame
- and riches over a pathway strewn with the amputational harvest of his
- skill. He filled the hereafter with himself routing disease; cutting down
- deadly maladies as a farmer might the mullein-stalk; driving before him
- bacteria and bacilli in herds, droves, schools and shoals. T. Jefferson
- Bender was a happy man, and his forehead was already, in his imaginings,
- kissed by the rays of a dawning professional prosperity.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>. Jefferson Bender
- allowed himself but one relaxation. He was from Lexington, and had a true
- Kentuckian's love for horseflesh. Thus it was that he patronised the
- races, and was often seen at Morris Park, where he prevailed from a seat
- in the grand-stand. Here, casting off professional dignity as he might a
- garment, T. Jefferson Bender whooped and howled and hurled his hat on
- high, as race following race swept in.
- </p>
- <p>
- At intervals T. Jefferson Bender was carried to such heights of madness as
- &ldquo;playing the horses.&rdquo; And then it was he suffered those vicissitudes which
- are chronicled colloquially under the phrase of &ldquo;getting it in the neck.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was the day of
- the great race. The Morris Park grand-stand was reeling full. The quarter
- stretch was crowded with Democrats and Republicans and Mugwumps, who,
- laying aside political hatreds for a day, had come to see the races. The
- horses were backing and plunging in the grasp of rubbers and stable
- minions, while the gay jockeys, with their mites of saddles on their left
- arms, were being weighed in.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly, a cry of terror rent the air. Otero, a headstrong beauty, had
- leaped upon the neck of Paddy the Pig, a horse rubber, and borne him to
- the earth. Paddy the Pig's neck was severely wrenched, so the crowd said.
- As the accident occurred, the victim fainted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is there a doctor present?&rdquo; shouted one of the race judges, appealing to
- the grand-stand.
- </p>
- <p>
- T. Jefferson Bender arose from where he sat, walked over seventeen men and
- women, and leaped upon the stretch.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am here,&rdquo; observed T. Jefferson Bender, while his eye lighted and his
- nostrils expanded with the ardour of a great resolve.
- </p>
- <p>
- T. Jefferson Bender bent above Paddy the Pig and felt his pulse.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He lives!&rdquo; muttered T. Jefferson Bender.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he called for whiskey.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the magical words, Paddy the Pig languidly opened his eyes, while a
- flush dimly painted his cheek.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doc, you have saved my life!&rdquo; said Paddy the Pig.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have,&rdquo; said T. Jefferson Bender, willing to be impressive. &ldquo;I have
- saved your life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doc,&rdquo; said Paddy the Pig in a weak, fluttering voice, &ldquo;I am only a horse
- rubber, but I will make you rich. Play Skylight to win, Doc; Skylight!
- It's a tip from the tomb!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a tip from the tomb!&rdquo; said T. Jefferson Bender reverently, &ldquo;what are
- the odds?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a 20-to-1 shot, Doc. Play it. You will thus be paid for what you've
- done for me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hat night T.
- Jefferson Bender stood in a pawnshop. The flickering gaslight shone on
- mandolins, pistols, watches, and clothing, which had suffered the ordeal
- of the spout. T. Jefferson Bender was dusty and footsore. He had walked
- from Morris Park, and was now about to pawn his watch for food.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0217.jpg" alt="0217 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0217.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <h3>
- T. Jefferson Bender had played Skylight.
- </h3>
- <p>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hy, yes,&rdquo;
- responded Chucky readily enough, &ldquo;there's choiches of all sorts, same as
- there's folks, see! Some does good an' then ag'in there's others that
- ain't so warm.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was rude, cold weather. Because of the bluster and the freezing air
- without, Chucky had abandoned his customary ale for hot Scotches. These
- and the barroom's pleasant heat, in contrast with the chill and gusts of
- the street, served to unfold Chucky's conversational powers. He even waxed
- philosophical.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For that matter,&rdquo; continued Chucky, critically, &ldquo;there's lots of good
- lyin' 'round loose. Sometimes it's dead hard to find, but it's there all
- d' same, if youse is fly enough to pipe it off. An' it ain't all in d'
- choiches neither. As I states, I'm d' last mug to go knockin' d' choiches,
- but dey ain't got no corner on d' good of this woild. There is others. D'
- choices ain't d' only apple on d' tree. Nor yet d' onliest gas jet on 'd
- chandelier.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say!&rdquo; Chucky went on, after a further taste of the hot Scotch, &ldquo;on d'
- level! I'm onto achoich what's got nex' to a bakery, an' what do youse
- t'ink? Each night d' bakery don't do a t'ing but give every poor hobo who
- fronts up to d' window a loaf of bread. That's for fair! an 'd' gezebo who
- runs d' bakery is a Dutch Sheeny at that. Would youse get bread if you was
- to go chasin' nex' door to d' choich? Nit; t'ree times nit! If you was to
- go slammin' 'round d! choich makin' a talk for a hand-out, all youse would
- get would be d' collar, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Onct a week that sanchewary would fill youse to d' chin on chimes; oh,
- yes! but no buns; not on your life! Chimes is d' limit wit' that choich.
- An' say! it's got money to boin! Bread at d' bakery! chimes at d' choich!
- that's how dey line t'ings up at that corner. An' I'm here to say as
- between d' brace of 'em, when it gets down to d' cold proposition, 'W'ich
- does d' most good?' d' bakery can lose that temple of worship in a walk. I
- strings me money on d' bakery. An' don't youse forget it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Chucky was quite exhausted after this outburst. He revived, however, with
- the hot Scotch, which restored him mightily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Onct,&rdquo; resumed Chucky, &ldquo;about ten years ago, this is, I was where a w'ite
- choker was takin' up a c'llection. An' what do youse figure he wants it
- for? I'm a black Republican if he didn't break it off on us that he was
- out to make up a wad so his congregation could cel'brate d' fortieth
- birt'-day of gold in Californy. Don't that knock youse silly? D' w'ite
- choker says as how he comes from Californy an' him an' his push is goin'
- to toin themselfs loose, see! an whoop it up because dey found gold forty
- spaces back. It made me tired, honest!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Why!' I says to this pulpit t'umper, just like that, 'Why! don't youse
- preach that gold is d' roots of evil? An' now youse is framin' up a
- blow-out over findin' it! It looks like a dead gauzy bluff to me.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What does d' w'ite choker mark do? Just gives me d' dead face an' ignores
- me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Youse permits yourself to be amazed at me pickin' this guy up about gold
- bein' d' seeds of evil,&rdquo; observed Chucky, with a touch of severity. This
- was in response to some syllable of admiration I'd let fall. &ldquo;Youse
- needn't mind. I'll give youse a tip that in me yout' I was d' star peeple
- of d' Sunday school dey opens long ago at d' Five Points. That's straight
- goods, see! I was d' soonest kid at me lessons that ever comes down d'
- pike, an 'd' swiftest ever. I has all d' other kids on d' blink. I win a
- test'ment onct from d' outstretched mits of d' entire push, bar d' Bible
- class, for loinin' more verses be heart than anybody. I downs every kid in
- d' bunch. I made 'em look like a lot of suckers!&rdquo; and Chucky paused in
- approving meditation over the victories of boyhood days.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Still d' choiches does dead lots o' good,&rdquo; asserted Chucky, coming back
- to the subject. &ldquo;There's d' case of Bridgy McGuire. She makes two or t'ree
- trips to d' Cat'lic joint over on Mott Street, an' all she loins, so it
- sticks in her frizzes, is: 'Honour dy father an' dy mother,' see! An'
- Bridgy says herself it's that what brings her back after she's been run
- away from home for six years. Bridgy shows up just in time to straighten
- out d' game for d' McGuires at that. D' fam'ly was on d' hog for fair when
- Bridgy gets there.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nixie, d' yarn ain't so long, nor yet so scarce; for that matter, there's
- lots more like 'em. In d' foist place, this mark, McGuire, Bridgy's dad,
- ain't so bad. Mac's a bricklayer; but d' loose screw wit' him was that he
- ain't woikin' in d' winter; an' as durin' d' summer he gen'rally lushes
- more whiskey than he lays bricks, an' is more apt to hit d' bottle than a
- job, d' McGuire household's more or less on d' bum, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I remembers Bridgy when she's so little a yard makes a frock for her. She
- was a long, slim, bony kid, wit' legs on her like she's built to pick
- hops; an' if Bridgy shows anyt'ing in her breed when young, it's a strong
- streak of step-ladder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In her kid days I wasn't noticin' Bridgy much; d' fact was, then as now,
- I'm havin' troubles, of me own. Her mommer, who was pretty near an even
- break wit' Mac himself when it comes to hittin' up d' booze, every now an'
- then t'run back to d' religious days of her own yout', an' it's durin' one
- of these Bible fits of d' old woman that she saws Bridgy off on d' choich,
- where I speaks of her gettin 'd' hunch from d' priest, or somebody, that
- it's d' fly caper if youse is out to finish wit' d' heavenly squeeze, to
- honour your father an' mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I relates, I ain't dead clear about Bridgy when she's young an'
- little, except it does come chasin' back to me that she's dead gone on
- dancin' an' knock-about woik. Onct when me an' d' McGuires is livin' on d'
- same floor, I hears a racket in d' hall like some sucker is tryin' to come
- downstairs wit' a tool chest. Naturally, I shoves me nut outside me door
- to tell him to go chase himself. But it's only Bridgy&mdash;mebby she's
- twelve at d' time&mdash;practyesing. I keeps me lamps onto her awhile, an'
- she never tumbles I'm there; for I don't say nothin', but lays dead.
- Bridgy is doin' han'-stan's, cartwheels, backbends, fallin' splits an' all
- sorts of funny stunts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Is this an accident, or does you mean it?' I asts at last, as Bridgy
- winds up a cartwheel wit' a split that looks like it's goin' to leave her
- on bot' sides of d' passage way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I'm doin' a spread,' says Bridgy, 'same as d' Boneless Wonder at
- Miner's, see!' An' here she lays her little cocoa down on her knee to show
- she's comfortable, an' dead easy in her mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit'out keepin' exact tabs on Bridgy, I'm able to state that as soon as
- she's big enough she goes to woik; an' at one time an' another she sells
- poipers, does a toin in a vest factory, or some other sweat shop; an' at
- last, when she's about seventeen, she's model in a cloak joint. She gets
- along all right, all right for a space or so, when one day d' old grey guy
- who owns d' woiks takes it into his nut he'll float into Bridgy's
- 'fections.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Love youse!' says Bridgy, to this aged stiff; 'old gent, you're dopey!
- If youse give way to a few more dreams like that, your folks 'll put you
- in d' booby house. Yous'll be in Bloomin'dale cuttin' poiper dolls d'
- foist news you know.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At this d' wicked old geezer makes a strong talk&mdash;makes d' speech of
- his life. But Bridgy won't stand for him, nor his game.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Come off your perch!' she says at last. 'Either you corks up or I quits.
- You don't make no hit wit' me at all.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But d' old mucker don't let up none, an' keeps on givin' Bridgy a song
- an' dance about his love for her; so at last she makes her bluff good an'
- walks out of d' joint an' goes home.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;McGuire was hot in d' collar at Bridgy t'runnin' down her job; but d' old
- woman, she says Bridgy does dead right; an' for a finish Mac an 'd' old
- woman goes on a drunk an' has a fight over it; after which d' subject's
- dropped, see! an' that's d' end of it. I only sees Bridgy onct after that,
- before she screws her cocoa. That's at d' Tugman's Ball; where she's d'
- Queen spieler of d' bunch, an' shows on d' floor as light an' graceful as
- so much cigar smoke. It's right on d' heels of this that Bridgy fades from
- d' Bend for fair, an' no one has d' least line on her or knows where she's
- at.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It runs on for t'ree or four spaces, an 'd' McGuires keeps gettin'
- drunker an' harder up. More'n onct d' neighbors has to bring in d' grub,
- or dey wouldn't have done a t'ing but starve. Dey's jumpin' sideways for
- food to chew, I'll tell youse that right now, as much as half d' time.
- Durin' all this no one hears a woid about Bridgy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, no one's makin' much of a roar. There's a good deal doin'
- about d' Bend, see! An' d' comin' or d' goin' of a skirt more or less
- don't cut much ice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's in d' winter, an 'd' McGuires has been carryin' on bad. No woik, no
- money, no grub! On d' dead! it's a forty-to-one shot dey bot' finishes at
- d' morgue, or d' Island before d' spring comes 'round. For d' winter is
- bad in d' Bend, an' while everybody is on, that d' McGuires is strikin' it
- hard, d' most of us is havin' all we can do runnin' down t'ree feeds a
- day, so d' McGuires ain't what*d' poipers calls 'much in d' public eye,'
- after all. One evenin', however, Mac comes sprintin' to me, an' he's fair
- sober for him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Nit!' he says, when I asts him, 'nit; none of d' ellegunt for me!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I tumbles there's a cochin on. McGuire's t'runnin' off on a drink
- was a new one on d' Bend.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Come wit' me,' he says, 'to Roster &amp; Bial's.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Come wit' youse to Koster's!' I retort. 'That's a dandy idee; youse
- ought to sew buttons on it! Come to Koster &amp; Bial's! Who's got d'
- price?'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Here's d' pasteboards,' says Mac.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' I'm a liar' if he ain't got 'em. So we goes, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' fift' toin on d' programme is a 'Mamselle Fleury from Paris.' She's
- down on d' bills as a singer, dancer an' high kicker. I'm leanin' back in
- me seat feelin' sore on meself for not makin' Mac hock d' tickets for
- beer, when all at onct Mac gives me a jolt in d' slats wit' his elbow, an'
- pointin' one of his main hooks at this French tart, where she's singin' on
- d' stoige&mdash;an' say! she's a boid an' a Kokobola&mdash;an' says:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Be youse on?'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I focuses me peeps on this Fleury, all pink tights an' silks an'
- feathers, where she's doin' her toin. I'm a lobster if she ain't Bridgy
- McGuire!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'What th' 'ell! what th' bloomin' 'ell!' is all I can say; an' on d'
- square! Mac has to drag me out an' lay an oyster on me before I'm meself
- ag'in. It comes mighty near stoppin' me in d' foist round.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You sees d' finish. Bridgy's took to d' stoige. She's been over in London
- an' Paris; an' say! she's got d' game down fine as silk. She'd come back
- an' was beatin 'd' box for t'ree hundred plunks a week.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure! Bridgy had been up to find her folks. Foist she said she t'ought
- she'd pass 'em up. Dey had given her d' woist of it when she's a kid; why
- should she bother! But she tells us herself, talkin' it over, how when she
- struck d' old town ag'in, an' old sights begins to toin up old mem'ries,
- it starts to run in her wig about d' Bend an 'd' old days. An' what stan's
- out clearest is d' little old Cat'lic choich, an 'd' guff dey gives her d'
- onct or twict she shows up there, about honourin' her father an' mother. I
- s'pose what youse would call Bridgy's conscience gets a run for its money.
- Anyhow, somet'ing inside of her took to chewin' d' rag, an' showin'
- Bridgy's she's wrong, an' at d' last, she can't stand for it no longer,
- an' so she sends a tracer out for her mother an' dad, an' lands 'em.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' McGuires live in Harlem now. Dey drinks better whiskey then dey did in
- d' Bend, an' less of it. Bridgy is a wonder an' a winner; in it wit' bot'
- feet an' has dough to back every needful racket. Yes, d' choich does it,
- give it d' credit; an' youse can gamble your last chip d' McGuires crosses
- themselfs every time dey sees one. An' dey's dead flossy so to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0059" id="link2H_4_0059"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- TOO CHEAP
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I.
- </h2>
- <h3>
- |The scene was Washington.
- </h3>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get the galoot to urge the Bill, gal; and I'll make over half them
- phosphate beds to you. The Senate has already passed it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll do my best, Uncle Silver Tip,&rdquo; said Agnes Huntington. &ldquo;Slippery Elm
- Benton loves me, and he cannot refuse his affianced wife his vote.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They'd hang him in Colorado if he did,&rdquo; observed Uncle Silver Tip; &ldquo;but
- see to it at once, gal; the fourth of March draws on apace. All must then
- be over, or all is lost.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>gnes Huntington
- pressed her expectant nose against the pane. Outside the snowstorm was
- profound. The flakes crowded the air as they fell. The drifts were four
- feet deep on Connecticut avenue. A man wrapped in furs pushed his way
- toward the Chateau d' Huntington. It was Arctic cold, but love beckoned
- him. He stamped the snow from his feet in the entry. The next moment Agnes
- Huntington had curled about his neck in a festoon of affection.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Representative Slippery Elm Benton.
- </p>
- <p>
- Agnes Huntington was a beautiful creature&mdash;tall, slender,
- spirituelle, with eyes as dark and deep as the heavens at-night. Agnes
- Huntington had but one fault: she would sell the honour of the man she
- loved.
- </p>
- <p>
- Agnes Huntington was out for the stuff bigger than a wolf.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>ometimes I doubt
- the longevity of our bliss,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Despair rides on the crupper of my
- hopes at times. The Witch of Waco told how in a trance she saw my future
- spread before me like a faro layout. 'And,' said the Witch of Waco, I saw
- the pale hand of Fate put a copper on the queen. You may be lynched, but
- you will never wed.' Such was her bleak bode.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Slippery Elm Benton trembled like a child.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Heed her not, dearest,&rdquo; murmured Agnes Huntington. &ldquo;Surrender yourself,
- as I do, to the solemn currents of our love. And, darling, promise me
- again, you will do what is needful for the Phosphate Bill. It would
- brighten the last days of dear old Uncle Silver Tip.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where is your aged relative?&rdquo; asked Slippery Elm Benton, moodily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'd better not call him, dearest,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Uncle is lushing to-night,
- and he is unpleasant when he has been tanking up. What you do for the
- Phosphate Bill, you do for me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was &ldquo;suspension
- day,&rdquo; and the Phosphate Bill went through the House like the grace of
- Heaven through a camp-meeting.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>alf of that
- phosphate bed is yours, gal,&rdquo; said Uncle Silver Tip, when Agnes Huntington
- told him the Bill was already at the White House for the President's
- signature. &ldquo;It's wuth a million; an' you've 'arned it, gal! It was to turn
- sech tricks as this your old uncle sent you from the wild and woolly West
- to an Eastern seminary, and had them knock your horns off. It cost a bunch
- of cattle, but it's paid.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>here's something I
- must tell you, love,&rdquo; said Agnes Huntington; &ldquo;you would know all in time,
- and it is better that you learn it now from the lips of your Agnes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, beautiful one?&rdquo; said Slippery Elm Benton, languidly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Congressional day, with its labours, had wearied our hero, and,
- although with the woman he loved, he still felt fatigued.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Read this,&rdquo; said Agnes, as she pushed a paper into her lover's hand, and
- shrank back as if frightened.
- </p>
- <p>
- The paper made over one-half of the phosphate bed to Agnes Huntington.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And it was for this you sold my vote in the House!&rdquo; and Slippery Elm
- Benton laughed mockingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, say not so, love!&rdquo; said Agnes Huntington, piteously. &ldquo;Rather would I
- hear you curse than laugh like that!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And so the vote and influence of Slippery Elm Benton are basely bargained
- by the woman he loved for a one-half interest in a phosphate bed!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Slippery Elm Benton strode up and down the apartment, tossing his arms
- like a Dutch windmill.
- </p>
- <p>
- Agnes Huntington cowered before the wrath of her lover.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What would you have?&rdquo; she cried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What would I have!&rdquo; repeated Slippery Elm Benton, with a sneer, which all
- but withered the weeping girl; &ldquo;what would I have! I would have all&mdash;all!
- My vote and influence were worth the entire phosphate bed, and you basely
- accepted a paltry moiety! Go from my side, false woman; you who would put
- so low an estimate upon me! The Witch of Waco was right. I leave you. I
- leave you as one unfit to be the wife of a Congressman!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Slippery Elm Benton, while Agnes Huntington swooned on the rug, rushed
- into the night and the snow.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0066" id="link2H_4_0066"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- HENRY SPENY'S BENEVOLENCE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>UMMER was here and
- the day was warm. Henry Speny had been walking, and now stood at-the
- corner of Tenth Avenue and Twenty-eighth street, mopping his brow. Henry
- Speny was a Conservative; and, although Mrs. Speny had that morning gone
- almost to the frontiers of a fist fight to make him change his underwear
- for the lighter and more gauzy apparel proper to jocund August, Henry
- Speny refused. He was now paying the piper, and thinking how much more
- Mrs. Speny knew than he did, when the Tramp came up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Podner!&rdquo; said the Tramp in a low, guttural whine, intended to escape the
- ear of the police and touch Henry Speny's heart at one and the same time;
- &ldquo;podner! couldn't you assist a pore man a little?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Assist a poor man to what?&rdquo; asked Henry Speny, returning his handkerchief
- to his pocket and looking scornfully at the Tramp.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was a fat, healthy Tramp, in good condition. Henry Speny hardened his
- heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dime!&rdquo; replied the Tramp; &ldquo;dime to get somethin' to eat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Henry Speny shortly; &ldquo;I'm a half dozen meals behind the game
- myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This last was only Henry Speny's humour. Mrs. Speny fed him twice a day.
- But Henry Speny knew that the Tramp wanted the dime for whiskey.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well! if you don't think I want it to chew on,&rdquo; said the Tramp, &ldquo;jest'
- take me to a bakery and buy me a loaf of bread. I'll get away with it
- right before you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say!&rdquo; remarked Henry Speny, in a spirit of sarcastic irritation, &ldquo;what's
- the use of your talking to me? There's the Charity Woodyard in this town,
- where, if you were really hungry, you would go and saw wood for something
- to eat. You can get two meals and a bed for sawing one-sixteenth of a cord
- of wood.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can't saw wood with no such fin as this, podner!&rdquo; said the Tramp; and
- pulling up his coat sleeve he displayed to Henry Speny an arm as withered
- as a dead tree. &ldquo;The other's all right,&rdquo; he continued, restoring his coat
- sleeve; &ldquo;but wot's one arm in a catch-as-catch-can racket with a bucksaw?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Henry Speny was conscience-stricken, but he would defeat the Tramp in his
- efforts to buy whiskey.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll go down to the woodyard and saw your wood myself,&rdquo; said Henry Speny.
- </p>
- <p>
- He told Mrs. Speny afterward that he could not account for the making of
- this offer, unless it was his anxiety to keep the Tramp sober. All the
- Tramp wanted was ten cents, and for Henry Speny to propose to saw
- one-sixteenth of a cord of hard wood on a hot day, when a dime would have
- made all things even, was a conundrum too deep for Henry Speny, as he
- looked back over the transaction. But he did make the proposal; and the
- Tramp accepted with a grin of gratitude.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were twenty sticks in that one-sixteenth of a cord&mdash;hard,
- knotty sticks, too. And each one had to be sawed three times; sixty cuts
- in all. It was a poor bucksaw. Before he had finished the third stick,
- Henry Speny declared that it was the most beastly bucksaw he ever handled
- in his life. The buck itself was a wretched buck, and wouldn't stand still
- while Henry Speny sawed. It had a habit of tipping over; and when Henry
- Speny put his knee on the stick to steady the refractory buck, the knots
- tore his trousers and made his legs black and blue. Then the perspiration
- got in his eyes and made them smart. When he wiped it away he saw two of
- his friends looking at him in a shocked, sober way from across the street.
- They passed on, and told everybody that Henry Speny was down at the
- Charity Woodyard sawing wood for his food. They said, too, that they had
- reason to believe he did this every day; that business had gone to pieces
- with him, and an assignment couldn't be staved off much longer.
- </p>
- <p>
- Henry Speny would have thrown up the job with the second stick, but the
- Tramp was already half through his meal; Henry Speny could see him bolting
- his food like a glutton through the window, from where he stood.
- </p>
- <p>
- It took Henry Speny two hours to saw those twenty sticks sixty times. His
- hands were a fretwork of blisters; his back and shoulders ached like a
- galley-slave's. Henry Speny hired a carriage to take him home; he couldn't
- stand the slam and jolt of a street car. He was laid up three days with
- the blisters on his hands, while Mrs. Speny rubbed his back and shoulders
- with Pond's Extract.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the fourth day, as Henry Speny was limping painfully toward his office,
- he heard a voice he knew.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Podner! can't you assist a pore m&mdash;Oh! beg pardon; you looked so
- different I didn't know you!&rdquo; It was the fat Tramp with the withered arm.
- Without a word Henry Speny gave him ten cents and hobbled on.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0067" id="link2H_4_0067"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- JANE DOUGHERTY
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of the Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hat's d' flossiest
- good t'ing I'm ever guilty of?&rdquo; said Chucky. There was a pause. Chucky let
- his eye&mdash;somewhat softened for him&mdash;rove a bit abstractedly
- about the sordid bar. At last it came back to repose on the beer mug
- before him, as the most satisfying sight at easy hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; retorted Chucky, as he wet his lip, &ldquo;that question is a corker.
- 'What's d' star good deed you does?' is d' way you slings it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Will I name it? In a secont&mdash;in a hully secont! It's d' story of a
- little goil I steals, an' sticks in for ever since. This kid's two years
- comin' t'ree, when I pinched it, so to speak; an' youse can bet your
- boots! she was reg'larly up ag'inst it. A fly old sport like Chucky would
- never have mingled wit' her destinies otherwise; not on your life! Between
- youse, an' me, an' d' bar-keep over there, I ain't got no more natural use
- for kids than I have for a wet dog. But never mind! we'll pass up that
- kink in me make-up an' get down to this abduction I prides meself on.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's nine spaces ago, an 'd' kid in dispoote is now goin' on twelve. I've
- been, as I states, stickin' in for her ever since, an' intends to play me
- string to a finish. But to go on wit' me romance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I relates, d' play I boasts of is nine spaces in d' rear, see! In that
- day I has a dandy graft. I've got me hooks on as big a bundle as a hundred
- plunks, many an' many is d' week. I'd be woikin' it now only I lushes too
- free.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here's how in that day I sep'rated suckers from their stuff. It was
- simply fakin', of d' smoot' an' woidy sort, see! I'd make up like a Zulu,
- wit' burnt cork, an' feathers, an' queer duds; an' then I'd climb into an
- open carriage, drive to a good corner, do a bit of chin music, pull a
- crowd an' sell 'em brass jewellery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me patter would run something like this: D' waggon would stop an' I'd
- stand up. Raisin' me lamps to d' heavens above, I'd cut loose d' remark at
- d' top of me valves:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'It looks like rain! It don't look like a t'ing but rain!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit' me foist yell d' pop'lace would flock 'round, an' in two minutes
- there would be a hundred people there. In ten, there'd be a t'ousand, if
- d' cops didn't get in their woik. I'll give youse a tip d' great American
- public is d' star gezebos to come to a dead halt, an' look an' listen to
- t'ings. More'n onct I've seen some stiff who's sprintin' for a doctor,
- make a runnin' switch at d' sound of me voice an' side-track himself for
- t'irty minutes to hear me. Dey's a dead curious lot, d' public is; buy a
- French pool on that!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'en d' crowd is jammed all about me carriage w'eels, I'd cut loose some
- more. I'd quit d' rain question cold, an' holdin' up an armful of jimcrow
- jewellery, I'd t'row meself like this:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Loidies an' gents,' I'd say, 'I'm d' only orig'nal Coal Oil Johnny. An'
- I'm a soon mug at that, see! I don't get d' woist of it; not on your
- neckties. I gives away two hundred an' I takes in four hundred toadskins
- (dollars) an' I don't let no mob of hayseeds do me, so youse farmers
- needn't try.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Look at me! Cast your lamps over me! I'm one of Cetewayo's Zulu
- body-guard, an' I'm here from Africa on a furlough to saw off on suckers a
- lot of bum jewellery, an' down youse for your dough, see! I'm goin' to
- offer for sale four t'ings: I'm goin' to sell youse foist ten rings, then
- ten brooches, then ten chains, and then ten watches. An' when I gets down
- to d' watches, watch me dost; because, when I gets nex' to d' tickers I've
- reached d' point where I'm goin' to t'run youse down. I'm here to skin
- youse out of your money, an' leave youse lookin' like d' last run of shad.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'But there's this pecoolarity about me sellin 'd' rings. Each ring is a
- dollar apiece, an' when I've shoved ten of 'em onto youse, every galoot
- who's paid me a dollar for one, gets his dollar back an' a dollar wit' it
- for luck.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Now here's d' rings, good folks an' all!'&mdash;here I*d flash d' rings;
- gilt, an' wort' t'ree dollars a ton!&mdash;'here's d' little crinklets!
- Who's goin' to take one at a dollar, an' at d' finish, when d' ten is
- sold, get two dollars back? Who'll be d' foist? Now don't rush me! don't
- crush me! but come one at a time. D' rings ain't wort' a dollar a ton: I
- only makes d' play for fun, an' because d' doctors who looks after me
- healt' says I'll croak if I don't travel. Who'll be d' early boid to nip a
- ring?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'There you be!' I goes on, as some rustic gets to d' front an' hands up
- d' bill. 'Sold ag'in an' got d' tin, another farmer just sucked in!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So I goes, on,&rdquo; continued Chucky, after reviving his voice&mdash;which
- his exertions had made a trifle raucous&mdash;with a swig at the tankard;
- &ldquo;so I'd go on until d' ten rings would be sold. Then I'd go over d' outfit
- ag'in, take back d' rings, an' give 'em each a two-dollar willyum.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Now push back into d' mob, you lucky guys,' I'd say, 'an' give your
- maddened competitors to d' rear of youse a chanct to woik d' racket. I'm
- goin' to sell ten brooches now for two dollars each, an' give back four
- dollars wit' every brooch. Then I'm goin' to dazzle youse wit' ten chains,
- at five cases per chain. An' then I'll get down to d' watches, at which
- crisis, me guileless come-ons, youse must be sure to watch me, for it's
- then I'll make a monkey of youse.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' so I chins on, offerin' d' brooches at two dollars a t'row, an' at d'
- wind-up, when d' ten is gone, I gives back to each mucker who's got in, d'
- sum of four plunks, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be that time it's a knock-down an' drag-out around me cabrioley, to see
- who's goin' to transact business wit' me, an', wit'out as much cacklin' as
- a hen makes over an egg, I goes to d' chains an' floats ten of 'em at five
- a chain. As I sells d' last, I toins sharp on some duck who's dost be me
- w'eel an' says:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'What's that? I'm a crook, am I! an' this ain't on d' level! Loidies an'
- gents, just for d' disparagin' remark of this hobo, who is no doubt funny
- in his topknot from drink, I'll go on an' sell ten more chains. After
- which I'll come down to d' watches, which is d' great commercial point
- where youse had better watch me, for it's there I'm goin' to lose you in a
- lope! An' that's for fair, see!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ten more chains, at five a trip, goes off like circus lem'nade, an' I
- stows d' long an' beauteous green away in me keck. As d' last one of d'
- secont ten fades into d' hooks of d' last sucker, I stows d' five he's
- coughed up for it in me raiment, an' says:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'An' now, loidies an' gents, we gets down to d' watches!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit' which bluff I lugs me ticker out an' takes a squint at it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'What th' 'ell!' I shouts. 'Here it's half-past t'ree, an' I was to be
- married at t'ree-fifteen! Hully gee! Excuse me, people, but I must fly to
- d' side of me beloved, or I'll get d' dead face; also d' frozen mit. I'll
- see youse dubs next year, if woikin' overtime wit' youse to-day ain't
- ruined me career.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I'm singin' out d' last, I'm givin' me driver d' office to beat his
- dogs an' chase, see! An', bein' as he's on, an' is paid extra as his part
- of d' graft, he soaks d' horses wit' d' whip an' in twenty seconts d'
- crowd is left behint, an' is busy givin' each other d' laugh. No, there
- never was no row; no mug was ever mobbed for guyin'. Nit! I always comes
- away all right, an' youse can figure it, I'm sixty good bones in on d'
- racket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naturally, youse would like to hear where d' kid breaks into d' play an'
- how I wins it. I'd ought to have told youse sooner, but, on d' level! when
- me old patter begins to flow off me tongue, I can't shut down until I've
- spieled it all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But about d' kid. One afternoon I'm goin' on&mdash;it's in Joisey City&mdash;wit'
- me Zulu war-paint an' me open carriage, givin 'd' usual mob d' usual
- jolly. T'ings is runnin' off d' reel like a fish new hooked, an' I'm down
- to me fift' chain. Just then I hears a woman say:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Fly's d' woid, Sallie! Here's your old man, an' he's got his load! He
- won't do a t'ing to youse! Screw out, Sal! screw out!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Sallie, who's a tattered lookin' soubrette, wit' a kid in her arms,
- an' who's been standin' dost be one of me hind w'eels, don't get no chanct
- to skin out, see! There's a drunken hobo&mdash;as big an' as strong as a
- horse&mdash;who's right up to her when d' foist skirt puts her on. As she
- toins, he cops her one in d' neck wit'-out a woid. Down she goes like
- ninepins! As she lands, d' back of her cocoa don't do a t'ing but t'ump a
- stone horse-block wit' a whack! As d' blood flies, I'm lookin' down at
- her. I sees her map fade to a grey w'ite under d' dirt; she bats her lamps
- onct or twict; an' d' nex' moment I'm on wit'out tellin' that her light is
- out for good.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As Sallie does d' fall, d' kid which she's holdin' rolls in d' gutter
- under d' carriage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'T'run d' kid in here!' I says to d' mark who picks it up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me only idee at d' time is to keep d' youngone from gettin 'd' boots from
- d mob that's surgin' round, an' tryin' to mix it up wit' d' drunken bum
- who's soaked Sal. D' guy who gets d' kid fires it up to me like it's a
- football. I'm handy wit' me hooks, so I cops it off in midair, an' stows
- it away on d' seat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be that time d' p'lice has collared d' fightin' bum all right, an' some
- folks is draggin' Sal, who's limp an' dead enough, into a drug shop.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all up wit' me graft for that day, so after lookin' at d' youngone a
- secont, I goes curvin' off to d' hotel where I hangs out. While I'm takin'
- me Zulu make-up off, d' chambermaid stands good for d' kid. When I sees it
- ag'in, it's all washed up an' got some decent duds on. Say! on d' dead! it
- was a wonder!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, to cut it short,&rdquo; said Chucky, giving the order for another mug of
- ale, &ldquo;I loins that night that d' mother is dead, an' d' drunken hobo's in
- d' holdover. As it s a cinch he'll do time for life, even if he misses
- bein' stretched, I looks d' game all over, an' for a wind-up I freezes to
- d' kid. Naw; I couldn't tell why, at that, see! only d' youngone acts like
- it's stuck on me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nixie; I never keeps it wit' me. I've got it up to d' Sisters' school.
- Say! them nuns is gone on it. I makes a front to 'em as d' kid's uncle;
- an' while I've been shy meself on grub more'n onct since I asted d'
- Sisters to keep it, I makes good d' money for d' kid right along, an' I
- always will. What name does I give it? Jane&mdash;Jane Dougherty; it's me
- mudder's name. Nit; I don t know what I'll do wit' Jane for a finish. I
- was talkin' to me Rag only d' other day about it, an' she told me, in a
- week or so, she'd go an' take a fall out of a fortune-teller, who, me Rag
- says, is d' swiftest of d' whole fortune-tellin' push. Mebby we'll get a
- steer from her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0068" id="link2H_4_0068"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- MISTRESS KILLIFER
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Wolfville)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>his is of a day
- prior to Dave Tutt's taking a wife, and a year before the nuptials of
- Benson Annie, as planned and executed by Old Man Enright, with one,
- French.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wolfville is dissatisfied; what one might call peevish. A man has been
- picked up shot to death, no one can tell by whom; no one has hung for it.
- Any one familiar with the Western spirit and the Western way would note
- the discontent by merely walking through the single, sun-burned street.
- When two citizens of the place make casual meeting in store or causeway,
- they confine their salutations to gruff &ldquo;how'd!&rdquo; and pass on. Men are even
- seen to drink alone in a sullen, morbid way.
- </p>
- <p>
- Clearly something is wrong with Wolfville. The popular discontent is so
- sufficiently pronounced as to merit the notice of leading citizens.
- Therefore it is no marvel that when Old Man Enright, who, by right of
- years&mdash;and with a brain as clear and as bright as a day in June&mdash;is
- the head man of the hamlet, meets Doc Peets at the bar of the Red Light,
- the discussion falls on affairs of public concern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever do you reckon is the matter with this camp, Enright?&rdquo; asks Doc
- Peets, as they tip their liquor into their throats without missing a drop.
- </p>
- <p>
- Doc Peets is the medical practitioner of Wolfville, but his grammar, like
- that of many another man, has lost ground before his environment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can't tell!&rdquo; replied Enright, with a mien dubious yet thoughtful. &ldquo;Looks
- like the whole outfit is somehow on a dead kyard. Mebby it's that Denver
- party gettin' downed last week an' no one lynched. Some folks says the
- Stranglers oughter have swung that Greaser.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well!&rdquo; retorts Doc Peets, &ldquo;you as chief of the Stranglers, an' I as a
- member in full standin', knows thar's no more evidence ag'in that Mexican
- than ag'in my <i>pinto</i> hoss.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, I knows that too!&rdquo; replies Enright, &ldquo;but still I sorter thinks
- general sentiment lotted on a hangin'. You know, Doc, it ain't so
- important from a public stand that you stretches the right gent, as that
- you stretches somebody when it's looked for. Nacherally it would have been
- mighty mortifyin' to the Mexican who's swung off at the loop-end of the
- lariat for a killin' he ain't in on; but still I holds the belief it would
- have calmed the sperit of the camp. However, I may be 'way off to one side
- on that; it's jest my view. Set up the nosepaint ag'in, barkeep!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- While Doc Peets is slowly freighting his glass with a fair allowance, he
- is deep in meditation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've an idee, Enright,&rdquo; says Doc Peets at last. &ldquo;The thing for us to do
- is to give the public some new direction of thought that'll hold 'em
- quiet. The games is all dead at this hour, an' the boys ain't doin'
- nothin'; s'pose we makes a round-up to consider my scheme. The mere
- exercise will soothe 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shall we have Jack Moore post a notice?&rdquo; asks
- </p>
- <p>
- Enright. &ldquo;He's Kettle Tender to the Stranglers, an' I reckons what he does
- that a-way makes it legal.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; says Peets, &ldquo;let's rustle 'em in an' hold the meetin' right now an'
- yere in the Red Light. Some of the boys is feelin' that petulant they're
- likely to get to chewin' each other's manes any minute. I'm tellin' you,
- Enright, onless somethin' is done mighty <i>poce tiempo</i> to cheer 'em,
- an' convince 'em that Wolfville is lookin' up an' gettin' ahead on the
- correct trail, this outfit's liable to have a killin' any time at all. The
- recent decease of that Denver person won't be a marker!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right!&rdquo; says Enright, &ldquo;if thar ain't no time for Moore an' a notice,
- a good, handy, quick way to focus public interest would be to step to the
- back door, an' shake the loads outen my six-shooter. That'll excite
- cur'osity, an' over they'll come all spraddled out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus it comes to pass that the afternoon peace of Wolfville is suddenly
- disparaged and broken down by six pistol shots. They follow each other
- like the rapid striking of a Yankee clock.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any one creased?&rdquo; asks Jack Moore, by general consent a fashion of
- marshal and executive officer for the place, and who, followed by the
- population of Wolfville, rushes up the moment following the shooting.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None whatever!&rdquo; replies Doc Peets, cheerfully. &ldquo;The shootin' you-alls
- hears is purely bloodless; an' Enright an' me indulges tharin onder what
- they calls the 'public welfare clause of the constitootion.' The intent
- which urges us to shake up the sereenity of the hour is to convene the
- camp, which said rite bein' now accomplished, the barkeep asks your
- beverages, an' the business proceeds in reg'lar order.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Enright, who has finished replenishing the pistol from which he evicted
- the loads, draws a chair to a monte table and drums gently with his
- fingers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The meetin' will please bed itse'f down!&rdquo; says Enright, with a sage
- dignity which has generous reflection in the faces around him. &ldquo;Doc Peets,
- gents, who is a sport whom we all knows an' respects, will now state the
- object of this round-up. The barkeep meanwhile will please continue his
- rounds, the same not bein' deemed disturbin'; none whatever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gents, an' fellow townsmen!&rdquo; says Doc Peets, rising at the call of
- Enright and stepping forward, &ldquo;I avoids all harassin' mention of a
- yeretofore sort. Comin' down to the turn at once, I ventures the remark
- that thar's somethin' wrong with Wolfville. I would see no virtue in
- pursooin' this subject, which might well excite the resentment of all true
- citizens of the town, was it not that I feels a crowdin' necessity for a
- change of a radical sort. Somethin' must be proposed, an' somethin' must
- be did. I am well aware thar's gents yere to-day as holds a conviction
- that a bet is overlooked in not stringin' the Mexican last week on account
- of the party from Denver. That may or may not be true; but in any event,
- that hand's been played, an' that pot's been lost an' won. Whether on that
- occasion we diskyards an' draws for the best interests of the public, may
- well pass by onasked. At any rate we don't fill, an' the Greaser wins out
- with his neck. Lettin' the past, tharfore, drift for a moment, I would
- like to hear from any gent present somethin' in the line of a proposal for
- future action; one calc'lated to do Wolfville proud. As affairs stand our
- pride is goin' our brotherly love is goin', our public sperit is goin',
- an' the way we're p'intin' out, onless we comes squar' about on the trail,
- we won't be no improvement on an outfit of Digger Injuns in a month.
- Gents, I pauses at this p'int for su'gestions.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Doc Peets sits down a whispered buzz runs through the room. It is plain
- that what he has said finds sympathy in his audience.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've heard Peets,&rdquo; observes Enright, beating softly. &ldquo;Any party with
- views should not withhold 'em. I takes it we-all is anxious for the good
- of Wolfville. We should proceed with wisdom. Red Dog, our tinhorn rival,
- is a-watchin' of this camp, ready to detect an' take advantages of any
- weakenin' of sperit on the Wolfville part. So far Red Dog has been
- out-lucked, out-played, an' out-held. Wolfville has downed her on the
- deal, an' on the draw. But, to continue in the future as in the past,
- requires to-day that we acts promptly, an' in yoonison, an' give the
- sitooation, mentally speakin', the best turn in the box.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What for a play would it be?&rdquo; asks Dan Boggs, doubtfully, as he rises and
- bows stiffly to Enright, who bows stiffly in return; &ldquo;whatever for a play
- would it be to rope up one of these yere lecture sharps, which the same I
- goes ag'inst the other night in Tucson? He could stampede over an' put us
- up a talk in the warehouse of the New York Store; an' I'm right yere to
- say a lecture would look mighty meetropolitan, that a-way, an' lay over
- Red Dog like four kings an' an ace.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever was this yere ghost dancer you adverts to lecturin' about?&rdquo; asks
- Jack Moore.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never do hear the first of it,&rdquo; replies Boggs. &ldquo;Me an' Old Monte, the
- stage driver, is projectin' about Tucson at the time we strikes this
- lecture game, an* it's about half dealt out when he gets in on it. But as
- far as we keeps tabs, he's talkin' about Roosia an' Siberia, an' how they
- were pesterin' an' playin' it low on the Jews. He has a lay-out of maps
- an' sech, an' packs the whole racket with him from deal box to check-rack.
- Folks as <i>sabes</i> lectures allows he turns as strong a game, with as
- high a limit, as any sport that ever charged four bits for a back seat.
- The lecture sharp's all right; the question is do you-alls deem highly of
- the scheme? If it's the sense of this yere town, it don't take two days to
- cut this short-horn out of the Tucson herd an' drive him over yere.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Onder other, an' what one might call a more concrete condition of public
- feelin',&rdquo; says Doc Peets, cutting rapidly and diplomatically into the
- talk, &ldquo;the hint of our esteemed townsman would be accepted on the instant.
- But to my mind this yere camp ain't in no proper frame of mind for
- lectures on Roosia. It'll be full of trouble,&mdash;sech a talk. I <i>sabes</i>
- Roosia as well as I does an ace. Thar's an old silver tip they calls the
- Czar, which is their language for a sort o' national chief of scouts, an'
- he's always trackin' 'round for trouble. Thar's bound to be no end of what
- you might call turmoil in a lecture on Roosia, and the sensibilities of
- Wolfville, already harrowed, ain't in no shape to bear it. Now, while
- friend Boggs has been talkin', my idees has followed off a different
- waggon track. What we-all needs, is not so much a lecture, which is for a
- day, but somethin' lastin', sech as the example of a refined an' elevated
- home life abidin' in our very midst. What Wolfville pines for is the
- mollifyin' inflooence of woman. Shorely we has Faro Nell! who is
- pleasantly present with us, a-settin' back thar alongside Cherokee Hall;
- an' that gent never makes a moccasin track in Wolfville who don't prize
- an' value Nell. Thar ain't a six-shooter in camp but what would bark
- itse'f hoarse in her behalf. But Nell's young; merely a yearlin' as it
- were. What we wants is the picture of a happy household where the feminine
- part tharof, in the triple capacity of woman, wife an' mother, while
- cherishin' an' carin' for her husband, sheds likewise a radiant inflooence
- for us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whoopee! for Doc Peets!&rdquo; shouts Faro Nell, flourishing her broad sombrero
- over her young curls.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pausin' only to thank our fair young townswoman,&rdquo; says Doc Peets, bowing
- gallantly to Faro Nell, who waves her hand in return, &ldquo;for her
- endorsements, which the same is as flatterin' as it is priceless, I
- stampedes on to say that I learns from first sources, indeed from the gent
- himse'f, that one of the worthiest citizens of Wolfville, Mr. Killifer,
- who is on the map as blacksmith at the stage station, has a wife in the
- states. I would recommend that Mr. Killifer be requested to bring on this
- esteemable lady to keep camp for him. The O. K. Restaurant will lose a
- customer, the same bein' the joint where Kif gets his daily <i>con-carne</i>;
- but Rucker, the landlord, will not repine for that. What will be Rucker's
- loss will be general gain, an' for the welfare of Wolfville, Rucker makes
- a sacrifice. Mr. Chairman, my su'gestion takes the form of a motion.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which said motion,&rdquo; responds Enright, with such vigorous application of
- his fist to the purpose of a gavel that nervous spirits might well fear
- for the results, &ldquo;which said motion, onless I hears a protest, goes as it
- lays. Thar bein' no objection the chair declares it to be the commands of
- Wolfville that Syd Killifer bring on his wife. What heaven has j'ined
- together, let no gent&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;See yere, Mr. Chairman!&rdquo; interposes Killifer, with a mixture of decision
- and diffidence, &ldquo;I merely interferes to ask whether, as the he'pless
- victim of this on-looked for uprisin', do my feelin's count? Which if I
- ain't in this&mdash;if it's regarded as the correct caper to lay waste the
- future of a gent, who in his lowly way is doin' his best to make good his
- hand, why! I ain't got nothin' to say. I'm impugnin' no gent's motives,
- but I'm free to remark, these yere proceeding strikes me as the froote of
- reckless caprice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will say to our fellow gent,&rdquo; says Enright with much dignity, &ldquo;that
- thar's no disp'sition to force a play to which he seems averse. If from
- any knowledge we s'posed we entertained of the possession of a sperit on
- his part, which might rise to the aid of a general need&mdash;I shorely
- hopes I makes my meanin' plain&mdash;we over-deals the kyards, all we can
- do is to throw our hands in the diskyard an' shuffle an' deal ag'in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not at all, an' no offence given, took or meant!&rdquo; hastily retorts
- Killifer, as he balances himself uneasily upon his feet, and surveys
- first, Enright and then Peets. &ldquo;I has the highest regard for the chair,
- personal, an' takes frequent occasion to remark that I looks on Doc Peets
- as the best eddicated scientist I ever sees in my life. But this yere
- surge into my domestic arrangements needs to be considered. You-alls don't
- know the lady in question, which, bein' as it's my wife, I ain't assoomin'
- no airs when I says I does.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Does she look like me, Kif?&rdquo; asks Faro Nell from her perch near Cherokee
- Hall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None whatever, Nell!&rdquo; responds Killifer. &ldquo;To be shore! I ain't basked
- none in her society for several years, an' my mem'ry is no doubt blurred
- by stampedes, an' prairie fires, an' cyclones, an' lynchin's, an' other
- features of a frontier career; but she puts me in mind, as I recalls the
- lady, of an Injun uprisin' more'n anythin' else. Still, she's as good a
- woman as ever founds a flap-jack. But she's haughty; that's what she is,
- she's haughty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I might add,&rdquo; goes on Killifer, in a deprecatory way, &ldquo;that inasmuch as I
- ain't jest lookin' for the camp yere to turn to me in its hour of need,
- this proposal to transplant the person onder discussion to Wolfville, is
- an honour as onexpected as a rattlesnake in a roll of blankets. But
- you-alls knows me!&rdquo;&mdash;And here Killifer braces himself desperately.&mdash;&ldquo;What
- the camp says, goes! I'm a <i>vox populi</i> sort of sport, an' the last
- citizen to lay down on a duty. Still!&rdquo;&mdash;here Killifer's courage
- begins to ebb a little&mdash;&ldquo;I advises we go about this yere enterprise
- mighty conserv'tive. My wife has her notions, an' now I thinks of it she
- ain't likely to esteem none high neither of our Wolfville ways. All I can
- say, gents, is that if she takes a notion ag'in us, she's as liable to
- break even as any lady I knows.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar ain't a gent here but what honours Kif,&rdquo; says the sanguine Peets, as
- he looks encouragingly at Killifer, who has resumed his seat and is
- gloomily shaking his head, &ldquo;for bein' frank an' free in this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I don't want you-alls to spread your blankets on no ant-hill, an'
- then blame me!&rdquo; interrupts Killifer dejectedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe, Mr. Chairman,&rdquo; continues Doc Peets, &ldquo;we fully onderstands the
- feelin's of our townsman in this matter. But I'm convinced of the
- correctness of my first view. Thar can shorely be nothin' in the daily
- life of Wolfville at which the lady could aim a criticism, an' we needs
- the beneficent example of a home. I would tharfore insist on my plan with
- perhaps a modification.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I rises to ask the Preesidin' Officer a question!&rdquo; interrupts Dave Tutt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let her roll!&rdquo; retorts Enright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How would it be to invite Kif's wife to come yere on a visit?&rdquo; queries
- Tutt. &ldquo;Sorter take her on probation! That's the way an oncle of mine back
- in Missouri j'ines the Meth'dist Church. An' it's lucky the congregation
- takes them precautions; which they saves the trouble of cuttin' the old
- felon out of the herd later, when he falls from grace. Which last he
- shorely does!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not waitin' for the chair to answer,&rdquo; replies Doc Peets, &ldquo;I holds the
- limitation of Tutt to be good. I tharfore pinches down my original
- resolootion to the effect that Kif bring his wife yere for a month. Let
- her stack up ag'inst our daily game, an' triumph through a deal or so, an'
- she'll never quit Wolfville nor Wolfville her. I shorely holds the present
- occasion the openin' of a new era.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It is a month later, perhaps, when everybody assembles at the post-office
- to receive the lady on whom the local public has built so many hopes.
- Killifer has gone over to Tucson to act as her escort into Wolfville, and,
- as he said, &ldquo;to sorter break the effect.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She is an iron-visaged heroine. As Killifer hands her from the stage&mdash;a
- ceremony upon which he bestows that delicate care wherewith he would have
- aided the unloading of so much dynamite&mdash;Doc Peets steps gallantly
- forward, raising his hat. Doc Peets is the proprietor of the only stiff
- hat in town, and presumes on it.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0253.jpg" alt="0253 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0253.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who is that insultin' drunkard, Mr. Killifer?&rdquo; demands the lady, as she
- bends her eyes on the suave Peets, with such point-blank wrath that it
- silences the salutation on Peets' lips; &ldquo;no friend of your'n I hope?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I says it in confidence,&rdquo; remarks Old Monte, as an hour later he
- refreshes himself at the bar of the Red Light, &ldquo;for I holds it
- onprofessional to go blowin' the private affairs of my passengers, but I
- shorely thinks the old grizzly gives Kif a clawin' on the way over. I
- hears him yell like a wolf back in Long's canyon. To be shore! he's inside
- an' I can't see, but I'm offerin' two to one up to $100 she was lickin'
- him; if I don't I'm a Siwash!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It turns out as Killifer predicted. He read the lady aright. There is
- nothing in Wolfville to which she yields approval. It would be as
- impossible as it would be terrific, to repeat in print the conduct of this
- remarkable woman. She utterly abashes Enright; while such hare-hearts as
- Jack Moore, Cherokee Hall, Dave Tutt, Texas Thompson, Short Creek Dave and
- Dan Boggs, fly from her like quicksilver. Even Doc Peets acknowledges
- himself defeated and put to naught. The least of her feats is the invasion
- of a peaceful poker game to which Killifer is party, and the sweeping
- confiscation of every dollar in the bank on claim that it is money
- ravished from Killifer by venal practices. The mildest of her plans is one
- to assail the Red Light with an axe, should she ever detect the odour of
- whiskey about Killifer again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' do you know, Doc!&rdquo; observes Enright, a fortnight later, as they meet
- for their midday drink, &ldquo;the boys sorter lays it on you. You know me, Doc!
- I'll stand up ag'in the iron for you; but as a squar' man, with a fairly
- balanced mind, I'm bound to admit the boys is right. Now I don't say they
- feels resentful; it's more like they was mournful over what used to be,
- an' a day of peace gone by. But you knows what people be whose burdens is
- more'n they can bear; an' if I was you, this yere lady or I would leave
- the camp. I'm the last gent to go dictatin' about the details of another
- gent's game; but you an' me, Doc, has been old friends, an' as a warnin'
- from a source which means you well, I gives it to you cold the camp is
- gettin' hostile.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It is always a spectacle to inspire, to witness a great soul rise to an
- occasion. Doc Peets never so proves the power of his nature as now, when
- the tremendous shadow of &ldquo;Kif's wife&rdquo; has fallen across Wolfville like a
- blight. Peets, following Enright's forebodings, holds a long and secret
- conference with the unhappy Killifer. That night Peets rides to Tucson.
- The next day Old Monte, with his six horses a-foam, comes crashing into
- Wolfville two hours ahead of schedule. Before even a mail bag is thrown
- off, Old Monte unpouches a telegram received at the Tucson office for
- Mistress Killifer. Its earmark is Illinois; its contents moving. No matter
- what it tells, its news is cogent enough to decide the lady's mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next morning this dread woman departs, leaving, as she came, with a
- withering look at all around. That night Killifer gets drunk. Wolfville
- not only pardons Killifer in his weakness; it joins him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you suppresses the facts, Kif, when you says she's haughty,&rdquo; observes
- Dan Boggs. &ldquo;Haughty, as a deescription, ain't a six-spot!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's with no purpose, Kif,&rdquo; says Doc Peets, as he fills his glass, &ldquo;to
- discourage you&mdash;whom I sympathises with as an onfortunate, an'
- respects as a dead game gent&mdash;that I yereby invites the pop'lation to
- join me in a drink of congratulation on Wolfville's escape from your wife.
- An' all informal though this assemblage be, I offers a resolootion that
- this, the 23d of August, the date when the lady in question pulls her
- freight, be an' remain forevermore a day of yearly thanksgivin' to
- Wolfville.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I libates to that myse'f!&rdquo; says Killifer as he drains his cup to
- the last lingering drop. &ldquo;Also I trusts this camp will proceed with
- caution the next time it turns in to play my domestic hand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0069" id="link2H_4_0069"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- BEARS
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>ears are peaceful
- folk. They are a mild and lowly citizenry of the woods&mdash;I'm talking
- of the black sort&mdash;and shuffle modestly away the moment they hear you
- coming. We get many of our impressions of the ferocity of animals and the
- deadly poisons of reptiles from an unworthy sort of hearsay evidence. Much
- of it comes from Mexicans and Indians rather than from real experience.
- Now I wouldn't traduce either the Mexicans or the Indians, for their lot
- is one of hard, sodden ignorance; but it must be conceded that they're by
- no means careful historians, and run readily to tales of the marvellous
- and the tragic. I am going back to a bear story I have in mind before I
- get through; but I want to interject here, while I think of it, that
- though the centipede, the rattlesnake, the tarantula and the Gila monster,
- have bitter repute as able to deal death with their poisonous feet or
- fangs, I was never, in my years on the plains and in the mountains, able
- to secure proof of even the shallowest sort that a death, whether of man
- or animal, had ever resulted from the sting of any one of these. On the
- other hand, I have been with men who were bitten by rattlesnakes, or stung
- by tarantulas; or who while asleep had suffered as the inadvertent
- promenade of a centipede, with its hundred hooked, poison-exuding feet;
- but none of them died. They were sick in an out-of-sort, headache fashion
- for a day or two; the bitten place inflamed and was sore for a week or a
- month; that was all. I suppose I've known of fully one hundred horses,
- cows and sheep which were bitten by rattlesnakes; none died. They were
- invariably fanged in the nose, too, as they grazed towards my lord of the
- rattlers. On more than one occasion I kept the animal so bitten in sight
- to note results. Its head would swell and puff; it would lounge about with
- a sick listlessness for several days; then the poison would wear away in
- force, and back to its grass it would go with the wire-edge appetite of a
- sailor home from sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- But about bears. I was remarking that my black, shaggy cousins of the
- woods were a peaceful folk. So much is this true, and so little do their
- neighbours apprehend violence at their clumsy hands, that they who live in
- regions which abound in bears evince not the least alarm about the safety
- of their children. The babies, some as young as five or six years, roam
- the same mountains with the bears; and, while the latter will swoop upon a
- pig and run dangers with wide-open eyes in doing it, never did I hear of
- one who disturbed a ringlet on a child's head. They had daily
- opportunities enough, for many are the households to live in the wide,
- pine-sown Rockies.
- </p>
- <p>
- Our bears, too, are creatures of vast physical power. Often, as I rode the
- mountain for cattle, have I come across a dead and fallen pine tree, which
- would have defeated the best efforts of a horse to move, completely torn
- from its bed in the earth and leaves, and either overturned or thrown one
- side by the mighty arms of a bear. He was in search of a dinner cf grubs&mdash;those
- white, helpless worms which make their dull homes under rotten logs&mdash;and
- Sir Bear made no more ado of lifting and laying aside a pine tree in his
- grub-hunt than would you or I of a billet of firewood.
- </p>
- <p>
- While in the mountains I marvelled over the fact that the bears and the
- mountain lions never assailed the young calves. The hills were rife with
- cattle, and every spring found the canyons and oak-bushed slopes a perfect
- nursery of calves. And yet neither the panthers nor the bears disturbed
- them. It was due, I think, more to the bellicose character of the old cow
- and her relatives, than any uprightness of character on the part of the
- bears, and the panthers. Let a calf raise but one yell of distress in
- those mountains&mdash;and I assure you he can make their walls and valleys
- ring with his youthful music when so disposed&mdash;and, out of canyons
- and off mesas, over logs and crashing through the oak bushes, will come
- plunging all the cattle within hearing. Not thirty seconds will elapse
- before as many cattle will be by the side of the threatened calf, lusting
- for battle. They make such a phalanx of sharp, threatening horns, coupled
- with their rolling, wrath-red eyes and ferocious breathings, that, I
- warrant you, they have so shocked the nerves of past bears and panthers,
- it has become instinct with these latter to give the whole horned,
- truculent brood a wide berth.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Indians are very fond of the bear for his wisdom, and he divides their
- respect with the beaver as a personage of sagacity. The curiosity of my
- shaggy friend would shame any boy or girl of ten. You may be sure, were a
- bear to visit you for a week at your home, he would open every door,
- ransack every bureau, take every garment off every hook in every closet&mdash;and
- I had almost said &ldquo;try it on&rdquo;&mdash;before he had been with you an hour.
- Not a box nor a barrel, not a nook nor cranny, from cellar to ridge pole,
- would escape his investigation. His black nose would sniff at every crack,
- his black hand explore every crevice. Nor, beyond what he bestowed in his
- remorseless stomach, would he destroy anything. I have the black coat of a
- bear at my house, who might be wearing it himself to-day, were it not for
- his curiosity.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a salt spring near my camp on the upper Red River; perhaps two
- miles away, which is &ldquo;near&rdquo; in the mountains. This salt spring was popular
- with the deer. They repaired thither to lick the salt earth about the
- waters. I had, among the lumber at my camp, a big, two-spring trap of
- steel; I suppose it must have weighed sixty pounds. It occurred to me that
- a lazy way to kill a deer would be to set this wide-jawed engine near the
- spring and let one walk into it. I'm not proud of this plan as a method in
- deer-killing, and wouldn't do it now. On this occasion, however I was not
- particular. I &ldquo;set&rdquo; the trap at my camp&mdash;for I had to use a
- hand-spike to crush down the springs, and it all gave me a deal of work
- and trouble&mdash;and then, with its jaws wide open, but held so that it
- wouldn't nip me in case it did snap, I crept carefully aboard my pony and
- rode over to the spring. The next morning early I had to go again to
- remove the trap, as during the day the cattle would take the places of the
- deer at this delectable salt spring, and I didn't care to break the legs
- of a thirty-dollar steer with my trapping. I went over while it was yet
- dark, and found no deer in the trap. I took it and hid it, face downward&mdash;the
- jaws still spread and &ldquo;set&rdquo;&mdash;by the of a big yellow pine log, which
- stretched its decayed length along the slope of the canyon. There I left
- it, intending to return and rearrange it for deer at dusk.
- </p>
- <p>
- It snowed that day, and as I grew lazy towards night, I left my trap where
- I'd hidden it by the yellow pine log. The deer would have one night of
- safety. What was safety for the deer proved otherwise for the bear.
- </p>
- <p>
- The following day I rode over just as the canyons were getting dark and
- the cattle climbing out of them to pass the night on the hills. Behold! my
- trap was gone!
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a great flourish of tracks in the snow; long plantigrade
- impressions like the bare footprints of some giant! I knew that a bear had
- somehow acquired my trap, or the trap, him; at that time I couldn't tell
- which. To make it short, however, it came to this: The bear, scouting in a
- loaferish way down the hill, and pausing no doubt to make an estimate of
- the probable grubs he would find beneath this particular yellow pine next
- summer, had chanced upon the trap. Here was a great find. Thoughts of
- grubs and common edible things at once deserted him. The mysterious
- novelty he had found took possession of his addle-pate like a new toy. A
- wolf or a fox would have smelled the odour of my handling, even off the
- cold steel of the trap, and been over the hills and far away in a
- twinkling. Your wolf is the canniest of timber folk; a grey Scotchman of
- the mountains. But my bear was reared on a different bottle. He sat down
- at once and actually took the new plaything in his lap. Then it would seem
- as if he deliberately thrust his paw into it and sprung its savage jaws on
- his forearm.
- </p>
- <p>
- In his first wrathful surprise, my bear tore up the snow and bushes for
- twenty feet about; but at last he set off with the trap on his foot.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was late. For half an hour I followed the broad track where his
- bearship had dragged the trap in the snow at a gallop. It was dark when at
- last I turned off for camp. Bright and betimes, I took the trail next day.
- It carried me over some ten miles of rough, close country. About midday I
- stood on the bluff edge of the Canyon Caliente, picking a pathway with my
- eyes along its steep, perilous side for my pony to get down. The bear had
- crossed here; but he was in the roughest of moods, and seemingly made no
- more of hurling himself over twenty-foot precipices&mdash;himself and my
- trap&mdash;or sublimely sliding down dangerous descents of hundreds of
- feet where foothold was impossible, than you would of eating buttered
- buns. So I had to pick out paths for myself; I couldn't trust to so
- reckless and uncivil an engineer as my bear.
- </p>
- <p>
- As I sat in the saddle running a quick eye over the slope for a trail, I,
- of an instant, heard a most surprising noise. It was indeed a noble
- racket, and might have passed for a blacksmith shop. But I knew the hills
- too well. It was of a verity my bear; and from the riot he was making, it
- was plain I would have to get there soon if I wanted to save the trap.
- </p>
- <p>
- This formidable uproar came from across the Caliente, perhaps half a mile.
- I slid from the saddle and went forward afoot. It didn't take long to
- cover the distance. I fell and tumbled down the first third, much as the
- bear had done a bit earlier.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once on the other side, I came upon my rough gentleman cautiously, and
- found him sitting by the side of a round, boulder-like rock, something the
- size and contour of a load of hay. And he was smiting the enduring granite
- with my trap in a way which told more of his feelings than would have been
- possible with mere words. He would raise his arm clumsily, 60-pound trap
- and all, and then bring it against the rock with all the fervour of rage
- and giant strength.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was so wrapt in the enterprise, he never heard me until a shot from my
- Winchester met him just under the ear. One shot did it; and I had trap and
- bear. He had ruined the trap; one spring was broken and the whole
- disparaged beyond my power to repair. Wherefore I stripped him of his
- black overcoat to pay for the damage he had done; and that and the grease
- I took from him covered all costs and damages.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0070" id="link2H_4_0070"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE BIG TOUCH
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>e fren', Mollie
- Matches,&rdquo; observed Chucky.
- </p>
- <p>
- That was our introduction. A moment later Chucky whispered in a hoarse
- aside:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Matches is d' dip I chins youse about, who gets d' Hummin' Boid t'run
- into him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Matches,&rdquo; as Chucky called him, was a sad, grey, broken man. Years and a
- life of flight and anxious furtivity had told on him. His eye was dancing
- and birdlike; resting on nothing, roving always; the sure mark of one sort
- of criminal. Matches drank for an hour before he felt at ease. That time
- arrived, however, and I took advantage of it to feed my curiosity. It was
- no easy matter, but at last I won him by a deft blending of flattery and
- drink to talk of his crimes. And indeed I fear&mdash;for I suppose the
- expert thief does plume himself a bit on his art&mdash;that Matches took
- some sort of wretched pride in his illicit pocket searchings.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' biggest touch I ever makes,&rdquo; said Matches, in response to a query,
- &ldquo;was $36,000; quite a bunch of dough. Gettin' it was easy; gettin' away
- wit' it was d' squeak.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We toins d' trick on d' train from Albany. D' tip comes straight to me in
- New York that a bloke is goin' to draw $36,000 from d' Albany bank on such
- a day. I makes up a mob; t'ree stalls an' meself;&mdash;all pretty fly we
- was&mdash;an' lands in Albany.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We gets onto d' party who's to be woiked early in d' mornin', an' shadows
- him so dost he's never out of reach. Our play is to follow him to d' bank
- an' do him wit 'd' drop game. If that misses, we're to stay wit' him till
- d' bundle's ours be one racket or another.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This sucker is pretty soon himself, see! He ain't such a mut as we
- figgers. His train starts at 1 o'clock, an' he takes in d' bank on his way
- to d' station.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course we was wit' him; but he's dead leary an' never t'rows himself
- open to be woiked. D' stuff is in t'ousand-dollar willyums, an' as he just
- sinks it in his keck d' minute his hooks is onto it, an' never stops to
- count or run his lamps over it, we don't get no chanct to do d' drop. D'
- instant d' money's in his mits he plants it&mdash;all stretched out long
- in a big leather, it is&mdash;in his inside pocket, an' screws his nut for
- d' door. D' hack slams an' he's on his way to d' train.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; we starts for d' station be another street. D' bloke ain't onto us
- yet, an' we tries not to plant a scare into him. He's leary enough as it
- is; just havin' such a roll wit' him rattles him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So I makes up me mind to do d' job on d' train runnin' into New York. As
- he sinks d' stuff away, I notes how d' ends of d' bills sticks out over d'
- pocket-book. Me idee is to weed it&mdash;get d' dough an' leave d' leather
- in his pocket&mdash;if I can make d' play. Weedin' was d' way to do; you
- gets d' long green an 'd' sucker still has d' leather to feel of, an' it's
- some time before he tumbles he's been touched, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' guy wit 'd' stuff plants himself in a seat. Two of me stalls sits
- ahead of him, me an' me other pal is behint him. We only waits now for him
- to get up an' come along d' aisle of d' car to get in our hooks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Foist I goes d' len'th of d' train to see who's onto it. I always does
- that; I wants to see if any guy aboard knows Mollie Matches. You see, if
- there is, when d' holler comes, an' some duck declares himself shy his
- spark, or roll, or ticker, it's 40 to 1 Mr. Know-all, who's onto me for a
- crook, sends a tip to d' p'lice: 'Matches was on d' train!' an' I gets d'
- collar. No, I never woiks when one of me acquaintances is along be
- accident. D' cops, in such case, as I says, is put onto me an' spots me
- wit 'd' foist yell.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I covers d' train an' comes back. There's no guy on me visiting list
- who's along. So I sits down wit' me pal to d' rear of d' sucker an' waits.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's not for long. D' leather's still in his inside keck, 'cause I can
- see him pressin' on it wit' his mit to make sure it's there. At last he
- gets up to go to d' watercooler. I sees d' move comin', an' is in d' aisle
- before him. So's me stalls. From start to finish no one bungles d' stunt.
- There's a tangle&mdash;all be accident, of course&mdash;every mug
- 'pologises, we break away, an' I've got d' blunt. But d' woist part is, I
- can't weed it. D' stuff won't come no other way, an' so I lifts leather
- an' all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's due to be a roar in no time;&mdash;this mark's bound to be on
- he's frisked!&mdash;so I splits out each stall's bit in a hurry an' says:
- 'Every gent for himself! an' if youse is nipped, don't knock!' an' then I
- sherries me nibs for d' rear coach. It was great graft. Me bit was $9,000,
- an' I has me plan all set up to save it an' meself wit' it. This is d'
- racket I has in me cocoa.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In d' last coach is an old w'ite choker&mdash;a pulpit t'umper, you
- understand. Wit' him is his daughter, an' wit' her is her kid. Mebby d'
- kid, say, is six years. I heads for 'em an' begins to give d' old skate a
- jolly. I was dead strong on patter in them days, an' puts it up I'm a
- gospel sharp from Hamilton. I saws it off on his nibs how me choich boins
- down, an' how I'm linin' out to New York to see if d' good folks down
- there won't spring their rolls&mdash;cough up be way of donations, you
- understand, an' help us slam up a new box&mdash;choich, I means&mdash;so
- we can go back to our graft.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all right. Me razzle dazzle takes like spring water. In two minutes
- me an 'd' old party an 'd' loidy, an' for that matter d' kid, is t'ick as
- t'ieves. We was bunched together, singin' 'Jesus, Lover of me Soul,' to
- beat four of a kind, when d' galoot I skins for his bundle lifts d' shout
- he's been done, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This dub who lose is t'ree coaches ahead. D' foist we knows of his
- troubles&mdash;all but me&mdash;d' Con' comes an' locks d' door. No one
- can get off d' train. Then he stops an' taps d' wires wit' a machine from
- d' baggage car an' sends d' story chasin' into New York.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Party t'run down for $36,000, says d' message; 'swag an' crooks still on
- me train. Send orders.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' order comes to keep d' doors locked an' run to New York wit' no more
- stops. An' after puttin' a Brakey in each coach to see what goes on,
- that's what dey does. We go spinnin' into New York at forty-five miles an
- hour.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naturally, I'm in a steam. I goes all right wit 'd' Con', an' d' train
- crew, as a sky pilot, but how was I to make d' riffle wit' de fly cop of
- New York, who'd be waitin' for d' train&mdash;me mug in d' gallery, an'
- four out o' five of 'em twiggin' me be me foist name? But I t'ought it
- out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When d' train rumbles into d' Gran' Central, d' door is slammed open an'
- we all gets up to go. A fly-cop is comin' in just as we starts. I grabs up
- d' kid to carry him, see! bein' d' old preacher party nor d' skirt ain't
- so able as me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! it was a winner. I buries me map in d' kid's make-up, gets between
- d' goil an' d' old stumblin' mucker of a gran'dad, an' walks slap t'rough
- d' entire day-push of d' Central office. An' hard, sharp marks dey is to
- beat, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fly dey is, but not swift enough for Matches wit a scare on, see! Not a
- dub of 'em tumbles to me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In two moves an' ten seconts I'm in d' street. As I goes along I pulls a
- ring off one of me north hooks wit' me teet,' an' t'oins it over to d' kid
- as his bit for makin' d' good front for me. No; d' others don't catch on,
- but d' way he cinches it in his small mit shows me he's goin' to save it
- out for fair.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I hits d' street I drops d' youngone, who's still froze to his
- solitaire, an' grabs off a cab, an' in twenty minutes I'm buried where all
- d' p'lice in New York couldn't toin me up in a t'ousand years.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; me pals got d' collar, an' each does a stretch. But dey lays dead
- about me; never peached nor squealed. I win out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who?&mdash;d' w'ite choker an' his party? Nit; never hears of 'em ag'in.
- For four days I gets one of d' fam'ly&mdash;he's a crook who's under cover
- for a bank trick, an' who's eddicted&mdash;to read me all d' poipers. I
- wants to see if d' preacher an' his goil gives up anyt'ing about d' ring I
- swaps to d' kid.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never hears a peep! Nixie; dey was on all right, you bet your life! when
- their lamps lights on that jewelry; but most likely dey needs d' ring in
- their graft. It was a spark wort' five hundred cases from any fence in d'
- land, an' so d' old guy an' his goil sort o' stan's for d' play, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0071" id="link2H_4_0071"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE FATAL KEY
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>oung Jenkins
- prided himself on sharp eyes. He said he could &ldquo;give a hawk cards and
- spades.&rdquo; He could find four-leaf clovers where no one else could see them.
- He took in the smallest detail of the scenery all about him.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a result, young Jenkins was a great finder of small trifles, and that
- he might miss nothing, lost, strayed or stolen, he went about during the
- little journeys of the day, with his eyes searching the ground. And he
- picked up many trinkets of a personal sort that other men had lost.
- Nothing of much value, perhaps, but it served to please young Jenkins, and
- it gave him a chance to boast of the sharp, devouring character of his
- eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Even as a child, young Jenkins was prone to find things. He told how once
- his talents as a retriever made him the subject of parental suspicion. He
- was ten years old when he picked up a four-blade Barlow knife.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where did you get it?&rdquo; queried old Jenkins, as young Jenkins displayed
- his treasure trove.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Found it,&rdquo; was the reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you found it!&rdquo; snorted old Jenkins. &ldquo;Well, take it straight back, and
- put it where you found it, and don't 'find' any more. If you do, I'll lick
- you out of your knickerbockers!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In spite of such discouragement, young Jenkins kept on finding all sorts
- of bric-à-brac. He does even to this day.
- </p>
- <p>
- One evening young Jenkins had a disagreeable adventure, as the fruit of
- his talent, which for an hour or so made him wish he had weaker vision.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was on Great Jones Street, and young Jenkins, hurrying along, noticed
- in the half moonlight a big store key, where the owner had dropped it just
- after locking up for the night. The hour was full midnight.
- </p>
- <p>
- Young Jenkins possessed himself of the key. He looked at it as he held it
- in his hand, and wondered how the careless shopman would open up in the
- morning without it.
- </p>
- <p>
- From where it lay it wasn't hard to infer the store to which the key
- belonged. Yet to make sure on that point it occurred to young Jenkins that
- he might better try the lock with it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Young Jenkins had just fitted the big key to the lock when some one seized
- him by the wrist. It startled him so that he dropped the key and allowed
- it to go rattling along the sidewalk. As young Jenkins looked up he saw
- that the party who had got him was a member of the police.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was trying to unlock the door!&rdquo; stammered young Jenkins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I saw what you were about,&rdquo; said the officer with suspicious severity.
- &ldquo;What were you monkeying with the door for? You aren't the owner of this
- store?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; said young Jenkins, much impressed. &ldquo;No, sir; I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nor one of the clerks?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; replied young Jenkins again, &ldquo;I have nothing to do with the
- store. I found the key, and thought I'd see if it opened this door.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did you want to see if it would open the door for? Don't you think
- it is a little late for a joke of that sort?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It wasn't a joke,&rdquo; said young Jenkins, beginning to perspire rather
- copiously; &ldquo;it was an experiment. I found the key on the sidewalk, and
- wanted to see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; interrupted the blue coat with a fine scorn; &ldquo;you wanted to see if
- you could get into the store and rob it bare. That is what you wanted to
- see. You're a box-worker, if ever I met one, and if I hadn't come along
- you would have had this bin cracked and cleaned out in another ten
- minutes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I told you I found the key,&rdquo; protested young Jenkins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right about your finding the key!&rdquo; said the policeman in
- supreme contempt. &ldquo;You found the key and I found you, and we'll both keep
- what we've found. That's square, ain't it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And in spite of all young Jenkins could say at that late hour of the
- twenty-four, the faithful officer dragged him to the station, where a
- faithful sergeant faithfully registered him, and a faithful turnkey locked
- him faithfully up.
- </p>
- <p>
- As young Jenkins sat unhappy in his cell, while vermin sparred with him
- for an opening, he registered a vow that never again would he find
- anything.
- </p>
- <p>
- Young Jenkins wouldn't pick up a twenty-dollar gold piece were he to meet
- one to-day in the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0072" id="link2H_4_0072"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- AN OCEAN ERROR
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>o; neither my name
- nor the name of my vessel can I give. Our navy has a way of
- courtmartialing its officers who wax garrulous.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was just as the Lieutenant called for the <i>creme de menthe</i>, that
- may properly succeed a dinner well ordered and well stowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you are welcome to the raw facts,&rdquo; continued the Lieutenant. &ldquo;It was
- during those anxious days that went before the penning in of Cervera at
- Santiago. We had been ordered on a ticklish service. Schley was over south
- of the island on a prowl for the Spanish fleet. Sampson was, or should
- have been, off the Windward Passage similarly employed. Cervera was last
- heard of two weeks before at Barbadoes. Then he disappeared like a ghost;
- no one knew where his smoke would be sighted next. The one sure thing, of
- which all were aware, was that with Sampson anywhere between the Mole and
- Cape Mazie, and Schley searching the wide seas south of Cuba, Cervera
- might easily with little luck and less seamanship dodge either and appear
- off Havana. There the cardboard fleet left on blockade wouldn't, with such
- heavy odds, last as long as a drink of whiskey.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It stood thus when our orders came to my Captain to proceed to Bayou
- Hondu, some seventy miles west of Havana, and there stand off and on, like
- a policeman walking his beat, in what would be the path of Cervera should
- he work to the rear of Schley and to the north of Cuba by the way of St.
- Antonio.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Our vessel was detailed on this duty because of her perfect order and
- speed of seventeen knots. Our heavy armament was eight 4-inch broadside
- guns, with a 6-inch rifle forward and another mounted aft. Our orders
- were: If Cervera came upon us to fight!&mdash;steam as slowly as might be
- for Havana and fight!&mdash;and to keep fighting until sunk or sure that
- the block-aders off Havana were warned, whether by our signals or our
- racket, of Cervera's coming.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was a grinding task, this lonely patrol off Bayou Hondu. The rains had
- just begun, the weather was a dripping hash of fog and squall and rain. If
- Cervera didn't come, it meant discomfort; and if he did, it meant death.
- Take it full and by, the outlook was depressing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At night no light burned and the ship was dark as a coffin. This, with
- the service, contributed to keep us all in a mood of alert nervousness.
- Cervera's ships would also be dark. We didn't care to be crept upon, and
- get our first notice of his advent from the broadside that sent us to the
- bottom like an anvil.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We had been on this dreary duty some ten days. It was a dark, heavy
- night. I myself had the bridge, and the captain, whose anxiety kept him
- up, was seated in the starboard corner, dozing. His sea cloak was thrown
- over his head to keep out the weather. We were working to the eastward,
- with engines at quarter speed, and with a head sea running, were making
- perhaps three knots.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The ship's bells were not being struck for the hours, and I had just
- looked at my watch by the light of the binnacle. It was half-past two in
- the morning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'How's your head?' I asked of the man at the wheel, as I put up my
- timepiece.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'East by south, half south,' he replied.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This was taking us too much inshore. 'Starboard for a point!' I said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I turned from the wheel I saw that which sent a thrill over me and
- brought me up all standing. It was the murky loom of a great ship, black
- and dim and dark and silent as ourselves. She was off our port quarter and
- not five hundred yards away. It gave me a start, I confess. None of our
- ships should be that far to the west of Havana. It was a sword to a sheath
- knife she was one of Cervera's advance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Instantly I reached for the electric button; and instantly the red and
- white lights, which stood for the letter of that night, burned in our
- semaphore. The stranger replied with a red over two white lights. It was
- the wrong letter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;With my first motion, the captain was on his feet; his hand gripped the
- lever that worked the engine bells.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Try her again!' he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Again I flashed the proper letter, and again came a queer reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The next moment the captain jammed the lever 'Full steam, ahead!' and a
- general call to quarters went singing through the ship.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Starboard!' shouted the captain to the man at the wheel; 'starboard!
- pull her over!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There was a vast churning from the propellers; the vessel leaped forward
- like a horse; the sailor climbed the wheel like a squirrel. We surged
- forward with a broad sheer to port. The next instant we opened on our dark
- visitor with every gun in the larboard battery. It wasn't ten seconds
- after she gave us the wrong signal when she got our broadside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The result was amazing. With the first crash of our guns the stranger
- went from utter darkness to the extreme of light. She flashed out all over
- like a Fall River steamer. Knowing who we were&mdash;for they bore orders
- for us&mdash;and realizing that there had been some mixing of signals, the
- officer on her bridge had the wit to turn on every light in his ship. It
- was an inspiration and saved them from a second broadside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who was she? One of our own vessels. Cervera was locked in Santiago and
- she had come up to tell us the news. Her officer blundered in giving out
- the wrong letter for the night, and thereby sowed the seed of our
- misunderstanding.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, beyond peppering her a bit, our fire did no harm. We were so close
- that most of our shot went over her. Still, I don't believe that vessel
- will ever get her signals fouled again. And it's just as well that way. If
- she had made the wrong talk to some one of our heavy-weights, the Oregon,
- for instance, she would have gone down like so much pig-iron.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0073" id="link2H_4_0073"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- SKINNY MIKE'S UNWISDOM
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">C</span>HUCKY was posed in
- his usual corner. As I came in he nodded sullenly as one whom the Fates
- ill-use. I craved of Chucky to name his drink; it was the surest way to
- thaw him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Make it beer,&rdquo; said Chucky.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now beer stood as a symbol of gloom with Chucky, as he himself had told
- me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's always d' way wit' me,&rdquo; said Chucky on that far occasion when he
- explained &ldquo;Beer&rdquo;, &ldquo;when I'm dead sore an' been gettin' it in d' neck, to
- order beer. It's d' sorrowfulest kind of booze, beer is; there's a sob in
- every bottle of it, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Realising Chucky's low spirits by virtue of present beer, I suavely made
- query of his unknown grief and tendered sympathy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've been done for me dough,&rdquo; replied Chucky, softening sulkily. &ldquo;You
- minds d' races at d' Springs? That's it; I gets t'run down be d' horses. I
- get d' gaff for fifty plunks. Now, fifty plunks ain't all d' money in d'
- woild; but it was wit' me. It was me fortune.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Chucky ruminated bitterly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I'm a good t'ing!&rdquo; he ejaculated, as he tilted his chair against the
- wall with an air of decision. &ldquo;I'll play d' jumpers agin, nit!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'at's d' use? I can't beat nothin'. Say! I couldn't beat a drum! I'm a
- mut to ever t'ink of it! I ought to give meself up to d' p'lice right now
- an' ast 'em to put me in Bloomin'dale or some other bug house. I'm nutty,
- that's what I am; an' that's for fair! Now, I'd as lief tell you. It's d'
- boss hard luck story, an' that ain't no vision!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In d' foist place, I was a rank sucker to d' point of deemin' meself a
- wise guy about d' horses. An' it so follows, bein' stuck on meself about
- horses, as I says, that when Skinny Mike blows in wit 'd' idee that he can
- pick d' winner of d' big event, I falls to d' play, an easy mark.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mike is an oldtime tout; an' wit' me feelin', as I says, dead fly, it
- ain't a minute before I'm addin' me ignorance to Mike's, an' we're runnin'
- over d' dopes in d' papers seein' what d' horses has done. To make a long
- story short, we settles it for a finish that War Song's out to win. Which,
- after all, ain't such a sucker t'eory.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'It's a cinch!' says Skinny Mike; 'War Song's got a pushover. Dey can't
- beat him; never in a t'ousand years!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It looks a sure tip to me, too; so I digs for me last dollar an' hocks me
- ticker besides, an' makes up d' fifty plunks I mentions. Mike sticks in
- fifty an' then takes d' whole roll an' screws his nut for d' Springs to
- get it up on War Song. Naw; I don't go. Mike's plenty to make d' play; an'
- besides I had me lamps on a sure t'ing for a tenner over on d' Bowery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, while Mike's gone, I ain't doin' a t'ing but read d' poipers
- all to pieces. War Song's a 20-to-1 shot; I stan's to make a killin'&mdash;stan's
- to win a t'ousand plunks, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An', say! War Song win! Mebby I don't give d' yell of d' year when I sees
- it in d' print.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'W'at's eatin' youse, Chucky?' says me Rag, as I cuts loose me warwhoop.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'O, I ain't got no nut!' I says, givin' meself d' gran' jolly. 'No! not
- at all! I has to ast some mark to tell me me name, I don't t'ink! I'm
- cooney enough to get onto War Song, all d' same! Say! I'm d' soonest
- galoot that ever comes down d' pike!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' way I feels an' that's d' way I chins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At last I cools off me dampers an' sets in to wait for Mike. Meanwhile I
- begins to figger how I'll blow d' stuff, see! an' settle what I'll buy.
- It's a case of money to boin an' I was gettin' me matches ready before
- even Mike shows up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Mike don't come. 'W'at th' 'ell!' I t'inks; 'Mike ain't crookt it; he
- ain't skipped wit' d' bundle?' An' say! you should a-seen me chew d' rag
- at d' idee.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I'm wrong on me lead. Mike hadn't welched, an' he hadn't been
- sandbagged. He comes creepin' along a day behint d' play, an' d' secont I
- gets me lamps on his mug I'm dead on we lose. I don't have to have me
- fortune told to tumble to that. Mike looks like five cents wort' of lard
- in a paper bag. An* here's d' song he sings.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mike says he goes to d' Springs all right, all right, an' is organised to
- get War Song for d' limit d' nex' day. It's that night, out be d' stables,
- when he chases up on a horsescraper&mdash;a sawed-off coon, he is&mdash;an
- 'd' horse-scraper breaks off a great yarn on Mike.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I ain't no tout, an' dis ain't no tip,' Mike says d' coon says; 'it's a
- rev'lation. On d' dead! it's a prophecy! It's las' night. I'm sleepin' in
- d' stall nex' to a little horse named Dancer. All at onct I wakes up an'
- listens. It's that Dancer horse in d' nex' stall talkin' to himself. Over
- an' over agin he says: &ldquo;I'm goin' to win it! I'm goin' to win it!&rdquo; just
- like that.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; continued Chucky, &ldquo;you know Skinny Mike. There's a ghost goes wit'
- Mike, an' he's that sooperstitious, d' nigger's story has him on a string
- in a hully secont. He can't shake it off. Away he wanders an' dumps d'
- entire wad on Dancer, an' never puts a splinter on War Song at all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'at do you t'ink of it? On d' level! w'at d' youse really t'ink of it?
- That Mike's a woild-beater; that's right; a woild-beater an' a wonder to
- boot! I'd like to trade him for a yaller dawg, an' do d' dawg!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did Dancer win?&rdquo; I asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did Dancer win?&rdquo; repeated Chucky; and his tones breathed guttural scorn;
- &ldquo;d' old skate never even finished. Naw; he gets 'round on d' back stretch,
- stops, bites d' boy off his back, chases over be d' fence an' goes to
- eatin' grass; that's what Dancer does. He's a dandy race horse, or I don't
- want a cent! I'll bet me mudder-in-law on that Dancer some day. I tells
- Mike to take a run an' jump on himself. Naw,&rdquo; concluded Chucky, with a
- great gulp, &ldquo;Dancer don't win; War Song win.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0074" id="link2H_4_0074"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- MOLLIE PRESCOTT
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Wolfville)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he Cactus&rdquo; was the
- name bestowed upon her in Wolfville. Her signature, if she had written it,
- would probably have been Mollie Prescott, at least such was the
- declaration of Cherokee Hall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I sees this yere lady a year ago in Tombstone,&rdquo; asserted that veracious
- chronicler, &ldquo;where she cooks at the stage station; an' she gives it out
- she's Prescott&mdash;Mollie Prescott&mdash;an' most likely she knows her
- name, an' knows it a year ago.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Cherokee was a historian of known firmness of statement, no one cared
- to challenge either his facts or his conclusions. The true name of &ldquo;The
- Cactus&rdquo; was accepted by the Wolfville public as Prescott.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; was personable, and her advent into Wolfville society caused
- something of a flutter. Her mission was to cook, and in the fulfilment of
- her destiny she presided over the range at the stage station.
- </p>
- <p>
- Being publicly hailed as &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; seemed in no wise to depress her. It
- was even possible she took a secret glow over an epithet, meant by the
- critical taste awarding it, to illustrate those thorns in her nature which
- repelled and held in check the amorous male of Wolfville.
- </p>
- <p>
- Women were not frequent in Wolfville, and on her coming, &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; had
- many admirers. Every man in camp loved her the moment she stepped from the
- Tucson stage; that is, every man save Cherokee Hall. That scientist, given
- wholly to faro as a philosophy, had no time&mdash;in a day before he met
- Faro Nell&mdash;for so dulcet an affair as love. Also Cherokee had
- scruples born of his business.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Life behind a deal box is a mighty sight too fantastic,&rdquo; observed the
- thoughtful Cherokee, &ldquo;for a fam'ly. It does well enough for
- single-footers, which it don't make much difference with when some gent
- they've mortified an' hurt, pulls his six-shooter an' sends them lopin'
- home to heaven all spraddled out. But a lady ain't got no business with a
- sport who turns kyards as a pursoot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As time unfurled, the train of lovers to sigh on the daily trail of &ldquo;The
- Cactus&rdquo; dwindled. There were those who grew dispirited.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm clean-strain enough,&rdquo; said Dan Boggs, in apologetic description of
- his failure to persevere, &ldquo;but I knows when I've got through. I'll play a
- game to a finish, but when it's down to the turn an' my last chip's gone
- over to the dealer, why! I shoves my chair back an' quits. An' it's about
- that a-way of an' concernin' my yearnin's for this yere Cactus girl. I
- jest can't get her none, an' that settles it. I now drops out an' gives up
- my seat complete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whatever!&rdquo; said Texas Thompson, who was an interested listener to
- the defeated Boggs, &ldquo;an' you can gamble I'm with you on them views! Seein'
- as how my wife in Laredo gets herse'f that divorce, I turns in an' loves
- this Cactus person myse'f to a frightful degree. Thar's times I simply
- goes about sobbin' them sentiments publicly. But yere awhile back I comes
- wanderin' 'round her kitchen, an' bing! arrives a skillet at my head. That
- lets me out! You bet! I don't pursoo them explorations 'round her no more.
- I has exper'ence with one, an' I don't aim to get any lariat onto a second
- female who is that callous as to go a-chunkin' of kitchen bric-a-brac at a
- heart which is merely pinin' for her smiles.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There were two at the shrine of &ldquo;The Cactus,&rdquo; who were known to Wolfville,
- respectively, as Cottonwood Wasson and Cape Jinks. These were
- distinguished for the ardour wherewith they made siege to the affection of
- &ldquo;The Cactus,&rdquo; and the energy of their demands for her capitulation.
- </p>
- <p>
- That virgin, however, paid neither heed to their court, nor took an
- interest in the comment of onlook-ing Wolfville. She pursued her path in
- life, even and unmoved. She set her tables, washed her dishes, and
- perfected her daily beefsteaks by the ingenious process, popular in the
- Southwest, of burning them on the griddles of the range, and all with a
- composure bordering hard on the stolid.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All I'm afraid of,&rdquo; said Old Man Enright, the head of the local vigilance
- committee, &ldquo;is that some of these yere young bucks'll take to pawin'
- 'round for trouble with each other. As the upshot of sech doin's would
- most likely be the stringin' of the survivors by the committee, nuptials,
- which now looks plenty feasible, would be plumb busted an' alienated, an'
- the camp get a setback it would be hard to rally from. I wishes this
- maiden would tip her hand to some discreet gent, so a play could be made
- in advance to get the wrong parties over to Tucson or some'ers. Whatever
- do you think yourse'f, Cherokee?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a delicate deal,&rdquo; replied that philosopher, &ldquo;to go tamperin' 'round
- a lady for the secret of her soul. But I shorely deems the occasion a
- crisis, an* public interest demands somethin' is done. I wish Doc Peets
- was yere; he knows these skirted cattle like I does an ace. But Peets
- won't be back for a month; pendin' of which, onless we-alls interferes,
- it's my jedgment some of this yere amorousness 'll come off in the smoke.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar ought to be statoots,&rdquo; observed Texas Thompson, with a fine air of
- wisdom, &ldquo;ag'in love-makin' in the far West. The East should be kept for
- sech purposes speshul; same as reservations for Injuns. The Western
- climate's too exyooberant for love.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;S'pose me an' you an' Thompson yere goes to this young person, an' all
- p'lite an' congenial like, we ups an' asks her intentions?&rdquo; remarked
- Enright. This was offered to Cherokee.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excuse me, pards!&rdquo; said Texas Thompson with eagerness, &ldquo;but I don't
- reckon I wants kyards in this at all. 'The Cactus' is a mighty fine young
- bein', but you-alls recalls as how I've been ha'ntin' 'round her somewhat
- in the past myse'f. For which reason, with others, she might take my
- comin' on sech errants derisive, an' bust me over the forehead with a
- dipper, or some sech objectionable play. I allows I better keep out of
- this embroglio a whole lot. I ain't aiming to shirk nothin', but it'll be
- a heap more shore to win.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thompson ain't onlikely to be plenty right about this,&rdquo; said Cherokee,
- &ldquo;an' I reckons, Enright, we-alls better take this trick ourse'ves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The mission was not a success. When the worthy pair of peace-preservers
- appeared in the presence of &ldquo;The Cactus,&rdquo; and made the inquiries noted,
- the scorn of that damsel was excited beyond the power of words to
- describe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What be you-alls doin' in my kitchen?&rdquo; she cried, her face a-flush with
- rage and noonday cookery. &ldquo;Who sends you-alls curvin' over to me, a-makin'
- of them insultin' bluffs? I demands to know!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' yere,&rdquo; said Cherokee Hall, relating the exploit in the Red Light
- immediately thereafter, &ldquo;she stamps her foot like a buck antelope, an'
- lets fly a stovelifter at us; an' all with a proud, high air, which
- reminds me a mighty sight of a goddess.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the time, it would seem, the duo attempted to show popular cause for
- their presence, and made an effort to point out to &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; the crying
- public need of some decision on her part.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You-all don't want the young male persons of this village to take to
- shootin' of each other all up none, do you?&rdquo; asked Enright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wants you two beasts to get outen my kitchen!&rdquo; replied &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo;
- vigorously; &ldquo;an' I wants you to move some hurried, too. Don't never let me
- find your moccasin tracks 'round yere no more, or I'll turn in an' mark
- you up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0014" id="linkimage-0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0287.jpg" alt="0287 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0287.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yere, you!&rdquo; she continued as the ambassadors were about to leave,
- something cast down by the conference; &ldquo;you-alls can tell the folks of
- this town, that if they're idiots enough to go makin' a gun play over me,
- to make it. They has shore pestered me enough!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I don't wonder none at Thompson bein' reluctant an' doobious about
- seein' this Cactus lady,&rdquo; said Enright, as the two walked away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's some fiery, an' that's a fact!&rdquo; observed Cherokee in assent.
- </p>
- <p>
- The result of the talk with &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; found its way about Wolfville,
- and in less than an hour bore its hateful fruit. The peaceful quiet of the
- Red Light, which, as a rule, was wounded by no harsher notes than the
- flutter of a stack of chips, was rudely broken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gents who ain't interested, better hunt a lower limb!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the voice of Cottonwood Wasson. The trained instincts of Wolfville
- at once grasped the trouble, and proceeded to hide its many heads behind
- barrels, tables, counters, and anything which promised refuge from the
- bullets.
- </p>
- <p>
- All but one; Cape Jinks. He knew it meant him the moment Cottonwood Wasson
- uttered the first syllable, and his pistol came bluntly to the fore
- without a word. His rival's was already there, and the shooting set in
- like a hailstorm. As a result, Cottonwood Wasson received an injury that
- crippled his arm for days, while Cape Jinks was picked up with a hole in
- his side, which even the sanguine sentiment of Wolfville, inclined to a
- hardy optimism at all times, called dangerous.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well!&rdquo; said Old Man Enright, drawing a deep, troubled breath, after the
- duellists were cared for at the O. K. House, &ldquo;yere we be ag'in an' nothin'
- settled! Thar's all this shootin', an' this blood-lettin', an' the camp
- gets all torn up; an' thar's as many of these people now as thar is
- before, an' most likely the whole deal to go over ag'in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shore 'bominates things a-splittin' even that a-way!&rdquo; said Cherokee.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day a new face was given the affair when &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; was
- observed, clothed in her best frock and with two violent red roses in her
- straw hat, to take the stage for Tucson. The stage company reported, in
- deference to the excited state of the Wolfville mind, that &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo;
- would return in a week.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Goin' for her weddin' trowsoo, most likely,&rdquo; said Dan Boggs, as he gazed
- after the stage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let's drink to the hope she wins out a red dress!&rdquo; remarked Texas
- Thompson. &ldquo;Set up the bottles, bar-keep, an' don't let no gent pass up the
- play. Which red is my fav'rite colour!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No one seemed to know the intentions of &ldquo;The Cactus.&rdquo; The shooting would
- appear to have in nowise disturbed her. That may have been her obdurate
- heart, or it may have come from a familiarity with the evanescent tenure
- of human life, born of her years on the border. Be that as one will, she
- expressed not the least concern touching her brace of wounded lovers, and
- took the stage without saying good-bye to any one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' some fools say women is talkers!&rdquo; remarked Jack Moore, the Marshal,
- in high disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three days later Old Monte, the stage driver, came in with thrilling news.
- &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; had wedded a man in Tucson, and would bring him to Wolfville
- in a week.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I first hears of it,&rdquo; went on Old Monte with a groan, &ldquo;an' when I
- thinks of them two pore boys a-layin' in Wolfville, an' their claims bein'
- raffled off in that heartless way, I shore thinks I'll take my Winchester
- an' stop them marriage rites if I has to crease the preacher. But, pards,
- the Tucson marshal wouldn't have it. He stan's me off. So she nails him;
- an' the barkeep at the Oriental Saloon tells me over thar, how she's been
- organisin' to wed this yere prairie dog before she ever hops into
- Wolfville at all. I sees him afterwards; an', gents! for looks, he don't
- break even with horned toads!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar you be!&rdquo; said Enright, making a deprecatory gesture, &ldquo;another case
- of woman, lovely woman! However, even if this Cactus lady has done rung in
- a cold hand onto us, we must still prance 'round an' show her a good time
- when she trails in with her prey. Where the honour of the camp is
- concerned, we whoops it up! Of course the Cactus don't please us none with
- this deal; but most likely she pleases herse'f, which, after all, is the
- next best thing. Gents,&rdquo; concluded Enright, after a pause, &ldquo;the return of
- the new couple will be the signal of a general upheaval in their honour.
- It's to be hoped our young friends, Cottonwood an' Jinks, will by then be
- healthful enough to participate tharin. Barkeep! the liquor, please! Boys,
- the limit's off; wherefore drink hearty!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I has preemonitions from the first, this yere Cactus female is a
- brace game,&rdquo; remarked Texas Thompson, as he filled his glass; &ldquo;that's
- whatever!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh! I don't know!&rdquo; replied Cherokee Hall thoughtfully. &ldquo;She has her right
- to place her bets to please herse'f, an' win or lose, this camp should be
- proud to turn for her. Wolfville can't always make a killin'&mdash;can't
- always be on velvet; but as long as the Cactus an' her victim pitches camp
- yere, Wolfville can call herse'f ahead on the deal. I sees no room for
- cavil, an' I yereby freights my glass to the Cactus an' the shorthorn
- she's tied down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0075" id="link2H_4_0075"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- ANNA MARIE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>nna Marie was to
- be a new woman. She had decided that for herself. In the carrying out of
- her destinies, Anna Marie had cut her hair short. She also made a
- specialty of very mannish costumes, and, outwardly, at least, became as
- virile as a woman might be with a make-up the basis of which was bound to
- be a skirt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie was motherless, and at the age of nineteen, when she determined
- to become a new woman, had no advice save her father's to depend on. When
- she discussed an adoption of broader and more masculine methods on her
- girlish part with her father, the old gentleman looked puzzled, and said:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, my dear! I have great confidence in your judgment. There is nothing
- like experience, so go ahead. You will find, however, before you have gone
- far, that you labour under many structural defects. The great Architect
- didn't lay you out for a man, Anna Marie; you were not intended for such a
- fate.&rdquo; However, Anna Marie kept on. She was looking for a fuller liberty
- and a wider field. She was too delicately and too accurately determined in
- her tastes to be a fool to cigarettes, or swept down in a current of
- profanity. Bad language she would leave to the real man; in her career as
- a new woman nothing so vigorous was needed.
- </p>
- <p>
- But men did other things, had other freedoms; and from that long male list
- of liberties Anna Marie proceeded to pick out a line of freedom for
- herself. She had had enough of that pent-up Utica which confines the
- conventional woman. What she wanted was more room: that is, of proper,
- decorous sort.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course, as Anna Marie proceeded up the long trail of masculinity, it
- was noted by critics that she still continued essentially feminine as to
- many common male accomplishments. She could not throw a stone, except in
- that vague, pawey, overhand fashion usual with ladies, and which confers
- on the missile neither direction nor force. And when Anna Marie essayed to
- run, she still put everybody in mind of a cow trying to keep an
- engagement.
- </p>
- <p>
- While others noted those solemn truths, Anna Marie did not. She thought
- she was making strenuous progress, and combed her short hair as a man
- combs his, and walked with long, decided stride.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie rode a bike, and decided to don bloomers for this ceremony. She
- came to the bloomer decision hesitatingly, but made up her mind at last.
- Secretly she regarded bloomers as the Rubicon. It was bloomers which
- flowed between herself and the new woman in full standing; and once Anna
- Marie had broken on the world in this ill-considered costume, she would
- feel herself graduated, and no longer at school to Destiny. Therefore,
- there dawned a day when Anna Marie came down the avenue on her bike,
- be-bloomered to heart's content. She had made the plunge; the Rubicon was
- crossed, and Anna Marie felt now like a female Cæsar who must conquer or
- die.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the bike-bloomer occasion Anna Marie was weak enough to hurry. She put
- her unbridled steed to fullest speed, and flashed by the onlookers like
- unto some sweet meteor. She blamed herself afterward for being such a
- craven, but concluded that by sticking to her bloomers she would acquire
- heart and slacken speed in time.
- </p>
- <p>
- The worst feature about the bloomer business was that Anna Marie wotted
- not how hideous she looked. She did not know that a printer on his way to
- his case, caught a fleeting impression of her as she sped by, and that he
- at once &ldquo;put on a sub.,&rdquo; took a night off, and became dejectedly yet fully
- drunk. Nor did she wist that a nervous person was so affected by the awful
- tout ensemble of herself, bike, and bloomers that he repaired to
- Bloomingdale and sternly demanded admission as a right.
- </p>
- <p>
- No; Anna Marie rode all too frightened and too fast to reap these truths.
- Still, she might not have altered her system if she had known. For Anna
- Marie was resolute. Bent as Anna Marie was on her completion as a new
- woman, she resolved to inhabit bloomers and ride her two-wheeled vehicle
- even unto a grey old age. How else, indeed, could she be a new woman? A
- girl friend who had stood appalled at the vigour of Anna Marie asked her
- as to the bloomers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They are good things,&rdquo; observed Anna Marie. &ldquo;There's a comfort in
- bloomers which lurks not in the tangled wilderness of the ordinary skirt.
- Their fault is that in donning bloomers one does not put them on over
- one's head. It is a great defect. As it is, one never feels more than
- half-dressed.&rdquo; Anna Marie declared that the great want of the day was
- bloomers, through which one thrust one's arms and head in the process of
- harnessing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie had a brother George. This youth was twelve years of age.
- George was essentially masculine. Anna Marie could see that, and it came
- to her as a thought that in the course of becoming a new woman of fullest
- feather, a good, ripe method would be to study George. Should she do as
- George did, young though he was, she was sure to succeed. George would do
- from instinct what she must do by imitation. Anna Marie felt these things
- without really and definitely thinking them. It so fell out that, without
- telling George, Anna Marie began to take him as guide, philosopher and
- friend. And all without really knowing it herself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Unconsciously, George loved her all the better because of this, and, moved
- by a warm, ingenuous lack of years, began to take Anna Marie into his
- confidence like true comrade. Anna Marie encouraged his frankness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;George,&rdquo; said Anna Marie, one day, &ldquo;whenever you are about to do anything
- peculiarly boyish and interesting, always tell me, so that I may join you
- in your sport.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- George said he would, and he did.
- </p>
- <p>
- It so befell one day, as the fruit of this comradeship, that George
- changed the channel of Anna Marie's manly determination, and caused her to
- abandon the rôle of a new woman. This is the story, and it all taught Anna
- Marie, with the rush of a landslide, that, however industriously she might
- prune and train her habits to the trellis of the male, she would never be
- able to bring her nature to that state of icy, egotistical, cold-blooded
- hardihood absolutely necessary to the perfect man, and therefore
- indispensable to the new woman. But the story.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anna Marie,&rdquo; said George, coming on her one day, &ldquo;Anna Marie, me and
- Billy Sweet wants you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, George?&rdquo; asked Anna Marie.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're going to hang a dog out back of the barn,&rdquo; explained George. &ldquo;Me
- and Billy are to be the jury, and we want you for judge. Hurry up, now!
- that's a good fellow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie felt a shock at thought of taking the life of anything. Her
- first feeling was that George was a brute&mdash;a mere animal himself. But
- Anna Marie quickly reflected, that, whatever George might be, at least his
- hardened sex was the promontory the new woman must steer by. She put down
- the garment she was sewing and sought the scene of canine trial.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see, Anna Marie!&rdquo; explained George, pointing to a saffron-coloured
- dog, which stood with dolorous tail between his legs and looked very
- repentant, &ldquo;he murdered a kitten, and we are going to try to convict and
- hang him. You sit down there by the fence, and the trial won't take a
- minute. Billy and me have got our minds made up, and we won't take no time
- to decide. There's the rope, and we're going to hang him to the limb of
- that maple.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie felt worried. Still, she allowed herself to be installed, and
- the trial proceeded. It was very brief. George produced the defunct
- kitten,&mdash;which looked indeed, very dead,&mdash;with the remark, &ldquo;Say,
- you yellow dog! you're charged with murdering this cat; have you got
- anything to say against being hung?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The yellow cur feebly wagged his disreputable tail, and looked at Anna
- Marie in a fashion of sneaking appeal. He said as plain as words: &ldquo;Save
- me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wouldn't hang the poor thing, George,&rdquo; said Anna Marie, and she began
- to pat the felon yellow cur.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a great judge!&rdquo; remonstrated George, indignantly. &ldquo;It ain't for
- you to decide; it's for me and Billy. We are the jury, and in favour of
- hanging him, ain't we, Billy?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Billy nodded emphatically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, George,&rdquo; expostulated Anna Marie, &ldquo;it is so cruel! so brutal!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Brutal!&rdquo; scoffed George. &ldquo;Don't they hang folks for murder every day? You
- wear bloomers and talk of being a new woman and having the rights of a
- man! I have heard you with that Sanford girl! And now you come out here
- and try to talk off a yellow dog who is guilty of murder, and admits it by
- his silence! You would act nice if it was a real man and a real murder
- case! Come on, Billy; let's string him up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Here George seized on the cowering victim of lynch law, and started for
- the maple, where the rope already dangled for its prey. Anna Marie became
- utterly feminine at this, and burst into tears. Her nineteen years and her
- progress toward a new womanhood did not save her. In her distress she
- turned to the other member of the jury.
- </p>
- <p>
- Billy Sweet, at the age of thirteen, was an ardent admirer of George's
- sister, loved her dearly, if secretly, and meant to marry her in ten or
- fifteen years, when he grew up. At present he played with George and kept
- a loving eye on his future bride. Anna Marie knew of Billy's partiality,
- so she cunningly turned on this admirer, like a true daughter of the olden
- woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think as I do, don't you, Billy?&rdquo; And Anna Marie's tone had a caress
- in it which made Billy's ears a happy red.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, ma'am!&rdquo; said Billy.
- </p>
- <p>
- George was disgusted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are the kind of a juryman,&rdquo; said George, full of contempt, &ldquo;that
- makes me tired. There, Anna Marie, take your yellow dog, and don't try to
- play with me no more. You are too soft!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie felt that some vast deposit of good, hard sense lay hidden in
- George's last remark. On her way to the house she did a good deal of
- thinking, as girls whose mothers are dead do now and then. The development
- of her cogitations was told in a remark to her girl friend:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's so tiresome, this being a new woman! I am going to give it up. I am
- afraid, as father says, I am 'not built right.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And thus it ended. Marie is exceedingly the olden woman now. She has
- beaten her sword into a pruning-hook, her bike into a spinning-wheel! She
- no longer walks with long, decided stride. She is a woman in all things,
- and will scream and chase a street car as if it were the last going that
- way for a week, like the tenderest and frailest of her kind. She has
- retracted as to bloomers. Anna Marie has returned to the agency, and
- forever abandoned the warpath of a new and manly womanhood.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0076" id="link2H_4_0076"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE PETERSENS
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>HEN Chucky came
- into the little doggery where we were wont to converse, there arrived with
- him an emphatic odour of kerosene. Also Chucky's face was worn and sad,
- and his hands were muffled with many bandages. To add to it all Chucky was
- not in spirits.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the trouble?&rdquo; I asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've been havin 'd' run in' of our lives,&rdquo; replied Chucky, as he called
- to the barkeeper for his usual bracer, &ldquo;an' our tenement is just standin'
- on its nut right now, an' that's for straight!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell me about it,&rdquo; I urged.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' racket this time over to d' joint,&rdquo; said Chucky, &ldquo;is about a Swede
- skirt named Petersen who croaks herself be d' gas play last night. D'
- place is full of cops an' hobos an' all sorts of blokes, pipin' off d'
- play, while a corner mug is holdin' an inkwest over d' stiff, see! What
- you smells is d' coal oil on me mits. I soaks me hooks in it to take d'
- boin away. Me Rag gives me d' tip; an' say! it's a winner at that. D'
- boins ain't half so bad as dey was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I don't understand,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;How did you come to burn your hands?
- If the gas was burning, I don't see how the woman could have committed
- suicide.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Youse is gettin' away on d' wrong hoof,&rdquo; said Chucky. &ldquo;I don't boin me
- fins over d' Petersen moll croakin' herself. I cremates 'em puttin' out d'
- flames when d' Petersen kid takes fire d' day before. This inkwest which
- d' cor'oner guy is holdin' to-day, is d' secont one. He holds d' foist
- yesterday over d' kid.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On d' level! I don't catch on to d' need of inkwests anyhow. If a mark's
- dead, he's dead. It don't need no sawbones an' a mob of snoozers to be
- 'panelled for a jury, see! to put youse on. It looks to me like a dead
- case of shakin' down d' public for d' fees; these inkwests do, Cor'ners, I
- s'spose, has to have some excuse for livin', so when some poor duck
- croaks, dey comes chasin' 'round wit' a inkwest to see if he's surely done
- up, an' to put a bit of dough in their kecks. Well! I figgers it's law all
- right, all right, an' mebby it's d' proper caper. Anyhow, I passes it up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What about this Petersen push? Well, if ever a household strikes it hard,
- I'm here to say it's d' Petersens. When it comes to d' boss hard luck
- story, I'll place me bets wit' that outfit every time.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's two spaces back when this Petersen gang comes ashore at Ellis
- Island. There's t'ree of 'em; husband, wife, an' kid, see! Dey comes in as
- steerage, an' naturally, d' Ellis Island gezebos collars 'em an' t'rows
- 'em into hock d' moment dey hits d' pier. Nit; dey ain't arrested. But
- youse is on, how dey puts d' clamps to emigrants. Dey 'detains' 'em, as
- it's called.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Every mug who comes steerage has to spring his plant when he lands, an'
- if he ain't as strong as $30, dey&mdash;d' offishuls&mdash;don't do a
- t'ing but chase him back on d' nex' boat. He's a pauper, see! an' he gets
- d' razzle dazzle an 'd' gran' rinky dink. Back he goes where he hails
- from, like a bundle of old clothes. Paupers is barred at Ellis Island; dey
- don't go wit' these United States, not on your overshoes!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So d' Petersens is stood up, like I tells youse, at Ellis Island to see
- be dey tramps. It toins out, nit. Dey ain't paupers. Petersen has more'n
- enough money to get be d' gate, see! Petersen has a hundred an' fifty
- plunks, an' bein' there's only t'ree, it's plenty to go 'round an' show
- $30 for each.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Still them Ellis Island snoozers detains d' Petersens a week just d'
- same. D' place where dey stays is worse'n any holdover or station house
- I'm ever in; an', bein' d' weather's winter, an' this 'detention' pen is
- wet an' cold, Petersen himself cops off d' pneumonia an' out goes his
- light before ever he leaves Ellis Island at all. Dey plants him in d'
- graveyard dey has for emigrants, an 'd' wife an' kid comes over to d' city
- alone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' foist I knows of d' Petersens. D' mother an' kid takes a
- back-room in our tenement; an' after dey gets 'quainted, she tells me Rag
- about her man dyin'. She ain't so old, this Petersen woman, an' only she's
- all broke up about her man croakin', she ain't a bad looker, see! wit'
- blue eyes an' a mop of gold hair. D' kid's name is Hilda, an,' except
- she's only seven years an' no bigger'n a drink of whiskey, she's a ringer
- for her mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well! like I says, d' Petersens&mdash;what's left of 'em after d' man
- quits livin'&mdash;organised in d' back room on our floor. An' because
- folks who wants to chew must woik, d' Petersen woman gets a curve on an'
- goes to doin' stunts wit' a tub. She chases 'round doin' washin', see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's when d' old goil is away slingin' suds that I gets nex' wit 'd' kid.
- She's dropped her ragbaby down be a gratin' one day an' her heart is
- broke. She t'inks it's a cinch case of all over wit' d' poor ragbaby, an'
- she's cryin' to beat d' band.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But she gets it ag'in. Me an' a big fat cop who comes waddlin' along,
- tears up d' gratin' an' fishes out Hilda's doll, an' after that me an' her
- gets to be dead chummy; what youse might call * pals.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hilda's shy at foist, an' a bit leary of me&mdash;I ain't no bute at me
- best&mdash;but she gets used to seein' me about, an' as I stakes her to
- or'nges onct or twict, at last she gets stuck on me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' Petersens, an' me, an' me Rag is neighbours on d' same floor for near
- two years. An' days when I comes home early, an' me breat' ain't smellin'
- of booze&mdash;for d' kid welches every time she sniffs d' lush on me,
- see!&mdash;I used to go in an' kiss Hilda same as she's me own. An'
- between youse an' me,&rdquo; and here a drop gathered in Chucky's cold eye, &ldquo;I
- ain't above tippin' it off on d' quiet, I t'inks a heap of this young-one,
- an' feels better every time I gets me lamps on her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' finish comes t'ree days ago. D' old goil Petersen is away woikin', an'
- Hilda, for all it's so cold, is playin' in d' passage-way. There's one of
- them plumber hold-ups fixin 'd' water pipe where it's sprung a leak, an'
- he's got one of them dinky little fire pots which plumbers lug 'round wit'
- em.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;While this plumber stiff is busy wit' his graft, poor little Hilda t'inks
- she'll warm her dolly's mits be d' blaze. She's holdin' her ragbaby's
- hooks over d' plumber's fire as I comes up d' stairs; an' as she hears me
- foot, an' toins smilin' to make sure it's me, her frock catches, an' when
- she chases screechin' into me arms, she's a bundle of live flame. Say! I'd
- sooner ten to one it was me, an' that's no bluff!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wraps me coat over her, an' gives d' fire d' quick smother, see! An' I
- boins me dukes until it comes to bein' mighty near a case of stumps wit'
- Chucky d' balance of his joiney to d' tomb.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what th' 'ell! It all don't do no good. D' poor kid has swallered d'
- fire, an' she's d' deadest ever before even I takes her out of me coat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We lays Hilda out, me Rag an' me, on d' Petersens' bed; an' d' cor'ner
- sucker, as I says at d' be-ginnin', comes sprintin' over an' goes to
- holdin' his inkwests.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bimeby, d' mother gets home from her tubs, an' that's where d' hard play
- comes in. Me Rag tells her as easy as she can; but youse could see it was
- a centre shot all d' same. It soaked her where she lived.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Foist d' man, an' then d' baby!' says d' Petersen woman, as she sets on
- d' floor an' mourns; 'now I'll soon go hunt for 'em.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me Rag tries to get her to come in wit' us, but she won't stan' for it.
- All t'rough d' night we hears her mournin' an' groanin' on d' floor be d'
- side of little Hilda's coffin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' kid's fun'ral was yesterday, an' a pulpit sharp from one of d'
- Missions gets in on d' play, an' offishiates. Sure! it's a case of
- Potter's Field&mdash;for d' mother ain't got d' dough to make good for a
- grave&mdash;but me an' me Rag gets a car, an' takes d' mother out to see
- little Hilda planted. No, she don't cry much at that; but me Rag toins in
- an' don't do a t'ing but break d' record for tears. If Hilda was her own
- kid, she couldn't have made more of a row. When it comes to what youse
- might call 'd' outward evidences of grief,' me Rag simply lose d' Petersen
- mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' mother was feelin' it all d' same. She keeps whisperin' to herself:
- 'Soon I'll go find 'em!' like that; an' that's d' limit of what youse
- could get out of her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's last night, after little Hilda's put away,&mdash;it's mebby, say,
- t'ree this mornin', when wit'out a woid of warnin' me Rag sets up straight
- in bed an' gives a sniff.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Be d' mother of d' Holy Mary! it's gas!' she says, an' nex' she makes a
- straight wake for d' Petersen door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' me Rag guesses right d' very foist time, like d' kid in d' song. Gas
- it was; d' poor Petersen mother toins it on full blast. She's croaked an'
- cold as a wedge, hours before we tumbles to her game.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' finish. As I states d' foist dash out of d' box, it's d' dandy
- hard luck story of d' year. D' whole Petersen push is wiped out, same as
- that bar-keep would swab off his bar. On d' dead! it's all too many for
- me! What's d' use of folks bein' born at all, if dey's goin' to get yanked
- in like that&mdash;t'ree at a clatter, an' all young!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do dey have re-latiffs? Some in d' old country, I takes it. There's a
- note d' Petersen woman leaves for me Rag, astin' her to write d' hist'ry
- of d' last round an' wind-up to d' folks at home, an' givin' d' address.
- But me ownliest own says 'nit!' an* chucks d' note in d' stove.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Dey's better off not knowin',' says me Rag.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0077" id="link2H_4_0077"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- BOWLDER'S BURGLAR
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>owlder's wife and
- offspring were away at the time; and the time was a night last summer.
- Mrs. B. was in Long Branch, and Bowlder, left lonely and forlorn, to look
- after the house and earn money, was having a sad, bad time, indeed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not that Bowlder really lacked anything; but he missed his wife and little
- ones. Where before the merry prattle of his children made the racket of a
- boiler shop, all was solemn peace and hush. The Bowlder mansion was like a
- graveyard.
- </p>
- <p>
- Naturally Bowlder felt lonesome; and to avoid, as much as might be, having
- his loneliness thrust upon him by the empty desolation of the house, he
- made it a rule during his wife's absence not to go home until 3 o'clock A.
- M.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was &ldquo;dead on his legs&rdquo; by that time, as he expressed it, and went at
- once to sleep, before the absence of Mrs. B. began to prey upon him.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the night, or more properly morning, in question, Bowlder wended
- homeward at sharp 3. He had been missing Mrs. B. painfully all the
- evening, and, to uphold himself, subscribed to divers drinks. These last
- Bowlder put safely away within his belt, and they cherished him and taught
- him resignation, and he didn't miss his wife as much as he had.
- </p>
- <p>
- The hoary truth is that as Bowlder drew near his home, he had so far
- conquered his sense of abandonment that he wasn't even thinking of his
- wife. He was plodding along in the middle of the street for fear of
- footpads, whom he fancied might be sauntering in the shadows on either
- side, and was really in quite a happy, fortunate frame of mind. As Bowlder
- turned in toward his door he was softly repeating the lines:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent10">
- &ldquo;'Tis sweet to hear the watch dog's honest bark,
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Bay deep-mouthed welcome as we draw near home,
- </p>
- <p class="indent10">
- 'Tis sweet to know there is an eye will mark
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Our coming, and grow brighter when we come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Not that Bowlder had a watch dog, honest or otherwise, to bay him
- deep-mouthed welcome. And inasmuch as they had discharged the exile from
- Erin, who aforetime did service as the Bowlder maid-of-all-work, when Mrs.
- B. took flight for the summer, there was slight hope of an eye on the
- premises to grow brighter when he came.
- </p>
- <p>
- No; it was not that Bowlder was really looking for deep-mouthed bays or
- brightening eyes; he was naturally musical and poetical, and the drinks he
- had corralled had unlocked his nature in that behalf. Bowlder was reciting
- the lines quoted for the pleasure he drew from their beauty; not from the
- prophecy they put forth of any meeting to which he looked forward. A
- remark which escaped Bowlder as he climbed his steps and dexterously
- fitted his night key to the day keyhole showed this.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ought to have stayed at a hotel,&rdquo; said Bowlder. &ldquo;There's nobody here to
- rake me over the coals for it, and I'm going to have a great head on me
- when I wake up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder at last by mistake got his latchkey into the keyhole to which it
- related, and the door swung inward. This was a distinct success and
- Bowlder heaved a breath of relief. This door, which had grown singularly
- obdurate since Mrs. B.'s departure, had been known to hold Bowlder at bay
- for twenty minutes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder had just cast his hat on the hall floor&mdash;he intended to hang
- it up in the morning when he would have more time&mdash;and got as far on
- a journey to the second story as one step, when a noise in the basement
- dining-room enlisted Bowlder's attention. His curiosity rather than his
- fears was aroused; another happy effect of his libations.
- </p>
- <p>
- Without one thought of burglars, Bowlder deferred his journey upstairs,
- and repaired instead to the dining-room below. Bowlder would investigate
- the untoward noises which, while soft and light, were still of such volume
- as might tell upon the ear.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wonder 'f the houshe is haunted?&rdquo; observed Bowlder as he went deviously
- below.
- </p>
- <p>
- It has already been noted that Bowlder not once bethought him of burglars.
- In truth he had often scoffed at burglars while conversing with Mrs. B. on
- this subject so interesting to ladies. Bowlder had said that no burglar
- could make day wages robbing the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- It had all the thrill of perfect surprise then when, as Bowlder turned
- into his dining-room, he beheld a bull's-eye lantern shedding a malevolent
- stream of light in his face, and caught the shadowy outlines of a tall man
- behind it who seemed engaged in pointing a pistol at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold up your hands!&rdquo; said the tall man, &ldquo;and don't come a step further,
- or out goes your light!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0015" id="linkimage-0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0307.jpg" alt="0307 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0307.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well! I like thish!&rdquo; squeaked Bowlder, in a tone of querulous complaint,
- at the same time, however, clasping his hands above his head; &ldquo;I like
- thish! What's the row here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The tall man made no reply, but came across and deftly ran his hands over
- Bowlder for possible arms. Bowlder had no gun. The tall man seemed
- satisfied, and stepping back, told Bowlder he might sit down on a chair
- and rest his hands in his lap. Bowlder took advantage of the permission.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any 'bjections to me lighting a shegar?&rdquo; queried Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; said the tall man.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder was soon puffing away. Being friendly, not to say polite by
- nature, Bowlder bestowed one on his visitor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it a mild cigar?&rdquo; asked the burglar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Colorado claro,&rdquo; said Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right!&rdquo; assented the other. &ldquo;I don't like a strong smoke; it
- makes my head ache.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As the visitor lighted the cigar, Bowlder noticed that he wore a black
- mask across his eyes, and that the latter shone through the apertures cut
- for their convenience like beads. The mask gave Bowlder a chill which the
- pistol had not evoked. Indeed, it came very near destroying the whole
- force of the drinks he had accumulated.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the stranger had lighted his cigar, Bowlder and he puffed at each
- other a moment without a word.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What are you doing in my houshe?&rdquo; at last demanded Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger smiled and puffed on. Then he kicked a large sack with his
- foot. Bowlder had not observed this sack before. As the stranger touched
- it with his foot, it gave out a metallic clinking.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder's eyes roamed instinctively to the sideboard. There wasn't much
- light; enough, however, to show Bowlder that the sideboard's burden of
- silverware was gone. With such a start, Bowlder was able to infer a great
- deal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Made a clean shweep, eh?&rdquo; remarked Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- The masked stranger nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you've got all there is loose and little in the houshe,&rdquo; said Bowlder&mdash;he
- was talking plainer every moment now&mdash;&ldquo;you've got $1,500 worth. Been
- up-shtairs yet?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the man of the mask nodded. Also he exhibited symptoms of being
- about to depart.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't go yet!&rdquo; remonstrated Bowlder. &ldquo;Want to talk to you. Did you get
- the old lady's jewellery upstairs?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the burglar nodded. He seemed disinclined to use his voice unless it
- was necessary.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thash's bad!&rdquo; remarked Bowlder reflectively; referring to the conquest of
- his wife's jewellery. &ldquo;The old lady won't do a thing but make me buy her
- some more. And the worst of it is, she'll put up the figures on what
- jimcracks you've got, and insisht they're worth four times their true
- value. I'm lucky if she don't put it higher than $1,000. And they ain't
- worth $200; you'll be lucky if you get that on 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The burglar looked hopeful as well as he could with a mask, but retorted
- nothing to Bowlder. The latter mused sorrowfully over his wife's jewels.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see it putsh me in the hole!&rdquo; said Bowlder. &ldquo;I get it going and
- coming. You come along and rob me; and then Mrs. B. comes home and robs me
- again. Don't you think that's a little rough?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger said it was rough. He didn't nod this time, but used his
- voice. Encouraged by the agreement with his views, Bowlder urged the
- return of his wife's jewellery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just gimme back what's hers,&rdquo; said Bowlder, &ldquo;and you can keep the rest.
- That'll let me out with her, and I don't care for the balance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But the man of midnight stoutly objected. It would be a dead loss of $200,
- he said, and worse yet, it would be unprofessional.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder thought deeply a moment. Then he took a new tack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any 'bjections to taking a drink with me?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None in the world!&rdquo; said the burglar.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder explored his coat pocket for a bottle he'd brought home to restore
- him after his sleep. He proffered the bottle to the burglar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After you is manners!&rdquo; said that person.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder drank and then the burglar did the same.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You a Republican?&rdquo; demanded Bowlder suddenly. &ldquo;I s'pose even burglars
- have their politics!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Administration Republican!&rdquo; said the burglar; &ldquo;that's what I am. I
- believe in Imperialism and a sound currency.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm an Administration Republican, too,&rdquo; remarked Bowlder. &ldquo;I knew we'd
- find common ground at last. Now, as a member of the same party as
- yourself, I want to ask a favour of you. You've got about $1,500 worth of
- plunder there; and yet, you see yourself, there's a good deal of furniture
- you're leaving behind; piano upstairs and all that. I'll play you one game
- of ten-point seven-up to see whether you take all or nothing. Come, now,
- as a favour!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The burglar hesitated. He feared there was a trap in it. Bowlder gave him
- his word as a goldbug that he made the proffer in all honesty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you win,&rdquo; said Bowlder, &ldquo;you can cart the furniture away to-morrow.
- I'll order you a waggon as I go down, and you can sleep in the house and
- see that I don't carry off anything or hold out on you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it ain't worth as much as what I've got,&rdquo; demurred the burglar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, see here!&rdquo; said Bowlder&mdash;sober he was now&mdash;&ldquo;to avoid
- spoiling sport I'll throw in my watch and $30. That's square!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The burglar admitted that the proposal was fair, but stuck for seven
- points.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I like straight seven-up,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Make it a seven-point game and I'll
- go you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder produced a deck of cards from the sewing-machine drawer. At the
- burglar's own suggestion they lighted one gas jet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cut for deal!&rdquo; said Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- The burglar cut a ten-spot, Bowlder a deuce. The burglar had the deal.
- </p>
- <p>
- The king of diamonds was turned as trump.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Beg!&rdquo; said Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Take it!&rdquo; remarked the burglar.
- </p>
- <p>
- The hands were played. Bowlder had the queen and six-spot of diamonds; the
- marauder had the ten, nine, and seven of diamonds. Bowlder took high, low
- and the burglar counted game.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No jack out!&rdquo; remarked Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the other. And then in an abused tone; &ldquo;Say! you don't beg nor
- nuthin', do you? The idee of a gent's beggin' in a two-hand game,
- a-holdin' of the queen and six.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They played three hands; Jack had been out once. Bowlder was keeping
- score. It stood:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bowl, I I I I I I.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Burg, I I I I.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Bowlder's deal. He riffled the cards with the deftness of one who
- plays often and well.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bound to settle it this time!&rdquo; said the burglar. &ldquo;The score stands 6 to
- 4. You bet your life! I'll stand on the bare jack if I get it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder threw the cards around and turned trump with a snap. It was the
- jack of clubs.
- </p>
- <p>
- The burglar looked at it wistfully, even sadly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's square, is it?&rdquo; he said to Bowlder in a tone of half reproach.
- &ldquo;You ain't the party to go and turn a jack on a poor crook from the bottom
- of the deck, and you only one to go?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder assured him the transaction was perfectly honest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I guess it was,&rdquo; said the burglar, rising. &ldquo;I was watching you, and
- I guess it was straight. It's just my luck, that's all. Well! I must go;
- it's getting along towards 4: 30 o'clock.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have a drink!&rdquo; said Bowlder, &ldquo;and take another cigar!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cracksman took a drink. Then he selected a cigar from Bowlder's
- proffered case.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it's all the same to youse,&rdquo; said the burglar, &ldquo;I'll smoke this later
- on&mdash;after breakfast.&rdquo; And he put the cigar in his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here; let me show you out this way,&rdquo; said Bowlder, leading the way to the
- front basement door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hates to ask it of a stranger,&rdquo; said the burglar, as he hesitated just
- outside the door, &ldquo;but the Eight' Avenoo cars'll be runnin' in a little
- while now, and would you mind lendin' me a nickel? I lives down be the
- Desbrosses Ferry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course Bowlder would lend him car-fare. This somewhat raised the
- burglar's spirits, made sad by seven-up. As he closed the door behind him,
- the burglar looked back at Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know, pard,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if it wasn't for my weakness for gamblin',
- I'd been a rich man a dozen times.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0078" id="link2H_4_0078"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- ANGELINA McLAURIN
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>ngelina McLaurin's
- was a rare face; a beautiful face. It had but one defect: Angelina's nose
- was curved like the wing of a gull. This gave her an air of resolution and
- command that affected the onlooker like a sign which says: &ldquo;Look out for
- the engine.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Still, Angelina McLaurin was bewitchingly lovely, a result much aided in
- its coming about by a form so admirably upholstered that to look upon her
- would have made Diana tired.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a soft, sensuous September afternoon. Angelina McLaurin was
- impatiently holding down a richly cushioned chair in the library of the
- noble McLaurin mansion&mdash;one of those stately piles which are the
- pride of Washington Heights. She was awaiting the coming of her affianced
- husband, George Maurice St. John.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why does he prove so dilatory?&rdquo; she murmured. &ldquo;Methinks true love would
- not own such leaden feet!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Angelina McLaurin arose to gaze from the window she rocked on the tail
- of the ample Angora cat.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cat made it a point to hang out in the library every afternoon. On
- this occasion, while Angelina McLaurin was dreaming of her lover, the cat
- had taken advantage of her abstraction to deftly bestow his tail beneath
- the rocker of her chair. When Angelina arose, as stated, the cat got the
- worst of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the rocker came down on the cat's tail, the cat exploded into
- observations in Angorese that are unfit for these pages. Angelina was not
- only startled out of herself, but almost out of her frock. Angelina and
- the cat arose hastily, and stood there panting.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the shrieks of the wronged exile from Angora were uplifted into space,
- the door of the library burst violently open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is the matter, dearest? Are you injured? Why do you cry for help?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was George Maurice St. John who asked the question. As he did so, he
- caught Angelina McLaurin in his powerful arms, while the Angora cat, his
- worst fears now realised, chased himself down the hall with tail excited
- to lamp-cleaner size.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, love?&rdquo; asked George Maurice St. John, as he tenderly unloaded
- his delicious burden onto a sofa, &ldquo;Speak! it is the voice of your George
- who bids you. Has any one dared to insult the coming bride of a St. John?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bear with me, George!&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Believe me, I will be better
- anon!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- After a few moments she recovered, and was able to smile through her tears
- at the alarm of her dear one. Then she told George all: how the cat had
- been ass enough to leave his tail lying around loose while asleep; how, in
- the intensity of her waiting, she had put a crimp in it with the fell
- rocker of the chair; and how the cat had been drawn into statements, by
- sheer dint of agony, which it was impolitic as well as useless to repeat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So I was just in time, Angelina, to relieve both you and the cat of what
- was doubtless an awkward situation.&rdquo; And George Maurice St. John laughed
- gaily.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he kissed her with a fervour that left nothing to be wished for, and
- Angelina took a brace and sat erect on the sofa.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I feel better now!&rdquo; she remarked.
- </p>
- <p>
- George tried to get in another kiss, but she stood him off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't crowd your luck, dear!&rdquo; she said, with a sweet softness. &ldquo;I am
- yours for ever, and there is not the slightest need for any excess of
- osculatory zeal. You are to have me with you always, so set a brake or two
- and take the grades easy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus repulsed, George Maurice St. John sat abashed. A pained look seamed
- his features; he bit his lips and was silent.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Daylight became twilight, and twilight retreated into the darkness of a
- new night. It struck eight o'clock in the adjoining tower, and George
- Maurice St John was a-hungered. His stomach was the first to tip it off to
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't we feed to-night?&rdquo; asked George Maurice St. John.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lovers for two hours had chattered aimlessly, as ones wandering in a
- wilderness of bliss. This was the first pointed remark.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anon! love; we will feed anon!&rdquo; replied Angelina McLaurin dreamily. &ldquo;But,
- George, before we get in our gustatory work, I would a word with you&mdash;indeed!
- sundry words.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Aim low, and send 'em along!&rdquo; said George. &ldquo;What is it my Queen would
- learn from her slave?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In his ecstacy he achieved a &ldquo;half Nelson&rdquo; on the lovely girl, and caught
- her in the back of the neck with a kiss.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Angora cat, who was stealthily threading the hall, intending to play a
- return game with the library rug, gave a great convulsive start, at the
- kiss, which carried him out of the mansion, and over the alley fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They're a mark too high for me!&rdquo; said the Angora to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then inflating his lungs to the last limit of expansion, the Angora sent a
- song of invitation down the line that set every Tabby in the block to
- washing her face and combing her ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your Queen wants a square heel-and-toe talk, George,&rdquo; said the sweet
- girl, as she tucked up her silken locks, dishevelled by his caresses into
- querulous little rings. &ldquo;And your Queen wants straight goods this time,
- and no guff! Oh, darling!&rdquo; continued Angelina McLaurin in a passionate
- outburst, &ldquo;be square with me, and make me those promises upon which my
- life's happiness depends!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- George Maurice St. John strained Angelina to his bosom.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll promise anything!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What wouldst thou have me do? My life,
- my fortune, my honour&mdash;my all, I lay at your feet! Monkey with them
- as thou wilt.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then listen!&rdquo; said Angelina.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;George, we are to be wedded in a month, are we not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We are!&rdquo; he cried exultantly; and again he essayed the &ldquo;half Nelson,&rdquo; and
- attempted to bury his nose in her mane.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't get gay, George!&rdquo; she said mournfully, as she broke George's lock,
- and gently but firmly pushed his bows off a point; &ldquo;don't get funny! but
- hear me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; said George, and his tones showed that his failure pierced him
- like a javelin. &ldquo;We are to be wedded in a month. What then, lady?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;George,&rdquo; said Angelina McLaurin, and the tear-jewels shone in her eyes,
- &ldquo;don't think me unwomanly, but you know how I am fixed;&mdash;father and
- mother both dead! I am an orphan, George, and must heel-and-handle
- myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Even so!&rdquo; said George, and his face showed his sympathy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, George, before we take that step to the altar,&rdquo; she went on
- steadily enough, but with a quaver in her voice which his ear, made
- sensitive by great love, did not fail to detect: &ldquo;before we take that
- step, I say, from which there is no retreat, I must know certain things.
- You must make me certain promises.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Name them,&rdquo; he whispered, and his deep voice overran her like a melody.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, George,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;is it too much to ask that $100,000 worth of
- property be settled upon me at this time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My solicitors have already received my instructions to make it a
- million.&rdquo; George Maurice St. John's voice dwelt fondly on the settlement.
- &ldquo;It is but a beggarly ante in such a game of table-stakes as this!&rdquo; This
- time Angelina McLaurin did not decline his endearments. When he let up,
- she continued:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And it's dead sure I go to the Shore each summer?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a welded cinch,&rdquo; he replied, as he drew her nearer to him. &ldquo;You
- take in the coast from Bar Harbour to the Florida Keys.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And servants?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A mob shall minister unto thee,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I have but one more boon, George,&rdquo; she murmured, &ldquo;grant that, and I
- am thine forever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Board the card!&rdquo; cried George; &ldquo;I promise before you ask.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say not so,&rdquo; she said with a sweet sadness; &ldquo;but muzzle your lips and
- listen. You must quit golf.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What!&rdquo; shrieked George, with an energy that sent the Angora backward off
- a shed-roof of dubious repute, from which he was carolling to his low
- companions; &ldquo;what!&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;Woman, think!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have thought, George,&rdquo; responded Angelina Mc-Laurin, with an air of
- sorrowful firmness. &ldquo;There is but one alternative: saw short off,&mdash;saw
- short off on golf, or give me up forever!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is this some horrid dream?&rdquo; he hissed, as he strode up and down the
- library.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last he paused before her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Woman,&rdquo; he said sternly, &ldquo;look on me! Is this some lightsome bluff, or
- does it go? Dost mean it, woman?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay! I mean it!&rdquo; answered Angelina, while her cheek paled and her breath
- came quick and fast. &ldquo;Don't make any mistake on that; I mean it. My talk
- goes. And my hand is off my chips.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is this your love?&rdquo; he sneered, bitterly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is,&rdquo; she faltered. &ldquo;I have spoken, and I abide your answer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, girl,&rdquo; said George Maurice St. John, and his words were cold and
- hard, &ldquo;all is over between us. You would drive me into a corner and take
- away my golf! I say No! No! a thousand times, No!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this outbreak the curve in Angelina's nose became more intense. She
- dried her eyes. Her features, too, became as flint. She even cut loose a
- low, mocking laugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be it so!&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;sirrah, take your ring!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He seized the bauble and ground it beneath his heel. As he did so her
- strength failed her, and she sank to the floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That knocked her out!&rdquo; he muttered, and he started to count: &ldquo;One!&mdash;Two!&mdash;Three&mdash;Four!-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, not necessarily!&rdquo; she said, struggling to her feet. &ldquo;I'm still in it;
- and I say again, give up golf, or give up me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The die is cast!&rdquo; and as he spoke the fatal words, the eyes of George
- Maurice St. John took on the firm, irrevocable expression of a fish's set
- in death. &ldquo;I wouldn't give up golf for the best woman that ever put a
- dress on over her head. Maiden, you ask too much; you come too high!
- Damsel, I quit you cold!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- George Maurice St. John rushed from the scene. The ponderous door, as it
- slammed behind him, echoed and re-echoed through the vaulted apartments of
- the McLaurin mansion. Angelina McLaurin listened until his footsteps died
- away far up the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He has flew the coop on me!&rdquo; she wailed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then she gave way to a torrent of tears. In her distress Angelina McLaurin
- was more beautiful than ever. Two minutes! Five minutes! Ten minutes went
- by! Her tears still fell like rain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have turned the hose on my hopes!&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was the thought that crossed her mind; but she desperately womanned
- (word coined since advent of new woman) herself to bear it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Still afloat on the sad currents of her tears, her head bowed, a light
- sound beat upon the tympanum of Angelina McLaurin. She looked quickly up
- and squared herself to emit a glad cry, if one should be necessary.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was it?
- </p>
- <p>
- Something had come back.
- </p>
- <p>
- True! it was the Angora cat.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the Angora flung himself upon the rug with an air of reckless abandon,
- Angelina McLaurin gazed at him with a wistful fixedness. One eye was
- closed, his fur was torn, blood dripped from his lacerated ears. He was,
- in good sooth, but a tattered Angora! Angelina McLaurin laughed long and
- wildly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He, too,' has got it in the neck!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0079" id="link2H_4_0079"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- DINKY PETE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>o we have romances
- on t' East Side!&rdquo; and Chucky's voice was vibrant with the scorn my doubts
- provoked. &ldquo;Do we have romances! Well, I don't t'ink! Say! there's days
- when we don't have nothin' else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this crisis Chucky called for another glass; did it without invitation.
- This last spoke of and betrayed a sense of injury.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me tell youse,&rdquo; continued Chucky, &ldquo;an' d' yarn don't cost you a cent,
- see! how Dinky Pete sends Jimmy d' barkeep back to his wife. It's what I
- calls romantic for a hundred plunks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not that Jimmy ever leaves her, for that matter; that is, he don't leave
- her for fair! But he's sort o' organisin' for d' play when Dinky Pete puts
- d' kybosh on d' notion, an' wit' that Jimmy don't chase at all, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jimmy d' barkeep is some soft in d' nut, see! Nit, he ain't really got
- w'eels; ain't bad enough for d' bug house; but he's a bit funny in his
- cocoa&mdash;mostly be way of bein' dead stuck on himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' bein' weak d' way I says, Jimmy is a high roller for clothes; always
- sports a w'ite t'ree-sheet, wit' a rock blazin' in d' centre, big enough
- to trip a dog. An' say! his necktie's a dream, an' his hat's d' limit!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's a t'ree-sheet? an' what's a rock? I don't want to give you no
- insultin' tips, but on d' square! youse ought to take a toim at night
- school. Why! a t'ree-sheet is his shirt, an' d' rock I names is Jimmy's
- spark! Of course, d' spark ain't d' real t'ing; only a rhinestone; but it
- goes in d' Bend all d' same for a 2-carat headlight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jimmy makes a tidy bit of dough, see! He gets, mebby it's fifteen bones a
- week, an' I makes no doubt he shakes down d' bar for ten more, which is
- far from bad graft. So it ain't s'prisin' one day when Jimmy gets it stuck
- in his frizzes he'll be married.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jimmy's Bundle is all right at that. Her name's Annie, an' she's a proper
- straight chip. An' that ain't no song an' dance; square as a die she was.
- An' a bute! She was d' pick of d' Bowery crush, an' don't youse doubt it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, Jimmy an' Annie goes on wit' their courtships, I takes it, same as
- if dey lives on Fift' Avenoo. Annie's a mil'ner, an' while she don't have
- money to t'row to d' boids, she woiks for enough so it's as good as a
- stan'-off on livin', which is all her hand calls for an' all she asts. If
- she don't quit winner after trimmin' hats a week, at any rate she don't
- get in d' hole, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, yes; she an' Jimmy gets action on d' sights. Now an' then it's Coney
- Island; then ag'in it's a front seat at d' People's; or mebby if some of
- d' squeeze has a dance, dey pulls on their skates an' steps in on d'
- spiel. An' say! as a spieler Annie's a wonder, an' don't youse forget it.
- I has d' woid for it from me own Rag, an' when it comes to pickin' out a
- dancer, you can trust me Rag to be dead on in a minute. D' loidy can do a
- dizzy stunt or two on a wax floor herself when it comes to a show-down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But about me romance. Jimmy has chased around wit' Annie, say it's t'ree
- mont's. An' all this time his strong play is voylets, see! Annie is gone
- on voylets, so each evenin' Jimmy toins in on Dinky Pete, who sells
- poipers an' peanuts, an' some of this hard, bum candy you breaks your
- teet's on. Dinky also deals a little flower game, wit' about a 5-cent
- limit, an' that's what gets Jimmy. Just as I says, each evenin' Jimmy
- sticks in a nickel for a bunch of voylets at Dinky's an' sends some kid&mdash;Dinky's
- joint is a great hang-out for d' kids&mdash;to take 'em up to Annie.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' them voylets tickles Annie to death.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At last all goes well, an' Jimmy an' Annie gets spliced. An' it's all
- right at that! Me Rag, who calls on 'em, says Jimmy an' Annie's d'
- happiest ever, an' gettin 'd' boss run for their money.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's about a year when Annie don't do a t'ing but have a kid. At foist
- Jimmy likes it, an' lets on it's d' racket of his career. But after a
- while Jimmy gets chilly&mdash;sort o' gets sore on d' kid. Me Rag gives me
- a pointer it's mostly Annie's fault. She stars d' kid too heavy, an' it
- makes Jimmy feel like a deuce in a bum deck; makes him t'ink he ain't so
- strong&mdash;ain't so warm as he was. An' it toins out' Annie, bein'
- always busy monkeyin' wit 'd' young-one, an' givin' Jimmy d' languid eye,
- d' nex' news you get, Jimmy is back on d' street when he is off watch,
- tryin' to pipe off some fun.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never knows where she catches on wit' Jimmy, but it ain't no time when
- one of them razzle-dazzle blondes has him on d' string. She's doin' d'
- grand at that, see! an' givin' him d' haughty stand-off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mebby Jimmy met her on d' street onct or twict, when for d' foist time,
- Goldie&mdash;which is this blonde tart's name&mdash;says Jimmy can come
- an' see her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's been mont's since Jimmy's done d' flower act at Dinkey Pete's. But
- d' sucker t'inks it's d' night of his life, an' so he chases in an' goes
- ag'inst Pete's counter for a bunch.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This Dinky Pete's a dead queer little mug. He's a short, sawed-off mark,
- wit' a humpy back an' a bum lamp. But you can gamble your life Î Dinky
- Pete's heart is on straight, whether his back is or not.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's be chanct I'm in Dinky Pete's meself d' time Jimmy is out to meet
- this blonde mash. Now, at d* time I ain't onto Jimmy's curves; I don't
- tumble to d' play till a week later, when me Rag puts me on.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'at was I doin' in Dinky Pete's? Flowers? Nit; not on your life! Naw; I
- wants to change me luck. I'd got d' gaff at draw poker d' night before,
- an' I'm layin' for Dinky Pete for to rub his hump on d' sly. Sure!
- Youse'll have luck out of sight. Only you mustn't let d' humpback guy get
- on. If he notices you rubbin' his hump it'll give youse bad luck, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jimmy comes in, an' at foist, be force of habit, I s'spose, he's goin' to
- plunge on voylets. But he t'inks of Annie, an' he can't stand for it. Wit'
- that, Jimmy shifts his brush an' tells Dinky Pete to toin him out some
- roses.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'An' make 'em d' reddest in d' joint, see!' says Jimmy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dinky Pete's got his mits on some voylets, but when Jimmy says 'roses'
- Dinky comes to a stan' still.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;' W'at! roses?' says Dinky Pete, an' his ratty eyes&mdash;one of 'em on
- d' hog, as I states&mdash;looks dead sharp at Jimmy. 'Roses?' he repeats.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'That's what I says!' is d' way Jimmy comes back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;' Better take voylets,' says Dinky, an' he stops foolin' wit 'd' flowers
- an' gives Jimmy d' gimlet eye.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Nit,' declares Jimmy; * I'm dead onto me needs. Give me roses.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'But roses won't last,' says Dinky, an' his look is sharp an' soft an'
- sad all at onct. 'Roses won't last, an' that's for fair,' says Dinky,
- 'while voylets is stayers. Better take voylets, Jimmy!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Jimmy gets sullen an' won't have no voylets, see! An' he swings an'
- rattles wit' Dinky that he wants roses&mdash;roses red as blood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Roses has thorns,' goes on Dinky, still holdin' his lamps on Jimmy in d'
- same queer way; 'you don't want roses, Jimmy; you just t'inks you want
- roses! Be a square bloke, Jimmy; be yourself an' take voylets!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' I'm damned!&rdquo; declares Chucky, &ldquo;if Jimmy don't begin to look like a
- whipped kid, an' d' foist t'ing I knows, he welches on roses, grabs off a
- bunch of voylets big enough to make a salad, an' goes chasin' home to
- Annie. Me Rag is there when Jimmy pours in.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! It's d' finish of d' blonde! She ain't in it! Me rag, on d' quiet,
- gives Annie d' chin-chin of her existence, an' shows her Jimmy ain't
- gettin' a square deal. An' Annie&mdash;who, for all she's nutty about d'
- kid, is a dead wise fowl just d' same&mdash;takes a tumble, an' from that
- time she makes d' bettin' even money on* bot 'd' young-one an' Jimmy. D'
- last time I sees Jimmy he stops to tell me that Annie's a peach, an' d'
- kid's a wonder. An' he's lookin' like a nine-times winner himself. Now
- don't youse call that a romance for Dinky Pete to get onto Jimmy's game so
- quick, an' stickin' to him till he takes d' voylet steer? Ain't it a
- romance? Well! I should kiss a pig!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0080" id="link2H_4_0080"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CRIB OR COFFIN?
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>OUNG Jones stood
- in the telegraph office&mdash;the one at Twenty-third Street and Broadway.
- There was an air of triumph about Jones, an atmosphere of insolent
- sagacity, which might belong to one who, by some sudden, skilful sleight
- had caught a starling. Yet Jones's victory was in nowise uncommon. Others
- had achieved it many a time and oft. It was simply a baby; young Jones had
- become a papa, and it was this that gave him those frills which we have
- chronicled. The presence of young Jones in the telegraph office might be
- explained by looking over his shoulder. This is the message he wrote:
- </p>
- <p>
- New York City, Dec. 8, '99.
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps,
- </p>
- <p>
- Albany, N. Y.
- </p>
- <p>
- I still take it you are interested in the census of your family. Recent
- events in this city have altered the figures. Don't attempt to write a
- history of the tribe of Van Epps without consulting Sanford Jones.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There!&rdquo; said young Jones, &ldquo;that ought to fetch him. He won't know whether
- I mean the birth of a baby or Mary's death. If he doesn't come to see her
- now, I will mark him off my list for good. I would as it stands, if it
- were not for Mary.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Won't father worry, dear?&rdquo; asked Mary, when young Jones repeated the
- ambiguous message he had aimed at his up-the-State father-in-law.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I expect him to shed apprehensive tears all the way to New York,&rdquo; replied
- young Jones. &ldquo;But don't fret, Mary; I am sure he will come; and a tear or
- two won't hurt him. They will help his eyes, even though they do his heart
- no good. I don't resent his treatment of me, but his neglect of you is not
- so easy to forgive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>his was the story:
- </p>
- <p>
- Back four years, Albany would have shown you young Jones opening his law
- office in that hamlet. Mary was &ldquo;Mary Van Epps.&rdquo; At that time seventeen
- years was all the family register allowed to her for age.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her father, Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps, was one of the leading citizens
- of Albany. While not a millionaire, he was of sufficient wealth to dazzle
- the local eye, and he was always mentioned by the denizens of his native
- place as &ldquo;rich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps had a weakness. He was slave to the pedigree
- habit. Never a day went by but he called somebody's attention to those
- celebrities who aforetime founded and set flowing the family of Van Epps;
- and he proposed at some hour in the future to write a history of that
- eminent house. With his wealth and his family pride to prompt him, it came
- easy one day for Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps to object with decision and
- vigour to a match between young Jones and his daughter Mary.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They were both fools!&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he pointed out that the day would never dawn when a plebeian like
- unto Jones, without lineage or lucre, boasting nothing better than a law
- office vacant of practice, and on which the rent was in arrears three
- months, would wed a daughter of the Van Epps. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps,
- in elaboration of his objection, showed that beyond a taste to drink
- whiskey and a speculative bent toward draw poker, he knew of nothing which
- young Jones possessed. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps closed, as he began,
- with the emphatic announcement that no orange blossoms would ever blow for
- the nuptials of young Jones and Mary Van Epps.
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps in his attitude will have the indorsement of
- all good Christian people. He was right as a father. As a prophet touching
- orange blossoms, however, he was what vulgar souls call &ldquo;off.&rdquo; Of that
- anon.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>OUNG Jones more
- than half believed that Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps was right. So far as
- whiskey and draw poker were concerned, he went with him; but with Colonel
- Stuyvesant Van Epps' objections to him, based on the lack of pedigree and
- a failure of pocket-book, he didn't sympathise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I may be poor, and my family tree may be a mullein stalk, but I am still
- a fitting mate for any member of the Van Epps tribe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus spake young Jones to Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. He then took the
- earliest private occasion to kiss Mary good-bye, give her his picture, and
- make her his promise to wed her within five years.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Would she wait?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I would wait a century,&rdquo; said Mary.
- </p>
- <p>
- Young Jones kissed Mary again after that. The next day Albany was short
- one citizen, and that citizen was young Jones. Albany is short to this
- day.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>et us drop
- details. Good luck came to young Jones, hard on the lonely heels of his
- evacuation of Albany. He was named a junior partner of a New York City law
- firm. His income equalled his hope. He dismissed whiskey and draw poker,
- and he wrote to Mary Van Epps:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Could he claim her now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps said &ldquo;No&rdquo; again. Young Jones still lacked
- ancestry, and a taste for whiskey and four aces still lurked in his blood.
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps would not consent. This served for a time to
- abate the bridal preparations.
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>wo years deserted
- the future for the past. A great deal of water will run under a bridge in
- two years. Mary Van Epps was nineteen. She went on a visit to a Trenton
- relative. Young Jones became abundant in Trenton at that very time. They
- took in a parson while on a stroll one day, and when that experienced
- divine got through with them they were man and wife. They wired their
- entangled condition to Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. He sent them a message
- of wrath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I cast Mary off for ever! Never let me see her face again!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Very well!&rdquo; remarked young Jones as he read the wire; &ldquo;I shall need Mary
- myself, in New York. Casting her off, therefore, at Albany, cuts no great
- figure. As for Mary's face, I will look at it all the more to make up for
- her brutal dad's abatement of interest therein.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he kissed Mary as if the feat were entirely fresh. And while Mary
- wept, she still felt very happy. Next they came to a modest home in the
- city.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>wo years more
- trailed the otners into history. Young Jones was held a fortunate man. His
- work was a success. Whiskey and poker were now so far astern as to be
- hull-down in the horizon. And he loved Mary better than ever. She was the
- triumph of his life, and he told her so every day.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is certainly wonderful,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;how much more beautiful you become
- every day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This pleased Mary; and while her heart turned to her hard old father, she
- did not repent that episode at Trenton, which changed her name to Jones.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once a month Mary faithfully addressed a letter, new and fresh each time
- with the love that fails and fades not, to &ldquo;Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps,
- Albany, N. Y.&rdquo; And once a month Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps read it,
- gulped a little, and made no reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will never see her again!&rdquo; Colonel Stuyvesant
- </p>
- <p>
- Van Epps remarked to himself on these letter occasions.
- </p>
- <p>
- All the time he knew he lived for nothing else. But he thought of his
- family and mustered his pride, and of course became a limitless fool at
- once, as do those who give way to an attack of pedigree.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the Jones baby was born; and young Jones concluded to try his hand on
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. Mary wanted him to come, and that settled the
- whole matter so far as young Jones was concerned. In his new victory as a
- successful father, he felt that he could look down on Colonel Stuyvesant
- Van Epps. He therefore wrote the message referred to in our first chapter
- with perfect confidence, that, turn as matters might, he had nothing to
- fear.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The past, at least, is secure!&rdquo; said young Jones; &ldquo;and, come what may, I
- have Mary and the baby.&rdquo; Both Mary and young Jones, however, awaited the
- returns from Albany with anxiety;&mdash;Mary, because she loved her father
- and mourned for his old face, and young Jones because he loved Mary. They
- were relieved when the bell rang at 7 P. M., and a bicycle boy handed in a
- yellow paper, which read: &ldquo;Will be there to-morrow on the 8:30.&mdash;Stuyvesant
- Van Epps.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mary was all gladness. Young Jones was calm, but gave way sufficiently to
- say:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary, we will call the cub 'Stuyvesant Van Epps Jones.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0016" id="linkimage-0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0335.jpg" alt="0335 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0335.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>OUNG Jones met
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps at the Forty-Second Street station. The old
- gentleman had been torn by doubts and grievous misgivings all the way
- down. What did young Jones' ambiguous message mean? Was Mary dead? Was he
- bound to a funeral? or a christening? Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps knew
- that something tremendous had happened. But what?
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps walked up to young Jones at the station, and
- without pausing to greet him, remarked:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Crib or coffin?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Crib!&rdquo; said young Jones.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps fell into a storm of tears, and began to
- shake young Jones by the hand for the first time in his life.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he three happiest
- people in the world that night were Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps, Mary and
- young Jones. The baby was the one member of the family who did not give
- way to emotion. He received his grandfather with a stolid phlegm which
- became a Van Epps.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And his name is Stuyvesant Van Epps Jones,&rdquo; said Mary.
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps kissed Mary again at this cheering news, and
- shook hands with young Jones for the second time in his life.
- </p>
- <p>
- That is all there is to a very true story. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps
- lives now in New York City, and Albany is shy a second citizen. Mary is
- happy, young Jones feels like a conqueror, and the infant, Stuyvesant Van
- Epps Jones, beneath the eye of his grandsire, waxes apace.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0081" id="link2H_4_0081"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- OHIO DAYS
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0082" id="link2H_4_0082"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- I&mdash;AT THE LEES
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>unt Ann, be we
- goin' to the spellin' to-night at the Block schoolhouse?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee always called his wife &ldquo;Aunt Ann.&rdquo; So did everybody except her
- daughter Lydia. She called Aunt Ann &ldquo;Mother.&rdquo; But to Jim Lee and the other
- inhabitants of Stowe Township, she was &ldquo;Aunt Ann Lee.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Jim Lee asked Aunt Ann the question, he threw down the armful of maple
- wood and retreated to the back door to stamp the snow off his boots.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to know,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;so's to do the chores in time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann was chopping mince-meat. She was a clean, beautiful woman of the
- buxom sort. Her eyes were very blue, while her hair was very black with
- not a strand of silver, for all her forty-seven years. Jim Lee held Aunt
- Ann in great respect. Aunt Ann on her part was a tender soul and true,
- although Jim Lee had found her quite firm at times.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now and then she's a morsel hard on the bit,&rdquo; said Jim Lee,
- descriptively.
- </p>
- <p>
- Perhaps the two old-maid Spranglers meant the same thing when they said:
- &ldquo;There never was a body with blue eyes and black hair who didn't have the
- snap in 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied Aunt Ann to Jim Lee's question &ldquo;yes, of course we'll go.
- I've got to see Mrs. Au about some rag carpets she's weavin' for me, and
- she be there. Better get the Morgan colt and the cutter ready, father;
- we'll go in that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That'll only hold two,&rdquo; said Jim Lee. &ldquo;How Lide goin' to go?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lide's goin' with Ed Church. She's over to Jenn Ruple's now; she and Jen
- are goin' to choose up for the spellin' bee. But she'll be back in time,
- and Ed Church is comin' for her at half-past seven.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee's face showed that he didn't like Ed Church He said nothing for
- five minutes, and pulling off his kip-skin boots began to give them a coat
- of tallow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where's Ezra?&rdquo; at last he asked. Ezra was the heir of the house of Lee.
- His age was eleven; he was twenty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ezra's down cellar sortin' over that bin of peach blows,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann,
- busy with her mince-me; and chopping-bowl; &ldquo;they'd started to rot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wanted to send him to the Corners for the mail,&rdquo; suggested Jim Lee, as
- he kneaded the wax tallow into the instep of his boot to soften the
- leather.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0018" id="linkimage-0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0341.jpg" alt="0341 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0341.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd better hitch up the colt a mite early,&rdquo; answered
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann, &ldquo;and go to the Corners before we start to the spellin'. Ezra's
- got to churn as soon; he's done the peachblows.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was another pause. Jim Lee softly drew on his freshly tallowed
- boots, and then stood up an tried them by raising his heels one after the
- other bending the boots at the toes as if testing a couple of Damascus
- sword blades.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't like this here Ed Church sparkin' our Lide,&rdquo; remarked Jim Lee at
- last; &ldquo;bimeby they'll want to get married.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father!&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, raising her blue eyes with a look of cold
- criticism from the mince-meat she was massacring.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Has he asked Lide yet?&rdquo; said Jim Lee.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, he ain't,&rdquo; replied Aunt Ann, &ldquo;but he's goin' to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do you know?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do I know?&rdquo; repeated Aunt Ann, as she set the chopping-bowl on the
- kitchen table, and turned to put a few select sticks of maple into the
- oven to the end that they become kiln-dried and highly inflammable; &ldquo;how
- do I know Ed Church is goin' to marry Lide? Humph! I can see it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm goin' to put a stop to it,&rdquo; said Jim Lee. &ldquo;This Church boy is goin'
- to keep away from Lide.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father, you're goin' to do nothing of the kind,&rdquo; and Aunt Ann's eyes
- began to sparkle. &ldquo;You can run the farm and Ezra, father; I'll run Lide
- and the house. The only person who's goin' to have a syllable to say about
- Lide's marryin' when the time comes, is Lide herself. If she wants Ed
- Church she's goin' to have him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Aunt Ann, I'm s'prised at you upholdin' for this Church boy!&rdquo; Jim Lee
- threw into his tone a strain of strong reproof. &ldquo;Ed Church drinks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ed Church don't drink,&rdquo; retorted Aunt Ann sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How about that time two years ago last summer? Waren't Ed Church drunk
- over at the Royalton Fair?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he was,&rdquo; answered Aunt Ann, &ldquo;and that's the only time. But so was my
- father drunk once at a barn-raisin' when he was a boy, for I've heerd him
- tell it; and I guess my father, William H. Pickering, was as good as any
- Lee who ever greased his boots. One swallow don't make a summer, and one
- drunk don't make a drunkard. Ed Church told me himself that he ain't took
- a drop since.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm goin' to break up this nonsense between him and Lide, at any rate,&rdquo;
- said Jim Lee. His mood was dogged, and it served to irritate Aunt Ann.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All you've got ag'inst Ed Church, father,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, &ldquo;is that his
- father voted ag'in you for pathmaster, and I'm glad he did. What under the
- sun you ever wanted to be pathmaster for, and go about ploughin' up good
- roads to make 'em bad, was more'n I could see. I'm glad you was beat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm goin' to stop this Church boy hangin' 'round Lide, jest the same,&rdquo;
- was the closing remark of Jim Lee. At this point he went out to the barn
- to put some straw in the cutter and harness the Morgan colt. Aunt Ann
- turned again to her duties.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father is so exasperatin',&rdquo; remarked Aunt Ann, as she poured some boiling
- water over a dozen slices of salt pork to &ldquo;freshen it,&rdquo; in the line of
- preparing them for the evening frying-pan. &ldquo;He'll find out, though, that
- I'll have a tolerable lot to say about Lide's marriage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0083" id="link2H_4_0083"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- II&mdash;ED CHURCH AND LIDE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>t half-past seven,
- Ed Church swung into Jim Lee's yard, with a horse all bells, and a cutter
- a billow of buffalo robes. He did not dare leave Grey Eagle, his pet colt,
- for Grey Eagle was restless with the wintry evening air and wanted to go.
- So Ed Church notified Lide of his coming by shouting, &ldquo;House!&rdquo; with a
- great voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Grey Eagle made a plunge at the sound, but was brought up by the bit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How'dy do, Ed,&rdquo; said Lide, as she came out the side door. She looked rosy
- and pretty with her muskrat muff and cape.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello, Lide,&rdquo; said Ed. &ldquo;You'll have to scramble in yourself. I can hardly
- hold the colt this weather, when he don't have nothin' to do but eat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide scrambled in. As Ed Church stood up in the cutter to allow Lide a
- chance to be seated, her face came close to his. Taking his eyes from Grey
- Eagle for the mere fraction of a second, he kissed her dexterously. Lide
- received the caress with the most admirable composure, and Ed Church
- himself did not act as if the idea was a discovery or the experiment new.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let him out, Ed!&rdquo; said Lide, when they were well into the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a foot of snow on the ground. The fence corners showed great
- drifts, while each rail of the fence had a ruffle of its own of cold,
- white snow. As far as one could see in the moonlight, the fields to each
- side were like milk. In the background stood the grey woods laced against
- the sky. Here and there a lamp shone in a neighbour's window like an eye
- of fire.
- </p>
- <p>
- Stowe Township was out that night. The steady beat of the bells could be
- heard ahead and behind. Ed Church sent Grey Eagle forward with long
- strides, the cutter following over the hard, packed snow with no more of
- resistance than a feather. Lide held her muff to her face, so that she
- might open her mouth to talk without catching any of the flying snowballs
- from Grey Eagle's nervous hoofs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It'll be a big spellin'-school to-night,&rdquo; said Lide.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I guess it will,&rdquo; replied Ed. &ldquo;I hear folks are comin' clear from
- Hammond Corners.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If that Gentry girl comes,&rdquo; said Lide, &ldquo;mind! you're not to speak to her,
- Ed. If you do, you can go home alone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Ed grinned with an air of pleased superiority.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get up,&rdquo; he said to Grey Eagle. Then to Lide: &ldquo;Go on! You're jealous!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I ain't!&rdquo; said Lide, with a lofty intonation. &ldquo;Speak to her if you
- want to! What do I care!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I won't speak to her, Lide.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Ed looked at his sweetheart to see how she received his submission. As the
- road was level and straight at this point, and Grey Eagle had worn away
- the wire edge of his appetite to &ldquo;go,&rdquo; Ed put his face in behind the
- muskrat muff and kissed Lide again. The victim abetted the outrage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I saw ye!&rdquo; yelled a happy voice behind. It was Ben Francis with Jennie
- Ruple. They also were enthroned in a cutter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What if you did?&rdquo; retorted Lide with a toss.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do it again if I want to!&rdquo; shouted Ed Church with much joyous hardihood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never asked you to marry me yet, did I, Lide?&rdquo; observed Ed Church,
- after two minutes of silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you didn't,&rdquo; said Lide from behind the muskrat muff. The words would
- have sounded hard, if it were not for the sudden soft sweetness of the
- voice, which was half a whisper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll do it now,&rdquo; said Ed, with much resolution, but a little shake
- in the tone. &ldquo;You'll marry me, Lide, when we get ready?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ed, what do you think father 'll say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Ed Church knew Lide's father found no joy in him. The next time his voice
- took on a moody, half-sullen sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't care what he says! I ain't marryin' the hull Lee family.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But s'pose he says we can't?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he does, I'll run away with you, Lide,&rdquo; and Ed Church's tones were
- touched with storm. &ldquo;I'm goin* to marry you even if all the Lees in the
- state stand in the way!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide crowded a bit closer to Ed at this, and, holding the muskrat muff
- against her face to keep her nose from getting red, said nothing. Lide was
- thinking what a noble fellow Ed was, and how much she admired him.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0084" id="link2H_4_0084"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- III&mdash;THE SPELLING SCHOOL
- </h2>
- <p>
- The Block schoolhouse was crowded. Lide and Ed made their way toward the
- back benches. Jim Lee spoke to his daughter and growled gruffly at Ed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The latter half growled back. Aunt Ann was all smiles and approval of Ed.
- At this, Ed thought her the best woman on earth except his own mother, and
- mentally put her next that excellent old lady in his heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a Mr. Parker who taught at the Block school-house. At 8 o'clock he
- rapped on the teacher's desk with a ruler, and everybody who was standing
- up hunted for a seat. Those who could find none&mdash;they were all young
- men and boys&mdash;crouched down along the walls of the big school-room
- and made seats of their heels. Mr. Parker came down from his desk and
- opened the stove door with the end of the ruler. The stove&mdash;a
- long-bodied air-tight&mdash;was raging red hot from the four-foot wood
- blazing in its interior. When the door was opened the heat almost singed
- Mr. Parker's eyebrows. At this he started back nervously, and Ben Weld and
- Will Jenkins, two very small boys, laughed. The stove on its part began to
- cool off and the cherry colour faded from its hot sides, leaving them
- brown and rusty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lydia Lee and Jennie Ruple have been selected to choose sides for the
- spelling contest,&rdquo; said Mr. Parker.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide and Jennie seated themselves side by side on the bench which ran
- along the rear of the room. It was Lide's first choice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ed Church,&rdquo; called Lide in a low voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Several young persons giggled, while Ed, blushing deeply to have his
- sweetheart's preference thus forced into prominence, blundered along the
- aisle and sat down by Lide. It was Jennie's choice. Jennie selected Ben
- Francis.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; said Ada Farr in a loud whisper to
- </p>
- <p>
- Myrtle Jones, &ldquo;they'd choose their beaux first, so as to sit by 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no gainsaying the Farr girl's statement. The &ldquo;choosing up,&rdquo;
- however, went on. At last everybody, young and old, from the grey-headed
- grandpa to the five-year-old just sent to his first school that winter,
- had been chosen by Lide or Jennie. Then Mr. Parker began to give out the
- words.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ed Church failed on the first word. It was &ldquo;emphasis.&rdquo; Ed thought there
- was an &ldquo;f&rdquo; in it. He straightway sat down and spelled no more that night.
- Lide made a better showing, and lasted through five words. She tripped on
- &ldquo;suet&rdquo; upon which she conferred an &ldquo;i.&rdquo; Lide then joined Ed among the
- silenced ones.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lide Lee missed on purpose,&rdquo; whispered the Farr girl to her neighbour
- Myrtle Jones, &ldquo;so she could sit and talk with Ed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee spelled well, but fell a prey to &ldquo;moustache.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At last only three were left standing&mdash;Nellie Brad-dock, a girl from
- Hammond Corners, and Aunt Ann. Mr. Parker turned over to the back part of
- the spelling book where the hard words lived. Nellie Braddock fell before
- &ldquo;umbrageous.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The struggle between the girl from Hammond Corners and Aunt Ann was a
- battle of the giantesses. The girl from Hammond Corners was the champion
- speller of her region, and had spelled down every school so far that
- winter. The interest was intense, as first to Aunt Ann and then to the
- girl from Hammond Corners, Mr. Parker put out:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fantasy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Autobiographer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thaumaturgie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cosmography.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At last the girl from Hammond Corners tripped on:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sibylline.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She made it &ldquo;syb.&rdquo; Mr. Parker had to show her the spelling book to
- convince the girl from Hammond Corners that she had missed. She glanced in
- the spelling book where Mr. Parker's finger pointed, and then burst into
- tears. At this an unknown young man, presumably from Hammond Corners, got
- up and excitedly declared the book to be wrong. Nobody took any notice of
- him, however, and Aunt Ann Lee was named the victor. She had spelled down
- the school.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0085" id="link2H_4_0085"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- IV&mdash;THE FIGHT
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">E</span>d CHURCH left Lide
- talking with the girls in the schoolhouse while he went back to the waggon
- shed to get Grey Eagle and bring him and the cutter to the door. As Ed was
- in the entry of the schoolhouse he was stopped by little Joe Barnes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! Fan Brown's out there waitin' for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What about Fan Brown?&rdquo; asked Ed Church.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fan Brown was the bully of Hinckley. He boasted that he could thrash any
- man between Bath Lakes and the Hinckley Ridge.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He says he's goin' to wallop you for shootin' his dawg last summer,&rdquo; said
- little Joe Barnes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Joe, will you do something for me?&rdquo; asked Ed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yep!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You go and tell Lide Lee in there that I'm goin' over to Square Chanler's
- to get a neck-yoke he borrowed and I'll be right back. Tell her to wait in
- the school-house till I come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's afraid of Fan Brown and is runnin' over to Square Chanler's to get
- the constable,&rdquo; said little Joe Barnes to himself. For this he despised Ed
- Church very much, but went in and delivered the message.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right!&rdquo; said Lide, and then went on gossiping with the girls.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ed Church stepped out of the schoolhouse and started for the horse-sheds.
- </p>
- <p>
- He noticed a knot of men standing at the rear corner of the building;
- among them he discerned the stocky, bull-necked bully of Hinckley, Fan
- Brown.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here he comes now!&rdquo; said one, as Ed approached.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let him come!&rdquo; gritted the bully; &ldquo;I'll fix him! I'll show him whose dog
- he's been shootin! As fine a coon dog, boys, as ever went into a corn
- field. He shot him, and I ain't goin' back to Hinckley till I mash his
- face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the row here?&rdquo; said Ed Church, walking straight to the little
- huddle about Fan Brown. His tones were brittle and bold; a note of ready
- war ran through them. Not at all the voice in which he talked to Lide. &ldquo;I
- understand somebody's lookin' for me. Who is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's me, by G&mdash;d! You killed my dog last summer, and I'm goin'&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you ain't,&rdquo; said Ed, interrupting; &ldquo;you ain't goin' to do a thing.
- You may be the bully of Hinckley, Fan Brown, but you can't scare me. Your
- dog was killin' sheep; he was a good deal like you; but bein' a dog I
- could shoot him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and I ain't goin' back to Hinckley until I maul you so you won't
- shoot another dog as long as you live.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Enough said!&rdquo; replied Ed, &ldquo;come right down in the hollow back of the
- horse sheds, where the folks won't see, and do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just then a small, meagre man approached. He walked with a lounging gait,
- and when he spoke he had a thin, mealy voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter here?&rdquo; piped the meagre little man.
- </p>
- <p>
- His name was Dick Bond. He was renowned widely as a wrestler. Gladiators
- had come from far and near, and at town meetings and barn raisings,
- wrestled with little Dick Bond. Where a hundred tried not one succeeded.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had not lost a &ldquo;fall&rdquo; for four years. His skill had given birth to a
- half proverb, and when somebody said he would do something, and somebody
- else doubted it, the latter would observe with laughing scorn: &ldquo;Yes;
- you'll do it when somebody throws Dick Bond.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Such was the fell repute of this invincible little man that when his
- shrill, light voice made the inquiry chronicled, a silence fell on the
- crowd and no one answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who's goin' to fight?&rdquo; asked Dick Bond more pointedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm goin' to fight Fan Brown,&rdquo; said Ed.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a load of ferocity in the way he said it, which showed that Ed,
- himself, had a latent hunger for battle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I guess I'll go 'long and see it,&rdquo; said Dick Bond pipingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do you want to fight?&rdquo; asked Ed of Fan Brown when each had buttoned
- up his coat tight to the chin. &ldquo;Stand up, or rough and tumble?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Rough and tumble,&rdquo; said Fan Brown savagely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, boys,&rdquo; said Dick Bond when all was ready, &ldquo;I'll give the word and
- then you're goin' to fight until one of you says 'enough.' And remember!
- there's no bitin' no gougin', no scratchin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bitin' goes?&rdquo; declared Fan Brown, in a fashion of savage interrogatory.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bitin' don't go!&rdquo; replied the lean little referee, &ldquo;and if you offer to
- bite or gouge, Fan Brown, I'll break your neck. You'll never go back to
- Hinckley short of being carried in a blanket.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0019" id="linkimage-0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0353.jpg" alt="0353 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0353.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- The battle was brief and bloody. It didn't last ten minutes. When it was
- over, Ed Church, bleeding, but victorious, walked back to the sheds to get
- Grey Eagle. Fan Brown was unable to rise from the snow without help. His
- face was beaten badly, and he was a thoroughly whipped person. Dick Bond
- expressed great satisfaction, and in his high voice said it was a splendid
- fight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, Brown,&rdquo; said Dick Bond to the beaten one, &ldquo;I can't see how you got
- it into your head you could lick Ed Church. Why, man! he was all over you
- like a panther.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The news of the fight ran like wildfire. Everybody knew of it before an
- hour passed. It was a source of general satisfaction that Ed Church had
- whipped Fan Brown, the Hinckley bully, yet no one failed to stamp the
- whole proceeding as disgraceful; that is, among the older men at least.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide, however, when she heard of the valour of her lover felt a great
- tenderness for him, and was never kinder than when they drove Grey Eagle
- back from the Block schoolhouse spelling-bee that crisp winter night.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0086" id="link2H_4_0086"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- V&mdash;JIM LEE INTERFERES
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>OTHER,&rdquo; sobbed
- Lide, as she threw herself down on the chintz lounge without pausing to
- take off her hat or cape, &ldquo;father has just told Ed never to come to the
- house nor speak to me again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee and Aunt Ann got home before the lovers. The news of the broil
- overtook them, however. Jim Lee declared it a scandal and a scorn.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now you see,&rdquo; he said to Aunt Ann, &ldquo;what sort of ruffian the Church boy
- is!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm glad he whipped that miserable Fan Brown,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann. &ldquo;He's
- done nothin' for ten years but come over here to Stowe Township and raise
- a fuss. I'm glad somebody's at last spunked up and thrashed him. I'd done
- it years ago if I had been a man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Aunt Ann Lee!&rdquo; said Jim Lee, hitting the Morgan colt a blow with the whip
- which set that sprightly animal almost astride the thills&mdash;&ldquo;Aunt Ann,
- do you tell me you approve of Ed Church lickin' Fan Brown?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I do,&rdquo; retorted Aunt Ann, stoutly, &ldquo;and so will Lide. If you
- imagine, father, a woman finds fault with a man because he'll fight other
- men you don't know the sex.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee moaned. Absolutely! for the first time in his life Aunt Ann had
- shocked him. Not another word was spoken by Jim Lee all the way home.
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann went into the house when they arrived, while Jim Lee remained to
- put up the Morgan colt. He was busy in the barn when Ed and Lide drove
- into the yard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father came up to Ed,&rdquo; sobbed Lide, as she lay on the lounge, &ldquo;and called
- him a brawler and a drunkard, and said he'd got to keep away from me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did Ed say?&rdquo; asked Aunt Ann, as she sat down by her daughter and
- began, with kind hands, to take off her hat and cape. Every touch was full
- of motherly love and tenderness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh! Ed didn't say much,&rdquo; said Lide, giving way to long-drawn sighs; a
- fashion of dead swell following the storm of sobs. &ldquo;He said he'd marry me
- whether father was willing or not. Then he drove away.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I guess Ed Church is pretty high strung,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, &ldquo;but that won't
- hurt him any.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee came in at that moment, looking a bit sheepish and guilty; but
- over it all an atmosphere of victory.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That Church boy will stay away now, I guess!&rdquo; said Jim Lee, as he got the
- bootjack and began pulling off his boots.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jim Lee, you're an awful fool!&rdquo; observed Aunt Ann with the air of a sibyl
- settling all things. &ldquo;You're the biggest numbskull in Stowe Township!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; asked Jim Lee.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was disturbed because Aunt Ann addressed him by his full name.
- Experience had taught him that defeat ever followed hard on the heels of
- his full name, when Aunt Ann made use of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never mind why!&rdquo; said Aunt Ann.
- </p>
- <p>
- And not another word could Jim Lee get from her.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0087" id="link2H_4_0087"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- VI&mdash;THEY DECORATE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was a month
- after the spelling-school. Stowe Township was decorating the Church for
- Christmas. For time out of mind Stowe Township had had a Christmas tree at
- the Church, and everybody, rich or poor, high or low, young or old, great
- or small, got a present if it were nothing but a gauze stocking full of
- painted popcorn.
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann, as usual, was at the head of the decorating committee. The
- Church was full of long strings of evergreen, which Aunt Ann's satellites
- were festooning about the walls, and to that end there was much climbing
- of step-ladders, much standing on tip-toe, much pounding of thumbs with
- caitiff tack-hammers, vilely wielded by girlish hands. Occasionally some
- fair step-ladder maid gave the public a glimpse of a well-filled woollen
- stocking as she went up and down, or stood on her toes on the top step. At
- this, the young men present always blushed, while the maidens tittered.
- Most people don't know it, but the male of our species is more modest,
- more easily embarrassed, than the female.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Christmas tree had just arrived. It had been contributed by &ldquo;Square&rdquo;
- Chanler. The tree was a noble hemlock; thick and feathery of bough,
- perfect of general outline. Old Curl, the Rip Van Winkle of Stowe, had cut
- it down and hauled it to the church on &ldquo;Square&rdquo; Chanler's bob-sleds. All
- the smallfry of the Corners had gone with Old Curl after the Christmas
- tree, and were faithful to him to the last. Every one of them was
- clamorously forward in unloading the tree and getting it into the Church.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then it was taken charge of by Aunt Ann, who put the smallfry to flight.
- They were to be beneficiaries of the tree, and it was held that their joy
- would be enhanced if they were not allowed to remain while the tree was
- decorated, and were debarred all sight thereof until Christmas Eve, when
- the presents would be cut from the boughs and bestowed upon their owners.
- </p>
- <p>
- One little boy had a cold, and Aunt Ann let him remain in the Church. This
- little boy perched himself in a window where his fellows outside might see
- and envy him. There was a three-cornered hole in the window pane near him,
- and the little boy was wont every few moments to place his mouth to this
- crevice and say to the boys outside:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My! but you ought to see what Aunt Ann's tyin' on the tree now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; would chorus the outside boys.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can't tell you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boy with the cold became the most unpopular child in Stowe Township,
- and several of his fellows outside in their agony threatened him with
- personal violence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll lick you when I ketch you!&rdquo; shouted children in the rabble rout to
- the lucky child with the cold.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't care!&rdquo; said the child inside, &ldquo;you just ought to see the tree
- now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide Lee was aiding the others to festoon the church. Under the maternal
- direction she was fitting tawdry little wax candles among the branches of
- the Christmas tree, and tying on Barlow knives for all the little boys,
- and &ldquo;Housewives&rdquo; for all the little girls.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide had not seen Ed save once since the spelling-school, and then she met
- him in the village drug-store by chance. But they wrote to each other, and
- some progress in this way had been made toward an elopement which was
- scheduled for the coming Spring. Aunt Ann in the depths of her sagacity,
- suspected the arrangement, but it gave her no alarm. As for Jim Lee, so
- fatuous was he that he believed he had ended all ties between his daughter
- and Ed Church.
- </p>
- <p>
- While decorations were in progress in the church, Jim Lee suddenly drove
- up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Aunt Ann,&rdquo; said Jim Lee, after pausing to admire the garish display,
- &ldquo;Aunt Ann, I've just got a line from Ludlow, and there's goin' to be a
- special meetin' of the board of directors of our Ice Company, and I've got
- to mosey into the city.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee had an air of importance. He liked to appear before Aunt Ann in
- the attitude of a much-sought-for man of business.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pshaw! father, that's too bad!&rdquo; said Aunt Ann. &ldquo;Can't you be back by
- Christmas Eve?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; Christmas Eve is only day after to-morrow, and the Ice Company
- business ought to last a week, so Ludlow says.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well!&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, &ldquo;if you must go, you must. Ezra can do most of the
- chores while you're away, and I'll have Old Curl come and do the heaviest
- of 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- So Jim Lee kissed Aunt Ann, and then kissed Lide. This latter caress was a
- trifle strained, for Jim Lee felt guilty when he looked at his daughter;
- and Lide hadn't half forgiven him his actions toward her idolised Ed.
- Since Ed had been forbidden her society, Lide loved him much better than
- before.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus started Jim Lee for the city on Ice Company matters, Tuesday
- afternoon. Christmas Eve was the following Thursday. Jim Lee would return
- on the Monday or Tuesday after. He was fated to find some startling
- changes on his coming back.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0088" id="link2H_4_0088"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- VII&mdash;AUNT ANN PLOTS
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>UNT Ann found much
- to occupy her during the hours before Christmas Eve. There were
- forty-eight of these hours. Aunt Ann needed them all.
- </p>
- <p>
- For one matter she made Ezra drive her over to the County Seat. She wanted
- to see her brother, Will Pickering, who was Probate Judge of the County.
- Aunt Ann also dispatched a letter by trusty messenger to her sister, Mary
- Newton, who lived at Eastern Crossroads, some seven miles from Stowe. As a
- last assignment, Aunt Ann told Ezra to go over and ask Ed to come up to
- the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll be at the Christmas tree at the church tonight, won't you, Ed?&rdquo;
- asked Aunt Ann, after making some excuse for sending for him. She put the
- question quite casually.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well! be sure and come, Ed,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann. &ldquo;And more'n that, be sure and
- dress yourself up. I think I'll need you to help me get things off the
- high limbs.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann, as she led Lide to his side. &ldquo;Now, Brother Crandall, if you will
- perform the ceremony&mdash;the short form, please, and leave out the word
- 'obey'&mdash;the distribution will be complete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But the licence!&rdquo; gasped the Rev. Crandall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There it is,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, &ldquo;with my brother Will's seal and signature
- as Probate Judge on it. You don't s'pose I had Ezra drive me clear to the
- County Seat in the dead of winter for nothing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The ceremony was over. Ed and Lide were &ldquo;Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Church;&rdquo; and
- the entire population of Stowe, some in tears, all in earnest, were
- kissing the bride and shaking hearty hands with the groom. That latter
- young gentleman was dazed and happy, and looked both.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, Ed,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, after kissing him and then kissing Lide, &ldquo;I'm
- your mother; and I'll begin to tell you what to do. You put Lide in your
- cutter and head Grey Eagle for Eastern Cross-roads. I sent Mary word you
- were coming, and there's a trunk full of Lide's things gone over. Stay a
- week. If you need collars, or shirts or anything, Mary will give you some
- of John's. Stay a week and then come home. Father will be back from the
- Ice Company Tuesday, and by Thursday of next week, when you return, I'll
- have him fully convinced that all is ordered for the best, and whatever
- is, is right. So kiss your mother again, children, and start. I hear Grey
- Eagle's bells a-jingling, where Dick Bond's brought him to the door.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- THE END
- </h3>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Sandburrs, by Alfred Henry Lewis
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-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
- <head>
- <title>
- Sandburrs, by Alfred Henry Lewis
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Sandburrs and Others, by Alfred Henry Lewis
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Sandburrs and Others
-
-Author: Alfred Henry Lewis
-
-Illustrator: Horace Taylor and George B. Luks
-
-Release Date: May 3, 2016 [EBook #51981]
-Last Updated: March 12, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SANDBURRS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- SANDBURRS
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By Alfred Henry Lewis
- </h2>
- <h4>
- Author of &ldquo;Wolfville,&rdquo; etc.
- </h4>
- <h3>
- Illustrated by Horace Taylor and George B. Luks
- </h3>
- <h5>
- Second Edition
- </h5>
- <h4>
- New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company
- </h4>
- <h3>
- 1898
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0001.jpg" alt="0001 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0001.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0008.jpg" alt="0008 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0008.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <h3>
- TO
- </h3>
- <h3>
- JAMES ROBERT KEENE
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>CONTENTS</b>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> SANDBURRS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> SPOT AND PINCHER. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> MULBERRY MARY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> SINGLETREE JENNINGS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> JESS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> THE HUMMING BIRD </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> GASSY THOMPSON, VILLAIN </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> ONE MOUNTAIN LION </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> MOLLIE MATCHES </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> THE ST. CYRS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> McBRIDE'S DANDY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> RED MIKE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> HAMILTON FINNERTY'S HEART </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER I </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER VI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> SHORT CREEK DAVE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> CRIME THAT FAILED </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> THE BETRAYAL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> FOILED </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER I </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER VI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> POLITICS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0038"> ESSLEIN GAMES </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> THE PAINFUL ERROR </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0040"> THE RAT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0041"> CHEYENNE BILL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0042"> BLIGHTED </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0043"> THE SURETHING </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0044"> GLADSTONE BURR </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0045"> THE GARROTE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0046"> O'TOOLE'S CHIVALRY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0047"> WAGON MOUND SAL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0048"> JOE DUBUQUE'S LUCK </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0049"> BINKS AND MRS. B. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0050"> ARABELLA WELD </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0051"> THE WEDDING </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0052"> POINSETTE'S CAPTIVITY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0053"> TIP FROM THE TOMB </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER I </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0059"> TOO CHEAP </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER I. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER II </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER III </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER IV </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER V </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER VI </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0066"> HENRY SPENY'S BENEVOLENCE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0067"> JANE DOUGHERTY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0068"> MISTRESS KILLIFER </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0069"> BEARS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0070"> THE BIG TOUCH </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0071"> THE FATAL KEY </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0072"> AN OCEAN ERROR </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0073"> SKINNY MIKE'S UNWISDOM </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0074"> MOLLIE PRESCOTT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0075"> ANNA MARIE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0076"> THE PETERSENS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0077"> BOWLDER'S BURGLAR </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0078"> ANGELINA McLAURIN </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0079"> DINKY PETE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0080"> CRIB OR COFFIN? </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0081"> OHIO DAYS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0082"> I&mdash;AT THE LEES </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0083"> II&mdash;ED CHURCH AND LIDE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0084"> III&mdash;THE SPELLING SCHOOL </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0085"> IV&mdash;THE FIGHT </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0086"> V&mdash;JIM LEE INTERFERES </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0087"> VI&mdash;THEY DECORATE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc2">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0088"> VII&mdash;AUNT ANN PLOTS </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- PREFACE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> SANDBURR is a
- foolish, small vegetable, irritating and grievously useless. Therefore
- this volume of sketches is named Sandburrs. Some folk there be who
- apologize for the birth of a book. There's scant propriety of it. A book
- is but a legless, dormant creature. The public has but to let it alone to
- be safe. And a book, withal! is its own punishment. Is it a bad book? the
- author loses. Is it very bad? the publisher loses. In any case the public
- is preserved. For all of which there will be no apology for SAND-BURRS.
- Nor will I tell what I think of it. No; this volume may make its own
- running, without the handicap of my apology, or the hamstringing of my
- criticism. There should be more than one to do the latter with the least
- of luck. The Bowery dialect&mdash;if it be a dialect&mdash;employed in
- sundry of these sketches is not an exalted literature. The stories told
- are true, however; so much may they have defence.
- </p>
- <h3>
- A. H. L.
- </h3>
- <p>
- New York, Nov. 15, 1899.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- SANDBURRS
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- SPOT AND PINCHER.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>artin is the
- barkeeper of an East Side hotel&mdash;not a good hotel at all&mdash;and
- flourishes as a sporting person of much emphasis. Martin, in passing, is
- at the head of the dog-fighting brotherhood. I often talk with Martin and
- love him very much.
- </p>
- <p>
- Last week I visited Martin's bar. There was &ldquo;nothin' doin',&rdquo; to quote from
- Martin. We talked of fighting men, a subject near to Martin, he having
- fought three prize-fights himself. Martin boasted himself as still being
- &ldquo;an even break wit' any rough-and-tumble scrapper in d' bunch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come here,&rdquo; said Martin, in course of converse; &ldquo;come here; I'll show you
- a bute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Martin opened a door to the room back of the bar. As we entered a
- pink-white bull terrier, with black spots about the eyes, raced across to
- fawn on Martin. The terrier's black toe-nails, bright and hard as agate,
- made a vast clatter on the ash floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is Spot,&rdquo; said Martin. &ldquo;Weighs thirty-three pounds, and he's a hully
- terror! I'm goin' to fight him to-night for five hundred dollars.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- I stooped to express with a pat on his smooth white head my approbation of
- Spot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pick him up, and heft him,&rdquo; said Martin. &ldquo;He won't nip you,&rdquo; 'he
- continued, as I hesitated; &ldquo;bulls is; d' most manful dogs there bees.
- Bulls won't bite nobody.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thereupon I picked up Spot &ldquo;to heft him.&rdquo; Spot smiled widely, wagged his
- stumpy tail, tried to lick my face, and felt like a bundle of live steel.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spot's goin' to fight McDermott's Pincher,&rdquo; said Martin. &ldquo;And,&rdquo;
- addressing this to Spot, &ldquo;you want to watch out, old boy! Pincher is as
- hard as a hod of brick. And you want to look out for your Trilbys;
- Pincher'll fight for your feet and legs. He's d' limit, Spot, Pincher is!
- and you must tend to business when you're in d' pit wit' Pincher, or he'll
- do you. Then McDermott would win me money, an' you an' me, Spot, would
- look like a couple of suckers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spot listened with a pleased air, as if drinking in every word, and wagged
- his stump reassuringly. He would remember Pincher's genius for crunching
- feet and legs, and see to it fully in a general way that Pincher did not
- &ldquo;do&rdquo; him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spot knows he's goin' to fight to-night as well as you and me,&rdquo; said
- Martin, as we returned to the bar. &ldquo;Be d' way! don't you want to go?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- It was nine o'clock that evening. The pit, sixteen feet square, with board
- walls three feet high, was built in the centre of an empty loft on
- Bleecker street. Directly over the pit was a bunch of electric lights. All
- about, raised six inches one above the other, were a dozen rows of board
- seats like a circus. These were crowded with perhaps two hundred sports.
- They sat close, and in the vague, smoky atmosphere, their faces, row on
- row, tier above tier, put me in mind of potatoes in a bin.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fincher was a bull terrier, the counterpart of Spot, save for the markings
- about the face which gave Spot his name. Pincher seemed very sanguine and
- full of eager hope; and as he and Spot, held in the arms of their
- handlers, lolled at each other across the pit, it was plain they
- languished to begin. Neither, however, made yelp or cry or bark. Bull
- terriers of true worth on the battle-field were, I learned, a tacit,
- wordless brood, making no sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Martin &ldquo;handled&rdquo; Spot and McDermott did kindly office for Pincher in the
- same behalf. Martin and McDermott &ldquo;tasted&rdquo; Spot and Pincher respectively;
- smelled and mouthed them for snuffs and poisons. Spot and Pincher
- submitted to these examinations in a gentlemanly way, but were glad when
- they ended.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the word of the referee, Spot and Pincher were loosed, each in his
- corner. They went straight at each other's throats. They met in the exact
- centre of the pit like two milk-white thunderbolts, and the battle began.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spot and Pincher moiled and toiled bloodily for forty-five minutes without
- halt or pause or space to breathe. Their handlers, who were confined to
- their corners by quarter circles drawn in chalk so as to hem them in,
- leaned forward toward the fray and breathed encouragement.
- </p>
- <p>
- What struck me as wonderful, withal, was a lack of angry ferocity on the
- parts of Spot and Pincher. There was naught of growl, naught of rage-born
- cry or comment. They simply blazed with a zeal for blood; burned with a
- blind death-ardour.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Spot and Pincher began, all was so flash-like in their motions, I
- could hardly tell what went on. They were in and out, down and up, over
- and under, writhing like two serpents. Now and then a pair of jaws clicked
- like castanets as they came together with a trap-like snap, missing their
- hold. Now and then one or the other would get a half-grip that would tear
- out. Then the blood flowed, painting both Spot and Pincher crimson.
- </p>
- <p>
- As time went on my eyes began to follow better, and I noted some amazing
- matters. It was plain, for one thing, that both Spot and Pincher were as
- wise and expert as two boxers. They fought intelligently, and each had a
- system. As Martin had said, Pincher fought &ldquo;under,&rdquo; in never-ending
- efforts to seize Spot's feet and legs. Spot was perfectly aware of this,
- and never failed to keep his fore legs well back and beneath him, out of
- Pinchers reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spot, on his part, set his whole effort to the enterprise of getting
- Pincher by the throat. A dog without breath means a dead dog, and Spot
- knew this. Pincher appeared clear on the point, too; and would hold his
- chin close to his breast, and shrug his head and shoulders well together
- whenever Spot tried to work for a throat hold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now and then Spot and Pincher stood up to each other like wrestlers, and
- fenced with their muzzles for &ldquo;holds&rdquo; as might two Frenchmen with foils.
- In the wrestling Spot proved himself a perfect Whistler, and never failed
- to throw Pincher heavily. And, as I stated, from the beginning, the two
- warriors battled on without cry. Silent, sedulous, indomitable; both were
- the sublimation of courage and fell purpose. They were fighting to the
- death; they knew it, joyed in it, and gave themselves to their destiny
- without reserve. Each was eager only to kill, willing only to die. It was
- a lesson to men. And, as I looked, I realised that both were two of the
- happiest of created things. In the very heat of the encounter, with
- throbbing hearts and heaving sides, and rending fangs and flowing blood,
- they found a great content.
- </p>
- <p>
- All at once Spot and Pincher stood motionless. Their eyes were like coals,
- and their respective stump tails stood stiffly, as indicating no abatement
- of heart or courage. What was it that brought the halt? Spot had set his
- long fangs through the side of Pinchers head in such fashion that Pincher
- couldn't reach him nor retaliate with his teeth. Pincher, discovering
- this, ceased to try, and stood there unconquered, resting and awaiting
- developments. Spot, after the manner of his breed, kept his grip like
- Death. They stood silent, motionless, while the blood dripped from their
- gashes; a grim picture! They had fought, as I learned later, to what is
- known in the great sport of dog fighting as &ldquo;a turn.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a turn!&rdquo; decided the referee.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this Martin and McDermot seized each his dog and parted them
- scientifically. Spot and Pincher were carried to their corners and
- refreshed and sponged with cold water. At the end of one minute the
- referee called:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Time!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this point I further added to my learning touching the kingly pastime
- of dog-fighting. When two dogs have &ldquo;fought to a turn,&rdquo; that is, locked
- themselves in a grip, not deadly to either if persisted in, and which
- still prevents further fighting,&mdash;as in the case of Spot and Pincher,&mdash;a
- responsibility rests with the call of &ldquo;Time&rdquo; on the dog that &ldquo;turns.&rdquo; In
- this instance, Pincher. At the call of &ldquo;Time&rdquo; Spot would be held by his
- handler, standing in plain view of Pincher, but in his corner. It was
- incumbent on Pincher&mdash;as a proof of good faith&mdash;to cross the pit
- to get at him. If Pincher failed when released on call of &ldquo;Time&rdquo; to come
- straight across to Spot, and come at once; if he looked to right or left
- or hesitated even for the splinter of a second, he was a beaten dog. The
- battle was against him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Time!&rdquo; called the referee.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just prior to the call I heard Martin whisper huskily over his shoulder to
- a rough customer who sat just back of and above him, at Spot's corner of
- the pit:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stand by wit' that glim now!&rdquo; Martin muttered without turning his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the call &ldquo;Time!&rdquo; McDermot released Pincher across in his corner.
- Pincher's eyes were riveted on Spot, just over the way, and there's no
- doubt of Pincher's full purpose to close with him at once. There was no
- more of hesitation in his stout heart than in Spot's, who stood mouth open
- and fire-eyed, waiting.
- </p>
- <p>
- But a strange interference occurred. At the word &ldquo;Time!&rdquo; the rough
- customer chronicled slipped the slide of a dark lantern and threw the
- small glare of it squarely in Pincher's eyes. It dazed Pincher; he lost
- sight of Spot; forgot for a moment his great purpose. There stood poor
- Pincher, irresolute, not knowing where to find his enemy; thrall to the
- glare of the dark lantern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spot win!&rdquo; declared the referee.
- </p>
- <p>
- At that moment the dark-lantern rough-customer closed the slide and
- disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- Few saw the trick or its effects. Certainly the referee was guiltless. But
- McDermot, who had had the same view of the dark lantern Pincher had, and
- on whom for a moment it had similar effect, raised a great clamour. But it
- was too late; Martin had claimed the thousand dollars from the
- stake-holder, and with it in his pocket was already in a carriage driving
- away, with Spot wrapped up in a lap robe occupying the front seat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let McDermot holler!&rdquo; said Martin, with much heat, when I mentioned the
- subject the next day. &ldquo;Am I goin' to lose a fight and five hundred
- dollars, just because some bloke brings a dark lantern to d' pit and takes
- to monkeyin' wit' it? Not on your life!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- MULBERRY MARY
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">C</span>hucky d' Turk&rdquo; was
- the <i>nom de guerre</i> of my friend. Under this title he fought the
- battles of life. If he had another name he never made me his confidant
- concerning it. We had many talks, Chucky and I; generally in a dingy
- little bar on Baxter Street, where, when I wearied of uptown sights and
- smells, I was wont to meet with Chucky. Never did Chucky call on me nor
- seek me. From first to last he failed not to conduct himself towards me
- with an air of tolerant patronage. When together I did the buying and the
- listening, and Chucky did the drinking and the talking. It was on such
- occasion when Chucky told me the story of Mulberry Mary.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary was born in Kelly's Alley,&rdquo; remarked Chucky, examining in a
- thoughtful way his mug of mixed ale; &ldquo;Mary was born in Kelly's Alley, an'
- say! she wasn't no squealer, I don't t'ink.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When Mary grows up an' can chase about an' chin, she toins out a dead
- good kid an' goes to d' Sisters' School. At this time I don't spot Mary in
- p'ticler; she's nothin' but a sawed-off kid, an' I'm busy wit' me graft.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' foist I really knows of Mary is when she gets married. She hooks up
- wit' Billy, d' moll-buzzard; an' say! he's bad.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He gets his lamps on Mary at Connorses spiel, Billy does; an' he's stuck
- on her in a hully secont. It's no wonder; Mary's a peach. She's d' belle
- of d' Bend, make no doubt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Billy's graft is hangin' round d' Bowery bars, layin' for suckers. An' he
- used to get in his hooks deep an' clever now an' then, an' most times
- Billy could, if it's a case of crowd, flash quite a bit of dough.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So when Billy sees Mary at Connorses spiel, like I says, she's such a
- bute he loses his nut. You needn't give it d' laugh! Say! I sees d' map of
- a skirt&mdash;a goil, I means&mdash;on a drop curtain at a swell t'eatre
- onct, an' it says under it she's Cleopatra. D' mark nex' me says, when I
- taps for a tip, this Cleopatra's from Egypt, an' makes a hit in d' coochee
- coochee line, wit' d' high push of d' old times, see! An' says this
- gezeybo for a finish: 'This Cleopatra was a wonder for looks. She was d'
- high-roller tart of her time, an' d' beauti-fulest.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, all I got to say is,&rdquo; continued Chucky, regarding me with a
- challenging air of decision the while; &ldquo;all I has to utter is, Mary could
- make this Cleopatra look like seven cents!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; resumed Chucky, as I made no comment, &ldquo;Billy chases up to Mary an'
- goes in to give her d' jolly of her life. An', say! she's pleased all
- right, all right; I can see it be her mug.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' Billy goes d' limit. He orders d' beers; an' when he pays, Billy
- springs his wad on Mary an' counts d' bills off slow, Linkin' it'll
- razzle-dazzle her. Then Billy tells Mary he's out to be her steady.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I've got money to boin,' says Billy, 'an' what you wants you gets, see!'
- An' Billy pulls d' long green ag'in to show Mary he's dead strong, an 'd'
- money aint no dream.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Mary says 'Nit! couple of times nit!' She says she's on d' level, an'
- no steady goes wit' her. It's either march or marry wit' Mary. An' so she
- lays it down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's how it stands, when d' nex' news we hears Billy an' she don't do a
- t'ing but chase off to a w'ite-choker; followin' which dey grabs off a
- garret in d' Astorbilt tenement, an' goes to keepin' house.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Mary breaks in on Billy's graft. She says he's got to go to woik;
- he'll get lagged if he don't; an' she won't stand for no husband who
- spends half d' time wit' her an 'd' rest on d' Island. So he cuts loose
- from d' fly mob an' leaves d' suckers alone, an' hires out for a tinsmith,
- see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' here's d' luck Billy has. It's d' secont day an' he's fittin' in d'
- tin flashin' round a chimbley on a five-story roof; an' mebby it's because
- he aint used to woik, or mebby he gets funny in his cupolo, bein' up so
- high; anyhow he dives down to d' pavement, an' when he lands, you bet your
- life! Billy's d' deadest t'ing that ever happened.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary goes wild an' wrong after that. In half of no time Mary takes to
- chasin' up to Mott Street an' hittin' d' pipe. There's a Chink up there
- who can cook d' hop out o' sight, an' it aint long before Mary is hangin'
- 'round his joint for good. It's then dey quits callin' her Mulberry Mary,
- an' she goes be d' name of Mollie d' Dope.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary don't last in d' Chink swim more'n a year before there's bats in her
- belfry for fair; any old stiff wit' lamps could see it; an' so folks gets
- leary of Mary.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0027.jpg" alt="0027 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0027.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It runs on mebby two years after Billy does that stunt from d' roof, see!
- when there's a fire an' all d' kids run an' screeched, an' all d' folks
- hollered, an' all d' engines comes an' lams loose to put it out. D' fire's
- in a tenement, an 'd' folks who was in it has skipped, so it's just d'
- joint itself is boinin'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All at onct a kid looks out d' fort' story window wit 'd' fire shinin'
- behint him. You can see be d' little mark's mug he's got an awful scare
- t'run into him, t'inkin' he's out to boin in d' buildin*.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'It's McManuses' Chamsey!' says one old Tommy, lettin' her hair down her
- back an' givin' a yell, 'Somebody save McManuses' Chamsey!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Let me save him!' says Mary, at d' same time laughin' wild. 'Let me save
- him; I want to save him! I'm only Mollie d' Dope&mdash;Mollie d' hop fiend&mdash;an'
- if I gets it in d' neck it don't count, see!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary goes up in d' smoke an 'd' fire, no one knows how, wit' d' water
- pourin' from d' hose, an 'd' boards an' glass a-fallin' an' a-crashin',
- an' she brings out McManuses' Chamsey, Saves him; on d' dead! she does;
- an' boins all d' hair off her cocoa doin' it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, of course d' fire push stan's in an' gives Mary all sorts of guff
- an' praise. Mary only laughs an' says, while d' amb'lance guy is doin' up
- her head, that folks ain't onto her racket; that she d' soonest frail that
- ever walks in d' Bend.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture Chucky desired another mixed ale. He got it, and after a
- long, damp pause he resumed his thread.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now what do youse t'ink of this for a finish? It's weeks ago d' fire is.
- Mary meets up wit' McManuses' Chamsey to-day&mdash;she's been followin'
- him a good deal since she saves him&mdash;an' as Chamsey is only six years
- old, he don't know nothin', an' falls to Mary's lead. It's an easy case of
- bunk, an' Chamsey only six years old like that!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary gives Chamsey d' gay face an' wins him right off. She buys him
- posies of one Dago an' sugar candy of another; an' then she passes Chamsey
- a strong tip, he's missin' d' sights be not goin' down to d' East River.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here's what Mary does&mdash;she takes Chamsey down be d' docks&mdash;a
- longshoreman loafin' hears what she says. Mary tells Chamsey to look at
- all d' chimbleys an 'd' smoke comin' out!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'An' in every one there's fire makin 'd' smoke,' says Mary. 'T'ink of all
- d' fires there must be, Chamsey! I'll bet Hell ain't got any more fires in
- it than d' woild! Do youse remember, Chamsey, how d' fire was goin' to
- boin you? Now, I'll tell you what we'll do, so d' fire never will boin us;
- we'll jump in,&mdash;you an' me!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' wit' that, so d' longshoreman says, Mary nails Chamsey be d' neck
- wit' her left hook an' hops into d' drink. Yes, dey was drowned&mdash;d'
- brace of 'em. Dey's over to d' dead house now on a slab&mdash;Mary an'
- McManuses' Chamsey.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What makes me so wet? I gets to d' dock a minute too late to save 'em,
- but I'm right in time to dive up d' stiffs. So I dives 'em up. It's easy
- money. That's what makes me cuffs look like ruffles an' me collar like a
- corset string.&rdquo; And here Chucky called for a third mixed ale, as a sign
- that his talk was done.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- SINGLETREE JENNINGS
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was evening in
- Jordan Hollow, and Singletree Jennings stood leaning on his street gate.
- Singletree Jennings was a coloured man, and, to win his bread, played many
- parts in life. He was a whitewasher; he sold fish; he made gardens; and
- during the social season he was frequently the &ldquo;old family butler,&rdquo; in
- white cotton gloves, at the receptions of divers families.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm a pore man, honey!&rdquo; Singletree Jennings was wont to say; &ldquo;but dar was
- a time when me an' my ole Delia was wuf $1,800. Kase why? Kase we brought
- it at auction, when Marse Roundtree died&mdash;didn't we, Delia?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This was one of Singletree Jennings's jokes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But pore man or no!&rdquo; Singletree Jennings would conclude, &ldquo;as de Lamb
- looks down an' sees me, I never wronged a man outen so much as a
- blue-laiged chicken in my life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This evening Singletree Jennings was a prey to dejection. Nor could he
- account for his gloom. His son opened the gate and went whistling up the
- street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Clambake Jennings, whar yo' gwine?&rdquo; asked Singletree Jennings.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gwine ter shoot craps.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have yo' got yer rabbit's foot?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yassir.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' de snake's head outen de clock?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yassir.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Singletree Jennings relapsed into moody silence, and Clambake passed on
- and away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shouts and cries of some storm-rocked multitude was heard up the
- street. The Columbia College boys were taking home their new eight-oared
- boat. The shouts settled into something like the barking of a dog. It was
- the crew emitting the college cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's dat?&rdquo; demanded Delia Jennings, coming to the door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;De Lawd save us ef I knows!&rdquo; said Singletree Jennings; &ldquo;onless it's one
- of dem yar bond issues dey's so 'fraid'll happen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The tones of Singletree Jennings showed that he was ill at ease.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's de matter, Daddy Singletree?&rdquo; demanded the observant Delia.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've got a present'ment, I reckon!&rdquo; said Singletree Jennings. &ldquo;I'm
- pow'ful feard dar'll somethin' bust loose wrong about dat Andrew Jackson
- goat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Singletree Jennings was the owner and business manager of a goat named
- Andrew Jackson. In the winter Singletree Jennings never came home without
- an armful of straw for Andrew Jackson. In the summer there was no need of
- straw. Andrew Jackson then ate the shirts off the neighbour's
- clothes-lines. Andrew Jackson had been known to eat the raiment off a
- screaming child, and then lower his frontlet at the rescue party. Andrew
- Jackson was a large, impressive goat; yet he never joked nor gave way to
- mirth. Ordinarily, Andrew Jackson was a calm, placid goat; aroused, he was
- an engine of destruction.
- </p>
- <p>
- All of these peculiarities were explained by Singletree Jennings when Sam
- Hardtack and Backfence Randolph, a committee acting on behalf of the
- Othello Dramatic Club, desired the loan of Andrew Jackson. The church to
- which Singletree Jennings belonged was programming a social this very
- night, and divers and sundry tableaux, under the direction of the Othello
- Dramatic Club, were on the card. It was esteemed necessary by those in
- control to present as a tableau Abraham slaying Isaac. There was a paucity
- of sheep about, and Andrew Jackson, in this dearth of the real thing, was
- cast to play the character of the Ram in the Bush.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' Andrew Jackson is boun' to fetch loose,&rdquo; reflected Singletree
- Jennings, with a shake of his head; &ldquo;an' when he does, he'll jes' go
- knockin' 'round among de congregashun like a blind dog in a meat shop!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Singletree Jennings's worst fears were realised. It was nine o'clock now,
- and he and Delia had come down to the social. Andrew Jackson had been
- restrained of his liberty for the previous four hours and held captive in
- a drygoods' box. He was now in a state of frenzy. When the curtain went up
- on Abraham and Isaac, Andrew Jackson burst his bonds at the rear of the
- stage and bore down on the Hebrew father and son like the breath of
- destiny. Andrew Jackson came, dragging his bush with him. The bush was, of
- course, a welcome addition. Abraham saw him coming, and fled into the lap
- of a fiddler. Isaac, however, wasn't faced that way. Andrew Jackson smote
- Isaac upon the starboard quarter. It was a follow shot, rather than a
- carom, and Andrew Jackson and his prey landed in the middle of the
- audience together. For two minutes Andrew Jackson mingled freely with the
- people present, and then retired by the back door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I knowed destrucshun was a-comin'!&rdquo; murmured Singletree Jennings. &ldquo;I
- ain't felt dat pestered, Delia, since de day I concealed my 'dentity in
- Marse Roundtree's smokehouse, an' dey cotched me at it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Singletree Jennings!&rdquo; observed the Reverend Handout F. Johnson, in a tone
- of solemn anger, while his pistol pocket still throbbed from the
- visitation of Andrew Jackson, &ldquo;Elder Shakedown Bixby is in pursuit of dat
- goat of your'n with a razor. He has orders to immolate when cotched. At de
- nex' conference dar'll be charges ag'in you for substitutin' a deboshed
- goat for de Ram of Holy Writ. I keers nothin' for my pussonel sufferin's,
- but de purity of de Word mus' be protected. De congregashun will now join
- in singin' de pestilential Psalms, after which de social will disperse.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- JESS
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was sunset at
- the Cross-K ranch. Four or five cowboys were gloomily about outside the
- adobe ranch house, awaiting supper. The Mexican cook had just begun his
- fragrant task, so a half hour would elapse before these Arabs were fed.
- Their ponies were &ldquo;turned&rdquo; into the wire pasture, their big Colorado
- saddles reposed astride the low pole fence which surrounded the house, and
- it was evident their riding was over for the day.
- </p>
- <p>
- Why were they gloomy? Not a boy of them could tell. They had been partners
- and <i>campaneros</i>, and &ldquo;worked&rdquo; the Cross-K cattle together for
- months, and nothing had come in misunderstanding or cloud. The ranch house
- was their home, and theirs had been the unity of brothers.
- </p>
- <p>
- The week before, a pretty girl&mdash;the daughter she was of a statesman
- of national repute&mdash;had come to the ranch from the East. Her name was
- Jess.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jess, the pretty girl, was protected in this venture by an old and gnarled
- aunt, watchful as a ferret, sour as a lime. Not that Jess, the pretty
- girl, needed watching; she was, indeed! propriety's climax.
- </p>
- <p>
- No soft nor dulcet reason wooed Jess, the pretty girl, to the West; she
- came on no love errand. The visitor was elegantly tired of the East, that
- was all; and longed for western air and western panorama.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jess, the pretty girl, had been at the Cross-K ranch a week, and the boys
- had met her, everyone. The meeting or meetings were marked by awkwardness
- as to the boys, indifference as to Jess, the pretty girl. She encountered
- them as she did the ponies, cows, horned-toads and other animals, domestic
- and <i>fero naturo</i>, indigenous to eastern Arizona. While every cowboy
- was blushingly conscious of Jess, the pretty girl, she was serenely
- guiltless of giving him a thought.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before Jess, the pretty girl, arrived, the cowboys were friends and the
- tenor of their calm relations was rippleless as a mirror. Jess was not
- there a day, before each drew himself insensibly from the others, while a
- vague hostility shone dimly in his eyes. It was the instinct of the
- fighting male animal aroused by the presence of Jess, the pretty girl.
- Jess, however, proceeded on her dainty way, sweetly ignorant of the
- sentiments she awakened.
- </p>
- <p>
- Men are mere animals. Women are, too, for that matter. But the latter are
- different animals from men. The effort the race makes to be other, better
- or different than the mere animal fails under pressure. It always failed;
- it will always fail. Civilisation is the veriest veneer and famously thin.
- A year on the plains cracks this veneer&mdash;this shell&mdash;and the
- animal issues visibly forth. This shell-cracking comes by the expanding
- growth of all that is animalish in man&mdash;attributes of the physical
- being, fed and pampered by a plains' existence.
- </p>
- <p>
- To recur to the boys of the Cross-K. The dark, vague, impalpable
- differences which cut off each of these creatures from his fellows, and
- inspired him with an unreasoning hate, had flourished with the brief week
- of their existence. A philosopher would have looked for near trouble on
- the Cross-K.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever did you take my saddle for, Bill?&rdquo; said Jack Cook to one Bill
- Watkins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I allows I'll ride it some,&rdquo; replied Watkins; &ldquo;thought it might
- like to pack a sure-'nough long-horn jest once for luck!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, don't maverick it no more,&rdquo; retorted Cook, moodily, and ignoring
- the gay insolence of the other. &ldquo;Leastwise, don't come a-takin' of it, an'
- sayin' nothin'. You can <i>palaver Americano</i>, can't you? When you aims
- to ride my saddle ag'in, ask for it; if you can't talk, make signs, an' if
- you can't make signs, shake a bush; but don't go romancin' off in silence
- with no saddle of mine no more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever do you reckon is liable to happen if I pulls it ag'in to-morry?&rdquo;
- inquired Bill in high scorn.
- </p>
- <p>
- Watkins was of a more vivacious temper than the gloomy Cook.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which if you takes it ag'in, I'll shorely come among you a whole lot. An'
- some prompt!&rdquo; replied Cook, in a tone of obstinate injury.
- </p>
- <p>
- These boys were brothers before Jess, the pretty girl, appeared. Either
- would have gone afoot all day for the other. Going afoot, too, is the last
- thing a cowboy will consent to.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you-all fail to come among me none,&rdquo; said Bill with cheerful
- ferocity, &ldquo;on account of it's bein' me. I crosses the trail of a hold-up
- like you over in the Panhandle once, an' makes him dance, an' has a
- chuck-waggon full of fun with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop your millin' now, right yere!&rdquo; said Tom Rawlins, the Cross-K range
- boss, who was sitting close at hand. &ldquo;You-alls spring trouble 'round yere,
- an' you can gamble I'll be in it! Whatever's the matter with you-alls
- anyway? Looks like you've been as <i>locoed</i> as a passel of sore-head
- dogs for more'n a week now. Which you're shorely too many for me, an' I
- plumb gives you up!&rdquo; And Rawlins shook his sage head foggily.
- </p>
- <p>
- The boys started some grumbling reply, but the cook called them to supper
- just then, and, one animalism becoming overshadowed by another, they
- forgot their rancour in thoughts of supplying their hunger. Towards the
- last of the repast, Rawlins arose, and going to another room, began
- overlooking some entries in the ranch books.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jess, the pretty girl, did not sit at the ranch table. She had small
- banquets in her own room. Just then she was heard singing some tender
- little song that seemed born of a sigh and a tear. The boys' resentment of
- each other began again to burn in their eyes. None of these savages was in
- the least degree in love with Jess, the pretty girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- The singing went on in a cooing, soft way that did not bring you the
- words; only the music.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What I says about my saddle a while back, goes as it lays!&rdquo; said Jack
- Cook.
- </p>
- <p>
- The song had ceased.
- </p>
- <p>
- As Cook spoke he turned a dark look on Watkins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;See yere!&rdquo; replied Watkins in an exasperated tone&mdash;he was as vicious
- as Cook&mdash;&ldquo;if you're p'intin' out for a war-jig with me, don't go
- stampin' 'round none for reasons. Let her roll! Come a-runnin' an' don't
- pester none with ceremony.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which a gent don't have to have no reason for crawlin' you!&rdquo; said Cook.
- &ldquo;Anyone's licenced to chase you 'round jest for exercise!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can gamble,&rdquo; said Watkins, confidently, &ldquo;any party as chases me
- 'round much, will regyard it as a thrillin' pastime. Which it won't grow
- on him none as a habit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As you-all seem to feel that a-way,&rdquo; said the darkly wrathful Cook, &ldquo;I'll
- sorter step out an' shoot with you right now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' I'll shorely go you!&rdquo; said Watkins.
- </p>
- <p>
- They arose and walked to the door. It was gathering dark, but it was light
- enough to shoot by. The other cowboys followed in a kind of savage
- silence. Not one word was said in comment or objection. They were grave,
- but passive like Indians. It is not good form to interfere with other
- people's affairs in Arizona.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jess, the pretty girl, began singing again. The strains fell softly on the
- ears of the cowboys. Each, as he listened, whether onlooker or principal,
- felt a licking, pleased anticipation of the blood to be soon set flowing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nothing was said of distance. Cook and Watkins separated to twenty paces
- and turned to face each other. Each wore his six-shooter, the loose pistol
- belt letting it rest low on his hip. Each threw down his big hat and stood
- at apparent ease, with his thumbs caught in his belt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shall you give the word, or me?&rdquo; asked Cook.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You says when!&rdquo; retorted Watkins. &ldquo;It'll be a funny passage in American
- history if you-all gets your gun to the front any sooner than I do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be you ready?&rdquo; asked Cook.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I'm shorely ready!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, go!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bang! Bang!! Bang!!!&rdquo; went both pistols together.
- </p>
- <p>
- The reports came with a rapidity not to be counted. Cook got a crease in
- the face&mdash;a mere wound of the flesh. Watkins blundered forward with a
- bullet in his side.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0041.jpg" alt="0041 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0041.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- Rawlins ran out. His experience taught him all at a look. Hastily
- examining Cook, he discovered that his hurt was nothing serious. The
- others carried Watkins into the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Take my pony saddled at the fence, Jack,&rdquo; said Rawlins, &ldquo;an' pull your
- freight. This yere Watkins is goin' to die. You've planted him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I shorely hopes I has!&rdquo; said Cook, with bitter cheerfulness. &ldquo;I
- ain't got no use for cattle of his brand; none whatever!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Cook took Rawlins's pony. When he paused, the pony hung his head while his
- flanks steamed and quivered. And no marvel! That pony was one hundred
- miles from the last corn, as he cooled his nervous muzzle in the Rio San
- Simon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some deviltry about their saddles, Miss; that's all!&rdquo; reported Rawlins to
- Jess, the pretty girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Isn't it horrible!&rdquo; shuddered Jess, the pretty girl.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next morning Jess and the gnarled aunt paid the injured Watkins a
- visit. This civility affected the other three cowboys invidiously. They at
- once departed to a line of Cross-K camps in the Northwest. This on a
- pretence of working cattle over on the Cochise Mesa. They looked black
- enough as they galloped away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which it's shore a sin Jack Cook ain't no better pistol shot!&rdquo; observed
- one, as the acrid picture of Jess, the pretty girl, sympathising above the
- wounded Watkins, arose before him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whatever!&rdquo; assented the others.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then, in moods of grim hatefulness, they bled their tired ponies with the
- spur by way of emphasis.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE HUMMING BIRD
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>IT; I'm in a hurry
- to chase meself to-night,&rdquo; quoth Chucky, having first, however, taken his
- drink. &ldquo;I'd like to stay an' chin wit' youse, but I can't. D' fact is I've
- got company over be me joint; he's a dead good fr'end of mine, see!
- Leastwise he has been; an' more'n onct, when I'm in d' hole, he's reached
- me his mit an' pulled me out. Now he's down on his luck I'm goin' to make
- good, an' for an even break on past favours, see if I can't straighten up
- <i>his</i> game.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who is your friend?&rdquo; I asked. &ldquo;Does he live here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naw,&rdquo; retorted Chucky; &ldquo;he's a crook, an' don't live nowhere. His name's
- Mollie Matches, an 'd' day was when Mollie's d' flyest fine-woiker on
- Byrnes's books. An' say! that ain't no fake neither.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did he do?&rdquo; I inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Leathers, supers an' rocks,&rdquo; replied Chucky. &ldquo;Of course, d' supers has to
- be yellow; d' w'ite kind don't pay; an' d' rocks has to be d' real t'ing.
- In d' old day, Mollie was d' king of d' dips, for fair! Of all d' crooks
- he was d' nob, an' many's d' time I've seen him come into d' Gran' Central
- wit' his t'ree stalls an' a Sheeny kid to carry d' swag, an' all as swell
- a mob as ever does time.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But he's fell be d' wayside now, an' don't youse forget it! Not only is
- he broke for dough, but his healt' is busted, too.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's one of the strange things to me, Chucky,&rdquo; I said, for I was
- disposed to detain him if I could, and hear a bit more of his devious
- friend; &ldquo;one of the very strange things! Here's your friend Mollie, who
- has done nothing, so you say, but steal watches, diamonds and pocket-books
- all his life, and yet to-day he is without a dollar.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh! as for that,&rdquo; returned Chucky wisely, &ldquo;a crook don't make so much. In
- d' foist place, if he's nippin' leathers, nine out of ten of 'em's bound
- to be readers&mdash;no long green in 'em at all; nothin' but poi-pers,
- see! An' if he's pinchin' tickers an' sparks, a fence won't pay more'n a
- fort' what dey's wort'&mdash;an' there you be, see! Then ag'in, it costs a
- hundred plunks a day to keep a mob on d' road; an' what wit' puttin' up to
- d' p'lice for protection, an' what wit' squarin' a con or brakey if youse
- are graftin' on a train, there ain't, after his stalls has their bits,
- much left for Mollie. Takin' it over all, Mollie's dead lucky to get a
- hundred out of a t'ousand plunks; an' yet he's d' mug who has to put his
- hooks on d' stuff every time; do d' woik an' take d' chances, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I'll tip it off to youse,&rdquo; continued Chucky, at the same time
- lowering his tone confidentially; &ldquo;I'll put you on to what knocks Mollie's
- eye out just now. He's only a week ago toined out of one of de western
- pens, an' I reckon he was bad wit' 'em at d' finish&mdash;givin' 'em a
- racket. Anyhow, dey confers on Mollie d' Hummin' Boid, an dey overplays.
- Mollie's gettin' old, and can't stand for what he could onct; an', as I
- says, these prison marks gives him too much of 'd Hummin' Boid and it
- breaks his noive.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure! Mollie's now what youse call hyster'cal; got bats in his steeple
- half d' time. If it wasn't for d' hop I shoots into him wit' a dandy
- little hypodermic gun me Rag's got, he'd be in d' booby house. An' all for
- too much Hummin' Boid! Say! on d' level! there ought to be a law ag'inst
- it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What in heaven's name is the Humming Bird?&rdquo; I queried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's d' prison punishment,&rdquo; replied Chucky. &ldquo;Youse see, every pen has its
- punishment. In some, it's d' paddles, an' some ag'in don't do a t'ing but
- hang a guy up be a pair of handcuffs to his cell door so his toes just
- scrapes d' floor. In others dey starves you; an' in others still, dey
- slams you in d' dark hole.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! if youse are out to make some poor mark nutty for fair, just give
- him d' dark hole for a week. There he is wit' nothin' in d' cell but
- himself, see! an* all as black as ink. Mebby if d' guards is out to keep
- him movin', dey toins d' hose in an' wets down d' floor before dey leaves
- him. But honest to God! youse put a poor sucker in d' dark hole, an' be d'
- end of ten hours it's apples to ashes he ain't onto it whether he's been
- in a day or a week. Keep him there a week, an' away goes his cupolo&mdash;he
- ain't onto nothin'. On d' square! at d' end of a week in d' dark, a mut
- don't know lie's livin'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' cat-o'nine-tails, which dey has at Jeff City, ain't a marker to d'
- dark hole! D' cat'll crack d' skin all right, all right, but d' dark hole
- cracks a sucker's nut, see! His cocoa never is on straight ag'in, after
- he's done a stunt or two in d' dark hole.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But the Humming Bird?&rdquo; I persisted. &ldquo;What is it like?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why! as I relates,&rdquo; retorted Chucky, &ldquo;d' Hummin Boid is what dey does to
- a guy in d' pen where Mollie was to teach him not to be too gay. It's like
- this: Here's a gezebo doin' time, see! Well, he gets funny. Mebby he soaks
- some other pris'ner; or mebby he toins loose and gives it to some guard in
- d' neck; or mebby ag'in he kicks on d' lock-step. I've seen a heap of mugs
- who does d' last.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anyhow, whatever he does, it gets to be a case of Hummin' Boid, an' dey
- brings me gay scrapper or kicker, whichever he is, out for punishment. An'
- this is what he gets ag'inst:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey sets him in a high trough, same as dey waters a horse wit', see!
- Foist dey shucks d' mark&mdash;peels off his make-up down to d' buff. An'
- then dey sets him in d' trough, like I says, wit' mebby its eight inches
- of water in it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then he's strapped be d' ankles, an' d' fins, and about his waist, so he
- can't do nothin' but stay where he is. A sawbones gets him be d' pulse,
- an' one of them 'lectrical stiffs t'rows a wire, which is one end of d'
- battery, in d' water. D' wire, which is d' other end, finishes in a wet
- sponge. An' say! hully hell! when dey touches a poor mark wit' d' sponge
- end on d' shoulder, or mebby d' elbow, it completes d' circuit, see! an'
- it'll fetch such a glory hallelujah yelp out of him as would bring a deef
- an' dumb asylum into d' front yard to find out what d' row's about.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's d' same t'ing as d' chair at Sing Sing, only not so warm. It's
- enough, though, to make d' toughest mug t'row a fit. No one stands for a
- secont trip; one touch of d' Hummin' Boid! an' a duck'll welch on anyt'ing
- you says&mdash;do anyt'ing, be anyt'ing; only so youse let up and don't
- give him no more. D' mere name of Hummin' Boid's good enough to t'run a
- scare into d' hardest an' d' woist of 'em, onct dey's had a piece.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I says about Mollie: it seems them Indians gives him d' Hummin' Boid;
- an' dey gives him d' gaff too deep. But I've got to chase meself now, and
- pump some dope into him. I ought to land Mollie right side up in a week.
- An' then I'll bring him over to this boozin' ken of ours, an' cap youse a
- knock-down to him. Ta! ta!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- GASSY THOMPSON, VILLAIN
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ESTERN humour is
- being severely spoken of by the close personal friends of Peter Dean. Less
- than a year ago, Peter Dean left the paternal roof on Madison Avenue and
- plunged into the glowing West. On the day of his departure he was
- twenty-three; not a ripe age. He had studied mining and engineering, and
- knew in those matters all that science could tell. His purpose in going
- West was to acquire the practical part of his chosen profession. Peter
- Dean believed in knowing it all; knowing it with the hands as well as with
- the head.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus it befell that young Peter Dean, on a day to be remembered, tossed a
- careless kiss to his companions and fled away into the heart of the
- continent. Then his hair was raven black. Months later, when he returned,
- it was silver white. Western humour had worked the change; therefore the
- criticism chronicled. Peter Dean tells the following story of the
- bleaching:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At Creede I met a person named Thompson; 'Gassy' Thompson he was called
- by those about him, in testimony to his powers as a conversationist. A
- barkeeper, who seemed the best-informed and most gentlemanly soul in town,
- told me that Gassy Thompson was a miner full of practical skill, and that
- he was then engaged in sinking a shaft. I might arrange with Gassy and
- learn the business. At the barkeeper's hint, I proposed as much to Gassy
- Thompson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'All right!' said Gassy; 'come out to the shaft to-morrow.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The next day I was at the place appointed. The shaft was already fifty
- feet deep. Besides myself and this person, Gassy, who was to tutor me,
- there was a creature named Jim. This made three of us.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At the suggestion of Gassy, he and I descended into the shaft; Jim was
- left on the surface. We went down by means of a bucket, Jim unwinding us
- from a rickety old windlass.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Once down, Gassy and I, with sledge and drill, perpetrated a hole in the
- bottom of the shaft. I held the drill, Gassy wielding the sledge. When the
- hole met the worshipful taste of my tutor, he put in a dynamite cartridge,
- connected a long, five-minute fuse therewith, and carefully thumbed it
- about and packed it in with wet clay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At Gassy's word, I was then hauled up from the shaft by Jim. I added my
- strength to the windlass, Gassy climbed into the bucket, lighted the fuse,
- and was then swiftly wound to the surface by Jim and myself. We then
- dragged the windlass aside, covered the mouth of the shaft, and quickly
- scampered to a distance, to be out of harm's reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At the end of five minutes from the time that Gassy lighted the fuse, and
- perhaps three minutes after we had cleared away, the shot exploded with a
- deafening report. Tons of rock were shot up from the mouth of the shaft,
- full fifty feet in the air. It was all very impressive, and gave me a
- lesson in the tremendous power of dynamite. I was much pleased, and felt
- as if I were learning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Following the explosion Gassy and I again repaired to the bottom of the
- shaft. After clearing away the débris and sending it up and out by the
- bucket, we resumed the sledge and drill. We completed another hole and
- were ready for a second shot. This was about noon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was at this point that the miscreant, Gassy, began to put into action
- a plot he had formed against me, and to carry out which the murderer, Jim,
- lent ready aid. You must remember that I had perfect confidence in these
- two villains.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I never seed no tenderfoot go along like you do at this business,' said
- Gassy Thompson to me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This was flattery. The miscreant was fattening me for the sacrifice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Looks like you was born to be a miner,' he went on. 'Now, I'm goin' to
- let you fire the next shot. Usual, I wouldn't feel jestified in allowin' a
- tenderfoot to fire a shot for plumb three months. But you has a genius for
- minin'; it comes as easy to you as robbin' a bird's nest. I'd be doin'
- wrong to hold you back.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, I naturally felt pleased. To be allowed to fire a dynamite
- shot on my first day in the shaft I felt and knew to be an honour. I
- determined to write home to my friends of this triumph.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gassy said he'd put in the shot, and he selected one of giant size. I saw
- the herculean explosive placed in the hole; then he attached the fuse and
- thumbed the clay about it as before. He gave me a few last words.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'After I gets up,' he said, 'an' me an' Jim's all ready, you climb into
- the bucket an' light the fuse. Then raise the long yell to me an' Jim, an'
- we'll yank ye out. But be shore an' light the fuse. There's nothin' more
- discouragin' than for to wait half an* hour outside an' no cartridge goin'
- off. Especial when it goes off after you comes back to see what's the
- matter with her. So be shore an' light the fuse, an' then Jim an' me'll
- run you up the second follerin'. This oughter be a great day for you,
- young man! firin' a shot this away, the first six hours you're a miner!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jim and Gassy were at the windlass and yelled:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'All ready below?'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was in the bucket and at the word scratched a match and lit the fuse.
- It sputtered with alarming ardour, and threw off a shower of sparks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Hoist away!' I called.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The villains ran me up about twenty-five feet, and came to a dead halt.
- At this they seemed to get into an altercation. They both abandoned the
- windlass, and I could hear them cursing, threatening, and shooting;
- presumably at each other.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I'll blow your heart out!' I heard Gassy say.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My alarm was without a limit. I'd seen one dynamite cartridge go off.
- Here I was, swinging some twenty-five feet over a still heavier charge,
- and about to be blown into eternity! Meanwhile the caitiffs, on whom my
- life depended, were sacrificing me to settle some accursed feud of their
- own.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I cannot tell you of my agony. The fuse was spitting fire like forty
- fiends; the narrow shaft was choked with smoke. I swung helpless, awaiting
- death, while the two monsters, Gassy and Jim, were trying to murder each
- other above. Either from the smoke or the excitement, I fainted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I came to myself I was outside the shaft, safe and sound, while
- Gassy and his disreputable assistant were laughing at their joke. There
- had been no shot placed in the drill-hole; the heartless Gassy had palmed
- it and carried it with him to the surface.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At my very natural inquiry, made in a weak voice&mdash;for I was still
- sick and broken&mdash;as to what it all meant, they said it was merely a
- Colorado jest, and intended for the initiation of a tenderfoot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'It gives 'em nerve!' said Gassy; 'it puts heart into 'em an' does 'em
- good!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As soon as I could walk I severed my relations with Gassy Thompson and
- his outlaw adherent, Jim. The next morning my hair had turned the milky
- sort you see. The Creede people with whom I discussed the crime, laughed
- and said the drinks were on me. That was all the sympathy, all the
- redress, I got.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After that I came East without delay. When I leave the city of New York
- again it will not be for Creede. Nor will my next mining connection be
- formed with such abandoned barbarians as Gassy Thompson and Jim.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- ONE MOUNTAIN LION
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>ard! would you
- like to shoot at that lion?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bob usually gave me no title at all. But when in any stress of our
- companionship he was driven to it, I was hailed as &ldquo;pard!&rdquo; Once or twice
- on some lighter occasion he had addressed me by the Spanish &ldquo;<i>Amigo</i>.&rdquo;
- In business hours, however, my rank was &ldquo;pard!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Sundown in the hills. The scene was a southeast spur of the Rockies; call
- the region the Upper Red River or the Vermejo, whichever you will for a
- name. Forty miles due west from the Spanish Peaks would stand one on the
- very spot.
- </p>
- <p>
- I had been out all day, ransacking the canyons, taking a Winter's look at
- the cattle to note how they were meeting the rigours of a season not yet
- half over. I had witnessed nothing alarming; my horned folk of the hills
- still made a smooth display as to ribs, and wore the air of cattle who had
- prudently stored up tallow enough the autumn before to carry them into the
- April grass.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Many a day have I dwelt in a wet saddle, only to crawl into a wetter
- blanket at night; and all for cows!&rdquo; It was Bob Ellis who fathered this
- rather irrelevant observation. I had cut his trail an hour before, and we
- were making company for each other back to camp. I put forth no retort.
- Bob and I abode in the same small log hut, and I saw much of him, and
- didn't feel obliged to reply to those random utterances which fluttered
- from him like birds from a bush.
- </p>
- <p>
- It had been snowing for three days. This afternoon, however, had shaken
- off the storm. It is worth while to see the snow come down in the hills;
- flakes soft and clinging and silently cold; big as a baby's hand. Out in
- the flat valleys free of the trees the snow was deep enough to jade and
- distress our ponies. Therefore Bob and I were creeping home among the
- thick sown pines which bristled on the Divide like spines on a pig's back.
- There was very little snow under the trees. What would have made an easy
- depth of two feet had it been evenly spread on the ground over which our
- broncos picked their tired way, was above our heads in the pines. That was
- the reason why the trees were so still and silent. Your pine is a most
- garrulous vegetable in a sighing fashion, and its complaining notes sing
- for ever in your ears; sometimes like a roar, sometimes like a wail. But
- the three-days' snow in their green mouths gagged them; and never a tree
- of them all drew so much as a breath as we pushed on through their ranks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Like the Winchester you're packin?&rdquo; asked Bob.
- </p>
- <p>
- I confessed a weakness for the gun.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Had one of them magazine guns once myse'f,&rdquo; Bob remarked. &ldquo;Model of '78.
- Never liked it, though; always shootin' over. As you pump the loads outen
- 'em and empty the magazine, the weight shifts till toward the last the
- muzzle's as light as a feather. Thar you be! shootin' over and still over,
- every pull.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Having no interest in magazine guns beyond the act of firing them, I paid
- no heed to Bob's assault on their merits.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now a single-shot gun,&rdquo; continued Bob, as he rode an oak shrub underfoot
- to come abreast of me, &ldquo;is the weepon for me. Never mind about thar bein'
- jest one shot in her! Show me somethin' to shoot, an' I'll sling the
- cartridges into her frequent enough for the most impatient gent on earth.
- This rifle I'm packin' is all right&mdash;all except the hind sight.
- That's too coarse; you could drag a dog through it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bob's dissertation on rifles was entertaining enough. My mood was
- indifferent, and his wisdom ran through my wits like water through a
- funnel, keeping them employed without filling them up. Bob had just begun
- again&mdash;all about a day far away when muzzle loaders were many in the
- hills&mdash;when my pony made sudden shy at something in the bushes. The
- muzzle of my gun instantly pointed to it, as if by an instinct of its own.
- Even as it did I became aware of the harmless cause of my pony's devout
- breathings&mdash;one of those million tragedies of nature which makes the
- wilderness a daily slaughter pen. It was the carcass of a blacktail deer.
- Its torn throat and shoulders, as well as the tracks of the giant cat in
- the snow, told how it died. The panther had leaped from the big bough of
- that yellow pine.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mountain lion!&rdquo; observed Bob, sagely, as he con templated the torn deer.
- &ldquo;The deer come sa'nterin' down the slope yere, an' the lion jest naturally
- jumps his game from that tree. This deer was a bigger fool than most. You
- wouldn't ketch many of 'em as could come walkin' down the wind where the
- brush and bushes is rank, and gives the cats a chance to lay for 'em and
- bushwhack 'em!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was becoming shadowy in among the pines by this time, and, having
- enough of Bob's defence of the dead buck and apology for its errors, I
- pushed on through the bushes for the camp. As we crossed a burnt strip
- where the fires had made a meal of the trees, the sun was reluctantly
- blinking his last before going to bed in the Sangre de Christo Range,
- which rolled upward like some tremendous billow in an ocean of milk full
- five scores of miles to the west.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bob and I were smoking our pipes in our log home that evening. Perhaps it
- was nine o'clock. A pitch-pine fire&mdash;billets set up endwise in the
- fireplace&mdash;roared in one corner. Our chimney was a vast success. Out
- back of our log habitat the surveyors had peeled the base of a pine and
- made a red-paint statement to the effect that even in the bottom of our
- little valley we were over 8,000 feet above the sea. This rather derogated
- from the pride of our chimney's performance; because, as Bob with justice
- urged, &ldquo;a chimney not to 'draw' at an altitude of 8,000 feet would have to
- be flat on the ground.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- I was sprawled on a blanket, softly taking in the smoke of a meerschaum.
- My eyes, fascinated by the glaring, pitch-pine blaze, were boring away at
- the fire as if it guarded a treasure. But neither the tobacco smoke nor
- the flames were in my thoughts; the latter were idly going back to the
- torn deer.
- </p>
- <p>
- As if in deference to a fashion of telepathy, Bob would have been thinking
- of the deer, also. It's possible, however, he had the cat in his
- meditations.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly he broke into my quiet with the remark which opens this yarn.
- Then he proceeded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because,&rdquo; Bob continued, as I turned an eye on him through my tobacco
- smoke, &ldquo;you might get it easy. He's shorely due to go back to-night an'
- eat up some of that black-tail, unless he's got an engagement. It's even
- money he's right thar now.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- I stepped to the door and looked out. The roundest of moons in the
- clearest of skies shone down. Then there was the snow; altogether, one
- might have read agate print by the light. I picked up my rifle and sent my
- eye through the sights.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But how about it when we push in among the pines; it'll be darker in
- there?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar'll be plenty of light,&rdquo; declared Bob. &ldquo;You don't have to make a
- tack-head shot. It ain't goin' to be like splittin' a bullet on a bowie.
- This mountain lion will be as big as you or me. Thar'll be light enough to
- hit a mark the size of him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Our ponies were heartily scandalised at being resaddled so soon; but they
- were powerless to enforce their views, and away we went, Indian file, with
- souls bent to slay the lion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I shorely undertakes the view that we'll get him,&rdquo; observed Bob as
- we rode along.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did you ever hear the Eastern proverb which says, 'The man who sold the
- lion's hide while yet upon the beast was killed in hunting him'?&rdquo; I asked
- banteringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who says so?&rdquo; demanded Bob, defiantly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is an Eastern proverb.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it may do for the East,&rdquo; responded Bob, &ldquo;but you can gamble it
- ain't had no run west of the Mississippi. Why! I wouldn't be afraid to bet
- that one of these panthers never killed a human in the world. They do it
- in stories, but never in the hills. Why, shore! if you went right up an'
- got one by his two y'ears an' wrastled him, he'd have to fight. You could
- get a row out of a house cat, an' play that system. But you can write
- alongside of the Eastern proverb, that 'Bob Ellis says that the lion them
- parties complain of as killin' their friend, must have been plumb <i>locoed</i>,
- an' it oughtn't to count.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the edge of the trees we left the ponies standing. They pointed their
- ears forward as if wondering what all this mysterious night's work meant.
- It was entirely beside their experience. We left them to unravel the
- puzzle and passed as quietly among the trees as needles into cloth.
- </p>
- <p>
- Both Bob and I had served our apprenticeship at being noiseless, and
- brought the noble trade of silence to a science. It wasn't distant now to
- the field of the deer's death. Soon Bob pointed out the yellow pine. Bob
- was a better woodsman than I. Even in the daylight I would have owned
- trouble in picking out the tree at that distance among such a piney
- throng.
- </p>
- <p>
- What little wind we had was breathing in our faces. Bob hadn't made the
- black-tail's blunder of giving the lion the better of the breeze. Bob took
- the lead after he pointed out the yellow pine. Perhaps it was 150 yards
- away when he identified it. We didn't cover five yards in a minute. Bob
- was resolutely deliberate. Still, I had no thought of complaint. I would
- have managed the case the same way had I been in the lead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Every ten feet Bob would pause and listen. There was now and then the
- sound of a clot of snow falling in the tops of the pines, as some bough
- surrendered its burden to the influence of the slight breeze. That was all
- my ears could detect of voices in the woods.
- </p>
- <p>
- We were within forty yards of the yellow pine, when Bob, after lingering a
- moment, turned his face toward me and made a motion of caution. I bent my
- ear to a profound effort. At last I heard it; the unctuous sound of
- feeding jaws!
- </p>
- <p>
- The oak bushes grew thick in among the pine trees. It did not seem
- possible to make out our game on account of this shrub-screen. At this
- point, instead of going any nearer the yellow pine, Bob bore off to the
- left. This flank movement not only held our title to the wind, but brought
- the moon behind us. After each fresh step Bob turned for a further survey
- of that region at the base of the yellow pine, where our lion, or some one
- of his relatives, was busy at his new repast.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the climax of search arrived. To give myself due credit, I saw the
- panther as soon as did Bob. A fallen pine tree opened a lane in the
- bushes. Along this aisle I could dimly make out the body of the beast. His
- head and shoulders were protected by the trunk of the yellow pine, from
- the limb of which he had ambuscaded the black-tail. A cat's mouth serves
- vilely as a knife; the teeth are not arranged to cut well. His inability
- to sever a morsel left nothing for our lion to do, but gnaw at the carcass
- much as a dog might at a bone. This managed to keep his head out of harm's
- way behind the tree.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nothing better was likely to offer, and I concluded to try what a bullet
- would bring, on that part of the panther we could see. I found as I raised
- my Winchester that there was to be a strong element of faith in the shot.
- It was dim and shadowy in the woods, conditions which appeared to increase
- the moment you tried to point a gun. The aid my aim received from the
- gun-sights was of the vaguest. Indeed, for that one occasion they might as
- well have been left off the rifle. But as I was as familiar with the
- weapon as with the words I write, and could tell to the breadth of a hair
- where to lay it against my face to make it point directly at an object,
- there was nothing to gain by any elaboration of aim. As if to speed my
- impulse in the matter, a far-off crashing occurred in the bushes to the
- rear. A word suffices to read the riddle of the interruption. Our ponies,
- tired of being left to themselves, were coming sapiently forward to join
- us.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the first blundering rush of the ponies I unhooked my Winchester. The
- panther had no chance to take stock of the ponies' careless approach. If
- they had started five minutes earlier he might have owed them something.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the crack of the Winchester, the panther gave such a scream as, added
- to the jar of the gun&mdash;I was burning 120 grains of powder&mdash;served
- to make my ears sing. There were fear, amazement and pain all braided
- together in that yell. The flash of the discharge and the night shadows so
- blinded me that I did not make a second shot. I pumped in the cartridge
- with the instinct of precedent, but it was of no use. On the heels of it,
- our ponies, as if taking the shot to be an urgent invitation to make
- haste, came up on a canter, tearing through the bushes in a way to lose a
- stirrup if persisted in.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bob had run forward. There was blood on the snow to a praiseworthy extent.
- As we gazed along the wounded animal's line of flight there was more of
- it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's too hard hit to go far,&rdquo; said Bob. &ldquo;We'll find him in the next
- canyon, or that blood's a joke.&rdquo; Bob walked along, looking at the
- blood-stained snow as if it were a lesson. Suddenly he halted, where the
- moonlight fell across it through the trees.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You uncoupled him,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Broke his back plumb in two. See where he
- dragged his hind legs!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He can't run far on those terms,&rdquo; I suggested.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't know,&rdquo; said Bob, doubtfully. &ldquo;A mountain lion don't die easy.
- Mountain lions is what an insurance sharp would call a good resk. But I'll
- tell you how to carry on this campaign: I'll take the horses and scout
- over to the left until I get into the canyon yonder. Then I'll bear off up
- the canyon. If he crosses it&mdash;an' goin' on two legs that away, I
- don't look for it&mdash;I'll signal with a yell. If he don't, I'll circle
- him till I find the trail. Meanwhile you go straight ahead on his track
- afoot. Take it slow an' easy, for he's likely to be layin' somewhere.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The trail carried me a quarter of a mile. As nearly as I might infer from
- the story the panther's passage had written in the snow, his speed held
- out. This last didn't look much like weakness. Still, the course was a
- splash of blood in red contradiction. The direction he took was slightly
- uphill.
- </p>
- <p>
- The trail ended sharp at the edge of a wide canyon. There was a shelf of
- scaly rock about twelve feet down the side. This had been protected from
- the storm by the overhanging brink of the canyon, and there was no snow on
- the shelf. That and the twelve feet of canyon side above it were the
- yellow colour of the earth.
- </p>
- <p>
- Below the shelf the snow again was deep, as the sides took an easier slope
- toward the bottom of the canyon. The panther had evidently scrambled down
- to the shelf. It took me less than a second to follow his wounded example.
- Once down I looked over the edge at the snow a few feet below to catch the
- trail again. The unmarred snow voiced no report of the game I hunted. I
- stepped to the left a few paces, still looking over for signs in the snow.
- There were none. As the shelf came to an end in this direction, I returned
- along the ledge, still keeping a hawk's eye on the snow below for the
- trail. I heard Bob riding in the canyon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you struck his trail?&rdquo; I shouted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar's been nothin' down yere!&rdquo; shouted Bob in reply. &ldquo;The snow's as
- unbroken as the cream-cap on a pan of milk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Where was my panther? I had begun to regard him as a chattel. As my eye
- journeyed along the ledge the mystery cleared up. There lay my yellow
- friend close in against the wall. I had walked within a yard of him,
- looking the other way while earnestly reading the snow.
- </p>
- <p>
- The panther was sprawled flat like a rug, staring at me with green eyes. I
- had broken his back, as Bob said. As I brought the Winchester to my face,
- his gaze gave way. He turned his head as if to hide it between his
- shoulder and the wall. I was too near to talk of missing, even in the dim
- light, and the next instant he was hiccoughing with a bullet in his brain.
- Six and one-half feet from nose to tip was the measurement; whereof the
- tail, which these creatures grow foolishly long, furnished almost
- one-half.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- MOLLIE MATCHES
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of the Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was clear and
- cold and dry&mdash;excellent weather, indeed, for a snowless Christmas.
- Everywhere one witnessed evidences of the season. One met more gay clothes
- than usual, with less of anxiety and an increase of smiling peace in the
- faces. Each window had its wreath of glistening green, whereof the red
- ribbon bow, that set off the garland, seemed than common a deeper and more
- ardent red. Or was the elevation in the faces, and the greenness of the
- wreaths, and the vivid sort of the ribbon, due to impressions, impalpable
- yet positive, of Christmas everywhere?
- </p>
- <p>
- All about was Christmas. Even our Baxter Street doggery had attempted
- something in the nature of a bowl of dark, suspicious drink, to which the
- barkeeper&mdash;he was a careless man of his nomenclature, this barkeeper&mdash;gave
- the name of &ldquo;apple toddy.&rdquo; Apple toddy it might have been.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Chucky came in, an uncertain shuffle which was company to his rather
- solid tread showed he was not alone. I looked up. Our acquaintance, Mollie
- Matches, expert pickpocket,&mdash;now helpless and broken, all his one
- time jauntiness of successful crime gone,&mdash;was with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was lonesome over be me joint,&rdquo; vouchsafed Chucky, &ldquo;wit' me Bundle
- chased over to do her reg'lar anyooal confession to d' priest, see! an' so
- I fought youse wouldn't mind an' I bring Mollie along. Me old pal is still
- a bit shaky as to his hooks,&rdquo; remarked Chucky, as he surveyed his
- tremulous companion, &ldquo;an' a sip of d' booze wouldn't do him no harm. It
- ain't age; Mollie's only come sixty spaces; it's that Hum-min' Boid about
- which I tells youse, that's knocked his noive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Drinks were ordered; whiskey strong and straight for Matches. No; I've no
- apology for buying these folk drink. &ldquo;Drink,&rdquo; observed Johnson to the
- worthy Boswell, &ldquo;drink, for one thing, makes a man pleased with himself,
- which is no small matter.&rdquo; Heaven knows! my shady companions, for the
- reason announced by the sagacious doctor, needed something of the sort.
- Besides, I never molest my fellows in their drinking. I've slight personal
- use for breweries, distilleries, or wine presses; and gin mills in any
- form or phase woo me not; yet I would have nothing of interference with
- the cups of other men. In such behalf, I feel not unlike that fat,
- well-living bishop of Westminster who refused to sign a memorial to
- Parliament craving strict laws in behalf of total abstinence. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said
- that sound priest, stoutly, &ldquo;I will sign no such petition to Parliament. I
- want no such law. I would rather see Englishmen free than sober.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It took five deep draughts of liquor, ardently raw, to put Matches in half
- control of his hands. What with the chill of the day, and what with the
- torn condition of his nerves, they shook like the oft-named aspen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Them don't remind a guy,&rdquo; said Matches, as he held up his quivering
- fingers, &ldquo;of a day, twenty-five years ago, when I was d' pick of d' swell
- mob, an 'd' steadiest grafter that ever ringed a watch or weeded a
- leather! It would be safe for d' Chief to take me mug out of d' gallery
- now, an' rub d' name of Mollie Matches off d' books. Me day is done, an'
- I'll graft no more.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was plaintiveness in the man's tones as if he were mourning some
- virtue, departed with his age and weakness. Clearly Matches, off his guard
- and normal, found no peculiar fault with his past.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How came you to be a thief?&rdquo; I asked Matches bluntly. I had counted the
- sixth drink down his throat, which meant that he wouldn't be sensitive.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's too far off to say,&rdquo; retorted Matches. &ldquo;I can't t'row back to d'
- time when I wasn't a crook. Do youse want to know d' foist trick I loined?
- Well, it wasn't t'ree blocks from here, over be d' Bowery. I couldn't be
- more'n five. There was a fakir, sellin' soap. There was spec'ments of d'
- long green all over his stand, wit' cakes of soap on 'em, to draw d'
- suckers. Standin' be me side was a kid; Danny d' Face dey called him. He
- was bigger than me, an' so I falls to his tips, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'When you see him toin round,' said Danny d' Face, 'swipe a bill, an'
- chase yourself up d' alley wit' it.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Danny goes behint, an' does a sneak on d' fakir's leg wit' a pin. Of
- course, he toins an' cuts loose a bluff at Danny, who's ducked out of
- reach. As he toins, up goes me small mit, an' d' nex' secont I'm sprintin'
- up d' alley wit 'd' swag.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit; d' mug wit' d' soap don't chase. He never even makes a holler; I
- don't t'ink he caught on. But Danny cuts in after me, an 'd' minute he
- sees we ain't bein' followed, or piped, he gives me d' foot, t'rows me in
- a heap, an' grabs off d' bill. I don't get a smell of it. An 'd' toad
- skin's a fiver at that!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' foist real graft I recalls,&rdquo; continued Matches, as he took a
- meditative sip of the grog, &ldquo;I'm goin' along wit' an old fat skirt, called
- Mother Worden, to Barnum's Museum down be Ann Street an' Broadway. Mebbe
- I'm seven or eight then. Mother Worden used to make up for d' respectable,
- see! an' our togs was out of sight. There was no flies on us when me an'
- Mother Worden went fort' to graft. What was d' racket? Pickin' women's
- pockets. Mother Worden would go to d' museum, or wherever there was a
- crush, an' lead me about be me mit. She'd steer me up to some loidy, an'
- let on she's lookin' at whatever d' other party has her lamps on.
- Meanwhile, I'm shoved in between d' brace of 'em, an' that's me cue to dip
- in wit' me free hook an' toin out d' loidy's pocket, see! An' say! it was
- a peach of a play; an' a winner. We used to take in funerals, an'
- theaytres, an' wherever there was a gang. Me an' Mother Worden was d'
- whole t'ing; there was nobody's bit to split out; just us. We was d'
- complete woiks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now an' then there was a squeal. Once in a while I'd bungle me stunt, an'
- d' loidy I was friskin' would tumble an' raise d' yell. But Mother Worden
- always 'pologised, an' acted like she's shocked, an' cuffed me an' t'umped
- me, see! an' so she'd woik us free. I stood for d' t'umpin', an' never
- knocked. Mother Worden always told me that if we was lagged, d' p'lice
- guys would croak me. An' as d' wallopin's she gives me was d' real t'ing,&mdash;bein'
- she was hot under d' collar for me failin' down wit' me graft,&mdash;d'
- folks used to believe her, an' look on me fin in their pocket, that way,
- as d' caper of a kid. Oh, d' old woman Worden was dead flossy in her day,
- an' stood d' acid all right, all right, every time.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But like it always toins out, she finds her finish. One day she makes a
- side-play on her own account, somethin' in d' shopliftin' line, I t'ink;
- an' she's pinched, an' takes six mont's on d' Island. I never sees her
- ag'in; at which I don't break no record for weeps. She's a boid, was
- Mother Worden; an' dead tough at that. She don't give me none d' best of
- it when I'm wit' her, an' I'm glad, in a kid fashion, when she gets put
- away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' start I gets. Some other time I'll unfold to youse how I takes
- me name of Mollie Matches. Youse can hock your socks! I've seen d' hot end
- of many an alley! I never chases be Trinity buryin' ground, but I t'inks
- of a day when I pitched coppers on one of d' tombstones, heads or tails,
- for a saw-buck, wit' a party grown, before I was old enough an' fly enough
- to count d' dough we was tossin' for. But we'll pass all that up to-night.
- It's gettin' late an' I'll just put me frame outside another hooker an'
- then I'll hunt me bunk. I can't set up, an' booze an' gab like I onct
- could; I ain't neither d' owl nor d' tank I was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE ST. CYRS
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>rançois St. Cyr is
- a Frenchman. He is absent two years from La Belle France. He and his
- little wife, Bebe, live not far from Washington Square. They love each
- other like birds. Yet François St. Cyr is gay, and little Bebe is jealous.
- Once a year the Ball of France is held at the Garden. Bebe turns up a nose
- and will not so belittle herself. So François St. Cyr attends the Ball of
- France alone. However, he does not repine. François St. Cyr is permitted
- to be more <i>de gage</i>; the ladies more <i>abandon</i>. At least that
- is the way François St. Cyr explains it.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is the night of the Ball of France. François St. Cyr is there. The
- Garden lights shine on fair women and brave men. It is a masque. The
- costumes are fancy, some of them feverishly so. A railroad person present
- says there isn't enough costume on some of the participants to flag a
- hand-car. No one has any purpose, however, to flag a hand-car; the
- deficiency passes unnoticed. Had the railroader spoken of flagging a beer
- waggon&mdash;<i>mon Dieu!</i> that would have been another thing!
- </p>
- <p>
- A prize, a casket of jewels, is to be given to the best dressed lady. A
- bacchante in white satin trimmed with swans' down and diamonds the size
- and lustre of salt-cellars is appointed the beneficiary by popular
- acclaim. François St. Cyr, as one of the directors of the ball, presents
- the jewels in a fiery speech. The music crashes, the mad whirl proceeds. A
- supple young woman, whose trousseau would have looked lonely in a
- collar-box, kicks off the hat of François St. Cyr. <i>Sapriste!</i> how
- she charms him! He drinks wine from her little shoe!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he morning papers
- told of the beauty in swans' down; the casket of jewels, and the
- presentation rhetoric of François St. Cyr, flowing like a river of oral
- fire. Bebe read it with the first light of dawn. <i>Peste!</i> Later, when
- François St. Cyr came home, Bebe hurled the clock at him from an upper
- window. Bebe followed it with other implements of light housekeeping.
- François St. Cyr fled wildly. Then he wept and drank beer and talked of
- his honour.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he supple person
- who kicked the hat of François St. Cyr was a chorus girl. The troop in
- whose outrages she assisted was billed to infuriate Newark that evening.
- François St. Cyr would seek surcease in Newark. He would bind a new love
- on the heart bruised and broken by the jealous Bebe. <i>Mon Dieu!</i> yes!
- </p>
- <p>
- The curtain went up. François St. Cyr inhabited a box. He was very still;
- no mouse was more so. No one noticed François St. Cyr. At last the chorus
- folk appeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Brava! mam'selle, brava!&rdquo; shouted François St. Cyr, springing to his
- feet, and performing with his hands as with cymbals.
- </p>
- <p>
- What merited this outburst? The chorus folk had done nothing; hadn't slain
- a note, nor murdered a melody. The audience stared at the shouting
- François St. Cyr. What ailed the man? At last the audience admonished
- François St. Cyr.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sit down! Shut up!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Those were the directions the public gave François St. Cyr.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I weel not sit down! I weel not close up!&rdquo; shouted François St. Cyr,
- bending over the box-rail and gesticulating like a monkey whose reason was
- suffering a strain. Then again to the chorus girl:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Brava! mam'selle, brava!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The other chorus girls looked disdainfully at the chorus girl whom
- François St. Cyr honoured, so as to identify her to the contempt of the
- public.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>rancois St. Cyr
- suddenly discharged a bouquet at the stage. It was the size of a butter
- tub. It mowed a swath through the chorus like a chain shot.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Put him out!&rdquo; commanded the public.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poot heem out!&rdquo; repeated François St. Cyr with a shriek of sneering
- contempt. &ldquo;<i>Canaille!</i> I def-fy you! I am a Frenchman; I do not
- fee-ar to die!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Wafted to his duty on the breath of general opinion, a <i>gend'arme</i> of
- Newark acquired François St. Cyr, and bore him vociferating from the scene
- of his triumph.
- </p>
- <p>
- As he was carried through the foyer, he raised his voice heroically:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;<i>Vive le Boulanger!</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he next public
- appearance of François St. Cyr was in the Newark Police Court. He was pale
- and limp, and had thoughts of suicide. He was still clothed in his dress
- suit, which clung to him as if it, too, felt &ldquo;<i>des-pond</i>.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- François St. Cyr was fined $20.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bebe, the jealous, the faithful little Bebe, was there to pay the money.
- <i>Mon Dieu!</i> how he loved her! He would be her bird and sing to her
- all her life! Never would he leave his Bebe more! As for the false one of
- the chorus: François St. Cyr &ldquo;des-spised&rdquo; her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Also Bebe had brought the week-day suit of François St. Cyr. Could an
- angel have had more forethought? François St. Cyr changed his clothes in a
- jury room, and Bebe and he came home cooing like turtle doves.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>y virtue of the
- every-day suit, the St. Cyrs were home by 4 o'clock in the afternoon.
- Otherwise, under the rules, being habited in a dress suit, François St.
- Cyr could not have returned until 6,
- </p>
- <p>
- And they were happy!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- McBRIDE'S DANDY
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>lbert Edward
- Murphy is a high officer in one of the departments of the city. He holds
- his position with credit to the administration, and to his own celebration
- and renown. He has a wife and a family of children; and sets up his Lares
- and Penates in a home of his own in Greenwich Village.
- </p>
- <p>
- Among other possessions of a household sort, Albert Edward Murphy, until
- lately, numbered one pug dog. It was a dog of vast spirit and but little
- wit. Yet the children loved it, and its puggish imbecility only seemed to
- draw it closer to their baby hearts.
- </p>
- <p>
- The pug's main delusion went to the effect that he could fight. Good
- judges say that there wasn't a dog on earth the pug could whip. But he
- didn't know this and held other views. As a result, he assailed every dog
- he met, and got thrashed. The pug had taken a whirl at all the canines in
- the neighbourhood, and been wickedly trounced in every instance. This only
- made him dearer, and the children loved him for the enemies he made.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- The pug's name was John.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day, John, the pug, fell heir to a frightful beating at the paws and
- jaws of the dog next door. All that saved the life of John, the pug, on
- this awful occasion, was the lucky fact that he could get between the
- pickets of the line fence, and the neighbour's dog could not. The
- neighbour's dog was many times the size and weight of John, the pug; but,
- as has been suggested, what John didn't know about other dogs would fill a
- book; and he had gone upon the neighbour's premises and pulled off a
- fight.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now these divers sporting events in which John, the pug, took disastrous
- part worried Albert Edward Murphy. They worried him because the children
- took them to heart, and wept over the wounds of John, the pug, as they
- bound them with tar and other medicaments. At last Albert Edward Murphy
- resolved upon a campaign in favour of John, the pug. His future should
- have a protector; his past should be avenged.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a forty-pound bulldog resident of Philadelphia. He whipped every
- dog to whom he was introduced. His name was Alexander McBride. He was
- referred to as &ldquo;McBride's Dandy&rdquo; in his set, whenever his identification
- became a conversational necessity. Of the many dogs he had met and
- conquered, Alexander McBride had killed twenty-three.
- </p>
- <p>
- Albert Edward Murphy resolved to import Alexander McBride. He knew the
- latter's owner. A letter adjusted the details. The proprietor of Alexander
- McBride was willing his pet should come to the metropolis on a visit.
- Alexander McBride had fought Philadelphia to a standstill, and his owner's
- idea was that, if Alexander McBride were to go on a visit and remain away
- for a few months, Philadelphia would forget him, and on his return he
- might ring Alexander in on the town as a stranger, and kill another dog
- with him. *****
- </p>
- <p>
- Alexander McBride got off the cars in a chicken crate. The expressmen were
- afraid of him. Albert Edward Murphy was notified. He hired a coloured
- person, who looked on life as a failure, to convey Alexander McBride to
- his new home. They tied him to a bureau when they got him there.
- </p>
- <p>
- Alexander McBride was a gruesome-looking dog, with a wide, vacant head,
- when his mouth was open, like unto an empty coal scuttle. Albert Edward
- Murphy looked at Alexander McBride, and after saying that he &ldquo;would do,&rdquo;
- went to dinner. During the prandial meal he explained to his family the
- properties and attributes of Alexander McBride; and then he and the
- children went over the long list of neighbour dogs who had oppressed John,
- the pug, and settled which dog Alexander McBride should chew up first.
- Alexander McBride should begin on the morrow to rend and destroy the
- adjacent dogs, and assume toward John, the pug, the rôle of guide,
- philosopher and friend. Albert Edward Murphy and his children were very
- happy.
- </p>
- <p>
- After dinner they went back to take another look at Alexander McBride. As
- they stood about that hero in an awed but admiring circle, John, the pug,
- rushed wildly into the ring, and tackled Alexander McBride. The
- coal-scuttle head opened and closed on John, the Pug.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a moment of frozen horror, and then Albert Edward Murphy and his
- household fell upon Alexander McBride in a body.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was too late. It took thirteen minutes and the family poker to open the
- jaws of Alexander McBride. Then John, the pug, fell to the floor, dead and
- limp as a wet bath towel.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Alexander McBride had slain his twenty-fourth dog, and John, the pug, is
- only a memory now.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- RED MIKE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of the Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>ay!&rdquo; remarked
- Chucky as he squared himself before the greasy doggery table, &ldquo;I'm goin'
- to make it whiskey to-day, 'cause I ain't feelin' a t'ing but good, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- I asked the cause of Chucky's exaltation. Chucky's reason as given for his
- high spirits was unusual.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Red Mike gets ten spaces in Sing Sing,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;an' he does a dead
- short stretch at that. He oughter get d' chair&mdash;that bloke had.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Red Mike croaks his kid,&rdquo; vouchsafed Chucky in further elucidation. &ldquo;Say!
- it makes me tired to t'ink! She was as good a kid, this little Emmer which
- Mike does up, as ever comes down d' Bend. An' only 'leven!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell me the story,&rdquo; I urged.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This Red Mike's a hod carrier,&rdquo; continued Chucky, thus moved, &ldquo;but ain't
- out to hoit himself be hard woik at it; he don't woik overtime. Hit! Not
- on your life insurance!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What Red Mike sooner do is bum Mulberry Street for drinks, an' hang
- 'round s'loons an' sling guff about d' wrongs of d' woikin'man. Then he'd
- chase home, an' bein' loaded, he'd wallop his family.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On d' level! I ain't got no use ford' sort of a phylanthrofist who goes
- chinnin' all night about d' wrongs of d' labour element an 'd' oppressions
- of d* rich an' then goes home an' slugs his wife. Say! I t'ink a bloke
- who'd soak a skirt, no matter what she does&mdash;no matter if she is his
- wife! on d' square! I t'ink he's rotten.&rdquo; And Chucky imbibed deeply,
- looking virtuous.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, at last,&rdquo; said Chucky, resuming his narrative, &ldquo;Mike puts a crimp
- too many in his Norah&mdash;that's his wife&mdash;an' d' city 'torities
- plants her in Potters' Field.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did Mike kill her?&rdquo; I queried, a bit horrified at this murderous
- development of Chucky's tale.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure!&rdquo; assented Chucky, &ldquo;Mike kills her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shoot her?&rdquo; I suggested.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit!&rdquo; retorted Chucky disgustedly. &ldquo;Shoot her! Mike ain't got no gun. If
- he had, he'd hocked it long before he got to croak anybody wit' it. Naw,
- Mike does Norah be his constant abuse, see! Beats d' life out of her be
- degrees.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When Norah's gone,&rdquo; resumed Chucky, &ldquo;Emmer, who's d' oldest of d' t'ree
- kids, does d' mudder act for d' others. She's 'leven, like I says. An'
- little!&mdash;she ain't bigger'n a drink of whiskey, Emmer ain't.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But youse should oughter see her hustle to line up an' take care of them
- two young-ones. Only eight an' five dey be. Emmer washes d' duds for 'em,
- and does all sorts of stunts to get grub, an' tries like an old woman,
- night an' day, to bring 'em up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' neighbours helps, of course, like neighbours do when it's a case of
- dead hard luck; an' I meself has t'run a quarter or two in Emmer's lap
- when I'm a bit lushy. Say! I'm d' easiest mark when I've been hit-tin' d'
- bottle!&mdash;I'd give d' nose off me face!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If d' neighbours don't chip in, Emmer an' them kids would lots of times
- have had a hard graft; for mostly there ain't enough dough about d' joint
- from one week's end to another to flag a bread waggon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Finally Red Mike gets woise. After Norah goes flutterin' that time,
- Mike's been goin' along as usual, talkin' about d' woikin'man, an' doin'
- up Emmer an 'd' kids for a finish before he rolls in to pound his ear.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At foist it ain't so bad. He simply fetches one of d' young ones a
- back-handed swipe across d' map wit' his mit to see it swap ends wit'
- itself; or mebbe he soaks Emmer in d' lamp an' blacks it, 'cause she's
- older. But never no woise. At least, not for long.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But as I says, finally Red Mike gets bad for fair. He lams loose oftener,
- an' he licks Emmer an 'd' kids more to d' Queen's taste&mdash;more like
- dey's grown-up folks an' can stan' for it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Emmer, day after day chases 'round quiet as a rabbit, washin' d' kids an'
- feedin' 'em when there's any-t'ing, an' she don't make no holler about
- Mike's jumpin' on 'em for fear if she squeals d' cops'll pinch Mike an'
- give him d' Island.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, Emmer was a dead game all right. Not only she don't raise d' roar on
- Mike about his soakin' 'em, but more'n onct she cuts in an' takes d' smash
- Mike means for one of d' others.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, of course, you can see poor Emmer's finish. She's little, an' weak,
- an' t'in, not gettin' enough to chew&mdash;for she saws d' food off on d'
- others as long as dey makes d' hungry front&mdash;an 'd' night Mike puts
- d' boots to her an' breaks t'ree of her slats, that lets her out! She
- croaks in four hours, be d' watch.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'at does Red Mike do it for? Well, he never needs, much of a hunch to
- pitch into Emmer an' d' rest. But I hears from me Rag who lives on d' same
- floor that it's all 'cause Mike gets d' tip that Emmer's got two bits, an'
- he wants it for booze. Mike comes in wit' a t'irst an' he ain't got d'
- price, an' he puts it to Emmer she's got stuff. Mike wants her to spring
- her plant an' chase d' duck.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Emmer welched an' won't have it. She's dead stubborn an' says d' kids
- must eat d' nex' day; and so Mike can't have d' money. Mike says he'll
- kick d' heart out of her if he don't get it. Emmer stan's pat, an' so Mike
- starts in.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's 'most an hour before I gets there. D' poor baby&mdash;for that's all
- Emmer is, even if she was dealin' d' game for d' joint&mdash;looks awful,
- all battered to bits. One of d' city's jackleg sawbones is there, mendin'
- Emmer wit' bandages. But he says himself he's on a dead card, an' that
- Emmer's going to die. Mike is settin' on a stool keepin' mum an' lookin'
- w'ite an' dopey, an' a cop is wit' him. Oh, yes! he gets d' collar long
- before I shows up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! d' scene ain't solemn, oh, no! nit! Emmer lays back on d' bed&mdash;she
- twigs she's goin' to die; d' doctor puts her on. Emmer lays back an' as
- good as she can, for her valves don't woik easy an' she breathes hard, she
- tells 'em what to do. She says there's d' washboiler she borry's from d'
- Meyers's family, an' to send it back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'An' I owes Mrs. Lynch,' says Emmer&mdash;she's talkin' dead faint&mdash;'a
- dime for sewin' me skirt, an' I ain't got d' dough. But when dey takes dad
- to d' coop, tell her to run her lamps over d' plunder, an' she has her
- pick, see! An' when I'm gone,' goes on Emmer, 'ast d' Gerries to take d'
- kids. Dey tries to get their hooks on 'em before, but I wanted to keep
- 'em. Now I can't, an' d' Gerries is d' best I can do. D' Gerries ain't so
- warm, but dey can lose nothin' in a walk. An' wit' dad pinched an' me
- dead, poor Danny an' Jennie is up ag'inst it for fair.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit; Emmer never sheds a weep. But say! you should a seen me Rag! She was
- d' terror for tears! She does d' sob act for two, an' don't you forget it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Emmer just lays there when she's quit chinnin' an' gives Mike d' icy eye.
- If ever a bloke goes unforgiven, it's Red Mike.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Don't youse want d' priest, or mebby a preacher?' asts me Rag of Emmer
- between sobs. Emmer's voice is most played when she comes back at her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'W'at's d' use?' says Emmer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then she toins to d' two kids who's be d' bed cryin', an' tries to kiss
- 'em, but it's a move too many for her. She twists back wit 'd' pain, an'
- bridges herself like you see a wrestler, an' when she sinks straight wit
- 'd' bed ag'in, d' red blood is comin' out of her face. Emmer's light is
- out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tumbles to it d' foist. As I leads me Rag back to our room&mdash;for I
- can see she's out to t'row a fit&mdash;d' cop takes Red Mike down be d'
- stairs.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- HAMILTON FINNERTY'S HEART
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>ar up in Harlem,
- on a dead swell street, the chance pedestrian as he chases himself by the
- Ville Finnerty, may see a pale, wrung face pressing itself against the
- pane. It is the map of Hamilton Finnerty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'at's d' matter wit' d' bloke?&rdquo; whispered Kid Dugan, the gasman's son,
- to his young companion, as they stood furtively piping off the Ville
- Finnerty. &ldquo;Is it 'D' Pris'ner of Zenda' down to date?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stash!&rdquo; said his chum in a low tone. &ldquo;Don't say a woid. That guy was
- goin' to be hitched to a soubrette. At d' las' minute d' skirt goes back
- on him&mdash;won't stan' for it; see! Now d' sucker's nutty. Dey's
- thrunning dice for him at Bloomin'dale right now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a sad, sad story of how two loving hearts were made to break away;
- of how in their ignorance the police declared themselves in on a play of
- which they wotted nit, and queered it.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hen the betrothal
- of Isabelle Imogene McSween to Hamilton Finnerty was tipped off to their
- set, the élite of Harlem fairly quivered with the glow and glory of it.
- The Four Hundred were agog.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's d' swiftest deal of d' season!&rdquo; said De Pygstyster.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hammy won't do a t'ing to McSween's millions, I don't t'ink!&rdquo; said Von
- Pretselbok.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hammy'll boin a wet dog. An' don't youse forget it, I'll be in on d'
- incineration!&rdquo; said Goosevelt.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>amilton Finnerty
- embarked for England. The beautiful Isabelle Imogene McSween had been
- plunging on raiment in Paree. The wedding was to be pulled off in two
- weeks at St. Paul's, London. It was to be a corker; for the McSweens were
- hot potatoes and rolled high. Nor were the Finnerties listed under the
- head of Has-beens. It is but justice to both families to say, they were in
- it with both feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Hamilton Finnerty went ashore at Liverpool he communed with himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's five days ere dey spring d' weddin' march in me young affairs,&rdquo;
- soliloquised Hamilton Finnerty, &ldquo;an' I might as well toin in an' do d'
- village of Liverpool while I waits. A good toot will be d' t'ing to allay
- me natural uneasiness.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus it was that Hamilton Finnerty went forth to tank, and spread red
- paint, and plough a furrow through the hamlet of Liverpool. But Hamilton
- was a dead wise fowl. He had been on bats before, and was aware that they
- didn't do a thing to money.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For fear I'll blow me dough,&rdquo; said Hamilton, still communing with
- himself, &ldquo;I'll buy meself an' chip d' retoin tickets, see! It's a
- lead-pipe cinch then, we goes back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And the forethoughtful Hamilton sprung his roll and went against the
- agent, for return tickets. They were to be good on the very steamer he
- chased over in. They were for him and the winsome Isabelle Imogene
- McSween, soon to be Mrs. Finnerty. The paste-boards called for the
- steamer's trip three weeks away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There!&rdquo; quoth Hamilton Finnerty, as he concealed the tickets in his
- trousseau, &ldquo;I've sewed buttons on the future. We don't walk back, see! I
- can now relax an' toin meself to Gin, Dog's Head and a general whizz. I
- won't have no picnic,&mdash;oh, no! not on your eyes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was early
- darkness on the second day. One after another the windows were showing a
- glim. Liverpool was lighting up for the evening. A limp figure stood
- holding to a lamp-post. The figure was loaded to the guards. It was
- Hamilton Finnerty, and his light was out. He had just been fired from that
- hostelry known as The Swan with the Four Legs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I 'opes th' duffer won't croak on me doorstep,&rdquo; said the blooming
- barmaid, as she cast her lamps on Hamilton Finnerty from the safe vantage
- of a window of The Swan with the Four Legs.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no danger of Hamilton Finnerty dying, not in a thousand years.
- But he was woozy and tumbled not to events about him. He knew neither his
- name, nor his nativity, Nor could he speak, for his tongue was on a spree
- with the Gin and the Dog's Head.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>s Hamilton
- Finnerty stood holding the lamp-post, and deeming it his &ldquo;only own,&rdquo; two
- of the Queen's constabulary approached.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0085.jpg" alt="0085 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0085.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Ere's a bloomin' gow, Jem!&rdquo; said the one born in London. &ldquo;Now '00 d' ye
- tyke the gent to be?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They were good police people, ignorant but innocent; and disinclined to
- give Hamilton Finnerty the collar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Frisk 'un, Bill,&rdquo; advised the one from Yorkshire; &ldquo;it's loike th' naime
- bees in 'uns pawkets.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The two went through the make-up of Hamilton Finnerty. Jagged as he was,
- he heeded them not. They struck the steamer tickets and noted the
- steamer's name, but not the day of sailing.
- </p>
- <p>
- As if anxious to aid in the overthrow of Hamilton Finnerty, the steamer
- was still at her dock, with preparations all but complete for the return
- slide to New York.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now 'ere's a luvely mess!&rdquo; said London Bill, looking at the tickets. &ldquo;The
- bloody bowt gows in twenty minutes, an' 'ere's this gent a-gettin' 'eeself
- left! An' th' tickets for 'ees missus, too! It's punds t' peanuts, th'
- loidy's aboard th' bowt tearin' 'er blessed heyes out for 'im. Hy, say
- there, kebby! bear a 'and! This gent's got to catch a bowt!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hamilton Finnerty, dumb with Gin and Dog's Head, was tumbled into the cab,
- and the vehicle, taking its hunch from the excited officers, made the run
- of its life to the docks. They were in time.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It tak's th' droonken 'uns t'av th' loock!&rdquo; remarked Yorkshire Jem
- cheerfully to London Bill, as they stood wiping their honest faces on the
- dock, while the majestic steamer, with Hamilton Finnerty aboard, worked
- slowly out.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hen Hamilton
- Finnerty came to his senses he was one hundred miles on his way to New
- York. For an hour he was off his trolley. It was six days before he
- landed, and during that period he did naught but chew the rag.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hamilton Finnerty chased straight for Harlem and sought refuge in the
- Ville Finnerty. He must think; he must reorganise his play! He would
- compile a fake calculated to make a hit as an excuse with Isabelle Imogene
- McSween, and cable it. All might yet be well.
- </p>
- <p>
- But alas! As Hamilton Finnerty opened the door of the Ville Finnerty the
- butler sawed off a cablegram upon him. It was from Isabelle Imogene
- McSween to Hamilton Finnerty's cable address of &ldquo;Hamfinny.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Hamilton Finnerty read the fatal words, he fell all over himself with a
- dull, sickening thud. And well he might! The message threw the boots into
- the last hope of Hamilton Finnerty. It read as follows:
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>Hamfinny:&mdash;Miscreant! Villain! A friend put me onto your skip from
- Liverpool. It was a hobo trick. But I broke even with you. I was dead
- aware that you might do a sneak at the last minute, and was organised with
- a French Count up me sleeve; see! Me wedding came off just the same. Me
- hubby's a bute! I call him Papa, and he's easy money. Hoping to see you on
- me return, nit, and renew our acquaintance, nit, I am yours, nit.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- <i>Isabelle Imogene McSween-Marat de Rochetwister.</i>
- </p>
- <p>
- Outside the Ville Finnerty swept the moaning winds, dismal with November's
- prophecy of snow. At intervals the election idiot blew his proud horn in
- the neighbouring thoroughfare. It was nearly morning when the doctor said,
- that, while Hamilton Finnerty's life would be spared, he would be mentally
- dopey the balance of his blighted days.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- SHORT CREEK DAVE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Wolfville)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>hort Creek Dave
- was one of Wolfville's leading citizens. In fact his friends would not
- have scrupled at the claim that Short Creek Dave was a leading citizen of
- Arizona. Therefore when the news came over from Tucson that Short Creek
- Dave, who had been paying that metropolis a breezy visit, had, in an
- advertant moment, strolled within the radius of a gospel meeting then and
- there prevailing, and suffered conversion, Wolfville became spoil and prey
- to some excitement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I tells him,&rdquo; said Tutt, who brought the tidings, &ldquo;not to go tamperin'
- 'round this yere meetin'. But he would have it. He simply keeps pervadin'
- about the 'go-in' place, an' it looks like I can't herd him away. Says I:
- 'Dave, you don't onderstand this yere game they're turnin' inside. Which
- you keep out a whole lot, you'll be safer!' But warnin's ain't no good;
- Short Creek don't regard 'em a little bit.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This yere Short Creek is always speshul obstinate that a-way,&rdquo; said Dan
- Boggs, &ldquo;an' he gets moods frequent when he jest won't stay where he is nor
- go anywhere else. I don't marvel none you don't do nothin' with him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let it go as it lays!&rdquo; observed Cherokee Hall, &ldquo;I reckons Short Creek
- knows his business, an* can protect himse'f in any game they opens on him.
- I ain't my-se'f none astonished by these yere news. I knows him to do some
- mighty <i>locoed</i> things, sech as breakin' a pair to draw to a
- three-flush; an' it seems like he's merely a pursooin' of his usual system
- in this relig'ous lunge. However, he'll be in Wolfville to-morry, an' then
- we'll know a mighty sight more about it; pendin' of which let's irrigate.
- Barkeep, please inquire out the beverages for the band!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Those of Wolfville there present knew no cause to pursue the discussion so
- pleasantly ended, and drew near the bar. The debate took place in the Red
- Light, so, as one observed on the issuance of Cherokee's invitation: &ldquo;They
- weren't far from centres.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Cherokee himself was a suave suitor of fortune who presided behind his own
- faro game. Reputed to possess a &ldquo;straight&rdquo; deal box, he held high place in
- the Wolfville breast.
- </p>
- <p>
- Next day; and Wolfville began to suffer an increased exaltation. Feeling
- grew nervous as the time for the coming of the Tucson stage approached. An
- outsider might not have detected this fever. It found its evidence in the
- unusual activity of monte, high ball, stud and kindred relaxations. Faro,
- too, displayed some madness of spirit.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last out of the grey and heat-shimmer of the plains a cloud of dust
- announced the coming of the stage. Chips were cashed and games cleaned up,
- and presently the population of Wolfville stood in the street to catch as
- early a glimpse as might be of the converted one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't reckon now he's goin' to look sech a whole lot different
- neither!&rdquo; observed Faro Nell. She stood near Cherokee Hall, awaiting the
- coming stage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wonder would it 'go' to ask Dave for to drink?&rdquo; said Tutt, in a tone of
- general inquiry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shore!&rdquo; argued Dan Boggs; &ldquo;an' why not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, nothin' why not!&rdquo; replied Tutt, as he watched the stage come up;
- &ldquo;only Dave's nacherally a peevish person that a-way, an' I don't reckon
- now his enterin' the fold has redooced the restlessness of that
- six-shooter of his'n, none whatever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All the same,&rdquo; said Cherokee Hall, &ldquo;p'litenes 'mong gents should be
- observed. I asks this yere Short Creek to drink so soon as ever he
- arrives; an' I ain't lookin' to see him take it none invidious, neither.&rdquo;
- With a rattle of chains and a creaking of straps the stage and its six
- high-headed horses pulled up at the postoffice door. The mail bags were
- kicked off, the express boxes tumbled into the street, and in the general
- rattle and crash the eagerly expected Short Creek Dave stepped upon the
- sidewalk.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was possibly a more eager scanning of his person in the thought that
- the great inward change might have its outward evidences; a more vigorous
- shaking of his hand, perhaps; but beyond these, curious interest did not
- go. Not a word nor a look touching Short Creek's religious exploits
- betrayed the question tugging at the Wolfville heart. Wolfville was too
- polite. And, again, Wolfville was too cautious. Next to horse-stealing,
- curiosity is the greatest crime. It's worse than crime, it's a blunder.
- Wolfville merely expressed its polite satisfaction in Short Creek Dave's
- return, and took it out in handshaking. The only incident worth record was
- when Cherokee Hall observed in a spirit of bland but experimental
- friendship:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't reckon, Dave, you-all is objectin' to whiskey none after your
- ride?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I ain't done so usual,&rdquo; observed Dave cheerfully, &ldquo;but this yere
- time, Cherokee, I'll have to pass. Confidin' the trooth to you-all, I'm
- some off on nose-paint now. I'm allowin' to tell you the win-an'-lose
- tharof later on. Now, if you-alls will excuse me, I'll go wanderin' over
- to the O. K. House an' feed myse'f a whole lot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shore reckons he's converted!&rdquo; said Tutt, and he shook his head
- gloomily. &ldquo;I wouldn't care none, only it's me as prevails on Dave to go
- over to Tucson that time; an' so I feels responsible.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever of it?&rdquo; responded Dan Boggs, with a burst of energy, &ldquo;I don't
- see no reecriminations comin', nor why this yere's to be regarded. If Dave
- wants to be relig'ous an' sing them hymns a heap, you bet! that's his
- American right! I'll gamble a hundred dollars, Dave splits even with every
- deal, or beats it. I'm with Dave; his system does for me, every time!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day the excitement began to subside. Late in the afternoon a
- notice posted on the postoffice door caused it to rise again. The notice
- announced that Short Creek Dave would preach that evening in the warehouse
- of the New York Store.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckons we-alls better go!&rdquo; said Cherokee Hall. &ldquo;I'm goin' to turn up
- my box an' close the game at first drink time this evenin', an' Hamilton
- says he's out to shut up the dance hall, seein' as how several of the
- ladies is due to sing a lot in the choir. We-alls might as well turn loose
- an' give Short Creek the best whirl in the wheel&mdash;might as well make
- the play to win, an* start him straight along the new trail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whatever!&rdquo; agreed Dan Boggs. He had recovered from his first
- amazement, and now entered into the affair with spirit.
- </p>
- <p>
- That evening the New York Store's warehouse was as brilliantly a-light as
- a mad abundance of candles could make it. All Wolfville was there. As a
- result of conferences held in private with Short Creek Dave, and by that
- convert's request, Old Man Enright took a seat by the drygoods box which
- was to serve as a pulpit. Doc Peets, also, was asked to assume a place at
- the Evangelist's left. The congregation disposed itself about on the
- improvised benches which the ardour of Boggs had provided.
- </p>
- <p>
- At 8 o'clock Short Creek Dave walked up the space in the centre reserved
- as an aisle, carrying a giant Bible. This latter he placed on the drygoods
- box. Old Man Enright, at a nod from Short Creek Dave, called gently for
- attention, and addressed the meeting briefly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This yere is a prayer meetin' of the camp,&rdquo; said Enright, &ldquo;an' I'm asked
- by Dave to preside, which I accordin' do. No one need make any mistake
- about the character of this gatherin', or its brand. This yere is a
- relig'ous meetin'. I am not myse'f given that a-way, but I'm allers glad
- to meet up with folks who be, an' see that they have a chance in for their
- ante, an' their game is preserved. I'm one, too, who believes a little
- religion wouldn't hurt this yere camp much. Next to a lynchin', I don't
- know of a more excellent inflooence in a western camp than these meetin's.
- I ain't expectin' to cut in on this play none myse'f, an' only set yere,
- as does Peets, in the name of order, an' for the purposes of a squar'
- deal. Which I now introdooces to you a gent who is liable to be as good a
- preacher as ever thumps a Bible&mdash;your old pard, Short Creek Dave.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Pres'dent!&rdquo; said Short Creek Dave, turning to Enright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Short Creek Dave!&rdquo; replied Enright sententiously, bowing gravely in
- recognition.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' ladies an' gents of Wolfville!&rdquo; continued Dave, &ldquo;I opens this racket
- with a prayer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The prayer proceeded. It was fervent and earnest; replete with unique
- expression and personal allusion. In the last, the congregation took a
- warm interest.
- </p>
- <p>
- Towards the close, Dave bent his energies in supplication for the
- regeneration of Texas Thompson, whom he represented in his orisons as by
- nature good, but living a misguided and vicious life. The audience was
- listening with approving attention, when there came an interruption. It
- was from Texas Thompson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Pres'dent,&rdquo; said Texas Thompson, &ldquo;I rises to ask a question an' put
- for'ard a protest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The gent will state his p'int,&rdquo; responded Enright, rapping on the
- drygoods box.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which the same is this,&rdquo; resumed Texas Thompson, drawing a long breath.
- &ldquo;I objects to Dave a-tacklin' the Redeemer for me. I protests ag'in him
- makin' statements that I'm ornery enough to pillage a stage. This yere
- talk is liable to queer me on High. I objects to it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prayer is a device without rools or limit,&rdquo; responded Enright. &ldquo;Dave
- makes his runnin' with the bridle off; an* the chair, tharfore, decides
- ag'in the p'int of order.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' the same bein' the case,&rdquo; rejoined Texas Thompson with heat,
- &ldquo;a-waivin' of the usual appeal to the house, all I've got to say is, I'm a
- peaceful gent; I has allers been the friend of Short Creek Dave. Which I
- even assists an' abets Boggs in packin' in these yere benches, an' aids to
- promote this meetin'. But I gives notice now, if Short Creek Dave persists
- in malignin' of me to the Great White Throne, as yeretofore, I'll shore
- call on him to make them statements good with his gun as soon as ever the
- contreebution box is passed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The chair informs the gent,&rdquo; said Enright with cold dignity, &ldquo;that Dave,
- bein' now a Evangelist, can't make no gun plays, nor go canterin' out to
- shoot as of a former day. However, the chair recognises the rights of the
- gent, an', standin' as the chair does in the position of lookout to this
- game, the chair nom'nates Dan'l Boggs, who's officiatin' as deacon hereof,
- to back these yere orisons with his six-shooter as soon as ever church is
- out, in person.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It goes!&rdquo; responded Boggs. &ldquo;I proudly assoomes Dave's place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0097.jpg" alt="0097 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0097.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Pres'dent,&rdquo; interrupted Short Creek Dave, &ldquo;jest let me get my views
- in yere. It's my turn all right, as I makes clear, easy. I've looked up
- things some, an* I finds that the Apostle Peter, who was a great range
- boss of them days, scroopled not to fight. Which I trails out after Peter
- in this. I might add, too, that while it gives me pain to be obleeged to
- shoot up brother Texas Thompson in the first half of the first meetin' we
- holds in Wolfville, still the path of dooty is plain, an' I shall shorely
- walk tharin, fearin' nothin'. I tharfore moves we adjourn ten minutes, an'
- as thar is plenty of moon outside, if the chair will lend me its gun&mdash;I'm
- not packin' of sech frivolities no more, regyardin' of 'em in the light of
- sinful bluffs&mdash;I trusts to Providence to convince brother Texas
- Thompson that he's followed off the wrong waggon track. You-alls can
- gamble! I knows my business. I ain't 4-flushin' none when I lines out to
- pray!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Onless objection is heard, this meetin' will stand adjourned for ten
- minutes,&rdquo; said Enright, at the same time passing Short Creek Dave his
- pistol.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fifteen paces were stepped off, and the opponents faced up in the moonlit
- street. Enright, Peets, Hall, Boggs, Tutt, Moore and the rest of the
- congregation made a line of admiration on the sidewalk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I counts one! two! three! an' then I drops the contreebution box,&rdquo; said
- Enright, &ldquo;whereupon you-alls fires an' advances at will. Be you ready?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The shooting began on the word. When the smoke blew away, Texas Thompson
- staggered to the sidewalk and sat down. There was a bullet in his hip, and
- the wound, for the moment, brought a feeling of sickness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The congregation will now take its seats in the sanctooary,&rdquo; remarked
- Enright, &ldquo;an' play will be re-soomed. Tutt, two of you-alls carry Texas
- over to the hotel, an' fix him up all right. Yereafter, I'll visit him an'
- p'int out his errors. This shows concloosive that Short Creek Dave is
- licensed from Above to pray any gait for whoever he deems meet, an' I'm
- mighty pleased it occurs. It's shore goin' to promote confidence in Dave's
- ministrations.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The concourse was duly in its seats when Short Creek Dave again reached
- the pulpit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will now resoome my intercessions for our onfortunate brother, Texas
- Thompson,&rdquo; said Short Creek Dave.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know'd he would,&rdquo; commented Dan Boggs, as twenty dollars came over
- addressed by the wounded Thompson to the contribution box. &ldquo;Texas Thompson
- is one of the reasonablest sports in Wolfville. Also you can bet!
- relig'ous trooths allers assert themse'ves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CRIME THAT FAILED
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of the Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>ay! Matches,&rdquo; said
- Chucky, removing his nose from his glass, &ldquo;youse remember d' Jersey Bank?
- I means d' time youse has to go to cover an 'd' whole mob is pinched in d'
- hole. Tell us d' story; it's dead int'restin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This last was to me in a husky whisper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That play was a case of fail,&rdquo; remarked Mollie Matches thoughtfully. Then
- turning to me as chief auditor, he continued. &ldquo;It's over twenty years ago;
- just on d' heels of d' Centenyul at Phil'delfy. D' graft was fairly flossy
- durin 'd' Centenyul, an' I had quite a pot of dough.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One day a guy comes to me; he's a bank woiker, what d' fly people calls
- 'a gopher man'; he's a mug who's onto all d' points about safes an' such.
- Well, as I says, this soon guy comes chasin' to me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Matches,' he says, 'don't say a woid; I'll put youse onto an easy trick.
- Come wit' me to Jersey, an' I'll show you a bin what's all organised to be
- cracked. Any old hobo could toin off d' play; it's a walk-over.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit' that, for I had confidence in this mark, see! We skins over to
- Jersey, an' he steers me out to a nearby town an' points me out a bank.
- What makes it a good t'ing is a vacant joint, wit' a 'To Rent' sign in d'
- window, built dost ag'inst d' side of d' bank.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Are youse on?' says d' goph, pointin' his main hook at d' empty house,
- an' then at d' bank.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bein' I'm no farmer meself, I takes no time to tumble. We screws our
- nuts, me an' d' goph, to d' duck who owns d' house, an 'd' nex' news is we
- rents it. D' duck who does d' rentin' says he can see we're on d' level d'
- moment we floats in; but all d' same, if we can bring him a tip or two on
- d' point of our bein' square people from one or two high rollers whose
- names goes, he'll take it kindly. We says, suttenly; we fills him to d'
- chin wit' all d' ref-runces he needs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'We won't do a t'ing but send our pastor to youse,' puts in d' goph.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good man, me pal was, as ever draws slide on a dark lantern, but always
- out to be funny.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We rents d' joint, as I states, an' no more is said about refrunces. Now,
- when it comes to d' real woik, I ain't goin' to do none, see! I ain't down
- to dig an' pick; it spoils me hooks for dippin'. What I does is furnish d'
- tools an 'd' dough.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I goes back an' gets a whole kit of bank tools&mdash;drills, centre-bits,
- cold-chisels, jointed-jimmies, wedges, pullers, spreaders, fuse, powder,
- mauls an' mufflers&mdash;I gets d' whole t'ing, see! Me pal knows a brace
- of pards who'll stand in on d' play. He calls 'em in, an' one night d'
- entire squeeze, wit 'd' tools, goes over an' plants themselfs in d 'empty
- house. Yes; dey takes grub an' blankets an' all dey needs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Before this I goes ag'inst d' bank janitor; an' while he's a fairly downy
- party, I wins him. D' janitor of d' bank gets a hundred bones, an' I gets
- a map of d' bank, which shows where d* money is planted an' all about it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's d' idee? Our racket is to tunnel from d' cellar of d' joint we
- rents, under d' sidewall of d' bank, an' keep on until we reaches d'
- stuff, see! We're out to do all d' woik we can wit'out lettin' d'
- bank-crush twig d' graft. Then we waits till Saturday noon. D' bank shuts
- up on Saturday noon, understan'! An' then we has till Monday at 9 o'clock
- to finish d' woik. An' say! it's time plenty! It gives us time to boin!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I states, I don't do any of d' woik. D' gopher an' his two pals is all
- d' job calls for. So I lays dead in d' town, ready to split out me piece
- of d' plunder, an' waits results.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To hurry me yarn, everyt'ing woiks like it's greased to fit d' play. D'
- mob gets d' tunnel as far as it'll go. Saturday noon comes an 'd' last
- sucker who belongs to d' bank skips out. It's then me gopher an' his two
- pals t'rows themselfs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All t'rough Saturday afternoon an' all d' night till daylight Sunday
- mornin', them gezebos woiks away like dogs. An' say! don't youse ever
- doubt it! dey was winnin' in a walk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But all this time d' pins was set up to do 'em. It was d' same old story.
- There's always some little nogood bet a crook is sure to overlook, an' it
- goes d' wrong way an' downs him. Here's what happens:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In d' foist place, we forgets to take d' 'To Rent' sign out of d' window,
- see! That's d' beginnin'. Nex,' me goph an' his side-partners digs so much
- dirt out of d' tunnel it fills d' cellar. Honest! it won't hold no more.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At this last, dey takes to shovelin 'd' dirt into a bushel basket. Then
- dey carries it up d' back stairs and dumps it on d' floor of a summer
- kitchen. Be 7 o'clock Sunday, mebby dey dumps as many as six basketfuls;
- dumps it, as I tells youse, in this lean-to, which is built on d' rear.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, right at this time there's an old Irish Moll who keeps a boardin'
- house not far away who is flyin' along to early Mass, bein' dead religious
- an' leary about her soul, see! This old goil, as she comes sprintin'
- along, gets her bleary old lamps on d' 'To Rent' card. All at onct d' idee
- fetches her a t'ump in d' cocoa that d' house would be out of sight for a
- boardin' joint. Wit' that she steers herself in to take a squint an' size
- up d' crib.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' door is locked, so d' old goil can't come in. Wit' that she leads d'
- nex' best card an' goes galumpin' round, pipin' off d' place t'rough d'
- windows. An' say! she gets stuck on it. She t'inks if she can rent it, she
- can run d' dandy boardin' house of d' ward in it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As d' old frail goes round d' place, among all d' rest, she looks t'rough
- d' windows into d' summer kitchen. She gets onto d' dirt that's dumped, as
- I states, in one corner. But she don't see none of d' gang, bein' dey's
- down in d' hole at d' time, so she don't fasten to nothin'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At last she's seen enough an' sherries her nibs to d' cat'edral.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right if it's only d' end; but it ain't. When it gets to about
- 2 o'clock, this old skate in petticoats goes toinin' nutty ag'in about d'
- empty house. Over she spins to grab another glimpse, see! When she strikes
- d' summer kitchen she comes near to throwin' a faint. D' pile of rubbidge
- is twenty times as big!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That settles it! d' joint is ha'nted! an' wit' that notion all tangled up
- in her frizzes d' old mut makes a straight wake for d' priest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'D' empty house nex' to d' bank is full of ghosts!' she shouts, an' then
- she flings her apron over her nut an' comes a fit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, this priest is about as sudden a party as ever comes over d' ocean.
- Youse can't give him no stiff about spooks, see! Bein' nex' to d' bank is
- a hot tip, an' he takes it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit! he don't go surgin' round for his prayer-books an d' hully water. It
- would have been a dead good t'ing if he had. Nixie weedin'! D' long-coat
- sucker don't even come over to d' house.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What does he do? He sprints for d' nearest p'lice station at a 40 clip,
- an' fills up d' captain in charge wit 'd' story till youse can't rest.
- After that, it takes' d' p'lice captain about ten seconts to line up his
- push; an' be coppin' a sneak, he pinches me gopher an' his two pals right
- in d' hole. Dey was gettin' along beautiful at d' time, an' in ten hours
- more dey would have had that bank on d' hog for fair.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dey was dead games at that. While dey gets d' collar, not one of 'em
- coughs on me, an' me name ain't never in it from start to finish. Dey was
- game, true pals from bell to bell, an' stayed d' distance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was d' bummest finish, all d' same, for what looked like d' biggest
- trick, an' d' surest big money, that I ever goes near. Youse may well peel
- your peeps! If it wasn't for that old Irish keener an' her ghost stories,
- in less than ten hours more we wouldn't have got a t'ing but complete
- action on more'n a million plunks! There was a hay-mow full of money in
- that bin!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' last round an' wind-up, as d' pugs puts it. Me gopher an' his
- pals is handed out ten spaces each, an' I lose me kit of tools. Take it
- over all, I'm out some four t'ousand dollars on d' deal. A tidy lump of
- dough to be done out of be a priest, a p'liceman an' an old Irish boardin'
- boss! D' old loidy lands wit' bot' her trilbys, though; d' bank chucks her
- a bundle of fly-paper big enough to stan' for all her needs until she
- croaks, forcuttin' in on our play, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE BETRAYAL
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he boys had
- resolved on revenge, and nothing could turn them from their purpose. The
- trouble was this: Some one not otherwise engaged had fed the furnace an
- overshoe which it did not need. As incident to its consumption the
- overshoe had filled the building with an odour of which nothing favourable
- could be said. The professor afterwards, in denouncing the author of the
- outrage, had referred to it as &ldquo;effluvia.&rdquo; It had as a perfume much force
- of character, and was stronger and more devastating than the odour which
- goes with an egg in its old age, when it has begun to hate the world and
- the future holds nothing but gloom.
- </p>
- <p>
- As stated, the schoolhouse reeked and reeled with this sublimated
- overshoe. It all pleased the boys excessively. They made as much as
- possible of the odour; they coughed, and sneezed, and worried the
- professor by holding up their hands one after the other with the remark:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Teacher, may I go out?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The professor, after several destructive whiffs of the overshoe, made a
- fiery speech. He said that could he once locate the boy who lavished this
- overshoe on mankind in a gaseous form, that boy's person would experience
- a rear-end collision. He would be so badly telescoped that weeks would
- elapse before the boy could regard himself as being in old-time form. The
- professor said the boy who founded the overshoe odour was a &ldquo;miscreant&rdquo;
- and a &ldquo;vandal.&rdquo; He demanded his name of the boys collectively; and failing
- to get it, the professor said they were all miscreants and vandals, and
- that it would be as balm to his spirits were he to wade in and larrup the
- entire outfit.
- </p>
- <p>
- After school the boys held a meeting.
- </p>
- <p>
- Frank Payne, aged fourteen, the boy who could lick any boy in school,
- denounced the professor. He referred to the fact that his father was a
- school trustee; and that under the rules the professor had no right to
- bestow upon them the epithets of miscreants and vandals. Frank Payne
- advised that they whip the professor; who must, he said, while a large,
- muscular man, yield to mob violence.
- </p>
- <p>
- The proposition to whip the professor was carried unanimously under a
- suspension of the rules.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the ardour of this crusade for their rights the boys did not feel as if
- they could await the slow approach of trouble in the natural way. It was
- decided by them to bring matters to a focus. It was planned to have Tony
- Sanford stick a pin in John Dayton. That would be a splendid start! John
- Dayton, thus stuck, would yell; and when the professor asked the cause of
- his lamentations, John Dayton would point to Tony Sanford as his assassin.
- When the professor laid corrective hands on Tony all of the conspirators
- were to rush upon the professor and give him such a rough-and-tumble
- experience that succeeding ages would date time from the emeute. The boys
- were filled with glee; they regarded the business, so they said, as &ldquo;a
- pushover.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The hour for action had arrived.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tony Sanford had no pin. But Tony was a fertile boy; if there was a picket
- off Tony's mental fence at all, it was his foresight. Lacking a pin, the
- ingenious Tony stuck the small blade of his knife into John Dayton. The
- victim howled like a dog at night.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Please, sir, Tony Sanford's stabbed me,&rdquo; was John Dayton's explanation of
- his shrieks.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tony Sanford was paraded for punishment. The cold-blooded enormity of the
- crime seemed to strike the professor dumb. He did not know how to take
- hold of the situation. But Tony pursued a course which not only invited
- but suggested action. As Tony approached, he dealt the professor an
- uppercut in the bread-basket, and with the cry, &ldquo;Come on, boys!&rdquo; closed
- doughtily with the foe.
- </p>
- <p>
- The boys beheld the deeds of the intrepid Tony; they heard his cry and
- knew it for their cue. Nevertheless, notwithstanding, not a boy moved.
- They sat in their seats and gazed fixedly at Tony and the professor. With
- the call of Tony to his fellow-conspirators the professor saw it all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tony Sanford,&rdquo; quoth the professor, &ldquo;we will adjourn to the library. When
- I get through, you will be of no further use to science.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The door closed on Tony Sanford, and a professor weighing 211 pounds. The
- sounds which came welling from the library showed that some strong,
- emotional work was being done within. Tony and the professor sounded at
- times like a curlew at night, and anon like unto a man falling downstairs
- with a stove. Tony Sanford said afterward that he would never again attach
- himself to a plot which did not show two green lights on the rear platform
- of its caboose.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- FOILED
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>ARLING, I fear
- that man! The cruel guy can from his place as umpire do you up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Gwendolin O'Toole who spoke. She was a beautiful blonde angel, and
- as she clung to her lover, Marty O'Malley, they were a picture from which
- a painter would have drawn an inspiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Take courage, love!&rdquo; said Marty O'Malley tenderly; &ldquo;I'm too swift for the
- duck.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know, dearest,&rdquo; murmured the fair Gwendolin, &ldquo;but think what's up on
- the game! Me brother, you know him well! the rooter prince, the bleachers'
- uncrowned king! he is the guardian of me vast estates. If I do not marry
- as he directs, me lands and houses go to found an asylum for decrepit ball
- tossers. And to-day me brother Godfrey swore by the Banshee of the
- O'Tooles that me hand should belong to the man who made the best average
- in to-morrow's game. Can you win me, love?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will win you or break the bat!&rdquo; said Marty O'Malley, as he folded his
- dear one in his arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>HEN that villain,
- O'Malley, goes to bat to-morrow, pitch the ball ten feet over his head. No
- matter where it goes I'll call a 'strike.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Dennis Mulcahey who spoke; the man most feared by Gwendolin
- O'Toole. He was to be the next day's umpire, and as he considered how
- securely his rival was in his grasp, he laughed the laugh of a fiend.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dennis Mulcahey, too, loved the fair Gwendolin, but the dear girl scorned
- his addresses. His heart was bitter; he would be revenged on his rival.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've got it in for the mug!&rdquo; replied Terry Devine, to whom Dennis
- Mulcahey had spoken. Devine was the pitcher of the opposition, and like
- many of his class, a low, murdering scoundrel. &ldquo;But, say! Denny, if you
- wants to do the sucker, why don't youse give him a poke in d' face? See!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Such suggestions are veriest guff,&rdquo; retorted Dennis Mulcahey. &ldquo;Do as I
- bid you, caitiff, an' presume not to give d' hunch to such as I! A wild
- pitch is what I want whenever Marty O'Malley steps to the plate. I'll do
- the rest.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll t'row d' pigskin over d' grand stand,&rdquo; said Terry Devine as he and
- his fellow-plotter walked away.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the conspirators drifted into the darkness a dim form arose from behind
- a shrub. It was Marty O'Malley.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah! I'll fool you yet!&rdquo; he hissed between his clinched teeth, and turning
- in the opposite direction he was soon swallowed by the darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>ou'll not fail me,
- Jack!&rdquo; said Marty O'Malley to Jack, the barkeeper of the Fielders' Rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not on your sweater!&rdquo; said Jack, &ldquo;Leave it to me. If that snoozer pitches
- this afternoon I hopes d' boss'll put in a cash-register!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Marty O'Malley hastened to the side of his love. Jack, the faithful
- barkeeper, went on cleaning his glasses.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That hobo, Devine, will be here in a minute,&rdquo; said Jack at last, &ldquo;an' I
- must organise for him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack took a shell glass and dipped it in the tank behind the bar. Taking
- his cigar from between his finely chiselled lips, he blew the smoke into
- the moistened interior of the glass. This he did several times.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll smoke a glass on d' stiff,&rdquo; said Jack softly. &ldquo;It's better than a
- knockout drop.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a moment later when Terry Devine came in. With a gleam of almost
- human intelligence in his eye Jack, the barkeeper, set up the smoked
- glass. Terry Devine tossed off the fiery potation, staggered to a chair,
- and sat there glaring. A moment later his head fell on the table, while a
- stertorous snore proclaimed him unconscious.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That fetched d' sucker,&rdquo; murmured Jack, the barkeeper, and he went on
- cleaning his glasses. &ldquo;His light's gone out for fourteen hours, an' he
- don't make no wild pitches at Marty O'Malley to-day, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>en thousand people
- gathered to witness the last great contest between the Shamrocks and the
- Shantytowns.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gwendolin O'Toole, pale but resolute, occupied her accustomed seat in the
- grand stand. Far away, and high above the tumult of the bleachers she
- heard the hoarse shouts of her brother, Godfrey O'Toole, the bleachers'
- king.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Remember, Gwendolin!&rdquo; he had said, as they parted just before the game,
- &ldquo;the mug who-makes the best average to-day wins your hand. I've sworn it,
- and the word of an O'Toole is never broken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Make it the best fielding average, oh, me brother!&rdquo; pleaded Gwendolin,
- while the tears welled to her glorious eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never!&rdquo; retorted Godfrey O'Toole, with a scowl; &ldquo;I'm on to your curves!
- You want to give Marty O'Malley a better show. But if the butter-fingered
- muffer wants you, he must not only win you with his fielding, but with the
- stick.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>erry Devine wasn't
- in the box for the Shantytowns. With his head on the seven-up table, he
- snored on, watched over by the faithful barboy Jack. He still yielded to
- smoked glass and gave no sign of life.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Curse him!&rdquo; growled Umpire Mulcahey hoarsely beneath his breath &ldquo;has he
- t'run me down? If I thought so, the world is not wide enough to save him
- from me vengeance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And the change pitcher took the box for the Shantytowns.
- </p>
- <p>
- Marty O'Malley, the great catcher of the Shamrocks, stepped to the plate.
- Dennis Mulcahey girded up his false heart, and registered a black, hellish
- oath to call everything a strike.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never! never shall he win Gwendolin O'Toole while I am umpire!&rdquo; he
- whispered, and his face was dark as a cloud.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the last word that issued from the clam-shell of Dennis Mulcahey
- for many a long and bitter hour; the last crack he made. Just as he
- offered his bluff, the first ball was pitched. It was as wild and high as
- a bird, as most first balls are. But Marty O'Malley was ready. He, too,
- had been plotting; he would fight Satan with fire!
- </p>
- <p>
- As the ball sped by, far above his head, Marty O'Malley leaped twenty feet
- in the air. As he did this he swung his unerring timber. Just as he had
- planned, the flying, whizzing sphere struck the under side of his bat, and
- glancing downward with fearful force, went crashing into the dark,
- malignant visage of Dennis Mulcahey, upturned to mark its flight. The
- fragile mask was broken; the features were crushed into complete confusion
- with the awful inveteracy of the ball.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dennis Mulcahey fell as one dead. As he was borne away another umpire was
- sent to his post. Marty O'Malley bent a glance of intelligence on the
- change pitcher of the Shantytowns, who had taken the place of the
- miscreant Dermis, and whispered loud enough to resell from plate to box:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, gimme a fair ball!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>nd so the day was
- won; the Shamrocks basted the Shantytowns by the score of 15 to 2. As for
- Marty O'Malley, his score stood:
- </p>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
- Ab. R. H. Po. A. E.
-
- O'Malley, c,....4 4 4 10 14 0
-</pre>
- <p>
- No such record had ever been made on the grounds. With four times at bat,
- Marty O'Malley did so well, withal, that he scored a base hit, two
- three-baggers and a home-run.
- </p>
- <p>
- That night Marty O'Malley wedded the rich and beautiful Gwendolin O'Toole.
- Jack, the faithful bar-boy of the Fielders' Rest, officiated as groomsman.
- Godfrey O'Toole, haughty and proud, was yet a square sport, and gave the
- bride away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rich notes of the wedding bells, welling and swelling, drifted into
- the open windows of the Charity Hospital, and smote on the ears of Dennis
- Mulcahey, where he lay with his face.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Curse 'em!&rdquo; he moaned.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then came a horrible rattle in his throat, and the guilty spirit of Dennis
- Mulcahey passed away.
- </p>
- <p>
- Death caught him off his base.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- POLITICS
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>ixie! I ain't did
- nothin', but all de same I'm feelin' like a mut, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Chucky was displeased with some chapter in his recent past. I could tell
- as much by the shifty, deprecatory way in which he twiddled and fiddled
- with his beer-stein.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is d' way it all happens,&rdquo; exclaimed Chucky. &ldquo;Over be Washin'ton
- Square there's an old soak, an' he's out to go into pol'tics&mdash;wants
- to hold office; Congress, I t'inks, is what this gezeybo is after. Anyhow
- he's nutty to hold office.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, I figgers that a guy who wants to hold office is a sucker; for
- meself, I'd sooner hold a baby. Still, when some such duck comes chasin'
- into pol'tics, I'm out for his dough like all d' rest of d' gang.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So I goes an' gets nex' to this mucker an' jollies his game. I tells him
- all he's got to do is to fix his lamps on d' perch that pleases him, blow
- in his stuff an' me push'll toin loose, an' we'll win out d' whole box of
- tricks in a walk, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right; d' Washin'ton Square duck is of d' same views. An' some
- of it ain't no foolish talk at that. I'm dead strong wit' d' Dagoes, an'
- d' push about d' Bend, an' me old chum&mdash;if he starts&mdash;is goin'
- to get a run for his money.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It ain t this, however, what wilts me d' way you sees to-night. It's that
- I'm 'shamed, see! In d' foist place, I'm bashful. That's straight stuff;
- I'm so bashful that if I'm in some other geezer's joint&mdash;par-tic'ler
- if he's a high roller an' t'rowin' on social lugs, like this Washin'ton
- Square party&mdash;I feels like creep-in' under d' door mat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' other night this can'date for office says, says he, 'Chucky, I'm goin
- to begin my money-boinin' be givin' a dinner over be me house, an' youse
- are in it, see! in it wit' bot' feet.*
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Be I comin' to chew at your joint?' I asts; 'is that d' bright idee?'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'That's d' stuff,' he says; 'youse are comin' to eat wit' me an' me
- friends. An' you can gamble your socks me friends is a flossy bunch at
- that.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I says I'll assemble wit' 'em.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit, I ain't stuck on d' play. I'd sooner eat be meself. But if I'm goin'
- to catch up wit' his Whiskers an' sep'rate him from some of d' long green,
- I've got to stay dost to his game, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's at d' table me troubles begins. I does d' social double-shuffle in
- d' hall all right. D' crush parts to let me t'rough, an' I woiks me way up
- to me can'date&mdash;who, of course, is d' main hobo, bein' he's d'
- architect of d' blowout&mdash;an' gives him d' joyful mit; what you calls
- d' glad hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Glad to see youse, Chucky,' says d' old mark. 'Tummas, steer Chucky to
- his stool be d' table.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's at d' table I'm rattled, wit' all d' glasses an' dishes an 'd'
- lights overhead. But I'm cooney all d' same. I ain't onto d' graft meself,
- but I puts it up on d' quiet I'll pick out some student who knows d' ropes
- an' string me bets wit' his.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I sets there, I flashes me lamps along d' line, an' sort o' stacks up
- d' blokes, for to pick out d' fly guys from d' lobsters, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Over'cross'd table I lights on an old stiff who looks like he could teach
- d' game. T'inks I to meself, 'There's a mut who's been t'rough d' mill
- many a time an' oft. All I got to do now is to pipe his play an' never let
- him out o' me sight. If I follows his smoke, I'll finish in d' front
- somewheres, an' none of these mugs 'll tumble to me ignorance.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! on d' level! there was no flies on that for a scheme, was there? An'
- it would have been all right, me system would; only this old galoot I goes
- nex' to don't have no more sense than me. Why! he was d' ass of d'
- evening! d' prize pig of d' play, he was! Let me tell youse.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' foist move, he spreads a little table clot' across his legs. I ain't
- missin' no tricks, so I gets me hooks on me own little table clot' and
- spreads it over me legs also.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'This is good enough for a dog, I t'inks, an' easy money! Be keepin' me
- eye on Mr. Goodplayer over there I can do this stunt all right.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' so I does. I never lets him lose me onct.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'How be youse makin' it, Chucky?' shouts me can'date from up be d' end of
- d' room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Out o' sight!' I says. 'I'm winner from d' jump; I'm on velvet.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Play ball!' me can'date shouts back to encourage me, I suppose because
- he's dead on I ain't no Foxy Quiller at d' racket we're at; 'play ball,
- Chucky, an' don't let 'em fan youse out. When you can't bat d' ball, bunt
- it,' says me can'date.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course gettin 'd' gay face that way from d' boss gives me confidence,
- an' as a result it ain't two seconts before I'm all but caught off me
- base. It's in d' soup innin's an 'd' flunk slams down d' consomme in a tea
- cup. It's a new one on me for fair! I don't at d' time have me lamps on d'
- mark 'cross d' way, who I'm understudyin', bein' busy, as I says, slingin
- 'd' bit of guff I tells of wit' me can'date. An' bein' off me guard, I
- takes d' soup for tea or some such dope, an' is layin' out to sugar it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Stan' your hand!' says a dub who's organised be me right elbow, an'
- who's feedin' his face wit' both mits; 'set a brake!' he says. 'That's
- soup. Did youse t'ink it was booze?'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After that I fastens to d' old skate across d' table to note where he's
- at wit' his game. He's doin' his toin on d' consomme wit' a spoon, so I
- gets a spoon in me hooks, goes to mixin' it up wit 'd' soup as fast as
- ever, an' follows him out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' say! I'm feelin' dead grateful to this snoozer, see! He was d'
- ugliest mug I ever meets, at that. Say! he was d' limit for looks, an'
- don't youse doubt it. As I sizes him up I was t'inking to meself, what a
- wonder he is! Honest! if I was a lion an' that old party comes into me
- cage, do youse know what I'd do? Nit; you don't. Well, I'll tip it to
- youse straight. If any such lookin' monster showed up in me cage, if d'
- door was open, I'd get out. That's on d' square, I'd simply give him d'
- cage an' go an' board in d' woods. An' if d' door was locked an' I
- couldn't get out, I'd t'row a fit from d' scare. Oh! he was a dream! He's
- one of them t'ings a mark sees after he's been hittin' it up wit 'd' lush
- for a mont'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'But simply because he looks like a murderer,' I reflects, 'that's no
- reason why he ain't wise. He knows his way t'rough this dinner like a
- p'liceman does his beat, an' I'll go wit' him.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a go! When he plays a fork, I plays a fork; when he boards a shave,
- I'm only a neck behint him. When he shifts his brush an' tucks his little
- table clot' over his t'ree-sheet, I'm wit' him. I plays nex' to him from
- soda to hock.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' every secont I'm gettin' more confidence in this gezebo, an' more an'
- more stuck on meself. On d' dead! I was farmer enough to t'ink I'd t'ank
- him for bein' me guide before I shook d' push an' quit. Say! he'd be a
- nice old dub for me to be t'ankin 'd' way it toins out. I was a good t'ing
- to follow him, I don't t'ink.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If I was onto it early that me old friend across d' table had w'eels an'
- was wrong in his cocoa, I wouldn't have felt so bad, see! But I'd been
- playin' him to win, an' followin' his lead for two hours. An' I was so
- sure I was trottin' in front, that all d' time I was jollyin' meself, an'
- pattin' meself on d' back, an' tellin' meself I was a corker to be gettin'
- an even run wit 'd' 400 d' way I was, d' foist time I enter s'ciety. An'
- of course, lettin' me nut swell that way makes it all d' harder when I
- gets d' jolt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's at d' finish. I'd gone down d' line wit' this sucker, when one of
- them waiter touts, who's cappin' d' play for d' kitchen, shoves a bowl of
- water in front of him. Now, what do youse t'ink he does? Drink it? Nit;
- that's what he ought to have done. I'm Dutch if he don't up an' sink his
- hooks in it. An' then he swabs off his mits wit' d' little table clot'.
- Say! an' to t'ink I'd been takin' his steer t'rough d' whole racket! It
- makes me tired to tell it!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'W'at th' 'ell!' I says to meself; 'I've been on a dead one from d'
- start. This stiff is a bigger mut than I be.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It let me out. Me heart was broke, an' I ain't had d' gall to hunt up me
- can'date since. Nit; I don't stay to say no 'good-byes.' I'm too bashful,
- as I tells you at d' beginnin'. As it is, I cops a sneak on d' door,
- side-steps d' outfit, an' screws me nut. The can'date sees me oozin' out,
- however, an' sends a chaser after me in d' shape of one of his flunks. He
- wants me to come back. He says me can'date wants to present me to his
- friends. I couldn't stan' for it d' way I felt, an' as d' flunk shows
- fight an' is goin' to take me back be force, I soaks him one an' comes
- away. On d' dead! I feels as'shamed of d' entire racket as if some sucker
- had pushed in me face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- ESSLEIN GAMES
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>or generations the
- Essleins have been fanciers of game chickens. The name &ldquo;Esslein&rdquo; for a
- century and a half has had honourable place among Virginians. In his day,
- they, the Essleins, were as well known as Thomas Jefferson. As this is
- written they have equal Old Dominion fame with either the Conways, the
- Fairfaxes, the McCarthys or the Lees. And all because of the purity and
- staunch worth of the &ldquo;Esslein Games.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the broad Esslein boast that no man had chickens of such feather or
- strain. And this was accepted popularly as truth. The Essleins never
- loaned, sold, nor gave away egg or chicken. No one could produce the
- counterpart of the Esslein chickens for looks or warlike heart; no one
- ever won a main from the Essleins. So at last it was agreed generally,
- that no one save the Essleins did have the &ldquo;Esslein Games;&rdquo; and this
- belief went unchallenged while years added themselves to years.
- </p>
- <p>
- But there came a day when a certain one named Smith, who dwelt in the
- region round about the Essleins, and who also had note for his fighting
- cocks, whispered to a neighbour that he, as well as the Essleins, had the
- &ldquo;Esslein Games.&rdquo; The whisper spread into talk, and the talk into general
- clamour; everywhere one heard that the long monopoly was broken, and that
- Smith had the &ldquo;Esslein Games.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This startling story had half confirmation by visitors to the Smith walks.
- Undoubtedly Smith had chickens, feather for feather, twins of the famous
- Essleins. That much at least was true. The rest of the question might have
- evidence pro or con some day, should Smith and the Essleins make a main.
- </p>
- <p>
- But this great day seemed slow, uncertain of approach. Smith would not
- divulge the genesis of his fowls, nor tell how he came to be possessed of
- the Esslein chickens. Smith confined himself to the bluff claim:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've got 'em, and there they be.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Beyond this Smith wouldn't go. On' their parts, the Essleins, at first
- maintained themselves in silent dignity. They said nothing; treating the
- Smith claim as beneath contempt.
- </p>
- <p>
- As man after man, however, went over to the Smith side, the Essleins so
- far unbent from their pose of tongue-tied hauteur as to call Smith &ldquo;a
- liar!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Still this failed of full effect; the talk went on, the subject was in
- mighty dispute, and the Essleins at last, to settle discussion, defied
- Smith to a main.
- </p>
- <p>
- But Smith refused to fight his chickens against the Essleins. Smith said
- it was conscience, but failed to go into details. This was damaging.
- Meanwhile, however, as Smith challenged the world of fighting cocks, and,
- moreover, won every match he ever made, and barred only the Essleins in
- his campaigning, there arose, in spite of his steady objection to fighting
- the Essleins, many who believed Smith and stood forth for it that Smith
- did have the far-famed &ldquo;Esslein Games.&rdquo; It is to the credit of the
- Essleins that they did all that was in their power to bring Smith and his
- chickens to the battlefield. They offered him every inducement known in
- chicken war, and tendered him a duel for his cocks to be fought for
- anything from love to money.
- </p>
- <p>
- Firm to the last, Smith wouldn't have it; and so, discouraged, the
- Essleins, failing action, nailed as it were their gauntlet to Smith's
- hen-coop door, and thus the business stood for months.
- </p>
- <p>
- It came about one day that a stranger from Baltimore accepted Smith's
- standing challenge to fight anybody save the Essleins. The stranger
- proposed and made a match with Smith to fight him nine battles, $500 on
- each couple and $2,500 on the general main. And then the news went 'round.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was high excitement in chicken circles. The day came and the sides
- of the pit were crowded. Smith was in his corner with his handler, getting
- the first of his champions ready for the struggle. As Smith was holding
- the chicken for the handler to fasten on the gaffs&mdash;drop-socket, they
- were, and keen as little scimetars&mdash;he chanced to glance across the
- pit.
- </p>
- <p>
- There stood John, chief of the Essleins.
- </p>
- <p>
- Smith saw it in a moment; he had been trapped. But it was too late. The
- match was made and the money was up; there was no chance to retrace, even
- if Smith had wanted. As a fact to his glory, however, he had no desire so
- to do.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're up against the Essleins, Bill,&rdquo; Smith said to his trainer; &ldquo;and
- it's all right. I didn't want to make a match with them, because I got
- their chickens queer. And if I'd fought them and won, I'd felt like I'd
- got their money queer; and that I couldn't stand. But this is different.
- We'll fight the Essleins now they're here, and 'if they can win over me,
- they're welcome.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the main began. The first battle was short, sharp, deadly; and
- glorious for Smith. The Esslein chicken got a stab in the heart the first
- buckle. Smith smiled as his handler pulled his chicken's gaff out of its
- dead victim, and set it free.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Smith entries won the second and third battle. Triumph rode on the
- glance of Smith, while the Esslein brows were bleak and dark.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Smith's got the 'Esslein Games,' sure!&rdquo; was whispered about the pit.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the fourth and fifth battles the tide ran the other way, the Esslein
- chickens killing their rivals. Each battle, for that matter, had so far
- been to the death.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sixth battle went to Smith and the seventh to the Essleins. Thus it
- stood four for Smith to three for the Essleins, just before the eighth
- battle. It didn't look as if Smith could lose.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was at this juncture so hopeful for the coops of Smith, that Smith did
- a foolish thing. Yielding to the appeals of his trainer, Smith let that
- worthy man put up a chicken of his own to face the Esslein entry for the
- eighth duel. It was a gorgeous shawl-neck that Smith's trainer produced;
- eye bright as a diamond, and beak like some arrow-head of jet. His legs
- looked as strong as a hod-carrier's. It was a horse to a hen, so everybody
- said, that the Esslein chicken,&mdash;which was but a small, indifferent
- bird,&mdash;would lose its life, the battle, and the main at one and the
- same time.
- </p>
- <p>
- Popular conjecture was wrong, as popular conjecture often is. The Esslein
- chicken locked both gaffs through the shawl-neck's brain in the second
- buckle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That teaches me a lesson,&rdquo; said Smith. &ldquo;Hereafter should an angel come
- down from heaven and beg me to let him fight a chicken in a main of mine,
- I'll turn him down!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the ninth battle and the score stood four for Smith and four for
- the Essleins. As the slim gaffs, grey and cruelly sharp, were being placed
- on the feathered gladiators for the last deadly joust, Smith called across
- the pit to John Esslein:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Esslein,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;no matter how this last battle may fall, I reckon
- I've convinced you and everybody looking on, that, just as I said, I've
- got the 'Esslein Games.' To show you that I know I have, and give you a
- chance for revenge as well, I'll make this last fight for $10,000 a cock.
- The main so far has been an even break, and neither of us has won or lost.
- The last battle decides the tie and wins or loses me $3,000. To make it
- interesting, I'll raise the risk both ways, if you're willing, just
- $7,000, and call the bundle ten. And,&rdquo; concluded Smith, as he glanced
- around the pit, &ldquo;there isn't a sport here but will believe in his heart,
- when I, a poor man, offer to make this last battle one for $20,000, that I
- know that, even if I'm against, I'm at least behind an 'Esslein Game.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Make it for $10,000 a cock, then!&rdquo; said John Esslein bitterly. &ldquo;Whether I
- win or lose main and money too, I've already lost much more than both
- to-day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the fight began. The chickens were big and strong and quick and as
- dauntlessly savage as ospreys. And feather and size, eye, and beak and
- leg, they were the absolute counterparts of each other.
- </p>
- <p>
- For ten minutes the battle raged. Either the spurred fencers had more of
- luck or more of caution than the others. Buckle after buckle occurred, and
- after ten minutes' fighting the two enemies still faced each other with
- angry, bead-like eyes, and without so much as a drop of blood spilled.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0127.jpg" alt="0127 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0127.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- They fronted each other balefully while one might count seven. Their beaks
- travelled up and down as evenly as if moved by the same impulse. Then they
- clashed together.
- </p>
- <p>
- This time,-as they drew apart, Smith's chicken fell upon its side, its
- right leg cut and broken well up toward the hip, with the bone pushing
- upward and outward through the slash of the gaff.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get your chicken and wring its neck, Smith,&rdquo; said someone. &ldquo;It's all
- over!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let them fight!&rdquo; responded Smith. &ldquo;It's not 'all over!' That chicken of
- Esslein's has a long row to hoe to kill that bird of mine.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Hardly were the words uttered when a strange chance befell. Smith's
- prostrate cripple reached up as its foe approached, seized it with its
- beak, and struggled to its one good foot. In the buckle that followed, the
- one gaff by some sleight of the cripple slashed the Esslein chicken over
- the eyes and blinded it. The muscles closed down and covered the eyes.
- Otherwise the Esslein cock was unhurt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then began a long, fierce, yet feeble fight. One chicken couldn't stand
- and the other couldn't see. The Smith chicken would lie on its side and
- watch its rival with eyes blazing hate, while the Esslein chicken, blind
- as a bat, would grope for him. When he came within reach of Smith's
- chicken, that indomitable bird would seize him with his bill; there would
- be some weak, aimless clashing, and again they'd be separated, the blind
- one to grope, the cripple to lie and wait.
- </p>
- <p>
- The war limped on in this fashion for almost two hours. But the end came.
- As the Esslein chicken strayed blindly within reach, its enemy got a
- strong, sudden grip, and in the collision that was the sequel, the Esslein
- chicken had its head half slashed from its body. It staggered a step with
- blood spurting, tottered and fell dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Smith said never a word, but from first to last his face had been cold and
- grimly indifferent. His heart was fire, but no one could see it in his
- face. Evidently the man was as clean-strain as his chickens.
- </p>
- <p>
- That's all there is to the story. What became of the victor with the
- broken leg? Smith looked him over, decided it was &ldquo;no use,&rdquo; and wrung his
- dauntless neck. The great main was over. Smith had won, everybody knew, as
- Smith went home that night, that he wras $10,000 better off, and that fast
- and sure, beyond denial or doubt, Smith had the &ldquo;Esslein Games.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE PAINFUL ERROR
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>his is a tale of
- school life. Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton are scholars in
- the same school. The name of this seminary is withheld by particular
- request. Suffice it that all three of these youths come and go and have
- their bright young beings within the neighbourhood of Newark. The age of
- each is thirteen years. Thirteen is a sinister number. They are all
- jocund, merry-hearted boys, and put in many hours each day thinking up a
- good time.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day during the noon hour the school building was all but deserted.
- Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Benjamin Clayton, however, were there. They
- had formed plans for their entertainment which demanded the desertion of
- the school building as chronicled. The coast being fairly clear, the
- conspiring three proceeded to one of the upper recitation rooms of the
- building. This room did not appertain to the particular school favoured by
- the attendance of Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton as
- scholars. This, however, only added zest to the adventure.
- </p>
- <p>
- The room to which our heroes repaired was the recitation stamping ground
- of a high school class in physiology. The better to know anatomy, the
- class was furnished with the skeleton of some dead gentleman, all nicely
- hung and arranged with wires so as to look as much like former days as
- possible. During class hours the framework of the dead person stood in a
- corner of the room, and the students learned things from it that were
- useful to know. When off duty it reposed in a box.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton had heard of deceased. Their
- purpose this noon was to call on him. They gained entrance to the room by
- the burglarious method of picking the lock. Once within they took the
- skeleton from its box home and stood it in the window where the public
- might revel in the spectacle. To take off any grimness of effect they
- fixed a cob pipe in its bony jaws and clothed the skull in a bad hat,
- pulled much over the left eye, the whole conferring upon the remains a
- highly gala, joyous air indeed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Benjamin Clayton withdrew from the scene.
- </p>
- <p>
- The skeleton in the window was very popular. Countless folk had assembled
- to gaze upon it at the end of the first ten minutes, and armies were on
- their way.
- </p>
- <p>
- The principal of the school as he came from lunch saw it and was much
- vexed. He put the skeleton back in its box, and the hydra-headed public
- slowly dispersed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Benjamin Clayton secretly gloated over the
- transaction in detail and entirety. But the principal began to make
- inquiries; the avenger was on the track of the criminal three. Some big
- girls had witnessed the felonious entrance of the guilty ones into the den
- of the skeleton. The big girls imparted their knowledge to the principal,
- hunting these felons of the school. But the big girls slipped a cog on one
- important point. They did not know the recreant Benjamin Clayton. After
- arguing it all over they decided that &ldquo;the third boy&rdquo; was a very innocent
- young person named Albert Weed, and so gave in the names of the guerillas
- as:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Charles Roy, Fred Avery and Albert Weed!&rdquo; That afternoon the indignant
- principal demanded that Fred Avery, Charles Roy and Albert Weed attend him
- to the study. They were there charged with the atrocity of the skeleton in
- the window. Charles Roy and Fred Avery confessed and asked for mercy.
- Albert Weed denied having art, part or lot in the outrage. The principal
- was much shocked at his prompt depravity in trying to lie himself clear.
- The principal, in order to be exactly just, and evenly fair, craved to
- know of Charles Roy and Fred Avery:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Was Albert Weed with you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Please, sir, we would rather be excused from answering,&rdquo; they said,
- hanging down their heads.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the principal knew that Albert Weed was guilty. Fred Avery and
- Charles Roy were forgiven, and were complimented on their straightforward,
- manly course in refusing to tell a lie to shield themselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As for you, Albert,&rdquo; observed the principal, as he seized Albert Weed by
- the top of his head, &ldquo;as for you, Albert, I do not punish you for being
- roguish with the skeleton, but for telling me a lie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- The principal thereupon lambasted the daylights out of Albert Weed.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE RAT
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>e d' cops at d'
- Central office fly?&rdquo; Chucky buried his face in his tankard in a polite
- effort to hide his contempt for the question. &ldquo;Be dey fly! Say! make no
- mistake! d' Central Office mugs is as soon a set of geezers as ever looked
- over d' hill. Dey're d' swiftest ever. On d' level! I t'ink t'ree out of
- every four of them gezebos could loin to play d' pianny in one lesson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just to put youse onto how quick dey be, an' to give you some idee of
- their curves, let me tell you what dey does to Billy d' Rat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Youse never chases up on d' Rat? Nit! Well, Cully, you don't miss much.
- Yes, d' Rat's a crook all right. He's a nipper, but a dead queer one, see!
- He always woiks alone, an' his lay is diamonds.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I don't want no pals or stalls in mine,&rdquo; says d' Rat. &ldquo;I can toin all
- needful tricks be me lonesome. Stalls is a give-away, see! Let some sucker
- holler, an' let one of your mob get pinched, an' what then? Why, about d'
- time he's stood up an' given d' secont degree be Mc-Clusky, he coughs.
- That's it! he squeals, an' d' nex' dash out o' d' box youse don't get a
- t'ing but d' collar. Nine out o' ten of d' good people doin' time to-day,
- was t'rown into soak be some pal knockin'. I passes all that up! I goes it
- alone! If I nips a rock it's mine; I don't split out no bits for no
- snoozer, see! I'm d' entire woiks, an' if I stumbles an' falls be d'
- wayside, it's me's to blame. Which last makes it easier to stan' for.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' way d' Rat lays out d' ground for me one day,&rdquo; continued
- Chucky, &ldquo;an' he ain't slingin' no guff at that. It's d' way he always
- woiked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But to skin back to d' Central Office cops an' how flydey be: One of d'
- Rat's favourite stunts is dampin' a diamond. What's that? Youse'll catch
- on as me tale unfolds, as d' nov'lists puts it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here's how d' Rat would graft. Foist he'd rub up his two lamps wit'
- pepper till dey looks red an', out of line. When he'd got t'rough doin' d'
- pepper act to 'em, d' Rat's peeps, for fair! would do to understudy two
- fried eggs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then d' Rat would pull on a w'ite wig, like he's some old stuff; an' wit'
- that an' some black goggles over his peeps, his own Rag wouldn't have
- known him. To t'row 'em down for sure, d' Rat would wear a cork-sole shoe,&mdash;one
- of these 6-inch soles,&mdash;like he's got a game trilby. Then when he's
- all made up in black togs, d' Rat is ready.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bein' organised, d' Rat hobbles into a cab an' drives to a diamond shop.
- D' racket is this: Of course it takes a bit of dough, but that's no
- drawback, for d' Rat is always on velvet an' dead strong. As I say, d'
- play is this: D' Rat being well dressed an' fitted up wit' his cork-soles,
- his goggles an' his wig, comes hobblin' into d' diamond joint an' gives d'
- impression he's some rich old mark who ain't got a t'ing but money, an'
- that he's out to boin a small bundle be way of matchin' a spark which he
- has wit' him in his mit. D' Rat fills d' diamond man up wit' a yarn, how
- he's goin' to saw a brace of ear-rings off on his daughter an' needs d'
- secont rock, see! Of course it's a dead case of string. D' Rat ain't got
- no kid, an' would be d' last bloke to go festoonin' her wit' diamonds if
- he had.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naturally, d' mut who owns d' store is out an' eager to do business. D'
- Rat won't let d' diamond man do d' matchin'; not on your life! he's goin'
- to mate them sparks himself. So he gives d' stiff wit' d' store d' tip to
- spread a handful of stones, say about d' size of d' one he's holdin' in
- his hooks&mdash;which mebby is a 2-carat&mdash;on some black velvet for
- him to pick from. D' diamond party ain't lookin' for no t'row down from an
- old sore-eyed, cork-sole hobo like d' Rat, so he lays out a sprinklin' of
- stones. D' Rat, who all this time is starring his bum lamps, an' tellin'
- how bad an' weak dey be, an' how he can hardly see, gets his map down dost
- to d' lay-out of sparks, so as he can get onto em an' make d' match.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's now d' touch comes in. When d' Rat's got his smeller right among d'
- diamonds, he sticks out his tongue, quick like a toad for a honey-bee, an'
- nails a gem. That's what dey calls 'dampin' a diamond.' Yes, mebby if
- there's so many of 'em laid out, he t'inks d' mark behint d' show case
- will stan' for it wit'out missin' 'em, d' Rat gets two. Then d' Rat goes
- on jollyin' an' chinnin' wit' d' sparks in his face; an' mebby for a
- finish an' to put a cover on d' play, he buys one an' screws his nut.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit' his cab, as I says, d' Rat is miles away, an' has time to shed his
- wig an' goggles an' cork-sole before d' guy wit' d' diamonds tumbles to it
- he's been done. That's how d' Rat gets in his woik. Now I'll tell youse
- how d' Central Office people t'run d' harpoon into him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One day d' Rat makes a play an' gets two butes. He tucks 'em away in back
- of his teet', an' is just raisin' his nut to say somethin', when d' store
- duck grabs him an' raises a roar. Two or t'ree cloiks an' a cop off d'
- street comes sprintin' up, an' away goes d' Rat to d' coop.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit 'd' foist yell of d' sucker who makes d' front for d' store&mdash;naw,
- he ain't d' owner, he's one of d' cloiks&mdash;d' Rat goes clean outside
- of d' sparks at a gulp; swallows 'em; that's what he does. There bein' no
- diamond toined up, an' no one at headquarters bein' onto him&mdash;for
- he's always laid low an' kept out of sight of d' p'lice&mdash;d' Rat makes
- sure dey'll have to t'run him loose.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But d' boss cop is pretty cooney. He figgers it all out, how d' Rat's a
- crook, an' how he's eat d' diamonds, just as I says. So he cons d' Rat an'
- t'rows a dream into him. He tells him there'll be no trouble, but he'll
- have to keep him for an hour or two until his 'sooperior off'cer,' as he
- calls him, gets there. He's d' main squeeze, this p'lice dub dey're
- waitin' for, an' as soon as he shows up an' goes over d' play, d' Rat can
- screw out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' sort of song an' dance d' high cop gives d' Rat; an' say! I'm a
- lobster if d' Rat don't fall to it, at that. On d' dead! this p'lice duck
- is so smooth an' flossy d' Rat believes him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just for appearances d' Rat registers a big kick; an' then&mdash;for dey
- don't lock him up at all&mdash;he plants himself in a easy chair to do a
- toin of wait. D' Rat couldn't have broke an' run for it, even if he'd took
- d' scare, for d' cops is all over d' place. But he ain't lookin' for d'
- woist of it nohow. He t'inks it's all as d' boss cop has told him; he'll
- wait there an hour or two for d' main guy an' then dey'll cut him free.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After a half hour d' boss cop says: 'It's no use you bein' hungry, me
- frien', an' as I'm goin' to chew, come wit' me an' feed your face. D'
- treat's on me, anyhow, bein' obliged to detain a respect'ble old mucker
- like you. So come along.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit' that d' Rat goes along wit 'd' boss cop, an' all d' time he's
- t'inkin' what a Stoughton bottle d' cop is.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's nex' door, d' chop-house is. D' cop an 'd' Rat sets down an' breasts
- up to d' table. Dey gives d' orders all right, all right. But say! d' grub
- never gets to 'em. D' nex' move after d' orders, d' Rat, who's got a
- t'irst on from d' worry of bein' lagged, takes a drink out of a glass.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I'm poisoned!' yells d' Rat as he slams down d' tumbler; 'somebody's
- doped me!' an' wit' that d' Rat toins in, t'rows a fit, an' is seasick to
- d' limit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's what that boss cop does. He sends over an' doctors a glass while
- d' Rat is settin' in his office waitin', an' then gives him a bluff about
- chewin' an' steers d' Rat ag'inst it. Say! it was a dandy play. D' dope or
- whatever it was, toins me poor friend d' Rat inside out, like an old
- woman's pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' them sparks is recovered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, d' Rat does a stretch. As d' judge sentences him, d' Rat gives d'
- cop who downs him his mit. 'You're a wonder,' says d' Rat to d' cop;
- 'there's no flies baskin' in d' sun on you. When I reflects on d' way you
- sneaks d' chaser after them sparks, an' lands 'em, I'm bound to say d'
- Central Office mugs are onto their job.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHEYENNE BILL
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Wolfville)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">C</span>heyenne Bill is
- out of luck. Ordinarily his vagaries are not regarded in Wolfville. His
- occasional appearance in its single street in a voluntary of nice feats of
- horsemanship, coupled with an exhibition of pistol shooting, in which old
- tomato cans and passé beer bottles perform as targets, has hitherto
- excited no more baleful sentiment in the Wolfville bosom than disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shootin' up the town a whole lot!&rdquo; is the name for this engaging pastime,
- as given by Cheyenne Bill, and up to date the exercise has passed
- unchallenged.
- </p>
- <p>
- But to-day it is different. Camps like individuals have moods, now light,
- now dark; and so it is with Wolfville. At this time Wolfville is
- experiencing a wave of virtue. This may have come spontaneously from those
- seeds of order which, after all, dwell sturdily in the Wolfville breast.
- It may have been excited by the presence of a pale party of Eastern
- tourists, just now abiding at the O. K. Hotel; persons whom the rather
- sanguine sentiment of Wolfville credits with meditating an investment of
- treasure in her rocks and rills. But whatever the reason, Wolfville virtue
- is aroused; a condition of the public mind which makes it a bad day for
- Cheyenne Bill.
- </p>
- <p>
- The angry sun smites hotly in the deserted causeway of Wolfville. The
- public is within doors. The Red Light Saloon is thriving mightily. Those
- games which generally engross public thought are drowsy enough; but the
- counter whereat the citizen of Wolfville gathers with his peers in
- absorption of the incautious compounds of the place, is fairly sloppy from
- excess of trade. Notwithstanding the torrid heat this need not sound
- strangely; Wolfville leaning is strongly homoeopathic. &ldquo;<i>Similia
- similibus curantur</i>,&rdquo; says Wolfville; and when it is blazing hot,
- drinks whiskey.
- </p>
- <p>
- But to-day there is further reason for this consumption. Wolfville is
- excited, and this provokes a thirst. Cheyenne Bill, rendering himself
- prisoner to Jack Moore, rescue or no rescue, has by order of that
- sagacious body been conveyed by his captor before the vigilance committee,
- and is about to be tried for his life.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was Cheyenne Bill's immediate crime? Certainly not a grave one. Ten
- days before it would have hardly earned a comment. But now in its spasm of
- virtue, and sensitive in its memories of the erratic courses of Cheyenne
- Bill aforetime, Wolfville has grimly taken possession of that volatile
- gentleman for punishment. He has killed a Chinaman. Here is the story:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yere comes that prairie dog, Cheyenne Bill, all spraddled out,&rdquo; says Dave
- Tutt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dave Tutt is peering from the window of the Red Light, to which lattice he
- has been carried by the noise of hoofs. There is a sense of injury
- disclosed in Dave Tutt's tone, born of the awakened virtue of Wolfville.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It looks like this camp never can assoome no airs,&rdquo; remarks Cherokee Hall
- in a distempered way, &ldquo;but this yere miser'ble Cheyenne comes chargin' up
- to queer it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0141.jpg" alt="0141 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0141.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- As he speaks, that offending personage, unconscious of the great change in
- Wolf ville morals, sweeps up the street, expressing gladsome and ecstatic
- whoops, and whirling his pistol on his forefinger like a thing of light.
- One of the tourists stands in the door of the hotel smoking a pipe in
- short, brief puffs of astonishment, and reviews the amazing performance.
- Cheyenne Bill at once and abruptly halts. Gazing for a disgruntled moment
- on the man from the East, he takes the pipe from its owner's amazed mouth
- and places it in his own &ldquo;smokin' of pipes,&rdquo; he vouchsafes in condemnatory
- explanation, &ldquo;is onelegant an' degradin'; an' don't you do it no more in
- my presence. I'm mighty sensitive that a-way about pipes, an' I don't aim
- to tolerate 'em none whatever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This solution of his motives seems satisfactory to Cheyenne Bill. He sits
- puffing and gazing at the tourist, while the latter stands dumbly staring,
- with a morsel of the ravished meerschaum still between his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- What further might have followed in the way of oratory or overt acts
- cannot be stated, for the thoughts of the guileless Cheyenne suddenly
- receive a new direction. A Chinaman, voluminously robed, emerges from the
- New York store, whither he has been drawn by dint of soap.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever is this Mongol doin' in camp, I'd like for to know?&rdquo; inquires
- Cheyenne Bill disdainfully. &ldquo;I shore leaves orders when I'm yere last, for
- the immejit removal of all sech. I wouldn't mind it, but with strangers
- visitin' Wolf ville this a-way, it plumb mortifies me to death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh well!&rdquo; he continues in tones of weary, bitter reflection, &ldquo;I'm the
- only public-sperited gent in this yere outfit, so all reforms falls
- nacheral to me. Still, I plays my hand! I'm simply a pore, lonely white,
- but jest the same, I makes an example of this speciment of a sudsmonger to
- let 'em know whatever a white man is, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then comes the short, emphatic utterance of a six-shooter. A puff of smoke
- lifts and vanishes in the hot air, and the next census will be short one
- Asiatic.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a moment arrives a brief order from Enright, the chief of the vigilance
- committee, to Jack Moore. The last-named official proffers a Winchester
- and a request to surrender simultaneously, and Cheyenne Bill, realizing
- fate, at once accedes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, gents,&rdquo; says Enright, apologetically, as he convenes the
- committee in the Red Light bar; &ldquo;I don't say this Cheyenne is held for
- beefin' the Chinaman sole an' alone. The fact is, he's been havin' a
- mighty sight too gay a time of late, an' so I thinks it's a good, safe
- play, bein' as it's a hot day an' we has the time, to sorter call the
- committee together an' ask its views, whether we better hang this yere
- Cheyenne yet or not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mr. Pres'dent,&rdquo; responds Dave Tutt, &ldquo;if I'm in order, an' to get the
- feelin' of the meetin' to flowin' smooth, I moves we takes this Cheyenne
- an' proceeds with his immolation. I ain't basin' it on nothin' in
- partic'lar, but lettin' her slide as fulfillin' a long-felt want.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do I note any remarks?&rdquo; asks Enright. &ldquo;If not, I takes Mr. Tutt's very
- excellent motion as the census of this meetin', an' it's hang she is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not intendin' of no interruption,&rdquo; remarks Texas Thompson, &ldquo;I wants to
- say this: I'm a quiet gent my-se'f, an' nacheral aims to keep Wolfville a
- quiet place likewise. For which-all I shorely favours a-hangin' of
- Cheyenne. He's given us a heap of trouble. Like Tutt I don't make no p'int
- on the Chinaman; we spares the Chink too easy. But this Cheyenne is allers
- a-ridin', an' a-yellin', an' a-shootin' up this camp till I'm plumb tired
- out. So I says let's hang him, an' su'gests as a eligible, as well as
- usual nook tharfore, the windmill back of the dance hall.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; says Enright, &ldquo;the windmill is, as experience has showed, amply
- upholstered for sech plays; an' as delays is aggravatin', the committee
- might as well go wanderin' over now, an' get this yere ceremony off its
- mind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;See yere, Mr. Pres'dent!&rdquo; interrupts Cheyenne Bill in tones of one
- ill-used, &ldquo;what for a deal is this I rises to ask?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can gamble this is a squar' game,&rdquo; replies Enright confidently.
- &ldquo;You're entitled to your say when the committee is done. Jest figure out
- what kyards you needs, an' we deals to you in a minute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I solely wants to know if my voice is to be regarded in this yere play,
- that's all,&rdquo; retorts Cheyenne Bill.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gents,&rdquo; says Doc Peets, who has been silently listening. &ldquo;I'm with you on
- this hangin'. These Eastern sharps is here in our midst. It'll impress 'em
- that Wolfville means business, an' it's a good, safe, quiet place. They'll
- carry reports East as will do us credit, an' thar you be. As to the
- propriety of stringin' Cheyenne, little need be said. If the Chinaman
- ain't enough, if assaultin' of an innocent tenderfoot ain't enough, you
- can bet he's done plenty besides as merits a lariat. He wouldn't deny it
- himse'f if you asks him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There is a silence succeeding the rather spirited address of Doc Peets, on
- whose judgment Wolfville has been taught to lean. At last Enright breaks
- it by inquiring of Cheyenne Bill if he has anything to offer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckons it's your play now, Cheyenne,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;so come a-runnin.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why!&rdquo; urges Cheyenne Bill, disgustedly, &ldquo;these proceedin's is ornery an'
- makes me sick. I shore objects to this hangin'; an' all for a measly
- Chinaman too! This yere Wolfville outfit is gettin' a mighty sight too
- stylish for me. It's growin' that per-dad-binged-'tic'lar it can't take
- its reg'lar drinks, an'&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop right thar!&rdquo; says Enright, with dignity, rapping a shoe-box with his
- six-shooter; &ldquo;don't you cuss the chair none, 'cause the chair won't have
- it. It's parliamentary law, if any gent cusses the chair he's out of
- order, same as it's law that all chips on the floor goes to the house.
- When a gent's out of order once, that settles it. He can't talk no more
- that meetin'. Seein' we're aimin' to eliminate you, we won't claim nothin'
- on you this time. But be careful how you come trackin' 'round ag'in, an'
- don't fret us! <i>Sabe?</i> Don't you-all go an' fret us none!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ain't allowin' to fret you,&rdquo; retorts Cheyenne Bill. &ldquo;I don't have to
- fret you. What I says is this: I s'pose, I sees fifty gents stretched by
- one passel of Stranglers or another between yere an' The Dalis, an' I
- never does know a party who's roped yet on account of no Chinaman. An' I
- offers a side bet of a blue stack, it ain't law to hang people on account
- of downin' no Chinaman. But you-alls seems sot on this, an' so I tells you
- what I'll do. I'm a plain gent an' thar's no filigree work on me. If it's
- all congenial to the boys yere assembled&mdash;not puttin' it on the
- grounds of no miser'ble hop slave, but jest to meet public sentiment half
- way&mdash;I'll gamble my life, hang or no hang, on the first ace turned
- from the box, Cherokee deal. Does it go?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Wolfville tastes are bizarre. A proposition original and new finds in its
- very novelty an argument for Wolfville favour. It befalls, therefore, that
- the unusual offer of Cheyenne Bill to stake his neck on a turn at faro is
- approvingly criticised. The general disposition agrees to it; even the
- resolute Enright sees no reason to object.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cheyenne,&rdquo; says Enright, &ldquo;we don't have to take this chance, an' it's
- a-makin' of a bad preceedent which the same may tangle us yereafter; but
- Wolfville goes you this time, an' may Heaven have mercy on your soul.
- Cherokee, turn the kyards for the ace.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Turn squar', Cherokee!&rdquo; remarks Cheyenne Bill with an air of interest.
- &ldquo;You wouldn't go to sand no deck, nor deal two kyards at a clatter, ag'in
- perishin' flesh an' blood?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I should say, no!&rdquo; replies Cherokee. &ldquo;I wouldn't turn queer for money,
- an' you can gamble! I don't do it none when the epeesode comes more onder
- the head of reelaxation.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which the same bein' satisfact'ry,&rdquo; says Cheyenne Bill, &ldquo;roll your game.
- I'm eager for action; also, I plays it open.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I dunno!&rdquo; observes Dan Boggs, meditatively caressing his chin; &ldquo;I'm
- thinkin' I'd a-coppered;&mdash;that's whatever!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The deal proceeds in silence, and as may happen in that interesting sport
- called faro, a split falls out. Two aces appear in succession.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ace lose, ace win!&rdquo; says Cherokee, pausing. &ldquo;Whatever be we goin' to do
- now, I'd like to know?&rdquo; There is a pause.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gents,&rdquo; announces Enright, with dignity, &ldquo;a split like this yere creates
- a doubt; an' all doubts goes to the pris'ner, same as a maverick goes to
- the first rider as ties it down, an' runs his brand onto it. This camp of
- Wolfville abides by law, an' blow though it be, this yere Cheyenne Bill,
- temp'rarily at least, goes free. However, he should remember this yere
- graze an' restrain his methods yereafter. Some of them ways of his is
- onhealthful, an' if he's wise he'll shorely alter his system from now on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which the camp really lose! an' this person Bill goes free!&rdquo; says Jack
- Moore, dejectedly. &ldquo;I allers was ag'in faro as a game. Where we-all misses
- it egreegious, is we don't play him freeze-out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know, Cherokee,&rdquo; whispers Faro Nell, as her eyes turn softly to
- that personage of the deal box, &ldquo;I don't like killin's none! I'd sooner
- Cheyenne goes loose, than two bonnets from Tucson!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this Cherokee Hall pinches the cheek of Faro Nell with a delicate
- accuracy born of his profession, and smiles approval.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- BLIGHTED
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>s it hauteur, or
- is it a maiden's coyness which causes you to turn away your head, love?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- George D'Orsey stood with his arm about the willowy form of Imogene
- O'Sullivan. The scene was the ancestral halls of the O'Sullivans in the
- fashionable north-west quarter of Harlem. George D'Orsey had asked Imogene
- O'Sullivan to be his bride. That was prior to the remark which opened our
- story. And the dear girl softly promised. The lovers stood there in the
- gloaming, drinking that sweet intoxication which never comes but once.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It isn't hauteur, George,&rdquo; replied Imogene O'Sullivan, in tones like
- far-off church bells. &ldquo;But, George!&mdash;don't spurn me&mdash;I have
- eaten of the common onion of commerce, and my breath, it is so freighted
- with that trenchant vegetable, it would take the nap from your collar like
- a lawn mower. It is to spare the man she loves, George, which causes your
- Imogene to hold her head aloof.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look up, darling!&rdquo; and George D'Orsey's tones held a glad note of
- sympathy, &ldquo;I, too, have battened upon onions.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The lovers clung to each other like bats in a steeple.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But we'll have to put toe-weights on pa, George; he'll step high and
- lively when he hears of this!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The lovers were seated on the sofa, now; the prudent Imogene was taking a
- look ahead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doesn't your father love me, pet?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't think he does,&rdquo; replied the fair girl tenderly. &ldquo;I begged him to
- ask you to dinner, once, George; that was on your last trip. He said he
- would sooner dine with a wet dog, George, and refused. From that I infer
- his opposition to our union.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'll make a monkey of him yet!&rdquo; and George D'Orsey hissed the words
- through his set teeth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And my brother?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As for him,&rdquo; said George D'Orsey (and at this he began pacing the room
- like a lion), &ldquo;as for your brother! If he so much as looks slant-eyed at
- our happiness, he goes into the soup! From your father I would bear much;
- but when the balance of the family gets in on the game, they will pay for
- their chips in advance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can we not leave them, George; leave them, and fly together?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your father is rich, Imogene; that is a sufficient answer.&rdquo; There was a
- touch of sternness in George D'Orsey's tones, and the subject of flying
- was dropped.
- </p>
- <p>
- George D'Orsey lived in the far-off hamlet of Hoboken. He returned to his
- home. In three months he was to wed Imogene O'Sullivan. Benton O'Sullivan
- had a fit when it was first mentioned to him. At last he gave his sullen
- consent.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I had planned a title for you, Imogene.&rdquo; That was all he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three months have elapsed. It was dark when the ferryboat came to a
- panting pause in its slip. George D'Orsey picked his way through the crowd
- with quick, nervous steps. It was to be his wedding-night. He wondered if
- Imogene would meet him at the ferry. At that moment he beheld her dear
- form walking just ahead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To-night, dearest, you are mine forever!&rdquo; whispered George D'Orsey
- tenderly, seizing the sweet young creature by her arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shrieks which emanated from the young woman could have defied the best
- efforts of a steam siren.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was not Imogene O'Sullivan!
- </p>
- <p>
- The police bore away George D'Orsey. They turned a deaf ear to his
- explanations.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You make me weary!&rdquo; remarked the brutal turnkey, to whom George D'Orsey
- told his tale.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cell door slammed; the lock clanked; the cruel key grated as it
- turned. George D'Orsey was a prisoner. The charge the blotter bore against
- him was: &ldquo;Insulting women on the street.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When George D'Orsey was once more alone, he cursed his fate as if his
- heart would break. At last he was calm.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Oh, woman, in our hour of ease,
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Uncertain, coy, and hard to please;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- But, seen too oft, familiar with her face;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- We first endure, then pity, then embrace!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- The Chateau O'Sullivan was a flare and a glare of lights. The rooms were
- jungles of palms and tropical plants. Flowers were everywhere, while the
- air tottered and fainted under the burden of their perfume. Imogene
- O'Sullivan never looked more beautiful.
- </p>
- <p>
- But George D'Orsey did not come.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hour followed hour into the past. The guests moved uneasily from room to
- room. The preacher notified Benton O'Sullivan that he was ready.
- </p>
- <p>
- And still George D'Orsey came not.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The villain has laid down on us, me child!&rdquo; whispered Benton O'Sullivan
- to the weeping Imogene; &ldquo;but may me hopes of heaven die of heart failure
- if I have not me revenge! No man shall insult the proud house of.
- O'Sullivan and get away with it; not without blood!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The guests cheerfully dispersed, talking the most scandalous things in
- whispers.
- </p>
- <p>
- Imogene O'Sullivan's dream was over.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the next night. George D'Orsey stood on the O'Sullivan porch,
- ringing the bell. His eye and his pocket and his stomach were alike wildly
- vacant.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sic him, Bull! Sic him!&rdquo; said Benton O'Sullivan, bitterly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bull tore several specimens from the quivering frame of George D'Orsey,
- who vanished in the darkness with a hoarse cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- Years afterward George D'Orsey and Imogene O'Sullivan met, but they gave
- each other a cold, meaningless stare.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE SURETHING
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ohn Sparrowhawk
- was a sporting man of the tribe of &ldquo;Surethings.&rdquo; He was fond of what has
- Cherry Hill description as a &ldquo;cinch.&rdquo; He never let any lame, slow trick
- get away. John Sparrowhawk's specialty was racing; and he always referred
- to this diversion with horses as his &ldquo;long suit.&rdquo; He kept several rather
- abrupt animals himself, and whenever he found a man whose horse wasn't as
- sudden as some horse he owned, John Sparrowhawk would lay plots for that
- man, and ultimately race equines with him, and become master of such sums
- as the man would bet. John Sparrowhawk wandered through life in his
- &ldquo;surething&rdquo; way and amassed wealth. He was rich, and was wont to boast to
- very intimate friends:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never spent a dollar which I honestly earned.&rdquo; This gave John
- Sparrowhawk a vast deal of vogue, and he was looked up to and revered by a
- circle which is always impressed by the genius of one who can rob his
- fellow-worms, and do it according to law.
- </p>
- <p>
- It befell one day that the Brooklyn Jockey Club offered a purse for a
- running race, but demanded five entries. In no time at all, three horses
- were entered. Their names and capacities were well known to the sagacious
- John Sparrowhawk. He had a horse that could beat them all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He would run by them like they was tied to a post!&rdquo; remarked John
- Sparrowhawk, in a chant of ungrammatical exultation.
- </p>
- <p>
- It burst upon him that the time was ripe to pillage somebody. His latest
- larceny was ten days old, and John Sparrowhawk oft quoted the Bowery poet
- where he said:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Count that day lost whose low, descending sun
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Sees at thy hands no worthy sucker done.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- And John Sparrowhawk did business that way. If he might only get another
- horse entered, and then complete the quintet with his own, John
- Sparrowhawk would possess &ldquo;a snap.&rdquo; Which last may be defined as a
- condition of affairs much famed for its excellence.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture John Sparrowhawk had the idea of his career. The idea
- made &ldquo;a great hit&rdquo; with him. He had a friend who had a horse, which, while
- not so swiftly elusive as &ldquo;Tenbroeck&rdquo; and &ldquo;Spokane&rdquo; in their palmy days,
- could defeat such things as district messenger boys, Fifth avenue stages,
- and many other enterprises which do not attain meteoric speed. John
- Sparrowhawk's horse could beat it, he was sure. He would explain the
- situation to his friend, and cause his snail of a horse to be entered.
- This would fill the race, and then John Sparrowhawk's horse would win
- &ldquo;hands down,&rdquo; and thereby empty everybody's pockets in favour of John
- Sparrowhawk's, which was a very glutton of a pocket, and never got enough.
- </p>
- <p>
- John Sparrowhawk's friend was lying ill at the Hoffman. John Sparrowhawk
- went into that hostelry and climbed the stairs, softly humming that
- optimistic ballad, which begins: &ldquo;There's a farmer born every second!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The sick friend took little interest in the deadfall proposed by John
- Sparrowhawk. He was suffering from a mass-meeting on the part of divers
- boils, which had selected a trysting place on his person, where their
- influence would be felt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Locked, as it were, in conflict with his afflictions, John Sparrowhawk's
- friend was indifferent to his horse. He cared not what traps were set with
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- John Sparrowhawk entered the friend's horse and paid the entrance money&mdash;$150.
- Then he lavished $15 on a &ldquo;jock&rdquo; to ride him. The field was full, the
- conditions of the purse complied with, and the race a &ldquo;go.&rdquo; Of course,
- John Sparrowhawk's horse would win; and, acting on it as the chance of his
- life, John Sparrowhawk went craftily about wagering his dollars, even unto
- his bottom coin; and all to the end that he deplete the &ldquo;jays&rdquo; about him
- and become exceeding rich.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm out for the stuff!&rdquo; observed John Sparrow-hawk, and acted
- accordingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the race started John Sparrowhawk had everything up but his eyes, his
- ears, and other bric-à-brac of a personal sort, which would mean
- inconvenience to be without a moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- There could be no purpose other than a cruel one, so far as John
- Sparrowhawk is concerned, to dwell on the details of this race. Suffice it
- that they started and they finished, and the horse of the sick friend made
- a fool of the horse of John Sparrowhawk. He beat him like rocking a baby,
- so said the sports, and thereby dumped the unscrupulous yet sapient John
- Sparrow-hawk for every splinter he possessed. It shook every particle of
- dust out of John Sparrowhawk. He called to relate his woe to his sick
- friend. That suffering person's malady had temporarily taken a recess from
- its labours, and for the nonce he was resting easy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know'd it, and had four thousand placed that way, John,&rdquo; observed the
- invalid. &ldquo;I win almost thirteen thousand on the trick. My horse could do
- that skate of yours on three legs. I tumbled to it the moment you came in
- the other day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why didn't you put me on?&rdquo; remonstrated John Sparrowhawk, almost in
- tears, as he thought of the dray-load of money he had lost.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Put you on!&rdquo; repeated the Job of the Hoffman, scornfully; &ldquo;not none! I
- wanted to see how it would seem to let a 'surething' sharp like you open a
- game on a harmless sufferer and 'go broke' on it. No, John; it will do you
- good. You won't have so much money as the result of this, but you will be
- a heap more erudite.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- GLADSTONE BURR
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">G</span>ladstone Burr is a
- small, industrious, married man. His little nest of a home is in Brooklyn.
- Perhaps the most emphasised feature of the Burr family home is Mrs. B. She
- is a large woman, direct as Bismarck in her diplomacy, and when Gladstone
- Burr does wrong, she tells him of it firmly and fully for his good. There
- is but one bad habit which can with slightest show of truth be charged to
- Gladstone Burr. The barriers of his nature, yielding to social pressure,
- at intervals give way. At such times the soul of Gladstone Burr issues
- forth on a sea of strong drink.
- </p>
- <p>
- But, as he says himself, &ldquo;these bats never last longer than ten days.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Notwithstanding this meagre limit, Mrs. B. does not approve of Gladstone
- Burr when thus socially relaxed. And from time to time she has left
- nothing unsaid on that point. Indeed, Mrs. B. has so fully defined her
- position on the subject, that Gladstone Burr, while he in no sense fears
- her, does not care to go home unless he is either very drunk or very
- sober. There is no middle ground in tippling where Gladstone Burr and Mrs.
- B. can meet with his consent. He is not superstitious, but he avers that
- whenever he has been drinking and meets Mrs. B. he has had bad luck. His
- only safety lies in either being sober and avoiding it, or in taking
- refuge in a jag too thick for wifely admonitions to pierce.
- </p>
- <p>
- There arose last week in the life of Gladstone Burr some event that it was
- absolutely necessary to celebrate. For two days he gave himself up to his
- destiny in that behalf, and being very busy with his festival Gladstone
- Burr did not go home.
- </p>
- <p>
- Toward the close of the third day he was considering with himself how best
- to approach his domicile so as to avoid the full force of the storm. He
- was not so deep in his cups at that moment, but Mrs. B.'s opinions gave
- him concern. Still, he felt the need of going home. He was tired and he
- was sick. Gladstone Burr knew he would be a great deal sicker in the
- morning, but he felt of a four-bit piece in his pocket, and remarking
- something about the hair of a dog, took courage, and was confident he
- carried the means of restoring himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- But how to get home!
- </p>
- <p>
- It was at this crisis in the affairs of Gladstone Burr that his friend,
- Frederick Upham Adams, came up. An inspiration seized Gladstone Burr.
- Adams should take him home in a carriage. Mrs. B. didn't know Adams, being
- careful of her acquaintances. They would say that he, Gladstone Burr, had
- been ill, almost dead from apoplexy, or sunstroke, during the recent hot
- spell, and that &ldquo;Dr. Adams&rdquo; was bringing him home.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a most happy thought.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't be alarmed, Mrs. Burr,&rdquo; said Adams, as an hour later he supported
- the drooping Gladstone Burr through the hall and stowed him away on a
- sofa. &ldquo;I am Dr. Adams, of Williamsburg. Mr. Burr has suffered a great
- shock, but he is out of danger now. All he needs is rest&mdash;perfect
- rest!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Gladstone Burr gasped piteously from the sofa. Mrs. B. was deceived
- perfectly. The ruse worked like a charm.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0159.jpg" alt="0159 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0159.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How long must he be kept quiet, Doctor?&rdquo; asked Mrs. B., as she wrung her
- hands over Gladstone Burr's danger. She was bending above the invalid at
- the time, and he was unable to signal his friend to be careful how he
- prescribed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh! ahem!&rdquo; observed &ldquo;Dr. Adams,&rdquo; looking at the ceiling, professionally,
- &ldquo;about three days! That is right! Perfect rest for three days, and Mr.
- Burr will be a well man again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are there directions as to what medicines to give him?&rdquo; asked Mrs. B.,
- passing her hand gently over Gladstone Burr's heated dome of thought; &ldquo;any
- directions about the food, Doctor?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He needs no medicine,&rdquo; observed the wretched Adams, closing his eyes
- sagaciously, and sucking his cane. &ldquo;As for food, we must be careful. I
- should advise nothing but milk. Give him milk, Mrs. Burr, milk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- After this Frederick Upham Adams drove away. And at the end of three days
- Gladstone Burr was almost dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE GARROTE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>ell youse
- somethin' about d' worser side of d' Bend!&rdquo; retorted Chucky. His manner
- was resentful. I had put my question in a fashion half apologetic and as
- one who might be surprised at anything bad in the Bend. It was this
- lamblike method of being curious that Chucky didn't applaud. Evidently he
- gloried a bit in the criminal vigour of certain phases of a Bend
- existence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mebby you t'inks there is no worser side to d' Bend! Mebby you takes d'
- Bend for a hotbed of innocence! Don't string no stuff on d' milky
- character of d' Bend. Youse would lose it one, two, t'ree, keno! see!
- There's dead loads of t'ings about d' Bend what's so tough it 'ud make
- youse sore on yourself to get onto 'em.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be d' way! while youse is chinnin' concernin' d' hard lines of d' Bend,
- I'm put in mind about Danny d' Face, who shows up from Sing Sing to-day.
- Say! d' Face wasn't doin' a t'ing but put up a roar all d' morn-in', till
- a cop shows up an' lays it out cold if d' Face don't cork, he'll pinch
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was d' squeal about? Why! it's like this,&rdquo; continued Chucky,
- settling himself where the barkeeper might know when his glass was empty.
- &ldquo;It's all about d' Face's Bundle. When d' victim takes his little ten
- spaces, his Bundle mourns 'round for a brace of mont's, see! An' then she
- marries another guy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What else could youse look for? That's what I say; what could d' Face
- expect? Ten spaces ain't like a stretch, it's 'life,' see! D' mug who
- chases in an' takes a trip for ten, he's a lifer. An' you knows as well as
- me, even if youse ain't done time, that when a duck gets life, it's d'
- same as a divorce. That's dead straight! his Bundle is free to get married
- ag'in.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' that's just what d' Face's Rag does; she hooks up wit' another skate,
- after d' Face has had his stripes for a couple of mont's. She's no
- tree-toad to live on air an' scenery, so she gets hitched. I was right
- there, pipin' off d' play meself, when d' w'ite choker ties 'em. It was a
- good weddin', wit' a dandy lot of lush; d' can was passin' all d' time,
- an' so d' mem'ry of it is wit' me still.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I says, d' Face comes weavin' in this mornin', an' tries to break up
- what d' poipers call 'existin' conditions.' It don't go, though; d' cop
- cuts in on d' play an' makes it a cinch case of nit, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What'll d' Face do? What can he do but screw his nut an' stan' for it? He
- ain't got no licence to interfere. It's a case of 'nothin' doin',' as far
- as d' Face's end goes. Let him charge 'round an' grab off another skirt.
- There's plenty of 'em; d' Face can find another wife if he goes d' right
- way down d' line. But he don't make no hit be hollerin', he can take a
- tumble to that.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it railroads d' Face? He does a stunt garrotin', see! I'll tell
- youse d' story. Of course, d' Face is a crook.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, understan' me! I ain't no crook. I'm a fakir, an' a grafter; an'
- I've been fly in me time an' I ain't no dub to-day, but I never was no
- crook, see! But, of course, born as I was in Kelly's Alley, an' always
- free of d' Bowery push, I hears a lot about crooks, an' has more'n one of
- d' swell mob on me visitin' list.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naw; d' Face was never in d' foist circles, nothin' fine to him. He never
- was d' real t'ing as a dip, an 'd' best he could do was to shove an'
- stall. Now an' then he toins a trick as a porch climber; but even at that
- I never gets a tip of any big second-story woik d' Face does.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' Face's best trick is d' garrote, an' it's on d' gar-rote lay dey downs
- d' Face when dey puts him away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now-days there's a lot of sandbaggin'. Some mug comes wanderin' along,
- loaded to d' guards wit* booze, an' some soon duck lends him a t'ump back
- of d' nut wit' a sandbag, or mebby it's a lead pipe or a bar of rubber.
- Over goes d' slewed mug, on his map, an' d' rest is easy money, see!
- That's d' way it's done now.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But in d' old times, when I'm a kid, it ain't d' sandbag; it's d'
- garrote. An' d' patient can be cold sober, still d' garrote goes all
- right. It takes two to woik it; but even at that it beats d' sandbag hands
- down. It's smoother, cleaner, and more like a woik-man, see! d' garrote
- is.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Besides, there's more apt to be stuff on a sober party than on some stiff
- who's tanked. I know d' poipers is always talkin' about people gettin' a
- load, wit' money all over 'em; but youse can gamble! such talk is a song
- an' dance. I'm more'n seven years old, an' me exper'ence is, that it's a
- four-to-one shot a drunk is every time broke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But to go to d' story of how d' Face gets pinched. As I states, it's way
- back; not quite ten spaces (for d' Face shortens his stay at d' pen wit'
- good conduct time see!), an 'd' Face an' a pal, Spot Casey, who's croaked
- now, is out on d' garrote lay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' Face is followin', an' Spot is sluggin'. Here's how dey lays out d'
- game. It's on Fift' Avenoo, down be Nint'. Spot's playin' round d' corner
- on Nint'; d' Face is woikin' about a block away on Fift' Avenoo, on d'
- lookout for a sucker, see! Along he comes walkin' fast, this sucker. As he
- passes, d' Face gives him d' size-up. He's got a spark, an' a yellow
- chain, an' looks like he's good for a hundred in d' long green. That does
- for d' Face. He lets this guy get good an' by, an' then toins an' shadows
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' Face walks faster than d' sucker. It's his play to be nex', be d' time
- dey hits Nint', where Spot is layin' dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As dey chases up, d' Face an 'd' snoozer he's out to do is bot' walkin'
- fast, wit 'd' Face five foot behint.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just before dey makes d' corner, d' Face gives d' office to Spot be
- stampin' onct wit' his trilby on d' sidewalk. Then he moves right up
- sharp, claps his right arm about d' geezer's t'roat, at d' same time
- grabbin' his right hook wit' his left an' yankin' his arm in tight. It
- shuts off d' duck's wind.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As d' Face clenches his party, as I says, he gives him d' knee behint,
- an' sort o' lifts him up. At d' same instant, Spot comes chasin' round d'
- corner in front an' smashes his right duke into what d' prize fighters
- calls 'd' mark.' Yes, it's d' same t'ump that does for Corbett that day
- wit' Fitz.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'That's d' stuff, Spot!' says d' Face, as d' party is slugged, an' then
- he sets him down be d' fence all limp an' quiet, an' goes t'rough him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey gets a super, a pin, an' quite a healt'y roll besides. He's so done
- up dey even gets a di'mond off one of his hooks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure! d' garrote almost puts a mark's light out. Youse can bet! after
- youse has been t'rough d' mill onct, youse won't t'ink, travel, nor raise
- d' yell for half an hour. A mark's lucky to be alive who's been t'rough d'
- garrote. It ain't so bad as d' sandbag at that, neither.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How was it d' Face is took? Nit; d' cop don't get in on d' play; dey win
- easy. It's two weeks later when he's collared. D' Face's pal, Spot, gets
- too gabby wit' a skirt, who's stoolin' for d' p'lice on d' sly, an' she
- goes an' knocks to d' Chief!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0046" id="link2H_4_0046"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- O'TOOLE'S CHIVALRY
- </h2>
- <p class="indent15">
- A woman, a spaniel, and a walnut tree;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- The more you beat them, the better they be.
- </p>
- <p class="indent30">
- Irish Proverb.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hus sadly sang P.
- Sarsfield O'Toole to himself, as he readjusted the bandage to his wronged
- eye. He believed it, too; at least in the case of Madame Bridget Burke,
- the wife of one John Burke.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Burkes were the neighbours of P. Sarsfield O'Toole; they lived next
- door. The intimacy, however, went no further; O'Toole and the Burkes were
- not friends.
- </p>
- <p>
- This is the story of the damaged eye. It offers the reason why P.
- Sarsfield O'Toole comforted himself with the vigorous Irish proverb.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the evening before. P. Sarsfield O'Toole was sitting on his back
- porch, cooling himself after a day's work at his profession of bricklayer,
- by reading the history of Ireland. The Burkes were holding audible
- converse just over the division fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Sarsfield O'Toole closed the history of his native land to listen. This
- last was neither an arduous nor a painful task, for the Burkes, with the
- splendid frankness of a household willing to stand or fall by its record,
- could be heard a block.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me family was noble!&rdquo; P. Sarsfield O'Toole overheard John Burke remark.
- &ldquo;The Burkes wanst lived in their own cashtle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They did not,&rdquo; observed Madame Burke. &ldquo;They lived woild in the bog of
- Allen, and there was mud on their shanks from wan ind of the year to the
- other. Divvil a cashtle did a Burke ever see; barrin' a jail.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Woman! av yez arouse me,&rdquo; said John Burke, threateningly, &ldquo;I'll break the
- bones of ye, an' fling yez in the corner to mend. Don't exashperate me,
- woman.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I exashperate yez!&rdquo; retorted Madame Burke, scornfully. &ldquo;For phwat wud I
- exashperate yez! Wasn't your own uncle transhpoorted? Answer me that, John
- Burke?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me uncle suffered to free Ireland, woman!&rdquo; responded the husband.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;May the divvil hould him!&rdquo; said Madame Burke. &ldquo;He was transhpoorted as a
- felon, for b'atin' the head off Humpy Pete, the cripple, at the Fair. He
- was an illygant speciment of a Burke! always b'atin' cripples an' women!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The last would seem to have been an unfortunate remark, in so far as it
- contained a suggestion. The next heard by the listening P. Sarsfield
- O'Toole was the loud lament of Madame Bridget Burke as her husband, John
- Burke, submitted her to that correction which he afterwards described to
- the police justice as, &ldquo;givin' her a tashte av the sthrap.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cries of Madame Bridget Burke were at their highest when P. Sarsfield
- O'Toole looked over the fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shtop b'atin' the leddy, John Burke!&rdquo; commanded P. Sarsfield O'Toole.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Phwat's it to yez! ye Far-down!&rdquo; demanded John Burke, looking up from his
- labours. &ldquo;Av yez hang your chin on that line fince ag'in, I'll welt the
- life out av yez! D'ye moind it now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it to me yez apploies the word 'Far-down!&rdquo; shouted P. Sarsfield
- O'Toole, wrathfully. &ldquo;Phwat are yez yerself but a rascal of a
- Stonethrower? Don't timpt me with your names, John Burke, an' shtop
- b'atin' the leddy. If I iver come over wanst to yez, I'll return a
- criminal!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shtop b'atin' me own lawful Bridget,&rdquo; retorted John Burke, in tones of
- scorn, &ldquo;when she's been teasin' for the sthrap a month beyant! Well, I
- loike that! I'll settle with yez, O'Toole, when I tache me woife to
- respect the name of Burke.&rdquo; Here the representative of that honourable
- title smote Madame Bridget lustily. &ldquo;Av I foind yez in me yarud, O'Toole,
- ye'll lay no bricks to-morry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Sarsfield O'Toole cleared the fence at a bound. He was chivalrous, and
- would rescue Madame Burke. He was proud and would resent the opprobrious
- epithet of &ldquo;Far-down.&rdquo; He was sensitive, and would teach John Burke never
- to threaten him with disability as a bricklayer.
- </p>
- <p>
- P. Sarsfield O'Toole, as stated, cleared the fence at a bound, and closed
- with John Burke as if he were a bargain.
- </p>
- <p>
- What might have been the finale of this last collision will never be
- known. As P. Sarsfield O'Toole and John Burke danced about, locked in a
- deadly embrace, the emancipated Madame Burke suddenly selected a piece of
- scantling from the general armory of the Burke backyard and brought it
- down, not on the head of her oppressor, but on that of the gallant P.
- Sarsfield O'Toole, who had come to her rescue.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, ye murtherin' villyun!&rdquo; shouted Madame Burke. &ldquo;W'ud yez kill a
- husband befure the eyes of his lawful widded woife! An' due yez think I'd
- wear his ring and see yez do it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this point in the conversation Madame Bridget Burke cut a long,
- satisfactory gash in P. Sarsfield O'Toole, just over the eye.
- </p>
- <p>
- The police came.
- </p>
- <p>
- John Burke was fined twenty dollars.
- </p>
- <p>
- Madame Bridget Burke, present lovingly in court, paid it with a composite
- air, breathing insolence for the judge and affection for John Burke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The ijee av that shpalpeen, O'Toole,&rdquo; said Madame Burke that evening to
- John Burke, and her words floated over the fence to P. Sarsfield O'Toole,
- as he nursed his wounds on his porch; &ldquo;the ijee av that shpalpeen,
- O'Toole, comin' bechuxt man and woife! D' yez moind th' cheek av 'im!
- Didn't the priest say, 'Phwat hivin has j'ined togither, let no man put
- asoonder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He did, Bridget, he did,&rdquo; replied John Burke. &ldquo;An' yez have the
- particulars av a foine woman about yez, yerself, Bridget!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Troth! an' I have,&rdquo; said Madame Burke, giving full consent to this view
- of her merits. &ldquo;But, John, phwat a rapscallion yer uncle they
- transhpoorted must av been, to bate the loife out o' poor Humpy Pete, the
- cripple-fiddler, that toime at the Fair!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For the second time the strap fell, and the shrieks of Madame Burke filled
- the neighbourhood. P. Sarsfield O'Toole, still on his porch, sat unmoved,
- and bestowed no interest on the doings of the Burkes. As the strap was
- plied and the yells of the victim uplifted, P. Sarsfield O'Toole repeated
- the proverb which stands at the head of this story.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0047" id="link2H_4_0047"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- WAGON MOUND SAL
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Wolfville)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was Wagon Mound
- Sal&mdash;she got the prefix later and was plain &ldquo;Sal&rdquo; at the time&mdash;who
- took up laundry-labours when Benson Annie became a wife. And this tells of
- the wooing and wedding of Riley Bent with Sallie of Wagon Mound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wagon Mound Sal prevailed, as stated, the mistress of a laundry. And it
- was there Riley Bent first beheld her, as she was putting a tubful of the
- blue woollen shirts affected by the males of her region through a second
- suds. On this occasion Riley's appearance was due to a misunderstanding.
- He was foggy with drink, and looked in on a theory that the place was a
- store which made a specialty of the sale of shirts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What for a j'int is this?&rdquo; asked Riley as he entered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a laundry,&rdquo; replied Sal; and then observing that Riley Bent was in
- his cups, she continued with delicate firmness; &ldquo;an' if you-all ain't
- mighty keerful how you line out, you'll shorely get a smoothin' iron
- direct.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Nothing daunted by the lady's candour, Riley Bent sat down on a furloughed
- tub which reposed bottom up in one corner. In the course of a
- conversation, whereof he furnished the questions, and Sal the short,
- inhospitable replies, it occurred that she and Riley Bent became mutually,
- albeit dimly, known to one another.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the three months following, Riley Bent was much and persistently in
- the laundry of Wagon Mound Sal. Wolfville, eagle-eyed in the softer and
- more dulcet phenomena of life, looked confidently for a wedding. So in
- truth did Sal, emulous of Benson Annie. Also Sal was a clear-minded,
- resolute young lady; and having one day concluded to take Riley Bent for
- better or for worse, she lost no time in bringing matters to a focus.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a maverick?&rdquo; she one day asked, suddenly looking up from her
- ironing. Sal's tones were steady and cool, but it was noticed that she
- burnt a hole in the bosom of Doc Peets's shirt while waiting a reply.
- &ldquo;You-all ain't married none?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar ain't no squaw has ever been able to rope, throw an' run her brand
- on me!&rdquo; said Riley Bent. &ldquo;Which I'm shorely a maverick!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever then is the matter of you an' me dealin'?&rdquo; asked Sal, coming
- around to Riley Bent's side of the ironing table.
- </p>
- <p>
- That personage surveyed her in a thoughtful maze.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a long horn, an' for that much so be I,&rdquo; he said at last, as one
- who meditates. &ldquo;Neither of us would grade for corn-fed in anybody's
- yards!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then came another long pause, during which, with his eyes fixedly gazing
- into Wagon Mound Sal's, Riley Bent gave himself to the unwonted employment
- of thinking. At last he shook his head until the little gold bells on his
- bullion hatband tinkled in a dubious, uncertain way, as taking their tone
- from the wearer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which the idee bucks me plumb off!&rdquo; he remarked, with a final deep
- breath; and then with no further word Riley repaired to the Red Light
- Saloon and became dejectedly yet deeply drunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a month Wolfville saw naught of Riley Bent. He was supposed to be
- two-score miles away on the range with his cattle. Wagon Mound Sal, with a
- trace of grimness about the mouth, conducted her laundry, and, in the
- absence of competition, waxed opulent. She looked confidently for the
- return of Riley Bent; as what woman, knowing her spells and powers, would
- have not.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last he came. Sal, as well as Wolfville, learned of his presence by a
- mellow whoop at the far end of the single street. Sal was subsequently
- gratified by a view of him as he and a comrade, one Rice Hoskins, slid
- from their saddles and entered the Red Light Saloon.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wagon Mound Sal was offended at this; he should have come straight to her.
- But beyond slamming her irons unreasonably as she replaced them on the
- range, she made no sign.
- </p>
- <p>
- To give Riley Bent justice, he had done little during the month of his
- absence save think of Wagon Mound Sal. Whether he pursued the evanescent
- steer, or organised the baking powder biscuit of his day and kind, Wagon
- Mound Sal ran ever in his thoughts like a torrent. But he couldn't bring
- himself to the notion of a wife; not even if that favoured woman were
- Wagon Mound Sal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Seems like bein' married that a-way,&rdquo; he explained to Rice Hoskins, as
- they discussed the business about their camp-fire, &ldquo;is so onnacheral.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whatever!&rdquo; assented Rice Hoskins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Riley Bent after a pause; &ldquo;I reckon I'd better ride in an'
- tell her she don't get me none, an' end the game.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whatever!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was deference to this view which gained Wolfville the pleasure of the
- presence of Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins on the occasion named. It had been
- Riley Bent's plan&mdash;having first acquired what stimulant he might
- crave&mdash;to leave Rice Hoskins to the companionship of the barkeeper,
- while he repaired briefly to Wagon Mound Sal, and expressed a
- determination never to wed. But after the first drink he so far modified
- the programme as to decide, instead, to write a letter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;writin' a letter shows a heap more respect. An' then
- ag'in, if I goes personal, she might get all wrought up an' lay for me
- permiscus a whole lot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The flaw in this letter plan became apparent. Neither Riley Bent nor Rice
- Hoskins could write. They made application to Black Jack, the barkeeper,
- to act as amanuensis. But he saw objection, and hesitated.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I reckon I'll pass the deal, gents,&rdquo; said Black Jack, &ldquo;if you-alls don't
- mind. The grand jury is goin' to begin their round-up over in Tucson next
- week, an' they'd jest about call it forgery.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At last as a solution, Rice Hoskins drew a rude picture in ink of a woman
- going one way, and a man with a big hat and disreputable spurs, going the
- other; what he called an &ldquo;Injun letter.&rdquo; This work of art he regarded with
- looks of sagacity and satisfaction.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If she was an Injun,&rdquo; said the artist, &ldquo;she'd <i>sabe</i> that picture
- mighty quick. That means: 'You-all take your trail an' I'll take mine.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which it does seem plain as old John Chisholm's 'Fence-rail Brand,'&rdquo;
- remarked Riley Bent. &ldquo;Now jest make a tub by her, an' mark me with a
- 4-bar-J, the same bein' my brand; then she'll shorely tumble. Thar's
- nothin' like ropin' with a big loop; then if you miss the horns, you're
- mighty likely to fasten by the feet.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The missive was despatched to Wagon Mound Sal by hand of a Mexican. Then
- Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins restored their flagged spirits with liquor.
- </p>
- <p>
- Riley Bent and Rice Hoskins drank a vast deal. And it came to pass, by
- virtue of this indiscretion, that Rice Hoskins later, while Riley Bent was
- still thoughtfully over his cups at the Red Light, rode his broncho into
- the New York Store. In the plain line of objection to this, Jack Moore,
- the Marshal, shot Rice Hoskins' pony. As the animal fell it pinned Rice
- Hoskins to the floor by his leg; in this disadvantageous position he
- emptied his pistol at Jack Moore, and of course missed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Moore was in no sort an idle target. He was a painstaking Marshal, and
- showed his sense of duty at this time by putting four bullets through the
- reckless bosom of Rice Hoskins; the staccate voices of their Colt's
- six-shooters melted into each other until they sounded as one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never could shoot none with a pony on my laig,&rdquo; observed Rice Hoskins.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0177.jpg" alt="0177 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0177.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- Then a splash of blood stained his sun-coloured moustache; his empty
- pistol rattled on the board floor; his head dropped on his arm, and Rice
- Hoskins was dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was at this crisis that Riley Bent, startled by the artillery as he sat
- in the Red Light, came whirling to the scene on his pony. The duel was
- over before he set foot in stirrup. He saw at a glance that Rice Hoskins
- was only a memory. Had he been romantic, or a sentimentalist, Riley Bent
- would have shot out the hour with Jack Moore, the Marshal. And had there
- been one spark of life in the heart of Rice Hoskins to have fought over,
- Riley Bent would have stood in the smoke of his own six-shooter all day
- and taken what Fate might send. As it was, however, he curbed his broncho
- in mid-speed so bluntly, the Spanish bit filled its mouth with blood. It
- spun on its hind hoofs like a top. Then, as the long spurs dug to its
- ribs, it whizzed off in the opposite direction; out of camp like an arrow.
- The last bullet in Jack Moore's pistol splashed on a silver dollar in
- Riley Bent's pocket as he turned his pony.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whenever I reloads my pistol,&rdquo; said Jack Moore to Old Man Enright, who
- had come up, &ldquo;I likes to reload her all around; so I don't regyard that
- last cartridge as no loss.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Wagon Mound Sal was deep in a study of Rice Hoskins' &ldquo;Injun letter&rdquo; when
- the shooting took place. The missive's meaning was not so easy to make out
- as its hopeful authors had believed. When the deeds of Jack Moore were
- related to her, however, the brow of Wagon Mound Sal took on an angry
- flush. She sent a message to Jack Moore asking him to call at once.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever do you mean?&rdquo; she demanded of Jack Moore, as he entered the
- laundry, &ldquo;a-stampedin' of Riley Bent out of camp that a-way? Don't you
- know I was intendin' to marry him? Yere he's been gone a month, an' yet
- the minute he shows up you have to take to cuttin' the dust 'round his
- moccasins with your six-shooter, an' away he goes ag'in. He jest
- nacherally seizes on your gun-play for a good excuse. It's shore enough to
- drive one plumb loco!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack Moore looked decidedly bothered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, Sal,&rdquo; he said at last in a deprecatory way, &ldquo;you-all
- onderstands that when I takes to shakin' the loads outen my six-shooter at
- Riley Bent, I does it offishul. An' I'm free to say, that I was that
- wropped and preoccupied like with my dooties as Marshal at the time, I
- never thinks once of them nuptials you med'tates with Riley Bent. If I had
- I would have downed his pony with that last shot an' turned him over to
- you. But perhaps it ain't too late.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the next afternoon. Riley Bent was reclining in his camp in the <i>Très
- Hermanas</i>. Grey, keen eyes watched him from behind a point of rocks.
- Suddenly a mouthful of white smoke puffed from the point of rocks, and
- something hard and positive broke Riley Bent's leg just above the knee.
- The blow of the bullet shocked him for a moment, but the next, with a
- curse in his mouth, and a six-shooter in each hand, he tumbled in behind a
- boulder to do battle with his assailant. With the crack of the Winchester
- which accompanied the phenomena of smoke-puff and broken leg, came the
- voice of Jack Moore, Marshal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold up your hands, thar!&rdquo; said Moore. &ldquo;Up with 'em; I shan't say it
- twice!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Riley Bent could not obey; he had taken ten seconds off to faint.
- </p>
- <p>
- When he revived Jack Moore had claimed his pistols and was calmly setting
- the bones of the broken leg; devoting the woollen shirts in the war-bags
- on his saddle to be bandages, and making splints of cedar bark. These folk
- of the plains and mountains, far from the surgeon, often set each other's,
- or, for that matter, their own bones, when a fall from a pony, or some
- similar catastrophe, furnishes the call.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you-all needed me,&rdquo; observed Riley Bent peevishly, when a little later
- Jack Moore was engaged over bacon and flap-jacks for the sundown meal,
- &ldquo;whatever was the matter of sayin' so? Thisyere idee of shootin' up a gent
- without notice or pow-wow is plumb onlegal. An' I'll gamble on it, ten to
- one!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well!&rdquo; said Jack Moore, as he deftly tossed a flap-jack in the air and
- caught it in the frying-pan again, &ldquo;I didn't aim to take no chances of
- chagrinin' one who loves you, by lettin' you get away. Then, ag'in, my own
- notion is that it might sorter hasten the bridal some. Thar's nothin' like
- a bullet in a party's frame for makin' him feel romantic an' sentimental.
- It softens his nature a heap, an' sets him to yearnin' for female care.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which you've been shootin me up to be married!&rdquo; responded Riley Bent in
- tones of disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's straight!&rdquo; retoited Jack Moore, as he slid the last flap-jack into
- the invalid's tin plate. &ldquo;You've been pesterin' 'round Wagon Mound Sal
- ontil that lady has become wropped in you. She confides to me cold that
- she's anxious to make a weddin' of it, which is all the preliminary
- necessary in Arizona. You are goin' back to Wolfville with me tomorry on a
- buck-board,&mdash;which will be sent on yere from the stage station,&mdash;an'
- after Doc Peets goes over your laig ag'in, you an' Wagon Mound Sal are
- goin' to become man an' wife like a landslide. You have bred hopes in that
- lady's bosom, an' you've got to make 'em good. That's all thar is to this
- play; an' you don't get your guns ag'in ontil you're a married man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack Moore, firm, direct and decided, had a great effect in fixing the
- wandering fancies of Riley Bent. He thoughtfully masticated his flap-jack
- a moment, and then asked:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;S'pose I arches my back an' takes to buckin' at these yere abrupt methods
- in my destinies; s'pose I quits the deal cold?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In which eevent,&rdquo; responded Jack Moore, with an air of iron confidence,
- &ldquo;we merely convenes the Stranglers an' hangs you for luck.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But Riley Bent was softened and his mind made fully up. Whether it was the
- sentimental influence of Jack Moore's bullet, which Doc Peets subsequently
- dug out; or whether Riley was touched by the fact that Wagon Mound Sal,
- herself, brought over the buckboard to convey him to Wolfville, may never
- be known. What was certain, however, was that Riley Bent came finally to
- the conclusion to wed. He told Wagon Mound Sal so while on the buckboard
- going back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which it's shorely doubtful,&rdquo; said Wagon Mound Sal, &ldquo;if any man is worth
- the trouble. An' this yere is my busiest day, too!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was great rejoicing in the wareroom of the New York Store. A whole
- box of candles blazed gloriously from the walls. Old Man Enright gave the
- bride away, Benson Annie appeared to look on, while Faro Nell supported
- Sal as bridesmaid. As usual, in any hour of sacred need, a preacher was
- obtained from Tucson.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' you can bet that pastor knows his business!&rdquo; said Old Monte, the
- stage driver, who had been commissioned to bring one over. &ldquo;He's a
- deep-water brand, an' he's all right! I takes my steer when I seelects him
- from the barkeep of the Golden Rod saloon, an' he'd no more give me the
- wrong p'inter, that a-way, than he'd give me the wrong bottle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Doc Peets's offering to the bride was a bullet. It was formerly the
- property of Jack Moore. It was the one he conferred on Riley Bent that
- evening in the foothills of the <i>Très Hermanas</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keep it!&rdquo; said Doc Peets to the bride. &ldquo;It's what sobers him, an' takes
- the frivolity outen him, an' makes him know his own heart.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' I shorely reckons you're right that a-way, Doc,&rdquo; said Jack Moore,
- some hours after the wedding as the two turned from the laundry whither
- Moore had repaired to return Riley Bent his pistols; &ldquo;I shore reckons
- you're right a whole lot. I knows a gent in the states, an' he tells me
- himse'f how he goes projectin' 'round, keepin' company with a lady for a
- year, an' ain't thinkin' none speshul of marryin' her. One day somebody
- gets plumb tired of the play an' shoots him some, after which he simply
- goes about pantin' to lead that lady to the altar; that's straight!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0048" id="link2H_4_0048"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- JOE DUBUQUE'S LUCK
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>OUSE can soak your
- super,&rdquo; said Chucky, &ldquo;some dubs has luck! I've seen marks who could fall
- into d' sewer, see! an' come out wit' a bunch of lilacs in each mit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit; it wasn't all luck wit' Joe Dubuque. His breakin' out of hock that
- time is some luck, but mostly 'cause Joe himself is a dead wise guy an*
- onto his job. Tell youse about it? In a secont&mdash;in a hully second!
- Just say 'gin fizz!' to d' barkeep an' I'll begin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never mind d' preeliminaries, as d' story writers says, but Joe's in
- jail, see! Joe win out ten spaces for touchin' a farmer for his bundle.
- Was it a wad? D' roll Joe gets is big enough to choke a cow&mdash;'leven
- t'ousand plunks, if it's a splinter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wherefore, as I relates, Joe gets ten years, an' is layin' in jail while
- d' gezebo, who's his lawyer, sees can he woik d' high court to give Joe a
- new trial.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Joe don't feel no sort chirpy; he's onto it d' high court's dead sure to
- t'run him down. Then he goes to d' pen to do them ten spaces. An' onct
- there, wit' all that time ahead, he sees his finish all right, all right.
- He might as well be a lifer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So Joe puts it up he'll break himself out. Joe's goil comes every day to
- see him. Say! she's a bute, Joe's Rag is; d' crooks calls her 'Wild
- Willie,' 'cause now an' then she toins dopey an' acts like she's got doves
- in her eaves. But anyhow she's on d' square wit' Joe, an' sticks to him
- like a postage stamp.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Joe sends out d' woid be his Rag about what he's goin' to do, to d' push
- outside; an' tells 'em how to help. Yes; d' job is put up as fine as silk.
- Every mark knows what he's to do.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, here's d' trick dey toins; here's how Joe beats d' jail for good.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It comes round to d' night. Joe's cell&mdash;it's a big cell, a reg'lar
- corker, wit' gas into it&mdash;is on d' fort' corridor. D' guard comes
- round at 9 o'clock orderin' out d'lights. Joe's gas is boinin' away to
- beat d' band, an' Joe is lay in' on his bunk.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Dowse d' glim, Joe!' says d' guard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What th' 'ell!' says Joe. 'Dowse d' glim, yourself, you Sheeny hobo!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' guard makes a bluff about what he'll do, an' cusses Joe out. All d'
- same he unlocks d' door an' comes chasin' in to put out Joe's gas.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, what does Joe do? As d' guard toins to d' gas to dowse it, Joe sets
- up on his bunk, an' all at onct he soaks this gezebo of a guard wit' a
- rubber billy his Moll sneaks in to him d' day before. Does he land d'
- sucker? Say! he almost cracks his nut, an' that's for fair!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' guard drops an' in a minute Joe winds him all up tight in a bedtick
- rope he's made. Then he stoppers his jaw an' t'rows d' mucker on d' bunk,
- takes his keys, locks him in d' cell an' goes galumpin' off to let himself
- t'rough d' doors, so he can try a sprint for it. Yes, Joe makes some row
- when he t'umps this party, but d' captiffs in d' nex' cells hears d'
- racket an' half tumbles to it; an' so dey starts singin' 'Rock of Ages,'
- an' makes a noise so as to cover Joe's play, see! Oh! dey was some fly
- guys locked up in that old coop.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As Joe lines out for d' doors, he's t'inkin' to himself, how on eart' is
- he goin' to make it? Nit; it wouldn't be no trouble to get outside d'
- doors of what youse might call d' jail proper. But after that, Joe's got
- to go t'rough four offices wit' a mob of dep'ties into 'em. An' he's on
- it's goin' to be a squeak if some of 'em don't recognize him. Joe's mug
- was well known.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You know how dey woiks d' doors to a jail? Youse don't? It's this way.
- Joe, when he comes up, has d' key to d' inside door, which he nips off d'
- guard as I says when he slugs him wit 'd' billy. Joe lets himself into d'
- cage wit' that.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, d' key to d' outside door ain't in d' coop at all. There's an old
- stiff of a dep'ty sheriff planted outside wit' that. As Joe opens d'
- inside door, he raps on d' bars of d' cage wit' his key, an' it's d' tip
- for this outside snoozer to unlock his door. Of course he plays Joe for d'
- guard coinin' out from his rounds.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's at this door-slammin' pinch where Joe's luck comes in, an' relieves
- him of d' chanct of d' gang of dep'ties in d' office tumblin' to him. Just
- as Joe raps to d' sucker on d' outside door, an' then lets himself into d'
- cage, a gun goes off inside d' jail. It's Joe's guard. Joe forgets to
- pinch d' pop, see! an' this gezebo gets his hooks onto it, all tied like
- he is, an' bangs away wit' it in his pockets so as to warn d' gang Joe's
- loose.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'That does me for fair!' t'inks Joe when he hears d' gun; ''dey gets me
- dead to rights!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! it was d' one trick that saves him! At d' bang of d' gun every
- dep'ty leaps to his trilbys an' comes chasin'. D' outside mark has just
- unslewed his door. He flings it wide open an' scoots inside d' cage. Joe
- t'rows d' inside door open&mdash;for Joe's dead swift to take a hunch that
- way&mdash;an 'd' outside guard an 'd' entire bunch of dep'ties goes
- sprintin' into d' jail. Then Joe locks 'em all in an' loafs t'rough d'
- offices into d' street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; Joe knows where he's goin'. He toins into d' foist stairway an'
- climbs one story to a law office, which d' crooks outside has fixed to be
- open, waitin' for him. Nixie; d' law guy ain't in on d' play. A dip named
- Jim Butts comes an' touts this law sharp away, an' cons him into goin' out
- six miles to d' country to draw d' last will an' test'ment of a galoot he
- says is on d' croak, an' can't wait for mornin'. Yes, Butts has one of his
- mob faked up for sick, an' dey detains d' law guy four hours makin' d'
- will. This stall of Butts, who's doin' d' sick act, sets up between gasps
- an' gives away more'n twenty million dollars wort' of wealt'. This crook
- who's fakin' sick is on his uppers at d' time, an' don't really have d'
- price of beer; but to hear him make his will that night, you'd say he was
- d' richest ever; d' Astors was monkeys to him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I states, Joe skips into this lawyer's office, d' same bein' open for
- d' poipose, an' one of d' 'fambly' holdin' it down. While Joe's in there
- he hears d' chase runnin' up an' down in d' street below d' window.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not for long, though. Fifteen minutes after Joe is outside d' jug, one of
- d' crooks calls up d' Central Office be telephone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Who's talkin'?' asts d' captain at d' Central Office.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'It's Doyle, lieutenant o' police, Fourt' Precinct,' says d' crook who's
- on d' wire. Me man on d' station house beat just reports Joe Dubuque
- drivin' west on Detroit street wit' a horse an' buggy. He was on d' dead
- run, lamin' loose to beat four of a kind. Send all d' men youse can
- spare.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' that's what d' captain at d' Central Office does. In ten minutes
- every cop an' fly cop is on d' chase, a mile away from Joe, an' gettin'
- furder every secont, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After a while it settles down all quiet an' dead about d' jail, an 'd'
- little old law office where Joe lies buried. He, an' d' crook who's
- waitin' for him, is chinnin' each other in whispers. All d' time Joe's got
- his lamps to d' window pipin' off d' other side of d' street. At last a
- cab drives up opposite d' law office an' stops. A w'ite han'kerchief shows
- flutterin' be d' window. It's Wild Willie who's inside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Joe's pal gets up an' goes down to d' street. All's clear an' he w'istles
- up to Joe. When he gets d' office Joe sort of loafs down an' saunters over
- to d' cab. D' door opens an' in one move Joe's inside, an' d' nex' his arm
- is 'round his Moll. She's all right, this Wild Willie is, an' Joe does d'
- correct t'ing to give her d' fervent squeeze.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' end. Joe Dubuque runs clear away, goes under cover, an' d'
- sheriff never gets his hooks on him ag'in. As Joe drives be d' jail he can
- still hear them captiffs singin' 'Rock of Ages.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Say!' says Joe to Wild Willie as he toins her mug to his an' smacks her
- onct for luck, 'I won't do a t'ing but make it a t'ousand dollars in d'
- kecks of them ducks who's doin' that song. I'll woik d' dough to 'em be
- some of d' boys, see!'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0049" id="link2H_4_0049"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- BINKS AND MRS. B.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>INKS was an
- excellent man, hard-working and sober. He made good money and took it home
- to his wife for her judgment to settle its fate; every dollar of it. Mrs.
- Binks was a woman among a thousand. When taken separate and apart from his
- wife and questioned, Binks said she was a &ldquo;corker.&rdquo; Binks declined all
- attempts at definition, and beyond insisting that Mrs. Binks was and would
- remain a &ldquo;corker,&rdquo; said nothing.
- </p>
- <p>
- From what was told of Mrs. Binks by herself, it would seem that she was a
- true, loving wife to Binks, and that, aside from the duty every woman owed
- to her sex and the establishment of its rights in all avenues of life, she
- held that with the wedding ring came a list of duties due from a good
- woman to her husband, which could not be avoided nor gone about.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some women,&rdquo; quoth Mrs. B., &ldquo;worry their husbands with a detail of small
- matters. A woman who is to be a helpmeet to her husband, such as I am to
- Binks, will be self-reliant and decide things for herself. In the little
- cares of life which fall to her share, let her go forward in her own
- strength. What is the use of adding her troubles to his? If she has plans,
- let her execute them. If problems confront her, let her solve them. If she
- tells her husband aught of the thousand little enterprises of her daily
- home life, then let it be the result. When success has come to her, she
- may call her husband to witness the victory. Aside from that she should
- face her responsibilities alone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course Mrs. B. did not mean by all this that she would not be open and
- frank with Binks, and confide in him if a burglar were in the house, or if
- the roof took fire in the night that she would not arouse Binks and
- mention it. What she did mean was that when it came to such things as
- dismissing the servant girl, the wife should gird up her loins and &ldquo;fire&rdquo;
- the maiden singlehanded, and not ring her husband in on a play, manifestly
- disagreeable, and likely to subject him to great remorse.
- </p>
- <p>
- It chanced recently that an opportunity opened like a gate for Mrs. B. to
- illustrate her doctrine that wives should proceed in a plain duty alone,
- without imposing needless anxiety on the head of the family.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. Binks had decided to visit her sister in Hoboken. She was to go
- Thursday, and Binks, who was paid his sweat-bought stipend on Monday, was
- to furnish the money Monday evening wherewith to make the trip.
- </p>
- <p>
- It chanced, unfortunately, that pay-day this particular week was deferred.
- The head partner was sick, or out of town; checks could not be drawn, or
- something like that.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But your money will come on Saturday, boys,&rdquo; said the other partner.
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks was obliged to wait.
- </p>
- <p>
- The money was all right; it would be accurately on tap Saturday, so Binks
- took no fret on that point.
- </p>
- <p>
- But what was he to do about Mrs. B.? That good woman was to go Thursday,
- and in order to organise for the descent upon her relative would need the
- money&mdash;$40&mdash;on Tuesday. What was Binks to do?
- </p>
- <p>
- Clearly he must do something. He could not ask Mrs. B. to put off her trip
- a week; indeed, his reluctance to take such course came almost to the
- point of superstition.
- </p>
- <p>
- In his troubles Binks suddenly bethought him of a gold watch, once his
- father's, with a rich chain and guard attached. These precious heirlooms
- had been given to Binks by the elder Binks' executor, and were cherished
- accordingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Rather than disappoint Mrs. B. the worthy Binks decided, that just for
- once in his life he would seek a pawnbroker and do business with that
- common relative of all.
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks felt timid and ashamed, but the case was urgent. There was no risk,
- for his money would float in all right on the tides of Saturday. Binks
- would then redeem these pledges from disgraceful hock; all would be well.
- Mrs. B. would be in Hoboken on redemption day, and it would not be
- necessary to tell her anything about the matter. It would save her pain,
- and Binks bravely determined to keep the whole transaction dark.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again, if he told her he had not been paid at the store, the brave woman
- would indubitably wend to his employer's house and demand the reason why.
- This would be useless and embarrassing. Therefore, Binks would say
- nothing. He would pawn the ancestral super, and get it again when his
- money came in, and his wife was away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The watch and its appertainments were snug in the far corner of a bureau
- drawer; away over and behind Mrs. B.'s lingerie. Binks had a watch of his
- own, a Waterbury, with a mainspring as endless as a chain pump. Mrs. B.
- saw, therefore, no reason why he should carry the gold watch of his
- progenitor. Binks might lose it. Mrs. Binks strongly advised that it be
- kept in the bureau where it would be safe and naturally, in an affair of
- that sort Binks took his wife's advice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks reflected that he must secure the watch and pawn it that night. To
- do this he must plot to get Mrs. B. out of the house. Binks thought
- deeply. At last he had it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks sent a message home in the afternoon and asked Mrs. B. to meet him
- in a store down town at six o'clock. Then he had himself released at 5:30,
- and went hotfoot homeward.
- </p>
- <p>
- The coast was clear; Mrs. B. was down town in deference to his stratagem,
- no doubt believing that Binks meditated soda water, or some other
- delicacy, as the cause of his sudden summons of the afternoon. She little
- wotted that she was the victim of deceit. If she had, there would have
- been woe.
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks rushed at once to the bureau and secured the treasure. He did not
- wait a moment, but plunged off to a store where the three balls over the
- door bore testimony to the commerce within. Binks would explain to Mrs. B.
- on his return, how he had missed her and so failed to keep his date with
- her down town.
- </p>
- <p>
- The merchant of loans and pledges looked over Binks' timepiece, and then,
- as Binks requested, gave him a ticket for it and $40. It was to be
- redeemed in thirty days or sooner. And Binks was to pay $44 to get it
- again. Binks was very willing. Anything was wiser and better than to
- permit Mrs. B.'s visit to her sister to be interrupted.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Binks got home Mrs. B. had already returned.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a bad light in her eye. She accepted Binks' excuses and
- explanations as to &ldquo;how he missed her down town&rdquo; with an evil grace. She
- as good as told Binks that he deceived her; that if the phenomenon were
- treed she would find another woman in the case.
- </p>
- <p>
- However, Binks had the presence of mind to turn over the $40 he reaped on
- the watch; and as he expressed it later:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That sort of hushed her up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day Binks returned to his labours, while Mrs. B. repaired to the
- marts to plunge moderately on what truck she stood in want of for her
- trip.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Mrs. B. got back to the house it chanced that the first thing she
- needed was in the fatal drawer. She opened it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Horrors! The watch was gone!
- </p>
- <p>
- There was naught of hesitation; Mrs. B. knew it had been stolen. Anybody
- could see that from the way every garment had been carefully laid back to
- hide the loss.
- </p>
- <p>
- What should she do? The police must at once be notified. Mrs. B. pulled on
- her shaker and scooted for the police station. She told her story out of
- breath. She left her house at three o'clock and was back at four o'clock,
- and in that short hour her home had been entered and looted of its
- treasures. Made to be specific, Mrs. B. said the treasures were a watch
- and chain, and described them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What were they worth?&rdquo; asked the sergeant of the detectives.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. B. considered a bit, and then said they would be dog cheap at $1,000.
- She reflected that the sum, if published in the papers, would be a source
- of pride.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sergeant of detectives told Mrs. B. his men would look about for her
- property, and should they hear of it or find it they would at once notify
- her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You bet your gum boots! ma'am,&rdquo; said the sleuth confidently, &ldquo;whatever
- crook's got your ticker, he's due to soak it or plant it some'ers in a
- week. Mebby he'll turn it over to his Moll. But the minute we springs it,
- ma'am, or turns it up, we'll be dead sure to put you on in a jiff.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said Mrs. B.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then Mrs. Binks went home and, true to her determination to save Binks
- from unnecessary worry, she told him nothing of the loss nor of her
- arrangements for the watch's recovery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the use of bothering Binks?&rdquo; she asked herself. &ldquo;All he could do
- would be to notify the police, and I've done that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thursday came and Mrs. B. set forth for Hoboken. No notice had come from
- the police. Binks was glad to see her go. He had lived in fear lest she
- come across the departure of the watch. He breathed easier when she was
- gone. As for Mrs. B., as she had not heard from the police, there was
- nothing to tell Binks; wherefore, like a self-reliant woman who did not
- believe in making her husband unhappy to no purpose, she left without word
- or sign as to her knowledge of the watch's disappearance.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Friday; ever an unlucky day. Binks was walking swiftly homeward.
- Binks was thinking some idle thing when a hand came down on his shoulder,
- heavy as a ham.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold on, me covey; I want you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks looked around, scared and startled. He had been halted by a stocky,
- bluff man in citizen's clothes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; gasped Binks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Suttenly, sech a fly guy as you don't know!&rdquo; said the bluff man, with a
- glare. &ldquo;Well! never mind why I wants you; I'm a detective, and you comes
- with me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Binks went with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not only that, Binks went in a noisy patrol wagon which the detective rang
- for; and it kept gonging its way along and attracting everybody's
- attention.
- </p>
- <p>
- The word went about among his friends that Binks was drunk and had been
- fighting.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And to think a man would act like that,&rdquo; said one lady, who knew Binks by
- sight, &ldquo;just because his wife is away on a visit! If I were his wife I'd
- never come back to him!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the station Binks was solemnly looked over by the chief.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's the duck!&rdquo; said the chief at last. &ldquo;Exactly old Goldberg's
- description of the party who spouts the ticker. Where did you collar him,
- Bill?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I sees him paddin' along on Broadway,&rdquo; replied the bluff man, &ldquo;and I
- tumbles to the sucker like a hod of brick. I knowed he was a sneak the
- first look I gives; and the second I says to meself, 'he's wanted for a
- watch!' Then I nails him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know who he is?&rdquo; asked the chief.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My name,&rdquo; said Binks, who was recovering from the awful daze that had
- seized him, &ldquo;my name is B&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shet up!&rdquo; roared the bluff man. &ldquo;Don't give us any guff! It'll be the
- worse for you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I know the mark,&rdquo; said an officer looking on.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;His name is 'Windy Joe, the Magsman.' His mug's in the gallery all right
- enough; number 38, I think.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's correct!&rdquo; said the chief. &ldquo;I knowed he was familiar to me, and I
- never forgets a face. Frisk him, Bill, and lock him up!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But my name's Binks!&rdquo; protested our hero. &ldquo;I'm an innocent man!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's what they all says,&rdquo; replied the chief. &ldquo;Go through him, Bill, and
- lock him up; I want to go to me grub.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Binks was cast into a dungeon. Next door to him abode a lunatic, who
- reviled him all night. On the blotter the ingenuity of the chief detective
- inscribed: &ldquo;Windy Joe, the Magsman, alias Binks. Housebreaking in
- daytime.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- There is scant need of spinning out the agony. Binks got free of the
- scrape some twelve hours later. But it was all very unfortunate. He came
- near dismissal at the store, and the neighbours don't understand it yet.
- They shake their heads and say:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's very strange if he's so innocent, why he was locked up. When the
- police take a man, he's generally done something.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not sorry a bit!&rdquo; said Mrs. B., when she was brought back from
- Hoboken on Saturday by a wire the police allowed Binks to send her. &ldquo;And
- when I saw him with the officers, I was as good a mind to tell them to
- keep him as ever I had to eat. To think how he deceived me about that
- watch, allowing me to break my heart with thoughts of it being stolen! I
- guess the next time Binks sneaks off to pawn his dead father's watch,
- he'll let me know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0050" id="link2H_4_0050"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- ARABELLA WELD
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was a chill
- Harlem evening. The Undertaker sat in his easy chair smoking his pipe of
- clay. About him were ranged the tools and trappings of his gruesome art.
- On trestles, over in the corner's gliding shadows, lay the remains he had
- just been monkeying with.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last, as one who reviews his work, the Undertaker arose, and scanned
- the wan map of the Departed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He makes a great front,&rdquo; mused the Undertaker. &ldquo;He looks out of sight,
- and it ought to fetch her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Back to his chair roamed the Undertaker. As he seated himself he touched a
- bell. The Poet of the establishment glided dreamily in. The Undertaker,
- not only straightened the kinks out of corpses to the Queen's taste, but
- he furnished epitaphs, and as well, verses for those grief-bitten. These
- latter were to run in the papers with the funeral notice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have youse torn off that epitaph for his jiblets?&rdquo; asked the Undertaker,
- nodding towards Deceased.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What was it you listed for?&rdquo; asked the Poet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' epitaph for William Henry Weld,&rdquo; replied the Undertaker. The Poet
- passed over the desired epitaph.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- William Henry Weld.
- </p>
- <p class="indent30">
- (Aged 26 years.)
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- His race he win with pain and sin,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- At Satan he did mock;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- St. Peter said as he let him in:
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- &ldquo;It's Willie, in a walk!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a wonder!&rdquo; cried the Undertaker, when he had finished the perusal,
- and he gave the Poet the glad hand. &ldquo;Here's d' price. Go and fill your
- tank.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That should win her,&rdquo; reflected the Undertaker, when the poet had wended
- his way; &ldquo;that ought to leave her on both sides of d' road. What I've done
- for Deceased, and that epitaph should knock her silly. She shall be mine!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>UBLIC interest
- having been aroused in the corpse, it may be well to tell how it became
- that way.
- </p>
- <p>
- Deceased was William Henry Weld. Five days before the opening of our
- story, William donned his skates and lined out on one of his periodicals.
- For four days he debauched to beat four kings and an ace.
- </p>
- <p>
- And William had adventures. He paid a fine; he fell down a coal hole; he
- invaded a laundry and administered the hot wallops to the presiding
- Chinaman. On the fourth day he declared himself in on a ball not far from
- Sixth Avenue.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, there!&rdquo; quoth William, archly, to a beautiful being to whom he had
- not been introduced. &ldquo;Ah, there! Tricksey; I choose youse for d' next
- waltz.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit; not on your life!&rdquo; murmured the beautiful one.
- </p>
- <p>
- As William Henry Weld was about to make fitting response, a coarse, vulgar
- person approached.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What for be youse jimmin' 'round me pick?&rdquo; asked this person.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' stuff, Barney!&rdquo; said the beautiful one. &ldquo;Don't do a t'ing to
- him!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The next instant William Henry Weld was cast into outer darkness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all right, Old Man!&rdquo; said the friend who rescued William Henry Weld,
- &ldquo;I'm goin' to take youse home. Your wife ain't on to me, an' I'll fake it
- I'm a off'cer, see! I'll give her d' razzle dazzle of her existence, an'
- square youse wit' her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's Willie!&rdquo; said the friend to Arabella Weld, as he supported her
- husband into the sitting-room. &ldquo;It's Willie, an' he's feelin' O. K. but
- weedy. Me name, madam, is Jackson&mdash;Jackson, of d' secret p'lice.
- Willie puts himse'f in me hands as a sacred trust to bring him home.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is he sick?&rdquo; moaned Arabella Weld, as she began to let her hair down,
- preparatory to a yell.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never touched him!&rdquo; assured the friend. &ldquo;Naw; Willie's off his feed a
- bit. You sees, madam, Willie hired out to a hypnotist purely in d'
- interest of science, an' he's been in a trance four days, see! That's why
- he ain't home. Bein' in a trance, he couldn't send woid. Now all he needs
- is a rest for, say, a week. Oughtn't to let him get out of his crib for a
- week.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At 4 o'clock the next morning William Henry Weld began to see blue-winged
- goats. Arabella Weld &ldquo;sprung&rdquo; a glass of water on him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Give it a chase!&rdquo; shrieked William Henry Weld, wildly waving the false
- beverage aside.
- </p>
- <p>
- In his ratty condition he didn't tumble to the pure element's identity,
- but thought it was one of those Things.
- </p>
- <p>
- At 5 o'clock A. M. William Henry Weld didn't do a thing but perish. When
- the glorious sun again poured down its golden mellow beams, the Undertaker
- had his hooks on him and Arabella Weld was a widow.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>UT to return to
- the Undertaker, the real hero of our tale. We left him in his studio
- poring over the epitaph of William Henry Weld, while Departed rehearsed
- his dumb and silent turn for eternity in the corner's lurking shadow. At
- last the Undertaker roused himself from his reveries.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I must to bed!&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;it waxeth late, and tomorrow I propose for her
- in wedlock.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Next morning the Undertaker arose refreshed. He had smote his ear for full
- eight hours. He felt fit to propose for his life, let alone the delicate
- duke of Arabella Weld.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Undertaker's adored one was to come at noon. She wanted to size up
- Departed prior to the obsequies.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although it was but 9 o'clock, the Undertaker had to get a curve on
- himself to keep his date with Arabella Weld at midday. He had an invalid
- to measure for a coffin&mdash;it was a riveted cinch the party would die&mdash;and
- then there was a corpse to shave in the next block. These duties were
- giving him the crowd.
- </p>
- <p>
- But our hero made it; played every inning without an error, and was
- organised for Arabella Weld when she arrived.
- </p>
- <p>
- As they stood together&mdash;Arabella and the man who, all unknown to her,
- loved her so madly&mdash;looking down at Deceased, she could not repress
- her admiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On d' dead! I never saw Willie look so well,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;He's very much
- improved. You must have taken a woild of pains wit' Willie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The Undertaker was silent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Struck by this, Arabella Weld turned her full lustrous lamps on the
- Undertaker and saw it all. It was for her, the loving heart beside her had
- toiled over Deceased like an artist over a picture.
- </p>
- <p>
- Swift is Love, and the Undertaker, quivering with his great passion,
- twigged in an instant that Arabella was onto him. A vast joy swept his
- heart like a torrent.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wanted him to make a hit for your sake,&rdquo; he whispered, stealing his arm
- about her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Arabella softly put his arm away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not now,&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;It would be too soon a play. We must wait until
- we've got Willie off our hands&mdash;we must wait a year.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait a year!&rdquo; and the pain of it bent the Undertaker like a willow. &ldquo;Wait
- a year, dearest! Now, what's d' fun of that? You must take me for a
- farmer!&rdquo; and his tones showed that the Undertaker was hurt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But in Herkimer County they wait a year,&rdquo; faltered Arabella, wistfully.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure! in Herkimer!&rdquo; consented the Undertaker; &ldquo;but that's Up-the-state. A
- week in Harlem is equal to a year in Herkimer. Let it be a week, love!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This isn't a game for Willie's life insurance?&rdquo; and great crystals of
- pain and doubt swam in Arabella's glorious eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, me love!&rdquo; cried the Undertaker, fondly, yet desperately, &ldquo;plant d'
- policy wit' Willie! Send it back to d' company if youse doubts me, an'
- tell 'em to call d' whole bluff a draw.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The bit of paper, containing the epitaph, fluttered to the floor from her
- nerveless mits, her beautiful head sank on the broad shoulder of the
- Undertaker, and her tears flowed unrestrained.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>ne week had passed
- since William Henry Weld was solemnly pigeon-holed for eternal reference.
- </p>
- <p>
- The preacher received the couple in his study.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shall I marry you with the prayer-book, or would youse prefer the short
- cut?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Marry us on a deck of cards, if you choose!&rdquo; faltered Arabella. Her eyes
- sought the floor, while the tell-tale blushes painted her lovely
- prospectus. &ldquo;Only cinch the play, an' do it quick!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0051" id="link2H_4_0051"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE WEDDING
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>aw; I'm on I'm
- late all right, all right; but I couldn't help it, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Chucky was thirty minutes behind our hour. I'd been sitting in the little
- bar in sickening controversy with one of the vile cigars of the place
- waiting for Chucky. For which cause I was moved to mention his dereliction
- sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sorry to keep an old pal playin' sol'taire, wit' nothin' better to amuse
- him than d' len'th of rope youse is puffin',&rdquo; continued Chucky in furtive
- excuse, &ldquo;but I was to a weddin' an' couldn't breakaway. That's w'y I've
- got on me dress soote.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! on d' dead! of course I ain't in on many nuptials; but all d' same I
- likes to go. I always comes away feelin' so wise an* flossy an* cooney.
- Why, I don't know, unless it's 'cause d' guys gettin' hitched looks so
- much like a couple of come-ons&mdash;so dead sure life is such a cinch,
- such a sight of confidence like one sees at a weddin', be d' parts of d'
- two suckers who's bein' starred, never omits to make me feel too cunnin'
- to live for d' whole week after.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure! this weddin' was a good t'ing; what youse might call d' real t'ing;
- an' it's a spark to a rhinestone it toins out all hunk for d' folks
- involved. Who's d' two gezebos who gets nex' to each other? D' groom is d'
- boss gunner of one of our war boats, an 'd' skirt is d' cash goil in d'
- anti-Chink laundry on Great Jones street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' say! that little skirt's a wonder, an' don't youse forget it! She's
- good any day for any old t'ing I've got; an' all she's got to do is just
- rap, an' she takes it, see! It was me Rag sees d' goil foist one time when
- she's down be d' laundry puttin' in me t'ree-sheets for their weekly dose
- of suds.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is me Rag an' me married? Say! I likes that, I don't t'ink! Youse is
- gettin' fanciful in your cupolo. 4 Be me little Bundle an' me married?'
- says you. Well, I should kiss a pig! Youse can take me tip for it, if we
- ain't man an' wife be d' longest system d' Cat'lic Choich could play&mdash;for
- me Rag told d' father who 'fficiates that we're out for d' limit&mdash;then
- all I got to stutter is there ain't a mug who's married in d' entire city
- of Noo York.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cert! we're married!&rdquo; Chucky went on after cheering himself with the
- tankard which the barkeeper placed before him. &ldquo;If youse had let your
- lamps repose on this horseshoe scar over d' bridge of me smeller, youse
- would have tumbled to d' fac wit'out astin'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do I win it? I'm comin' up d' stairs like a sucker, just followin' a
- difference of opinion between me an' me loidy (I soaked her a little one,
- an' that's for fair! to show her she's off her trolley about d' subject in
- dispoote), when she cuts loose d' coal bucket at me. Say! she spoiled me
- map for a mont'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But to get back to d' little laundry goil. Me Rag, as I says, was in this
- tub-joint where d' goil woikswit' me linen one day; an' just as she chases
- in, a fresh stiff who's standin' there t'run some raw bluff at d' little
- laundry goil she couldn't stand for, see! an' she puts up a damp eye an'
- does d' weep act.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This little laundry goil is one of them meek, harmless people&mdash;rabbits
- is bull-terriers to 'em&mdash;an' so when me onliest own beholds d' tears
- come chasin down her nose at d' remarks of this fly guy, she chucks me
- shirts in d' corner an' mounts him in a hully secont.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' say! me Rag can scrap, an' that's no dream! I don't want none of it.
- When she an' me has carried d' conversation to d' point where she takes
- out her hairpins, an' gives her mane to d' breeze, that's me cue to cork.
- Youse can't get another rise out of me after that: I knows her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well! me Rag lights into this hobo who's got gay wit 'd' little goil, an'
- when she takes her hooks out of his make-up, an' he goes surgin' into d'
- street, honest! he looks like he's been fightin' a dog. Some lovers of
- true sport who's there an' payin' attention to d' mill, says this galoot
- wasn't in it wit' me Rag. She has him on d' blink from d' jump; she win in
- a loiter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Takin' her part that way makes d' little laundry goil confidenshul wit'
- me Rag. It's about two weeks later when she sprints over an' tells Missus
- Chuck (she makes her promise to lay dead about it, too, but still she
- passes d' woid to me)&mdash;she tells me Rag, as I'm sayin', that she's in
- trouble. Her steady, she says, is one of d' top notch gunners of one of
- our big boats; he's d' main squeeze in histurrent, see! an' way up in d'
- paint. His boat's been layin' at d' Navy Yard, an' now he's ordered to
- sail for Cuba in a week an' help straighten up d' Dagoes we're havin' d'
- recent run in wit'. Meanwhiles, she says, dey won't let her beloved have
- shore leave; an' neither dey won't stand for her to come aboard an' see
- him. There youse be! a case of dead sep'ration between two lovin' hearts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' little laundry goil gives it out cold, she'll croak if she don't get
- to see her Billy before he skates off for d' wars. She says she knows he's
- out to be killed anyhow. D' question wit' her is&mdash;what's she goin' to
- do? Dey won't let her aboard d' boat, an' dey won't let him aboard d'
- land; now, what's d' soon move for her to make?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, me Rag&mdash;who's got a nut on her for cert&mdash;says for her to
- skip down to Washin'ton an' go ag'inst d' Sec'tary himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Make him a strong talk,' says me Rag; 'give him a reg'lar razzle-dazzle,
- an' he'll write youse a poiper to them blokes aboard d' boat to let youse
- see your Billy.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Do youse t'ink for sure he will?' says d' little laundry goil.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Why, it's a walkover!' says me Rag. 'If he toins out a hard game, give
- him d' tearful eye, see! an' cough a sob or two, an' he'll weaken! You
- can't miss it,' says me ownliest; 'it's easy money.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But d' little goil was awful leary of d' play.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;' Washin'ton is so far away,' she says.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;' It's like goin' to Harlem,' says me Rag. 'All youse has to do to go, is
- to take some sandwidges an' apples to sort o' jolly d' trip, an' then
- climb onto d' cars an' go. When d' Con. comes t'rough, pass him your
- pasteboard, see! an' if any of them smooth marks try to make a mash, t'run
- 'em down an' t'run 'em hard. I'll go over an' do your stunt at d' laundry,
- so that needn't give youse a scare. An' be d' way! if that lobster I win
- from d' other day shows up, I'll make a monkey of him ag'in. I didn't
- spend enough time wit' him on d' occasion of our mix-up, anyway.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At last d' little laundry goil makes d' brace of her life. She's so
- bashful an' timid she can't live; but she's dead stuck on seein' her Billy
- before he sails away, an' it gives her nerve. As I says, she takes me
- Rag's steer an' skins out for d' Cap'tal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' what do youse t'ink? D' old mut who's Sec'tary won't chin wit' her.
- Toins her down cold, he does; gives her d' grand rinky-dink wit'out so
- much as findin' out what's her racket at all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At d' finish, however, d' little goil lands one of d' push&mdash;he's a
- cloik in d' office, I figgers&mdash;an' he hears her yarn between weeps,
- an' ups an' makes a pass or two, an' she gets d' writin'. It says to toin
- Billy loose every afternoon till d' boat pulls out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! him an 'd' little goil, when she gets back, was as happy as a couple
- of kids; dey has more fun than a box of monkeys. On d' level! I was proud
- of me Rag for floor managin' d' play. She wasn't solid wit' Billy an 'd'
- little goil! Oh, no!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's how me an' me loidy was in on this weddin' to-day wit' bot'
- trilbys. Me Rag's 'It' wit' d' little goil; youse can gamble on that!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course d' war's over now, an' two weeks ago d' little goil's Billy
- comes home. An' what wit' pay, an' what wit' prize money, he hits d' Bend
- wit' a bundle of d' long green big enough to make youse t'row a fit, an'
- he ain't done a t'ing but boin money ever since.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nit; it ain't much of a story, but d' whole racket pleases me out o'
- sight, see! Considerin' d' hand me Rag plays, when I'm at that weddin'
- to-day I feels like a daddy to Billy an 'd' little goil. On d' level! I
- feels that chesty about it, that when d' priest is goin' to bat an says,
- 'Is there any duck here to give d' bride away?' I cuts in on d' game wit
- 'd' remark, 'I donates d' bride meself.' I s'pose I was struck dopey, or
- nutty, or somethin'.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But me Rag fetches me to all c'rrect. She clinches her mit an' whispers:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me catch youse makin' another funny break like that an' I'll cop a
- sneak on your neck.' An' then she stands there chewin' d' quiet rag an'
- pipin' me off wit' an eye of fire. 'Such an old bum as youse,' she says,
- 'is a disgrace to d' Bend.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0052" id="link2H_4_0052"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- POINSETTE'S CAPTIVITY
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>his is a tale of
- last August. Poinsette was to be left alone for four weeks. Mrs. Poinsette
- had settled on Cape May as a good thing for the hot spell. She would hie
- her thither and leave Poinsette to do his worst without her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette did not care. He bravely told Mrs. P. she needed an outing. The
- ozone and the salty, ocean breeze would do her good. So he encouraged Cape
- May, and bid Mrs. P. go there by all means.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was decided by the Poinsettes discussing Cape May to have Poinsette
- room up town while Mrs. P. was thus Cape Maying. The Poinsette house in
- the suburbs might better be locked up during Mrs. P.'s absence from the
- city. It would be more economical; indeed, it was not esteemed safe to
- leave the Poinsette lares and penates to the unwatched ministrations of
- the Congo who performed in the Poinsette kitchen. It would be wiser to
- dismiss the servant, bolt and bar the house, obtain Poinsette apartments,
- and let him browse for food among the bounteous restaurants of the city.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette found a room to suit in a house on West 87th Street. It was one
- of a long row of houses. Poinsette reported his victory in room-hunting to
- Mrs. P. Poinsette was now all right, and ready for what might come. Mrs.
- P. might bend her course to Cape May without further hesitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mrs. P. was glad to learn of Poinsette's apartment success. She went out
- and looked at his find to make sure that Poinsette would be comfortable.
- Incidentally, Mrs. P. kept her eye about her, to note whether the
- boarding-house books carried any pretty girls. Mrs. P. did not care to
- have Poinsette too comfortable.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were no pretty girls. Mrs. P. approved the selection. The very next
- day she kissed Poinsette good-bye and rumbled and ferried to the station,
- from which arena of smoke and noise a train leaped forth like a greyhound
- and bore her away to Cape May.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette did not accompany his spouse to the station. Ten years before he
- would have done this, but experience had taught him that Mrs. P. could
- care for herself. Therefore he remained behind to fasten up the house.
- Soberly he went about locking doors, and fastening windows, and thinking
- rather sadly,&mdash;as all husbands so deserted do,&mdash;of the long,
- lonely months before him. At last all was secure, and Poinsette turned the
- key in the big front door and came away.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette did not feel like work that afternoon, or the trifling fragment
- of it that was left after Mrs. P. had wended and he had locked up the
- house. He bought a few good books and several of the more solid
- periodicals. They would serve during the weary nights while Mrs. P. was
- away at the Cape. These Poinsette sent to his rooms, and, as it was
- growing six o'clock now, he turned into Sherry's for his dinner.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just where Poinsette went that evening following Sherry's, and what he saw
- and did, and who assisted at such enterprises as he embarked in, would be
- nothing to the present point and may be skipped. They are the private
- affairs of Poinsette, and not properly the subjects of a morbid curiosity.
- However, lest Mrs. P. see this and argue aught herefrom to feed distrust,
- it should be said that Poinsette saw nobody, did nothing, went no place
- unbecoming an officer and a gentleman.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was four o'clock in the morning when Poinsette, the sole passenger
- aboard a foaming night-liner, toiled through the Park and bore away for
- his new abode. Poinsette stopped the faithful night-liner two blocks from
- the door and went forward on foot. Poinsette did not care to clatter
- ostentatiously to his rooms at four in the morning the first day he
- inhabited them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette found the house without trouble, and stepped lightly to the
- door. He put the pass-key his landlady had bestowed upon him in the lock,
- but it would not turn. The bolt would not yield to his wooing. Do all he
- might, and work he never so wisely, there had sprung up a misunderstanding
- between key and lock which would not be reconciled. Poinsette could not
- get &ldquo;action;&rdquo; the sullen door still barred him from his bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last Poinsette gave up in despair. He might ring the bell and arouse
- the house; but he hesitated. It was his first day; the hour needed
- apology. Poinsette thought it would be better to walk gently to a hotel
- and abide for the remainder of the night. He would solve this
- incompatibility of key and lock the next afternoon.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette turned away and started softly for the street. As he did so a
- policeman stepped from behind a tree and stopped him. The policeman had
- been watching Poinsette for five minutes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wot was you a-doin' at the door?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette, in a low, hurried voice, explained. He didn't care to awaken
- his landlady by a tumult of talk, and have that excellent woman discover
- him in the hands of the law.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If your key don't work,&rdquo; said the policeman, &ldquo;why don't you ring the
- bell?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette cleared up that mystery. The officer was not satisfied.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To be free with you, my man,&rdquo; he said, seizing Poinsette's collar, &ldquo;I
- think you're a burglar. If that's your boarding-house you're goin' in. If
- it isn't, you're goin' to the station.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the policeman, with one hand wound about in Poinsette's neckwear,
- made trial of the key with the other hand. The effort was futile. The lock
- was obdurate; the key was stranger to it. Then the blue guardian of the
- city's slumbers stepped back a pace and took a mighty pull at the
- door-bell. It was a yank which brought forth a wealth of jingle and ring.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette was glad of it. He had grown desperate and wanted the thing to
- end. Bad as it was, it would be better to face his landlady than be locked
- up in a burglar's cell. Poinsette was resigned, therefore, when a
- second-story window lifted and a night-capped head was made to overhang
- the sill and blot its silhouette against the star-lit sky.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be you the landlady?&rdquo; asked the policeman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I am!&rdquo; quoth the night-cap in a snappy, snarly way. &ldquo;What do you
- want?&rdquo; This with added sourness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This party says his name is Poinsette and that he rooms here,&rdquo; replied
- the officer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No such thing!&rdquo; retorted the night-cap. &ldquo;No such man rooms here. Don't
- even know the name!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then the window came down with a grievous bang. It was as if it descended
- on Poinsette's heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a crook!&rdquo; said the policeman, &ldquo;and now you come with me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette essayed to explain that the night-cap was not his landlady; that
- he had made a mistake in the house. The policeman laughed in hoarse scorn
- at this.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D'ye think I'm goin' all along the row, yankin' door-bells out by the
- roots on such a stiff as you're givin' me?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- That was the reply of the policeman to Poinsette's pleadings to try next
- door.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poinsette was led sadly off, with the grip of the law on his collar. At
- the station he was searched and booked and bolted in. On the hard plank,
- which made the sole furnishings of his narrow cell, Poinsette threw
- himself down; not to sleep, but to give himself to bitter consideration of
- his fate.
- </p>
- <p>
- As Poinsette sat there waiting for the sun to rise and friends to come to
- his rescue, the station clock struck five. It rang dismally in the cell of
- Poinsette.
- </p>
- <p>
- At Cape May, clocks of correct habits were also telling the hour of five.
- Mrs. P. was not yet asleep. The vigorous aroma of the ocean swept the
- room. The half-morning was beautiful; Mrs. P., loosely garbed, sat in an
- easy-chair at the window and enjoyed it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wonder what Poinsette's been doing,&rdquo; said Mrs. P. to herself; and there
- was a colour of jealousy in the tone. Then Mrs. P. snorted as in contempt.
- &ldquo;I'll warrant he's been having a good time,&rdquo; she continued. &ldquo;This idea
- that married men when their wives are away for the summer have a dull
- time, never imposed on me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0053" id="link2H_4_0053"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- TIP FROM THE TOMB
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>. Jefferson Bender
- was a doctor; that is, he was not a real, legal doctor as yet, but he was
- a hard student, and looked hopefully toward a day when, in accordance with
- the statutes in such cases made and provided, he would be cantered through
- the examination chute, and entitled to write &ldquo;M. D.&rdquo; following his name,
- with all that it implied.
- </p>
- <p>
- Each morning T. Jefferson Bender arose with the lark, and, seizing his
- dissecting knife, plunged into whatever subject was spread before him. In
- the afternoon he attended lectures, bending a hungry ear and watching with
- eager eye, while the lecturer, in illustration of his remarks, tortured
- poor people, free of charge. At night, when the day's carvings, and
- listenings, and lookings were over, T. Jefferson Bender sat in his easy
- chair and peered down the long aisle of coming time.
- </p>
- <p>
- The world was bright to the glance of T. Jefferson Bender; the future full
- of promise. In his musings he saw himself striding towards surgical fame
- and riches over a pathway strewn with the amputational harvest of his
- skill. He filled the hereafter with himself routing disease; cutting down
- deadly maladies as a farmer might the mullein-stalk; driving before him
- bacteria and bacilli in herds, droves, schools and shoals. T. Jefferson
- Bender was a happy man, and his forehead was already, in his imaginings,
- kissed by the rays of a dawning professional prosperity.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>. Jefferson Bender
- allowed himself but one relaxation. He was from Lexington, and had a true
- Kentuckian's love for horseflesh. Thus it was that he patronised the
- races, and was often seen at Morris Park, where he prevailed from a seat
- in the grand-stand. Here, casting off professional dignity as he might a
- garment, T. Jefferson Bender whooped and howled and hurled his hat on
- high, as race following race swept in.
- </p>
- <p>
- At intervals T. Jefferson Bender was carried to such heights of madness as
- &ldquo;playing the horses.&rdquo; And then it was he suffered those vicissitudes which
- are chronicled colloquially under the phrase of &ldquo;getting it in the neck.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was the day of
- the great race. The Morris Park grand-stand was reeling full. The quarter
- stretch was crowded with Democrats and Republicans and Mugwumps, who,
- laying aside political hatreds for a day, had come to see the races. The
- horses were backing and plunging in the grasp of rubbers and stable
- minions, while the gay jockeys, with their mites of saddles on their left
- arms, were being weighed in.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly, a cry of terror rent the air. Otero, a headstrong beauty, had
- leaped upon the neck of Paddy the Pig, a horse rubber, and borne him to
- the earth. Paddy the Pig's neck was severely wrenched, so the crowd said.
- As the accident occurred, the victim fainted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is there a doctor present?&rdquo; shouted one of the race judges, appealing to
- the grand-stand.
- </p>
- <p>
- T. Jefferson Bender arose from where he sat, walked over seventeen men and
- women, and leaped upon the stretch.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I am here,&rdquo; observed T. Jefferson Bender, while his eye lighted and his
- nostrils expanded with the ardour of a great resolve.
- </p>
- <p>
- T. Jefferson Bender bent above Paddy the Pig and felt his pulse.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He lives!&rdquo; muttered T. Jefferson Bender.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he called for whiskey.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the magical words, Paddy the Pig languidly opened his eyes, while a
- flush dimly painted his cheek.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doc, you have saved my life!&rdquo; said Paddy the Pig.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have,&rdquo; said T. Jefferson Bender, willing to be impressive. &ldquo;I have
- saved your life.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Doc,&rdquo; said Paddy the Pig in a weak, fluttering voice, &ldquo;I am only a horse
- rubber, but I will make you rich. Play Skylight to win, Doc; Skylight!
- It's a tip from the tomb!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a tip from the tomb!&rdquo; said T. Jefferson Bender reverently, &ldquo;what are
- the odds?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a 20-to-1 shot, Doc. Play it. You will thus be paid for what you've
- done for me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hat night T.
- Jefferson Bender stood in a pawnshop. The flickering gaslight shone on
- mandolins, pistols, watches, and clothing, which had suffered the ordeal
- of the spout. T. Jefferson Bender was dusty and footsore. He had walked
- from Morris Park, and was now about to pawn his watch for food.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0217.jpg" alt="0217 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0217.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <h3>
- T. Jefferson Bender had played Skylight.
- </h3>
- <p>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hy, yes,&rdquo;
- responded Chucky readily enough, &ldquo;there's choiches of all sorts, same as
- there's folks, see! Some does good an' then ag'in there's others that
- ain't so warm.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was rude, cold weather. Because of the bluster and the freezing air
- without, Chucky had abandoned his customary ale for hot Scotches. These
- and the barroom's pleasant heat, in contrast with the chill and gusts of
- the street, served to unfold Chucky's conversational powers. He even waxed
- philosophical.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For that matter,&rdquo; continued Chucky, critically, &ldquo;there's lots of good
- lyin' 'round loose. Sometimes it's dead hard to find, but it's there all
- d' same, if youse is fly enough to pipe it off. An' it ain't all in d'
- choiches neither. As I states, I'm d' last mug to go knockin' d' choiches,
- but dey ain't got no corner on d' good of this woild. There is others. D'
- choices ain't d' only apple on d' tree. Nor yet d' onliest gas jet on 'd
- chandelier.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say!&rdquo; Chucky went on, after a further taste of the hot Scotch, &ldquo;on d'
- level! I'm onto achoich what's got nex' to a bakery, an' what do youse
- t'ink? Each night d' bakery don't do a t'ing but give every poor hobo who
- fronts up to d' window a loaf of bread. That's for fair! an 'd' gezebo who
- runs d' bakery is a Dutch Sheeny at that. Would youse get bread if you was
- to go chasin' nex' door to d' choich? Nit; t'ree times nit! If you was to
- go slammin' 'round d! choich makin' a talk for a hand-out, all youse would
- get would be d' collar, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Onct a week that sanchewary would fill youse to d' chin on chimes; oh,
- yes! but no buns; not on your life! Chimes is d' limit wit' that choich.
- An' say! it's got money to boin! Bread at d' bakery! chimes at d' choich!
- that's how dey line t'ings up at that corner. An' I'm here to say as
- between d' brace of 'em, when it gets down to d' cold proposition, 'W'ich
- does d' most good?' d' bakery can lose that temple of worship in a walk. I
- strings me money on d' bakery. An' don't youse forget it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Chucky was quite exhausted after this outburst. He revived, however, with
- the hot Scotch, which restored him mightily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Onct,&rdquo; resumed Chucky, &ldquo;about ten years ago, this is, I was where a w'ite
- choker was takin' up a c'llection. An' what do youse figure he wants it
- for? I'm a black Republican if he didn't break it off on us that he was
- out to make up a wad so his congregation could cel'brate d' fortieth
- birt'-day of gold in Californy. Don't that knock youse silly? D' w'ite
- choker says as how he comes from Californy an' him an' his push is goin'
- to toin themselfs loose, see! an whoop it up because dey found gold forty
- spaces back. It made me tired, honest!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Why!' I says to this pulpit t'umper, just like that, 'Why! don't youse
- preach that gold is d' roots of evil? An' now youse is framin' up a
- blow-out over findin' it! It looks like a dead gauzy bluff to me.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What does d' w'ite choker mark do? Just gives me d' dead face an' ignores
- me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Youse permits yourself to be amazed at me pickin' this guy up about gold
- bein' d' seeds of evil,&rdquo; observed Chucky, with a touch of severity. This
- was in response to some syllable of admiration I'd let fall. &ldquo;Youse
- needn't mind. I'll give youse a tip that in me yout' I was d' star peeple
- of d' Sunday school dey opens long ago at d' Five Points. That's straight
- goods, see! I was d' soonest kid at me lessons that ever comes down d'
- pike, an 'd' swiftest ever. I has all d' other kids on d' blink. I win a
- test'ment onct from d' outstretched mits of d' entire push, bar d' Bible
- class, for loinin' more verses be heart than anybody. I downs every kid in
- d' bunch. I made 'em look like a lot of suckers!&rdquo; and Chucky paused in
- approving meditation over the victories of boyhood days.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Still d' choiches does dead lots o' good,&rdquo; asserted Chucky, coming back
- to the subject. &ldquo;There's d' case of Bridgy McGuire. She makes two or t'ree
- trips to d' Cat'lic joint over on Mott Street, an' all she loins, so it
- sticks in her frizzes, is: 'Honour dy father an' dy mother,' see! An'
- Bridgy says herself it's that what brings her back after she's been run
- away from home for six years. Bridgy shows up just in time to straighten
- out d' game for d' McGuires at that. D' fam'ly was on d' hog for fair when
- Bridgy gets there.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nixie, d' yarn ain't so long, nor yet so scarce; for that matter, there's
- lots more like 'em. In d' foist place, this mark, McGuire, Bridgy's dad,
- ain't so bad. Mac's a bricklayer; but d' loose screw wit' him was that he
- ain't woikin' in d' winter; an' as durin' d' summer he gen'rally lushes
- more whiskey than he lays bricks, an' is more apt to hit d' bottle than a
- job, d' McGuire household's more or less on d' bum, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I remembers Bridgy when she's so little a yard makes a frock for her. She
- was a long, slim, bony kid, wit' legs on her like she's built to pick
- hops; an' if Bridgy shows anyt'ing in her breed when young, it's a strong
- streak of step-ladder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In her kid days I wasn't noticin' Bridgy much; d' fact was, then as now,
- I'm havin' troubles, of me own. Her mommer, who was pretty near an even
- break wit' Mac himself when it comes to hittin' up d' booze, every now an'
- then t'run back to d' religious days of her own yout', an' it's durin' one
- of these Bible fits of d' old woman that she saws Bridgy off on d' choich,
- where I speaks of her gettin 'd' hunch from d' priest, or somebody, that
- it's d' fly caper if youse is out to finish wit' d' heavenly squeeze, to
- honour your father an' mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I relates, I ain't dead clear about Bridgy when she's young an'
- little, except it does come chasin' back to me that she's dead gone on
- dancin' an' knock-about woik. Onct when me an' d' McGuires is livin' on d'
- same floor, I hears a racket in d' hall like some sucker is tryin' to come
- downstairs wit' a tool chest. Naturally, I shoves me nut outside me door
- to tell him to go chase himself. But it's only Bridgy&mdash;mebby she's
- twelve at d' time&mdash;practyesing. I keeps me lamps onto her awhile, an'
- she never tumbles I'm there; for I don't say nothin', but lays dead.
- Bridgy is doin' han'-stan's, cartwheels, backbends, fallin' splits an' all
- sorts of funny stunts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Is this an accident, or does you mean it?' I asts at last, as Bridgy
- winds up a cartwheel wit' a split that looks like it's goin' to leave her
- on bot' sides of d' passage way.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I'm doin' a spread,' says Bridgy, 'same as d' Boneless Wonder at
- Miner's, see!' An' here she lays her little cocoa down on her knee to show
- she's comfortable, an' dead easy in her mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit'out keepin' exact tabs on Bridgy, I'm able to state that as soon as
- she's big enough she goes to woik; an' at one time an' another she sells
- poipers, does a toin in a vest factory, or some other sweat shop; an' at
- last, when she's about seventeen, she's model in a cloak joint. She gets
- along all right, all right for a space or so, when one day d' old grey guy
- who owns d' woiks takes it into his nut he'll float into Bridgy's
- 'fections.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Love youse!' says Bridgy, to this aged stiff; 'old gent, you're dopey!
- If youse give way to a few more dreams like that, your folks 'll put you
- in d' booby house. Yous'll be in Bloomin'dale cuttin' poiper dolls d'
- foist news you know.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At this d' wicked old geezer makes a strong talk&mdash;makes d' speech of
- his life. But Bridgy won't stand for him, nor his game.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Come off your perch!' she says at last. 'Either you corks up or I quits.
- You don't make no hit wit' me at all.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But d' old mucker don't let up none, an' keeps on givin' Bridgy a song
- an' dance about his love for her; so at last she makes her bluff good an'
- walks out of d' joint an' goes home.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;McGuire was hot in d' collar at Bridgy t'runnin' down her job; but d' old
- woman, she says Bridgy does dead right; an' for a finish Mac an 'd' old
- woman goes on a drunk an' has a fight over it; after which d' subject's
- dropped, see! an' that's d' end of it. I only sees Bridgy onct after that,
- before she screws her cocoa. That's at d' Tugman's Ball; where she's d'
- Queen spieler of d' bunch, an' shows on d' floor as light an' graceful as
- so much cigar smoke. It's right on d' heels of this that Bridgy fades from
- d' Bend for fair, an' no one has d' least line on her or knows where she's
- at.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It runs on for t'ree or four spaces, an 'd' McGuires keeps gettin'
- drunker an' harder up. More'n onct d' neighbors has to bring in d' grub,
- or dey wouldn't have done a t'ing but starve. Dey's jumpin' sideways for
- food to chew, I'll tell youse that right now, as much as half d' time.
- Durin' all this no one hears a woid about Bridgy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, no one's makin' much of a roar. There's a good deal doin'
- about d' Bend, see! An' d' comin' or d' goin' of a skirt more or less
- don't cut much ice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's in d' winter, an 'd' McGuires has been carryin' on bad. No woik, no
- money, no grub! On d' dead! it's a forty-to-one shot dey bot' finishes at
- d' morgue, or d' Island before d' spring comes 'round. For d' winter is
- bad in d' Bend, an' while everybody is on, that d' McGuires is strikin' it
- hard, d' most of us is havin' all we can do runnin' down t'ree feeds a
- day, so d' McGuires ain't what*d' poipers calls 'much in d' public eye,'
- after all. One evenin', however, Mac comes sprintin' to me, an' he's fair
- sober for him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Nit!' he says, when I asts him, 'nit; none of d' ellegunt for me!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I tumbles there's a cochin on. McGuire's t'runnin' off on a drink
- was a new one on d' Bend.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Come wit' me,' he says, 'to Roster &amp; Bial's.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Come wit' youse to Koster's!' I retort. 'That's a dandy idee; youse
- ought to sew buttons on it! Come to Koster &amp; Bial's! Who's got d'
- price?'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Here's d' pasteboards,' says Mac.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' I'm a liar' if he ain't got 'em. So we goes, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' fift' toin on d' programme is a 'Mamselle Fleury from Paris.' She's
- down on d' bills as a singer, dancer an' high kicker. I'm leanin' back in
- me seat feelin' sore on meself for not makin' Mac hock d' tickets for
- beer, when all at onct Mac gives me a jolt in d' slats wit' his elbow, an'
- pointin' one of his main hooks at this French tart, where she's singin' on
- d' stoige&mdash;an' say! she's a boid an' a Kokobola&mdash;an' says:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Be youse on?'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I focuses me peeps on this Fleury, all pink tights an' silks an'
- feathers, where she's doin' her toin. I'm a lobster if she ain't Bridgy
- McGuire!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'What th' 'ell! what th' bloomin' 'ell!' is all I can say; an' on d'
- square! Mac has to drag me out an' lay an oyster on me before I'm meself
- ag'in. It comes mighty near stoppin' me in d' foist round.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You sees d' finish. Bridgy's took to d' stoige. She's been over in London
- an' Paris; an' say! she's got d' game down fine as silk. She'd come back
- an' was beatin 'd' box for t'ree hundred plunks a week.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sure! Bridgy had been up to find her folks. Foist she said she t'ought
- she'd pass 'em up. Dey had given her d' woist of it when she's a kid; why
- should she bother! But she tells us herself, talkin' it over, how when she
- struck d' old town ag'in, an' old sights begins to toin up old mem'ries,
- it starts to run in her wig about d' Bend an 'd' old days. An' what stan's
- out clearest is d' little old Cat'lic choich, an 'd' guff dey gives her d'
- onct or twict she shows up there, about honourin' her father an' mother. I
- s'pose what youse would call Bridgy's conscience gets a run for its money.
- Anyhow, somet'ing inside of her took to chewin' d' rag, an' showin'
- Bridgy's she's wrong, an' at d' last, she can't stand for it no longer,
- an' so she sends a tracer out for her mother an' dad, an' lands 'em.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' McGuires live in Harlem now. Dey drinks better whiskey then dey did in
- d' Bend, an' less of it. Bridgy is a wonder an' a winner; in it wit' bot'
- feet an' has dough to back every needful racket. Yes, d' choich does it,
- give it d' credit; an' youse can gamble your last chip d' McGuires crosses
- themselfs every time dey sees one. An' dey's dead flossy so to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0059" id="link2H_4_0059"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- TOO CHEAP
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I.
- </h2>
- <h3>
- |The scene was Washington.
- </h3>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get the galoot to urge the Bill, gal; and I'll make over half them
- phosphate beds to you. The Senate has already passed it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll do my best, Uncle Silver Tip,&rdquo; said Agnes Huntington. &ldquo;Slippery Elm
- Benton loves me, and he cannot refuse his affianced wife his vote.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They'd hang him in Colorado if he did,&rdquo; observed Uncle Silver Tip; &ldquo;but
- see to it at once, gal; the fourth of March draws on apace. All must then
- be over, or all is lost.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>gnes Huntington
- pressed her expectant nose against the pane. Outside the snowstorm was
- profound. The flakes crowded the air as they fell. The drifts were four
- feet deep on Connecticut avenue. A man wrapped in furs pushed his way
- toward the Chateau d' Huntington. It was Arctic cold, but love beckoned
- him. He stamped the snow from his feet in the entry. The next moment Agnes
- Huntington had curled about his neck in a festoon of affection.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Representative Slippery Elm Benton.
- </p>
- <p>
- Agnes Huntington was a beautiful creature&mdash;tall, slender,
- spirituelle, with eyes as dark and deep as the heavens at-night. Agnes
- Huntington had but one fault: she would sell the honour of the man she
- loved.
- </p>
- <p>
- Agnes Huntington was out for the stuff bigger than a wolf.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>ometimes I doubt
- the longevity of our bliss,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Despair rides on the crupper of my
- hopes at times. The Witch of Waco told how in a trance she saw my future
- spread before me like a faro layout. 'And,' said the Witch of Waco, I saw
- the pale hand of Fate put a copper on the queen. You may be lynched, but
- you will never wed.' Such was her bleak bode.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Slippery Elm Benton trembled like a child.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Heed her not, dearest,&rdquo; murmured Agnes Huntington. &ldquo;Surrender yourself,
- as I do, to the solemn currents of our love. And, darling, promise me
- again, you will do what is needful for the Phosphate Bill. It would
- brighten the last days of dear old Uncle Silver Tip.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where is your aged relative?&rdquo; asked Slippery Elm Benton, moodily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'd better not call him, dearest,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Uncle is lushing to-night,
- and he is unpleasant when he has been tanking up. What you do for the
- Phosphate Bill, you do for me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was &ldquo;suspension
- day,&rdquo; and the Phosphate Bill went through the House like the grace of
- Heaven through a camp-meeting.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>alf of that
- phosphate bed is yours, gal,&rdquo; said Uncle Silver Tip, when Agnes Huntington
- told him the Bill was already at the White House for the President's
- signature. &ldquo;It's wuth a million; an' you've 'arned it, gal! It was to turn
- sech tricks as this your old uncle sent you from the wild and woolly West
- to an Eastern seminary, and had them knock your horns off. It cost a bunch
- of cattle, but it's paid.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>here's something I
- must tell you, love,&rdquo; said Agnes Huntington; &ldquo;you would know all in time,
- and it is better that you learn it now from the lips of your Agnes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, beautiful one?&rdquo; said Slippery Elm Benton, languidly.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Congressional day, with its labours, had wearied our hero, and,
- although with the woman he loved, he still felt fatigued.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Read this,&rdquo; said Agnes, as she pushed a paper into her lover's hand, and
- shrank back as if frightened.
- </p>
- <p>
- The paper made over one-half of the phosphate bed to Agnes Huntington.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And it was for this you sold my vote in the House!&rdquo; and Slippery Elm
- Benton laughed mockingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, say not so, love!&rdquo; said Agnes Huntington, piteously. &ldquo;Rather would I
- hear you curse than laugh like that!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And so the vote and influence of Slippery Elm Benton are basely bargained
- by the woman he loved for a one-half interest in a phosphate bed!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Slippery Elm Benton strode up and down the apartment, tossing his arms
- like a Dutch windmill.
- </p>
- <p>
- Agnes Huntington cowered before the wrath of her lover.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What would you have?&rdquo; she cried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What would I have!&rdquo; repeated Slippery Elm Benton, with a sneer, which all
- but withered the weeping girl; &ldquo;what would I have! I would have all&mdash;all!
- My vote and influence were worth the entire phosphate bed, and you basely
- accepted a paltry moiety! Go from my side, false woman; you who would put
- so low an estimate upon me! The Witch of Waco was right. I leave you. I
- leave you as one unfit to be the wife of a Congressman!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And Slippery Elm Benton, while Agnes Huntington swooned on the rug, rushed
- into the night and the snow.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0066" id="link2H_4_0066"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- HENRY SPENY'S BENEVOLENCE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>UMMER was here and
- the day was warm. Henry Speny had been walking, and now stood at-the
- corner of Tenth Avenue and Twenty-eighth street, mopping his brow. Henry
- Speny was a Conservative; and, although Mrs. Speny had that morning gone
- almost to the frontiers of a fist fight to make him change his underwear
- for the lighter and more gauzy apparel proper to jocund August, Henry
- Speny refused. He was now paying the piper, and thinking how much more
- Mrs. Speny knew than he did, when the Tramp came up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Podner!&rdquo; said the Tramp in a low, guttural whine, intended to escape the
- ear of the police and touch Henry Speny's heart at one and the same time;
- &ldquo;podner! couldn't you assist a pore man a little?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Assist a poor man to what?&rdquo; asked Henry Speny, returning his handkerchief
- to his pocket and looking scornfully at the Tramp.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was a fat, healthy Tramp, in good condition. Henry Speny hardened his
- heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dime!&rdquo; replied the Tramp; &ldquo;dime to get somethin' to eat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Henry Speny shortly; &ldquo;I'm a half dozen meals behind the game
- myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This last was only Henry Speny's humour. Mrs. Speny fed him twice a day.
- But Henry Speny knew that the Tramp wanted the dime for whiskey.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well! if you don't think I want it to chew on,&rdquo; said the Tramp, &ldquo;jest'
- take me to a bakery and buy me a loaf of bread. I'll get away with it
- right before you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say!&rdquo; remarked Henry Speny, in a spirit of sarcastic irritation, &ldquo;what's
- the use of your talking to me? There's the Charity Woodyard in this town,
- where, if you were really hungry, you would go and saw wood for something
- to eat. You can get two meals and a bed for sawing one-sixteenth of a cord
- of wood.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You can't saw wood with no such fin as this, podner!&rdquo; said the Tramp; and
- pulling up his coat sleeve he displayed to Henry Speny an arm as withered
- as a dead tree. &ldquo;The other's all right,&rdquo; he continued, restoring his coat
- sleeve; &ldquo;but wot's one arm in a catch-as-catch-can racket with a bucksaw?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Henry Speny was conscience-stricken, but he would defeat the Tramp in his
- efforts to buy whiskey.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll go down to the woodyard and saw your wood myself,&rdquo; said Henry Speny.
- </p>
- <p>
- He told Mrs. Speny afterward that he could not account for the making of
- this offer, unless it was his anxiety to keep the Tramp sober. All the
- Tramp wanted was ten cents, and for Henry Speny to propose to saw
- one-sixteenth of a cord of hard wood on a hot day, when a dime would have
- made all things even, was a conundrum too deep for Henry Speny, as he
- looked back over the transaction. But he did make the proposal; and the
- Tramp accepted with a grin of gratitude.
- </p>
- <p>
- There were twenty sticks in that one-sixteenth of a cord&mdash;hard,
- knotty sticks, too. And each one had to be sawed three times; sixty cuts
- in all. It was a poor bucksaw. Before he had finished the third stick,
- Henry Speny declared that it was the most beastly bucksaw he ever handled
- in his life. The buck itself was a wretched buck, and wouldn't stand still
- while Henry Speny sawed. It had a habit of tipping over; and when Henry
- Speny put his knee on the stick to steady the refractory buck, the knots
- tore his trousers and made his legs black and blue. Then the perspiration
- got in his eyes and made them smart. When he wiped it away he saw two of
- his friends looking at him in a shocked, sober way from across the street.
- They passed on, and told everybody that Henry Speny was down at the
- Charity Woodyard sawing wood for his food. They said, too, that they had
- reason to believe he did this every day; that business had gone to pieces
- with him, and an assignment couldn't be staved off much longer.
- </p>
- <p>
- Henry Speny would have thrown up the job with the second stick, but the
- Tramp was already half through his meal; Henry Speny could see him bolting
- his food like a glutton through the window, from where he stood.
- </p>
- <p>
- It took Henry Speny two hours to saw those twenty sticks sixty times. His
- hands were a fretwork of blisters; his back and shoulders ached like a
- galley-slave's. Henry Speny hired a carriage to take him home; he couldn't
- stand the slam and jolt of a street car. He was laid up three days with
- the blisters on his hands, while Mrs. Speny rubbed his back and shoulders
- with Pond's Extract.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the fourth day, as Henry Speny was limping painfully toward his office,
- he heard a voice he knew.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Podner! can't you assist a pore m&mdash;Oh! beg pardon; you looked so
- different I didn't know you!&rdquo; It was the fat Tramp with the withered arm.
- Without a word Henry Speny gave him ten cents and hobbled on.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0067" id="link2H_4_0067"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- JANE DOUGHERTY
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of the Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hat's d' flossiest
- good t'ing I'm ever guilty of?&rdquo; said Chucky. There was a pause. Chucky let
- his eye&mdash;somewhat softened for him&mdash;rove a bit abstractedly
- about the sordid bar. At last it came back to repose on the beer mug
- before him, as the most satisfying sight at easy hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; retorted Chucky, as he wet his lip, &ldquo;that question is a corker.
- 'What's d' star good deed you does?' is d' way you slings it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Will I name it? In a secont&mdash;in a hully secont! It's d' story of a
- little goil I steals, an' sticks in for ever since. This kid's two years
- comin' t'ree, when I pinched it, so to speak; an' youse can bet your
- boots! she was reg'larly up ag'inst it. A fly old sport like Chucky would
- never have mingled wit' her destinies otherwise; not on your life! Between
- youse, an' me, an' d' bar-keep over there, I ain't got no more natural use
- for kids than I have for a wet dog. But never mind! we'll pass up that
- kink in me make-up an' get down to this abduction I prides meself on.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's nine spaces ago, an 'd' kid in dispoote is now goin' on twelve. I've
- been, as I states, stickin' in for her ever since, an' intends to play me
- string to a finish. But to go on wit' me romance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I relates, d' play I boasts of is nine spaces in d' rear, see! In that
- day I has a dandy graft. I've got me hooks on as big a bundle as a hundred
- plunks, many an' many is d' week. I'd be woikin' it now only I lushes too
- free.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here's how in that day I sep'rated suckers from their stuff. It was
- simply fakin', of d' smoot' an' woidy sort, see! I'd make up like a Zulu,
- wit' burnt cork, an' feathers, an' queer duds; an' then I'd climb into an
- open carriage, drive to a good corner, do a bit of chin music, pull a
- crowd an' sell 'em brass jewellery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me patter would run something like this: D' waggon would stop an' I'd
- stand up. Raisin' me lamps to d' heavens above, I'd cut loose d' remark at
- d' top of me valves:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'It looks like rain! It don't look like a t'ing but rain!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit' me foist yell d' pop'lace would flock 'round, an' in two minutes
- there would be a hundred people there. In ten, there'd be a t'ousand, if
- d' cops didn't get in their woik. I'll give youse a tip d' great American
- public is d' star gezebos to come to a dead halt, an' look an' listen to
- t'ings. More'n onct I've seen some stiff who's sprintin' for a doctor,
- make a runnin' switch at d' sound of me voice an' side-track himself for
- t'irty minutes to hear me. Dey's a dead curious lot, d' public is; buy a
- French pool on that!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'en d' crowd is jammed all about me carriage w'eels, I'd cut loose some
- more. I'd quit d' rain question cold, an' holdin' up an armful of jimcrow
- jewellery, I'd t'row meself like this:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Loidies an' gents,' I'd say, 'I'm d' only orig'nal Coal Oil Johnny. An'
- I'm a soon mug at that, see! I don't get d' woist of it; not on your
- neckties. I gives away two hundred an' I takes in four hundred toadskins
- (dollars) an' I don't let no mob of hayseeds do me, so youse farmers
- needn't try.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Look at me! Cast your lamps over me! I'm one of Cetewayo's Zulu
- body-guard, an' I'm here from Africa on a furlough to saw off on suckers a
- lot of bum jewellery, an' down youse for your dough, see! I'm goin' to
- offer for sale four t'ings: I'm goin' to sell youse foist ten rings, then
- ten brooches, then ten chains, and then ten watches. An' when I gets down
- to d' watches, watch me dost; because, when I gets nex' to d' tickers I've
- reached d' point where I'm goin' to t'run youse down. I'm here to skin
- youse out of your money, an' leave youse lookin' like d' last run of shad.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'But there's this pecoolarity about me sellin 'd' rings. Each ring is a
- dollar apiece, an' when I've shoved ten of 'em onto youse, every galoot
- who's paid me a dollar for one, gets his dollar back an' a dollar wit' it
- for luck.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Now here's d' rings, good folks an' all!'&mdash;here I*d flash d' rings;
- gilt, an' wort' t'ree dollars a ton!&mdash;'here's d' little crinklets!
- Who's goin' to take one at a dollar, an' at d' finish, when d' ten is
- sold, get two dollars back? Who'll be d' foist? Now don't rush me! don't
- crush me! but come one at a time. D' rings ain't wort' a dollar a ton: I
- only makes d' play for fun, an' because d' doctors who looks after me
- healt' says I'll croak if I don't travel. Who'll be d' early boid to nip a
- ring?
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'There you be!' I goes on, as some rustic gets to d' front an' hands up
- d' bill. 'Sold ag'in an' got d' tin, another farmer just sucked in!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So I goes, on,&rdquo; continued Chucky, after reviving his voice&mdash;which
- his exertions had made a trifle raucous&mdash;with a swig at the tankard;
- &ldquo;so I'd go on until d' ten rings would be sold. Then I'd go over d' outfit
- ag'in, take back d' rings, an' give 'em each a two-dollar willyum.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Now push back into d' mob, you lucky guys,' I'd say, 'an' give your
- maddened competitors to d' rear of youse a chanct to woik d' racket. I'm
- goin' to sell ten brooches now for two dollars each, an' give back four
- dollars wit' every brooch. Then I'm goin' to dazzle youse wit' ten chains,
- at five cases per chain. An' then I'll get down to d' watches, at which
- crisis, me guileless come-ons, youse must be sure to watch me, for it's
- then I'll make a monkey of youse.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' so I chins on, offerin' d' brooches at two dollars a t'row, an' at d'
- wind-up, when d' ten is gone, I gives back to each mucker who's got in, d'
- sum of four plunks, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be that time it's a knock-down an' drag-out around me cabrioley, to see
- who's goin' to transact business wit' me, an', wit'out as much cacklin' as
- a hen makes over an egg, I goes to d' chains an' floats ten of 'em at five
- a chain. As I sells d' last, I toins sharp on some duck who's dost be me
- w'eel an' says:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'What's that? I'm a crook, am I! an' this ain't on d' level! Loidies an'
- gents, just for d' disparagin' remark of this hobo, who is no doubt funny
- in his topknot from drink, I'll go on an' sell ten more chains. After
- which I'll come down to d' watches, which is d' great commercial point
- where youse had better watch me, for it's there I'm goin' to lose you in a
- lope! An' that's for fair, see!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ten more chains, at five a trip, goes off like circus lem'nade, an' I
- stows d' long an' beauteous green away in me keck. As d' last one of d'
- secont ten fades into d' hooks of d' last sucker, I stows d' five he's
- coughed up for it in me raiment, an' says:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'An' now, loidies an' gents, we gets down to d' watches!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wit' which bluff I lugs me ticker out an' takes a squint at it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'What th' 'ell!' I shouts. 'Here it's half-past t'ree, an' I was to be
- married at t'ree-fifteen! Hully gee! Excuse me, people, but I must fly to
- d' side of me beloved, or I'll get d' dead face; also d' frozen mit. I'll
- see youse dubs next year, if woikin' overtime wit' youse to-day ain't
- ruined me career.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I'm singin' out d' last, I'm givin' me driver d' office to beat his
- dogs an' chase, see! An', bein' as he's on, an' is paid extra as his part
- of d' graft, he soaks d' horses wit' d' whip an' in twenty seconts d'
- crowd is left behint, an' is busy givin' each other d' laugh. No, there
- never was no row; no mug was ever mobbed for guyin'. Nit! I always comes
- away all right, an' youse can figure it, I'm sixty good bones in on d'
- racket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naturally, youse would like to hear where d' kid breaks into d' play an'
- how I wins it. I'd ought to have told youse sooner, but, on d' level! when
- me old patter begins to flow off me tongue, I can't shut down until I've
- spieled it all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But about d' kid. One afternoon I'm goin' on&mdash;it's in Joisey City&mdash;wit'
- me Zulu war-paint an' me open carriage, givin 'd' usual mob d' usual
- jolly. T'ings is runnin' off d' reel like a fish new hooked, an' I'm down
- to me fift' chain. Just then I hears a woman say:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Fly's d' woid, Sallie! Here's your old man, an' he's got his load! He
- won't do a t'ing to youse! Screw out, Sal! screw out!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Sallie, who's a tattered lookin' soubrette, wit' a kid in her arms,
- an' who's been standin' dost be one of me hind w'eels, don't get no chanct
- to skin out, see! There's a drunken hobo&mdash;as big an' as strong as a
- horse&mdash;who's right up to her when d' foist skirt puts her on. As she
- toins, he cops her one in d' neck wit'-out a woid. Down she goes like
- ninepins! As she lands, d' back of her cocoa don't do a t'ing but t'ump a
- stone horse-block wit' a whack! As d' blood flies, I'm lookin' down at
- her. I sees her map fade to a grey w'ite under d' dirt; she bats her lamps
- onct or twict; an' d' nex' moment I'm on wit'out tellin' that her light is
- out for good.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As Sallie does d' fall, d' kid which she's holdin' rolls in d' gutter
- under d' carriage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'T'run d' kid in here!' I says to d' mark who picks it up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me only idee at d' time is to keep d' youngone from gettin 'd' boots from
- d mob that's surgin' round, an' tryin' to mix it up wit' d' drunken bum
- who's soaked Sal. D' guy who gets d' kid fires it up to me like it's a
- football. I'm handy wit' me hooks, so I cops it off in midair, an' stows
- it away on d' seat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be that time d' p'lice has collared d' fightin' bum all right, an' some
- folks is draggin' Sal, who's limp an' dead enough, into a drug shop.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all up wit' me graft for that day, so after lookin' at d' youngone a
- secont, I goes curvin' off to d' hotel where I hangs out. While I'm takin'
- me Zulu make-up off, d' chambermaid stands good for d' kid. When I sees it
- ag'in, it's all washed up an' got some decent duds on. Say! on d' dead! it
- was a wonder!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, to cut it short,&rdquo; said Chucky, giving the order for another mug of
- ale, &ldquo;I loins that night that d' mother is dead, an' d' drunken hobo's in
- d' holdover. As it s a cinch he'll do time for life, even if he misses
- bein' stretched, I looks d' game all over, an' for a wind-up I freezes to
- d' kid. Naw; I couldn't tell why, at that, see! only d' youngone acts like
- it's stuck on me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nixie; I never keeps it wit' me. I've got it up to d' Sisters' school.
- Say! them nuns is gone on it. I makes a front to 'em as d' kid's uncle;
- an' while I've been shy meself on grub more'n onct since I asted d'
- Sisters to keep it, I makes good d' money for d' kid right along, an' I
- always will. What name does I give it? Jane&mdash;Jane Dougherty; it's me
- mudder's name. Nit; I don t know what I'll do wit' Jane for a finish. I
- was talkin' to me Rag only d' other day about it, an' she told me, in a
- week or so, she'd go an' take a fall out of a fortune-teller, who, me Rag
- says, is d' swiftest of d' whole fortune-tellin' push. Mebby we'll get a
- steer from her.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0068" id="link2H_4_0068"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- MISTRESS KILLIFER
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Wolfville)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>his is of a day
- prior to Dave Tutt's taking a wife, and a year before the nuptials of
- Benson Annie, as planned and executed by Old Man Enright, with one,
- French.
- </p>
- <p>
- Wolfville is dissatisfied; what one might call peevish. A man has been
- picked up shot to death, no one can tell by whom; no one has hung for it.
- Any one familiar with the Western spirit and the Western way would note
- the discontent by merely walking through the single, sun-burned street.
- When two citizens of the place make casual meeting in store or causeway,
- they confine their salutations to gruff &ldquo;how'd!&rdquo; and pass on. Men are even
- seen to drink alone in a sullen, morbid way.
- </p>
- <p>
- Clearly something is wrong with Wolfville. The popular discontent is so
- sufficiently pronounced as to merit the notice of leading citizens.
- Therefore it is no marvel that when Old Man Enright, who, by right of
- years&mdash;and with a brain as clear and as bright as a day in June&mdash;is
- the head man of the hamlet, meets Doc Peets at the bar of the Red Light,
- the discussion falls on affairs of public concern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever do you reckon is the matter with this camp, Enright?&rdquo; asks Doc
- Peets, as they tip their liquor into their throats without missing a drop.
- </p>
- <p>
- Doc Peets is the medical practitioner of Wolfville, but his grammar, like
- that of many another man, has lost ground before his environment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can't tell!&rdquo; replied Enright, with a mien dubious yet thoughtful. &ldquo;Looks
- like the whole outfit is somehow on a dead kyard. Mebby it's that Denver
- party gettin' downed last week an' no one lynched. Some folks says the
- Stranglers oughter have swung that Greaser.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well!&rdquo; retorts Doc Peets, &ldquo;you as chief of the Stranglers, an' I as a
- member in full standin', knows thar's no more evidence ag'in that Mexican
- than ag'in my <i>pinto</i> hoss.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, I knows that too!&rdquo; replies Enright, &ldquo;but still I sorter thinks
- general sentiment lotted on a hangin'. You know, Doc, it ain't so
- important from a public stand that you stretches the right gent, as that
- you stretches somebody when it's looked for. Nacherally it would have been
- mighty mortifyin' to the Mexican who's swung off at the loop-end of the
- lariat for a killin' he ain't in on; but still I holds the belief it would
- have calmed the sperit of the camp. However, I may be 'way off to one side
- on that; it's jest my view. Set up the nosepaint ag'in, barkeep!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- While Doc Peets is slowly freighting his glass with a fair allowance, he
- is deep in meditation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've an idee, Enright,&rdquo; says Doc Peets at last. &ldquo;The thing for us to do
- is to give the public some new direction of thought that'll hold 'em
- quiet. The games is all dead at this hour, an' the boys ain't doin'
- nothin'; s'pose we makes a round-up to consider my scheme. The mere
- exercise will soothe 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shall we have Jack Moore post a notice?&rdquo; asks
- </p>
- <p>
- Enright. &ldquo;He's Kettle Tender to the Stranglers, an' I reckons what he does
- that a-way makes it legal.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; says Peets, &ldquo;let's rustle 'em in an' hold the meetin' right now an'
- yere in the Red Light. Some of the boys is feelin' that petulant they're
- likely to get to chewin' each other's manes any minute. I'm tellin' you,
- Enright, onless somethin' is done mighty <i>poce tiempo</i> to cheer 'em,
- an' convince 'em that Wolfville is lookin' up an' gettin' ahead on the
- correct trail, this outfit's liable to have a killin' any time at all. The
- recent decease of that Denver person won't be a marker!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right!&rdquo; says Enright, &ldquo;if thar ain't no time for Moore an' a notice,
- a good, handy, quick way to focus public interest would be to step to the
- back door, an' shake the loads outen my six-shooter. That'll excite
- cur'osity, an' over they'll come all spraddled out.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus it comes to pass that the afternoon peace of Wolfville is suddenly
- disparaged and broken down by six pistol shots. They follow each other
- like the rapid striking of a Yankee clock.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any one creased?&rdquo; asks Jack Moore, by general consent a fashion of
- marshal and executive officer for the place, and who, followed by the
- population of Wolfville, rushes up the moment following the shooting.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None whatever!&rdquo; replies Doc Peets, cheerfully. &ldquo;The shootin' you-alls
- hears is purely bloodless; an' Enright an' me indulges tharin onder what
- they calls the 'public welfare clause of the constitootion.' The intent
- which urges us to shake up the sereenity of the hour is to convene the
- camp, which said rite bein' now accomplished, the barkeep asks your
- beverages, an' the business proceeds in reg'lar order.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Enright, who has finished replenishing the pistol from which he evicted
- the loads, draws a chair to a monte table and drums gently with his
- fingers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The meetin' will please bed itse'f down!&rdquo; says Enright, with a sage
- dignity which has generous reflection in the faces around him. &ldquo;Doc Peets,
- gents, who is a sport whom we all knows an' respects, will now state the
- object of this round-up. The barkeep meanwhile will please continue his
- rounds, the same not bein' deemed disturbin'; none whatever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gents, an' fellow townsmen!&rdquo; says Doc Peets, rising at the call of
- Enright and stepping forward, &ldquo;I avoids all harassin' mention of a
- yeretofore sort. Comin' down to the turn at once, I ventures the remark
- that thar's somethin' wrong with Wolfville. I would see no virtue in
- pursooin' this subject, which might well excite the resentment of all true
- citizens of the town, was it not that I feels a crowdin' necessity for a
- change of a radical sort. Somethin' must be proposed, an' somethin' must
- be did. I am well aware thar's gents yere to-day as holds a conviction
- that a bet is overlooked in not stringin' the Mexican last week on account
- of the party from Denver. That may or may not be true; but in any event,
- that hand's been played, an' that pot's been lost an' won. Whether on that
- occasion we diskyards an' draws for the best interests of the public, may
- well pass by onasked. At any rate we don't fill, an' the Greaser wins out
- with his neck. Lettin' the past, tharfore, drift for a moment, I would
- like to hear from any gent present somethin' in the line of a proposal for
- future action; one calc'lated to do Wolfville proud. As affairs stand our
- pride is goin' our brotherly love is goin', our public sperit is goin',
- an' the way we're p'intin' out, onless we comes squar' about on the trail,
- we won't be no improvement on an outfit of Digger Injuns in a month.
- Gents, I pauses at this p'int for su'gestions.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Doc Peets sits down a whispered buzz runs through the room. It is plain
- that what he has said finds sympathy in his audience.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You've heard Peets,&rdquo; observes Enright, beating softly. &ldquo;Any party with
- views should not withhold 'em. I takes it we-all is anxious for the good
- of Wolfville. We should proceed with wisdom. Red Dog, our tinhorn rival,
- is a-watchin' of this camp, ready to detect an' take advantages of any
- weakenin' of sperit on the Wolfville part. So far Red Dog has been
- out-lucked, out-played, an' out-held. Wolfville has downed her on the
- deal, an' on the draw. But, to continue in the future as in the past,
- requires to-day that we acts promptly, an' in yoonison, an' give the
- sitooation, mentally speakin', the best turn in the box.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What for a play would it be?&rdquo; asks Dan Boggs, doubtfully, as he rises and
- bows stiffly to Enright, who bows stiffly in return; &ldquo;whatever for a play
- would it be to rope up one of these yere lecture sharps, which the same I
- goes ag'inst the other night in Tucson? He could stampede over an' put us
- up a talk in the warehouse of the New York Store; an' I'm right yere to
- say a lecture would look mighty meetropolitan, that a-way, an' lay over
- Red Dog like four kings an' an ace.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whatever was this yere ghost dancer you adverts to lecturin' about?&rdquo; asks
- Jack Moore.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never do hear the first of it,&rdquo; replies Boggs. &ldquo;Me an' Old Monte, the
- stage driver, is projectin' about Tucson at the time we strikes this
- lecture game, an* it's about half dealt out when he gets in on it. But as
- far as we keeps tabs, he's talkin' about Roosia an' Siberia, an' how they
- were pesterin' an' playin' it low on the Jews. He has a lay-out of maps
- an' sech, an' packs the whole racket with him from deal box to check-rack.
- Folks as <i>sabes</i> lectures allows he turns as strong a game, with as
- high a limit, as any sport that ever charged four bits for a back seat.
- The lecture sharp's all right; the question is do you-alls deem highly of
- the scheme? If it's the sense of this yere town, it don't take two days to
- cut this short-horn out of the Tucson herd an' drive him over yere.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Onder other, an' what one might call a more concrete condition of public
- feelin',&rdquo; says Doc Peets, cutting rapidly and diplomatically into the
- talk, &ldquo;the hint of our esteemed townsman would be accepted on the instant.
- But to my mind this yere camp ain't in no proper frame of mind for
- lectures on Roosia. It'll be full of trouble,&mdash;sech a talk. I <i>sabes</i>
- Roosia as well as I does an ace. Thar's an old silver tip they calls the
- Czar, which is their language for a sort o' national chief of scouts, an'
- he's always trackin' 'round for trouble. Thar's bound to be no end of what
- you might call turmoil in a lecture on Roosia, and the sensibilities of
- Wolfville, already harrowed, ain't in no shape to bear it. Now, while
- friend Boggs has been talkin', my idees has followed off a different
- waggon track. What we-all needs, is not so much a lecture, which is for a
- day, but somethin' lastin', sech as the example of a refined an' elevated
- home life abidin' in our very midst. What Wolfville pines for is the
- mollifyin' inflooence of woman. Shorely we has Faro Nell! who is
- pleasantly present with us, a-settin' back thar alongside Cherokee Hall;
- an' that gent never makes a moccasin track in Wolfville who don't prize
- an' value Nell. Thar ain't a six-shooter in camp but what would bark
- itse'f hoarse in her behalf. But Nell's young; merely a yearlin' as it
- were. What we wants is the picture of a happy household where the feminine
- part tharof, in the triple capacity of woman, wife an' mother, while
- cherishin' an' carin' for her husband, sheds likewise a radiant inflooence
- for us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Whoopee! for Doc Peets!&rdquo; shouts Faro Nell, flourishing her broad sombrero
- over her young curls.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pausin' only to thank our fair young townswoman,&rdquo; says Doc Peets, bowing
- gallantly to Faro Nell, who waves her hand in return, &ldquo;for her
- endorsements, which the same is as flatterin' as it is priceless, I
- stampedes on to say that I learns from first sources, indeed from the gent
- himse'f, that one of the worthiest citizens of Wolfville, Mr. Killifer,
- who is on the map as blacksmith at the stage station, has a wife in the
- states. I would recommend that Mr. Killifer be requested to bring on this
- esteemable lady to keep camp for him. The O. K. Restaurant will lose a
- customer, the same bein' the joint where Kif gets his daily <i>con-carne</i>;
- but Rucker, the landlord, will not repine for that. What will be Rucker's
- loss will be general gain, an' for the welfare of Wolfville, Rucker makes
- a sacrifice. Mr. Chairman, my su'gestion takes the form of a motion.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which said motion,&rdquo; responds Enright, with such vigorous application of
- his fist to the purpose of a gavel that nervous spirits might well fear
- for the results, &ldquo;which said motion, onless I hears a protest, goes as it
- lays. Thar bein' no objection the chair declares it to be the commands of
- Wolfville that Syd Killifer bring on his wife. What heaven has j'ined
- together, let no gent&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;See yere, Mr. Chairman!&rdquo; interposes Killifer, with a mixture of decision
- and diffidence, &ldquo;I merely interferes to ask whether, as the he'pless
- victim of this on-looked for uprisin', do my feelin's count? Which if I
- ain't in this&mdash;if it's regarded as the correct caper to lay waste the
- future of a gent, who in his lowly way is doin' his best to make good his
- hand, why! I ain't got nothin' to say. I'm impugnin' no gent's motives,
- but I'm free to remark, these yere proceeding strikes me as the froote of
- reckless caprice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will say to our fellow gent,&rdquo; says Enright with much dignity, &ldquo;that
- thar's no disp'sition to force a play to which he seems averse. If from
- any knowledge we s'posed we entertained of the possession of a sperit on
- his part, which might rise to the aid of a general need&mdash;I shorely
- hopes I makes my meanin' plain&mdash;we over-deals the kyards, all we can
- do is to throw our hands in the diskyard an' shuffle an' deal ag'in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not at all, an' no offence given, took or meant!&rdquo; hastily retorts
- Killifer, as he balances himself uneasily upon his feet, and surveys
- first, Enright and then Peets. &ldquo;I has the highest regard for the chair,
- personal, an' takes frequent occasion to remark that I looks on Doc Peets
- as the best eddicated scientist I ever sees in my life. But this yere
- surge into my domestic arrangements needs to be considered. You-alls don't
- know the lady in question, which, bein' as it's my wife, I ain't assoomin'
- no airs when I says I does.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Does she look like me, Kif?&rdquo; asks Faro Nell from her perch near Cherokee
- Hall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None whatever, Nell!&rdquo; responds Killifer. &ldquo;To be shore! I ain't basked
- none in her society for several years, an' my mem'ry is no doubt blurred
- by stampedes, an' prairie fires, an' cyclones, an' lynchin's, an' other
- features of a frontier career; but she puts me in mind, as I recalls the
- lady, of an Injun uprisin' more'n anythin' else. Still, she's as good a
- woman as ever founds a flap-jack. But she's haughty; that's what she is,
- she's haughty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I might add,&rdquo; goes on Killifer, in a deprecatory way, &ldquo;that inasmuch as I
- ain't jest lookin' for the camp yere to turn to me in its hour of need,
- this proposal to transplant the person onder discussion to Wolfville, is
- an honour as onexpected as a rattlesnake in a roll of blankets. But
- you-alls knows me!&rdquo;&mdash;And here Killifer braces himself desperately.&mdash;&ldquo;What
- the camp says, goes! I'm a <i>vox populi</i> sort of sport, an' the last
- citizen to lay down on a duty. Still!&rdquo;&mdash;here Killifer's courage
- begins to ebb a little&mdash;&ldquo;I advises we go about this yere enterprise
- mighty conserv'tive. My wife has her notions, an' now I thinks of it she
- ain't likely to esteem none high neither of our Wolfville ways. All I can
- say, gents, is that if she takes a notion ag'in us, she's as liable to
- break even as any lady I knows.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar ain't a gent here but what honours Kif,&rdquo; says the sanguine Peets, as
- he looks encouragingly at Killifer, who has resumed his seat and is
- gloomily shaking his head, &ldquo;for bein' frank an' free in this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I don't want you-alls to spread your blankets on no ant-hill, an'
- then blame me!&rdquo; interrupts Killifer dejectedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe, Mr. Chairman,&rdquo; continues Doc Peets, &ldquo;we fully onderstands the
- feelin's of our townsman in this matter. But I'm convinced of the
- correctness of my first view. Thar can shorely be nothin' in the daily
- life of Wolfville at which the lady could aim a criticism, an' we needs
- the beneficent example of a home. I would tharfore insist on my plan with
- perhaps a modification.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I rises to ask the Preesidin' Officer a question!&rdquo; interrupts Dave Tutt.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let her roll!&rdquo; retorts Enright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How would it be to invite Kif's wife to come yere on a visit?&rdquo; queries
- Tutt. &ldquo;Sorter take her on probation! That's the way an oncle of mine back
- in Missouri j'ines the Meth'dist Church. An' it's lucky the congregation
- takes them precautions; which they saves the trouble of cuttin' the old
- felon out of the herd later, when he falls from grace. Which last he
- shorely does!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not waitin' for the chair to answer,&rdquo; replies Doc Peets, &ldquo;I holds the
- limitation of Tutt to be good. I tharfore pinches down my original
- resolootion to the effect that Kif bring his wife yere for a month. Let
- her stack up ag'inst our daily game, an' triumph through a deal or so, an'
- she'll never quit Wolfville nor Wolfville her. I shorely holds the present
- occasion the openin' of a new era.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It is a month later, perhaps, when everybody assembles at the post-office
- to receive the lady on whom the local public has built so many hopes.
- Killifer has gone over to Tucson to act as her escort into Wolfville, and,
- as he said, &ldquo;to sorter break the effect.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She is an iron-visaged heroine. As Killifer hands her from the stage&mdash;a
- ceremony upon which he bestows that delicate care wherewith he would have
- aided the unloading of so much dynamite&mdash;Doc Peets steps gallantly
- forward, raising his hat. Doc Peets is the proprietor of the only stiff
- hat in town, and presumes on it.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0253.jpg" alt="0253 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0253.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who is that insultin' drunkard, Mr. Killifer?&rdquo; demands the lady, as she
- bends her eyes on the suave Peets, with such point-blank wrath that it
- silences the salutation on Peets' lips; &ldquo;no friend of your'n I hope?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I says it in confidence,&rdquo; remarks Old Monte, as an hour later he
- refreshes himself at the bar of the Red Light, &ldquo;for I holds it
- onprofessional to go blowin' the private affairs of my passengers, but I
- shorely thinks the old grizzly gives Kif a clawin' on the way over. I
- hears him yell like a wolf back in Long's canyon. To be shore! he's inside
- an' I can't see, but I'm offerin' two to one up to $100 she was lickin'
- him; if I don't I'm a Siwash!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It turns out as Killifer predicted. He read the lady aright. There is
- nothing in Wolfville to which she yields approval. It would be as
- impossible as it would be terrific, to repeat in print the conduct of this
- remarkable woman. She utterly abashes Enright; while such hare-hearts as
- Jack Moore, Cherokee Hall, Dave Tutt, Texas Thompson, Short Creek Dave and
- Dan Boggs, fly from her like quicksilver. Even Doc Peets acknowledges
- himself defeated and put to naught. The least of her feats is the invasion
- of a peaceful poker game to which Killifer is party, and the sweeping
- confiscation of every dollar in the bank on claim that it is money
- ravished from Killifer by venal practices. The mildest of her plans is one
- to assail the Red Light with an axe, should she ever detect the odour of
- whiskey about Killifer again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' do you know, Doc!&rdquo; observes Enright, a fortnight later, as they meet
- for their midday drink, &ldquo;the boys sorter lays it on you. You know me, Doc!
- I'll stand up ag'in the iron for you; but as a squar' man, with a fairly
- balanced mind, I'm bound to admit the boys is right. Now I don't say they
- feels resentful; it's more like they was mournful over what used to be,
- an' a day of peace gone by. But you knows what people be whose burdens is
- more'n they can bear; an' if I was you, this yere lady or I would leave
- the camp. I'm the last gent to go dictatin' about the details of another
- gent's game; but you an' me, Doc, has been old friends, an' as a warnin'
- from a source which means you well, I gives it to you cold the camp is
- gettin' hostile.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It is always a spectacle to inspire, to witness a great soul rise to an
- occasion. Doc Peets never so proves the power of his nature as now, when
- the tremendous shadow of &ldquo;Kif's wife&rdquo; has fallen across Wolfville like a
- blight. Peets, following Enright's forebodings, holds a long and secret
- conference with the unhappy Killifer. That night Peets rides to Tucson.
- The next day Old Monte, with his six horses a-foam, comes crashing into
- Wolfville two hours ahead of schedule. Before even a mail bag is thrown
- off, Old Monte unpouches a telegram received at the Tucson office for
- Mistress Killifer. Its earmark is Illinois; its contents moving. No matter
- what it tells, its news is cogent enough to decide the lady's mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next morning this dread woman departs, leaving, as she came, with a
- withering look at all around. That night Killifer gets drunk. Wolfville
- not only pardons Killifer in his weakness; it joins him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you suppresses the facts, Kif, when you says she's haughty,&rdquo; observes
- Dan Boggs. &ldquo;Haughty, as a deescription, ain't a six-spot!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's with no purpose, Kif,&rdquo; says Doc Peets, as he fills his glass, &ldquo;to
- discourage you&mdash;whom I sympathises with as an onfortunate, an'
- respects as a dead game gent&mdash;that I yereby invites the pop'lation to
- join me in a drink of congratulation on Wolfville's escape from your wife.
- An' all informal though this assemblage be, I offers a resolootion that
- this, the 23d of August, the date when the lady in question pulls her
- freight, be an' remain forevermore a day of yearly thanksgivin' to
- Wolfville.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I libates to that myse'f!&rdquo; says Killifer as he drains his cup to
- the last lingering drop. &ldquo;Also I trusts this camp will proceed with
- caution the next time it turns in to play my domestic hand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0069" id="link2H_4_0069"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- BEARS
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>ears are peaceful
- folk. They are a mild and lowly citizenry of the woods&mdash;I'm talking
- of the black sort&mdash;and shuffle modestly away the moment they hear you
- coming. We get many of our impressions of the ferocity of animals and the
- deadly poisons of reptiles from an unworthy sort of hearsay evidence. Much
- of it comes from Mexicans and Indians rather than from real experience.
- Now I wouldn't traduce either the Mexicans or the Indians, for their lot
- is one of hard, sodden ignorance; but it must be conceded that they're by
- no means careful historians, and run readily to tales of the marvellous
- and the tragic. I am going back to a bear story I have in mind before I
- get through; but I want to interject here, while I think of it, that
- though the centipede, the rattlesnake, the tarantula and the Gila monster,
- have bitter repute as able to deal death with their poisonous feet or
- fangs, I was never, in my years on the plains and in the mountains, able
- to secure proof of even the shallowest sort that a death, whether of man
- or animal, had ever resulted from the sting of any one of these. On the
- other hand, I have been with men who were bitten by rattlesnakes, or stung
- by tarantulas; or who while asleep had suffered as the inadvertent
- promenade of a centipede, with its hundred hooked, poison-exuding feet;
- but none of them died. They were sick in an out-of-sort, headache fashion
- for a day or two; the bitten place inflamed and was sore for a week or a
- month; that was all. I suppose I've known of fully one hundred horses,
- cows and sheep which were bitten by rattlesnakes; none died. They were
- invariably fanged in the nose, too, as they grazed towards my lord of the
- rattlers. On more than one occasion I kept the animal so bitten in sight
- to note results. Its head would swell and puff; it would lounge about with
- a sick listlessness for several days; then the poison would wear away in
- force, and back to its grass it would go with the wire-edge appetite of a
- sailor home from sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- But about bears. I was remarking that my black, shaggy cousins of the
- woods were a peaceful folk. So much is this true, and so little do their
- neighbours apprehend violence at their clumsy hands, that they who live in
- regions which abound in bears evince not the least alarm about the safety
- of their children. The babies, some as young as five or six years, roam
- the same mountains with the bears; and, while the latter will swoop upon a
- pig and run dangers with wide-open eyes in doing it, never did I hear of
- one who disturbed a ringlet on a child's head. They had daily
- opportunities enough, for many are the households to live in the wide,
- pine-sown Rockies.
- </p>
- <p>
- Our bears, too, are creatures of vast physical power. Often, as I rode the
- mountain for cattle, have I come across a dead and fallen pine tree, which
- would have defeated the best efforts of a horse to move, completely torn
- from its bed in the earth and leaves, and either overturned or thrown one
- side by the mighty arms of a bear. He was in search of a dinner cf grubs&mdash;those
- white, helpless worms which make their dull homes under rotten logs&mdash;and
- Sir Bear made no more ado of lifting and laying aside a pine tree in his
- grub-hunt than would you or I of a billet of firewood.
- </p>
- <p>
- While in the mountains I marvelled over the fact that the bears and the
- mountain lions never assailed the young calves. The hills were rife with
- cattle, and every spring found the canyons and oak-bushed slopes a perfect
- nursery of calves. And yet neither the panthers nor the bears disturbed
- them. It was due, I think, more to the bellicose character of the old cow
- and her relatives, than any uprightness of character on the part of the
- bears, and the panthers. Let a calf raise but one yell of distress in
- those mountains&mdash;and I assure you he can make their walls and valleys
- ring with his youthful music when so disposed&mdash;and, out of canyons
- and off mesas, over logs and crashing through the oak bushes, will come
- plunging all the cattle within hearing. Not thirty seconds will elapse
- before as many cattle will be by the side of the threatened calf, lusting
- for battle. They make such a phalanx of sharp, threatening horns, coupled
- with their rolling, wrath-red eyes and ferocious breathings, that, I
- warrant you, they have so shocked the nerves of past bears and panthers,
- it has become instinct with these latter to give the whole horned,
- truculent brood a wide berth.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Indians are very fond of the bear for his wisdom, and he divides their
- respect with the beaver as a personage of sagacity. The curiosity of my
- shaggy friend would shame any boy or girl of ten. You may be sure, were a
- bear to visit you for a week at your home, he would open every door,
- ransack every bureau, take every garment off every hook in every closet&mdash;and
- I had almost said &ldquo;try it on&rdquo;&mdash;before he had been with you an hour.
- Not a box nor a barrel, not a nook nor cranny, from cellar to ridge pole,
- would escape his investigation. His black nose would sniff at every crack,
- his black hand explore every crevice. Nor, beyond what he bestowed in his
- remorseless stomach, would he destroy anything. I have the black coat of a
- bear at my house, who might be wearing it himself to-day, were it not for
- his curiosity.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a salt spring near my camp on the upper Red River; perhaps two
- miles away, which is &ldquo;near&rdquo; in the mountains. This salt spring was popular
- with the deer. They repaired thither to lick the salt earth about the
- waters. I had, among the lumber at my camp, a big, two-spring trap of
- steel; I suppose it must have weighed sixty pounds. It occurred to me that
- a lazy way to kill a deer would be to set this wide-jawed engine near the
- spring and let one walk into it. I'm not proud of this plan as a method in
- deer-killing, and wouldn't do it now. On this occasion, however I was not
- particular. I &ldquo;set&rdquo; the trap at my camp&mdash;for I had to use a
- hand-spike to crush down the springs, and it all gave me a deal of work
- and trouble&mdash;and then, with its jaws wide open, but held so that it
- wouldn't nip me in case it did snap, I crept carefully aboard my pony and
- rode over to the spring. The next morning early I had to go again to
- remove the trap, as during the day the cattle would take the places of the
- deer at this delectable salt spring, and I didn't care to break the legs
- of a thirty-dollar steer with my trapping. I went over while it was yet
- dark, and found no deer in the trap. I took it and hid it, face downward&mdash;the
- jaws still spread and &ldquo;set&rdquo;&mdash;by the of a big yellow pine log, which
- stretched its decayed length along the slope of the canyon. There I left
- it, intending to return and rearrange it for deer at dusk.
- </p>
- <p>
- It snowed that day, and as I grew lazy towards night, I left my trap where
- I'd hidden it by the yellow pine log. The deer would have one night of
- safety. What was safety for the deer proved otherwise for the bear.
- </p>
- <p>
- The following day I rode over just as the canyons were getting dark and
- the cattle climbing out of them to pass the night on the hills. Behold! my
- trap was gone!
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a great flourish of tracks in the snow; long plantigrade
- impressions like the bare footprints of some giant! I knew that a bear had
- somehow acquired my trap, or the trap, him; at that time I couldn't tell
- which. To make it short, however, it came to this: The bear, scouting in a
- loaferish way down the hill, and pausing no doubt to make an estimate of
- the probable grubs he would find beneath this particular yellow pine next
- summer, had chanced upon the trap. Here was a great find. Thoughts of
- grubs and common edible things at once deserted him. The mysterious
- novelty he had found took possession of his addle-pate like a new toy. A
- wolf or a fox would have smelled the odour of my handling, even off the
- cold steel of the trap, and been over the hills and far away in a
- twinkling. Your wolf is the canniest of timber folk; a grey Scotchman of
- the mountains. But my bear was reared on a different bottle. He sat down
- at once and actually took the new plaything in his lap. Then it would seem
- as if he deliberately thrust his paw into it and sprung its savage jaws on
- his forearm.
- </p>
- <p>
- In his first wrathful surprise, my bear tore up the snow and bushes for
- twenty feet about; but at last he set off with the trap on his foot.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was late. For half an hour I followed the broad track where his
- bearship had dragged the trap in the snow at a gallop. It was dark when at
- last I turned off for camp. Bright and betimes, I took the trail next day.
- It carried me over some ten miles of rough, close country. About midday I
- stood on the bluff edge of the Canyon Caliente, picking a pathway with my
- eyes along its steep, perilous side for my pony to get down. The bear had
- crossed here; but he was in the roughest of moods, and seemingly made no
- more of hurling himself over twenty-foot precipices&mdash;himself and my
- trap&mdash;or sublimely sliding down dangerous descents of hundreds of
- feet where foothold was impossible, than you would of eating buttered
- buns. So I had to pick out paths for myself; I couldn't trust to so
- reckless and uncivil an engineer as my bear.
- </p>
- <p>
- As I sat in the saddle running a quick eye over the slope for a trail, I,
- of an instant, heard a most surprising noise. It was indeed a noble
- racket, and might have passed for a blacksmith shop. But I knew the hills
- too well. It was of a verity my bear; and from the riot he was making, it
- was plain I would have to get there soon if I wanted to save the trap.
- </p>
- <p>
- This formidable uproar came from across the Caliente, perhaps half a mile.
- I slid from the saddle and went forward afoot. It didn't take long to
- cover the distance. I fell and tumbled down the first third, much as the
- bear had done a bit earlier.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once on the other side, I came upon my rough gentleman cautiously, and
- found him sitting by the side of a round, boulder-like rock, something the
- size and contour of a load of hay. And he was smiting the enduring granite
- with my trap in a way which told more of his feelings than would have been
- possible with mere words. He would raise his arm clumsily, 60-pound trap
- and all, and then bring it against the rock with all the fervour of rage
- and giant strength.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was so wrapt in the enterprise, he never heard me until a shot from my
- Winchester met him just under the ear. One shot did it; and I had trap and
- bear. He had ruined the trap; one spring was broken and the whole
- disparaged beyond my power to repair. Wherefore I stripped him of his
- black overcoat to pay for the damage he had done; and that and the grease
- I took from him covered all costs and damages.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0070" id="link2H_4_0070"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE BIG TOUCH
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>e fren', Mollie
- Matches,&rdquo; observed Chucky.
- </p>
- <p>
- That was our introduction. A moment later Chucky whispered in a hoarse
- aside:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Matches is d' dip I chins youse about, who gets d' Hummin' Boid t'run
- into him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Matches,&rdquo; as Chucky called him, was a sad, grey, broken man. Years and a
- life of flight and anxious furtivity had told on him. His eye was dancing
- and birdlike; resting on nothing, roving always; the sure mark of one sort
- of criminal. Matches drank for an hour before he felt at ease. That time
- arrived, however, and I took advantage of it to feed my curiosity. It was
- no easy matter, but at last I won him by a deft blending of flattery and
- drink to talk of his crimes. And indeed I fear&mdash;for I suppose the
- expert thief does plume himself a bit on his art&mdash;that Matches took
- some sort of wretched pride in his illicit pocket searchings.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' biggest touch I ever makes,&rdquo; said Matches, in response to a query,
- &ldquo;was $36,000; quite a bunch of dough. Gettin' it was easy; gettin' away
- wit' it was d' squeak.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We toins d' trick on d' train from Albany. D' tip comes straight to me in
- New York that a bloke is goin' to draw $36,000 from d' Albany bank on such
- a day. I makes up a mob; t'ree stalls an' meself;&mdash;all pretty fly we
- was&mdash;an' lands in Albany.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We gets onto d' party who's to be woiked early in d' mornin', an' shadows
- him so dost he's never out of reach. Our play is to follow him to d' bank
- an' do him wit 'd' drop game. If that misses, we're to stay wit' him till
- d' bundle's ours be one racket or another.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This sucker is pretty soon himself, see! He ain't such a mut as we
- figgers. His train starts at 1 o'clock, an' he takes in d' bank on his way
- to d' station.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course we was wit' him; but he's dead leary an' never t'rows himself
- open to be woiked. D' stuff is in t'ousand-dollar willyums, an' as he just
- sinks it in his keck d' minute his hooks is onto it, an' never stops to
- count or run his lamps over it, we don't get no chanct to do d' drop. D'
- instant d' money's in his mits he plants it&mdash;all stretched out long
- in a big leather, it is&mdash;in his inside pocket, an' screws his nut for
- d' door. D' hack slams an' he's on his way to d' train.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes; we starts for d' station be another street. D' bloke ain't onto us
- yet, an' we tries not to plant a scare into him. He's leary enough as it
- is; just havin' such a roll wit' him rattles him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So I makes up me mind to do d' job on d' train runnin' into New York. As
- he sinks d' stuff away, I notes how d' ends of d' bills sticks out over d'
- pocket-book. Me idee is to weed it&mdash;get d' dough an' leave d' leather
- in his pocket&mdash;if I can make d' play. Weedin' was d' way to do; you
- gets d' long green an 'd' sucker still has d' leather to feel of, an' it's
- some time before he tumbles he's been touched, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' guy wit 'd' stuff plants himself in a seat. Two of me stalls sits
- ahead of him, me an' me other pal is behint him. We only waits now for him
- to get up an' come along d' aisle of d' car to get in our hooks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Foist I goes d' len'th of d' train to see who's onto it. I always does
- that; I wants to see if any guy aboard knows Mollie Matches. You see, if
- there is, when d' holler comes, an' some duck declares himself shy his
- spark, or roll, or ticker, it's 40 to 1 Mr. Know-all, who's onto me for a
- crook, sends a tip to d' p'lice: 'Matches was on d' train!' an' I gets d'
- collar. No, I never woiks when one of me acquaintances is along be
- accident. D' cops, in such case, as I says, is put onto me an' spots me
- wit 'd' foist yell.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I covers d' train an' comes back. There's no guy on me visiting list
- who's along. So I sits down wit' me pal to d' rear of d' sucker an' waits.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's not for long. D' leather's still in his inside keck, 'cause I can
- see him pressin' on it wit' his mit to make sure it's there. At last he
- gets up to go to d' watercooler. I sees d' move comin', an' is in d' aisle
- before him. So's me stalls. From start to finish no one bungles d' stunt.
- There's a tangle&mdash;all be accident, of course&mdash;every mug
- 'pologises, we break away, an' I've got d' blunt. But d' woist part is, I
- can't weed it. D' stuff won't come no other way, an' so I lifts leather
- an' all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's due to be a roar in no time;&mdash;this mark's bound to be on
- he's frisked!&mdash;so I splits out each stall's bit in a hurry an' says:
- 'Every gent for himself! an' if youse is nipped, don't knock!' an' then I
- sherries me nibs for d' rear coach. It was great graft. Me bit was $9,000,
- an' I has me plan all set up to save it an' meself wit' it. This is d'
- racket I has in me cocoa.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In d' last coach is an old w'ite choker&mdash;a pulpit t'umper, you
- understand. Wit' him is his daughter, an' wit' her is her kid. Mebby d'
- kid, say, is six years. I heads for 'em an' begins to give d' old skate a
- jolly. I was dead strong on patter in them days, an' puts it up I'm a
- gospel sharp from Hamilton. I saws it off on his nibs how me choich boins
- down, an' how I'm linin' out to New York to see if d' good folks down
- there won't spring their rolls&mdash;cough up be way of donations, you
- understand, an' help us slam up a new box&mdash;choich, I means&mdash;so
- we can go back to our graft.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's all right. Me razzle dazzle takes like spring water. In two minutes
- me an 'd' old party an 'd' loidy, an' for that matter d' kid, is t'ick as
- t'ieves. We was bunched together, singin' 'Jesus, Lover of me Soul,' to
- beat four of a kind, when d' galoot I skins for his bundle lifts d' shout
- he's been done, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This dub who lose is t'ree coaches ahead. D' foist we knows of his
- troubles&mdash;all but me&mdash;d' Con' comes an' locks d' door. No one
- can get off d' train. Then he stops an' taps d' wires wit' a machine from
- d' baggage car an' sends d' story chasin' into New York.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Party t'run down for $36,000, says d' message; 'swag an' crooks still on
- me train. Send orders.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' order comes to keep d' doors locked an' run to New York wit' no more
- stops. An' after puttin' a Brakey in each coach to see what goes on,
- that's what dey does. We go spinnin' into New York at forty-five miles an
- hour.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Naturally, I'm in a steam. I goes all right wit 'd' Con', an' d' train
- crew, as a sky pilot, but how was I to make d' riffle wit' de fly cop of
- New York, who'd be waitin' for d' train&mdash;me mug in d' gallery, an'
- four out o' five of 'em twiggin' me be me foist name? But I t'ought it
- out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When d' train rumbles into d' Gran' Central, d' door is slammed open an'
- we all gets up to go. A fly-cop is comin' in just as we starts. I grabs up
- d' kid to carry him, see! bein' d' old preacher party nor d' skirt ain't
- so able as me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! it was a winner. I buries me map in d' kid's make-up, gets between
- d' goil an' d' old stumblin' mucker of a gran'dad, an' walks slap t'rough
- d' entire day-push of d' Central office. An' hard, sharp marks dey is to
- beat, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fly dey is, but not swift enough for Matches wit a scare on, see! Not a
- dub of 'em tumbles to me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In two moves an' ten seconts I'm in d' street. As I goes along I pulls a
- ring off one of me north hooks wit' me teet,' an' t'oins it over to d' kid
- as his bit for makin' d' good front for me. No; d' others don't catch on,
- but d' way he cinches it in his small mit shows me he's goin' to save it
- out for fair.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I hits d' street I drops d' youngone, who's still froze to his
- solitaire, an' grabs off a cab, an' in twenty minutes I'm buried where all
- d' p'lice in New York couldn't toin me up in a t'ousand years.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; me pals got d' collar, an' each does a stretch. But dey lays dead
- about me; never peached nor squealed. I win out.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who?&mdash;d' w'ite choker an' his party? Nit; never hears of 'em ag'in.
- For four days I gets one of d' fam'ly&mdash;he's a crook who's under cover
- for a bank trick, an' who's eddicted&mdash;to read me all d' poipers. I
- wants to see if d' preacher an' his goil gives up anyt'ing about d' ring I
- swaps to d' kid.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never hears a peep! Nixie; dey was on all right, you bet your life! when
- their lamps lights on that jewelry; but most likely dey needs d' ring in
- their graft. It was a spark wort' five hundred cases from any fence in d'
- land, an' so d' old guy an' his goil sort o' stan's for d' play, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0071" id="link2H_4_0071"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE FATAL KEY
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>oung Jenkins
- prided himself on sharp eyes. He said he could &ldquo;give a hawk cards and
- spades.&rdquo; He could find four-leaf clovers where no one else could see them.
- He took in the smallest detail of the scenery all about him.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a result, young Jenkins was a great finder of small trifles, and that
- he might miss nothing, lost, strayed or stolen, he went about during the
- little journeys of the day, with his eyes searching the ground. And he
- picked up many trinkets of a personal sort that other men had lost.
- Nothing of much value, perhaps, but it served to please young Jenkins, and
- it gave him a chance to boast of the sharp, devouring character of his
- eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Even as a child, young Jenkins was prone to find things. He told how once
- his talents as a retriever made him the subject of parental suspicion. He
- was ten years old when he picked up a four-blade Barlow knife.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where did you get it?&rdquo; queried old Jenkins, as young Jenkins displayed
- his treasure trove.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Found it,&rdquo; was the reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you found it!&rdquo; snorted old Jenkins. &ldquo;Well, take it straight back, and
- put it where you found it, and don't 'find' any more. If you do, I'll lick
- you out of your knickerbockers!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In spite of such discouragement, young Jenkins kept on finding all sorts
- of bric-à-brac. He does even to this day.
- </p>
- <p>
- One evening young Jenkins had a disagreeable adventure, as the fruit of
- his talent, which for an hour or so made him wish he had weaker vision.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was on Great Jones Street, and young Jenkins, hurrying along, noticed
- in the half moonlight a big store key, where the owner had dropped it just
- after locking up for the night. The hour was full midnight.
- </p>
- <p>
- Young Jenkins possessed himself of the key. He looked at it as he held it
- in his hand, and wondered how the careless shopman would open up in the
- morning without it.
- </p>
- <p>
- From where it lay it wasn't hard to infer the store to which the key
- belonged. Yet to make sure on that point it occurred to young Jenkins that
- he might better try the lock with it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Young Jenkins had just fitted the big key to the lock when some one seized
- him by the wrist. It startled him so that he dropped the key and allowed
- it to go rattling along the sidewalk. As young Jenkins looked up he saw
- that the party who had got him was a member of the police.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I was trying to unlock the door!&rdquo; stammered young Jenkins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I saw what you were about,&rdquo; said the officer with suspicious severity.
- &ldquo;What were you monkeying with the door for? You aren't the owner of this
- store?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; said young Jenkins, much impressed. &ldquo;No, sir; I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nor one of the clerks?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; replied young Jenkins again, &ldquo;I have nothing to do with the
- store. I found the key, and thought I'd see if it opened this door.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did you want to see if it would open the door for? Don't you think
- it is a little late for a joke of that sort?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It wasn't a joke,&rdquo; said young Jenkins, beginning to perspire rather
- copiously; &ldquo;it was an experiment. I found the key on the sidewalk, and
- wanted to see&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; interrupted the blue coat with a fine scorn; &ldquo;you wanted to see if
- you could get into the store and rob it bare. That is what you wanted to
- see. You're a box-worker, if ever I met one, and if I hadn't come along
- you would have had this bin cracked and cleaned out in another ten
- minutes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I told you I found the key,&rdquo; protested young Jenkins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right about your finding the key!&rdquo; said the policeman in
- supreme contempt. &ldquo;You found the key and I found you, and we'll both keep
- what we've found. That's square, ain't it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And in spite of all young Jenkins could say at that late hour of the
- twenty-four, the faithful officer dragged him to the station, where a
- faithful sergeant faithfully registered him, and a faithful turnkey locked
- him faithfully up.
- </p>
- <p>
- As young Jenkins sat unhappy in his cell, while vermin sparred with him
- for an opening, he registered a vow that never again would he find
- anything.
- </p>
- <p>
- Young Jenkins wouldn't pick up a twenty-dollar gold piece were he to meet
- one to-day in the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0072" id="link2H_4_0072"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- AN OCEAN ERROR
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>o; neither my name
- nor the name of my vessel can I give. Our navy has a way of
- courtmartialing its officers who wax garrulous.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was just as the Lieutenant called for the <i>creme de menthe</i>, that
- may properly succeed a dinner well ordered and well stowed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But you are welcome to the raw facts,&rdquo; continued the Lieutenant. &ldquo;It was
- during those anxious days that went before the penning in of Cervera at
- Santiago. We had been ordered on a ticklish service. Schley was over south
- of the island on a prowl for the Spanish fleet. Sampson was, or should
- have been, off the Windward Passage similarly employed. Cervera was last
- heard of two weeks before at Barbadoes. Then he disappeared like a ghost;
- no one knew where his smoke would be sighted next. The one sure thing, of
- which all were aware, was that with Sampson anywhere between the Mole and
- Cape Mazie, and Schley searching the wide seas south of Cuba, Cervera
- might easily with little luck and less seamanship dodge either and appear
- off Havana. There the cardboard fleet left on blockade wouldn't, with such
- heavy odds, last as long as a drink of whiskey.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It stood thus when our orders came to my Captain to proceed to Bayou
- Hondu, some seventy miles west of Havana, and there stand off and on, like
- a policeman walking his beat, in what would be the path of Cervera should
- he work to the rear of Schley and to the north of Cuba by the way of St.
- Antonio.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Our vessel was detailed on this duty because of her perfect order and
- speed of seventeen knots. Our heavy armament was eight 4-inch broadside
- guns, with a 6-inch rifle forward and another mounted aft. Our orders
- were: If Cervera came upon us to fight!&mdash;steam as slowly as might be
- for Havana and fight!&mdash;and to keep fighting until sunk or sure that
- the block-aders off Havana were warned, whether by our signals or our
- racket, of Cervera's coming.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was a grinding task, this lonely patrol off Bayou Hondu. The rains had
- just begun, the weather was a dripping hash of fog and squall and rain. If
- Cervera didn't come, it meant discomfort; and if he did, it meant death.
- Take it full and by, the outlook was depressing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At night no light burned and the ship was dark as a coffin. This, with
- the service, contributed to keep us all in a mood of alert nervousness.
- Cervera's ships would also be dark. We didn't care to be crept upon, and
- get our first notice of his advent from the broadside that sent us to the
- bottom like an anvil.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We had been on this dreary duty some ten days. It was a dark, heavy
- night. I myself had the bridge, and the captain, whose anxiety kept him
- up, was seated in the starboard corner, dozing. His sea cloak was thrown
- over his head to keep out the weather. We were working to the eastward,
- with engines at quarter speed, and with a head sea running, were making
- perhaps three knots.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The ship's bells were not being struck for the hours, and I had just
- looked at my watch by the light of the binnacle. It was half-past two in
- the morning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'How's your head?' I asked of the man at the wheel, as I put up my
- timepiece.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'East by south, half south,' he replied.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This was taking us too much inshore. 'Starboard for a point!' I said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As I turned from the wheel I saw that which sent a thrill over me and
- brought me up all standing. It was the murky loom of a great ship, black
- and dim and dark and silent as ourselves. She was off our port quarter and
- not five hundred yards away. It gave me a start, I confess. None of our
- ships should be that far to the west of Havana. It was a sword to a sheath
- knife she was one of Cervera's advance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Instantly I reached for the electric button; and instantly the red and
- white lights, which stood for the letter of that night, burned in our
- semaphore. The stranger replied with a red over two white lights. It was
- the wrong letter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;With my first motion, the captain was on his feet; his hand gripped the
- lever that worked the engine bells.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Try her again!' he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Again I flashed the proper letter, and again came a queer reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The next moment the captain jammed the lever 'Full steam, ahead!' and a
- general call to quarters went singing through the ship.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Starboard!' shouted the captain to the man at the wheel; 'starboard!
- pull her over!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There was a vast churning from the propellers; the vessel leaped forward
- like a horse; the sailor climbed the wheel like a squirrel. We surged
- forward with a broad sheer to port. The next instant we opened on our dark
- visitor with every gun in the larboard battery. It wasn't ten seconds
- after she gave us the wrong signal when she got our broadside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The result was amazing. With the first crash of our guns the stranger
- went from utter darkness to the extreme of light. She flashed out all over
- like a Fall River steamer. Knowing who we were&mdash;for they bore orders
- for us&mdash;and realizing that there had been some mixing of signals, the
- officer on her bridge had the wit to turn on every light in his ship. It
- was an inspiration and saved them from a second broadside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who was she? One of our own vessels. Cervera was locked in Santiago and
- she had come up to tell us the news. Her officer blundered in giving out
- the wrong letter for the night, and thereby sowed the seed of our
- misunderstanding.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, beyond peppering her a bit, our fire did no harm. We were so close
- that most of our shot went over her. Still, I don't believe that vessel
- will ever get her signals fouled again. And it's just as well that way. If
- she had made the wrong talk to some one of our heavy-weights, the Oregon,
- for instance, she would have gone down like so much pig-iron.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0073" id="link2H_4_0073"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- SKINNY MIKE'S UNWISDOM
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">C</span>HUCKY was posed in
- his usual corner. As I came in he nodded sullenly as one whom the Fates
- ill-use. I craved of Chucky to name his drink; it was the surest way to
- thaw him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Make it beer,&rdquo; said Chucky.
- </p>
- <p>
- Now beer stood as a symbol of gloom with Chucky, as he himself had told
- me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's always d' way wit' me,&rdquo; said Chucky on that far occasion when he
- explained &ldquo;Beer&rdquo;, &ldquo;when I'm dead sore an' been gettin' it in d' neck, to
- order beer. It's d' sorrowfulest kind of booze, beer is; there's a sob in
- every bottle of it, see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Realising Chucky's low spirits by virtue of present beer, I suavely made
- query of his unknown grief and tendered sympathy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I've been done for me dough,&rdquo; replied Chucky, softening sulkily. &ldquo;You
- minds d' races at d' Springs? That's it; I gets t'run down be d' horses. I
- get d' gaff for fifty plunks. Now, fifty plunks ain't all d' money in d'
- woild; but it was wit' me. It was me fortune.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Chucky ruminated bitterly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I'm a good t'ing!&rdquo; he ejaculated, as he tilted his chair against the
- wall with an air of decision. &ldquo;I'll play d' jumpers agin, nit!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'at's d' use? I can't beat nothin'. Say! I couldn't beat a drum! I'm a
- mut to ever t'ink of it! I ought to give meself up to d' p'lice right now
- an' ast 'em to put me in Bloomin'dale or some other bug house. I'm nutty,
- that's what I am; an' that's for fair! Now, I'd as lief tell you. It's d'
- boss hard luck story, an' that ain't no vision!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In d' foist place, I was a rank sucker to d' point of deemin' meself a
- wise guy about d' horses. An' it so follows, bein' stuck on meself about
- horses, as I says, that when Skinny Mike blows in wit 'd' idee that he can
- pick d' winner of d' big event, I falls to d' play, an easy mark.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mike is an oldtime tout; an' wit' me feelin', as I says, dead fly, it
- ain't a minute before I'm addin' me ignorance to Mike's, an' we're runnin'
- over d' dopes in d' papers seein' what d' horses has done. To make a long
- story short, we settles it for a finish that War Song's out to win. Which,
- after all, ain't such a sucker t'eory.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'It's a cinch!' says Skinny Mike; 'War Song's got a pushover. Dey can't
- beat him; never in a t'ousand years!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It looks a sure tip to me, too; so I digs for me last dollar an' hocks me
- ticker besides, an' makes up d' fifty plunks I mentions. Mike sticks in
- fifty an' then takes d' whole roll an' screws his nut for d' Springs to
- get it up on War Song. Naw; I don't go. Mike's plenty to make d' play; an'
- besides I had me lamps on a sure t'ing for a tenner over on d' Bowery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course, while Mike's gone, I ain't doin' a t'ing but read d' poipers
- all to pieces. War Song's a 20-to-1 shot; I stan's to make a killin'&mdash;stan's
- to win a t'ousand plunks, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An', say! War Song win! Mebby I don't give d' yell of d' year when I sees
- it in d' print.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'W'at's eatin' youse, Chucky?' says me Rag, as I cuts loose me warwhoop.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'O, I ain't got no nut!' I says, givin' meself d' gran' jolly. 'No! not
- at all! I has to ast some mark to tell me me name, I don't t'ink! I'm
- cooney enough to get onto War Song, all d' same! Say! I'm d' soonest
- galoot that ever comes down d' pike!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' way I feels an' that's d' way I chins.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At last I cools off me dampers an' sets in to wait for Mike. Meanwhile I
- begins to figger how I'll blow d' stuff, see! an' settle what I'll buy.
- It's a case of money to boin an' I was gettin' me matches ready before
- even Mike shows up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Mike don't come. 'W'at th' 'ell!' I t'inks; 'Mike ain't crookt it; he
- ain't skipped wit' d' bundle?' An' say! you should a-seen me chew d' rag
- at d' idee.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I'm wrong on me lead. Mike hadn't welched, an' he hadn't been
- sandbagged. He comes creepin' along a day behint d' play, an' d' secont I
- gets me lamps on his mug I'm dead on we lose. I don't have to have me
- fortune told to tumble to that. Mike looks like five cents wort' of lard
- in a paper bag. An* here's d' song he sings.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mike says he goes to d' Springs all right, all right, an' is organised to
- get War Song for d' limit d' nex' day. It's that night, out be d' stables,
- when he chases up on a horsescraper&mdash;a sawed-off coon, he is&mdash;an
- 'd' horse-scraper breaks off a great yarn on Mike.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'I ain't no tout, an' dis ain't no tip,' Mike says d' coon says; 'it's a
- rev'lation. On d' dead! it's a prophecy! It's las' night. I'm sleepin' in
- d' stall nex' to a little horse named Dancer. All at onct I wakes up an'
- listens. It's that Dancer horse in d' nex' stall talkin' to himself. Over
- an' over agin he says: &ldquo;I'm goin' to win it! I'm goin' to win it!&rdquo; just
- like that.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; continued Chucky, &ldquo;you know Skinny Mike. There's a ghost goes wit'
- Mike, an' he's that sooperstitious, d' nigger's story has him on a string
- in a hully secont. He can't shake it off. Away he wanders an' dumps d'
- entire wad on Dancer, an' never puts a splinter on War Song at all.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'at do you t'ink of it? On d' level! w'at d' youse really t'ink of it?
- That Mike's a woild-beater; that's right; a woild-beater an' a wonder to
- boot! I'd like to trade him for a yaller dawg, an' do d' dawg!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did Dancer win?&rdquo; I asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Did Dancer win?&rdquo; repeated Chucky; and his tones breathed guttural scorn;
- &ldquo;d' old skate never even finished. Naw; he gets 'round on d' back stretch,
- stops, bites d' boy off his back, chases over be d' fence an' goes to
- eatin' grass; that's what Dancer does. He's a dandy race horse, or I don't
- want a cent! I'll bet me mudder-in-law on that Dancer some day. I tells
- Mike to take a run an' jump on himself. Naw,&rdquo; concluded Chucky, with a
- great gulp, &ldquo;Dancer don't win; War Song win.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0074" id="link2H_4_0074"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- MOLLIE PRESCOTT
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Wolfville)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he Cactus&rdquo; was the
- name bestowed upon her in Wolfville. Her signature, if she had written it,
- would probably have been Mollie Prescott, at least such was the
- declaration of Cherokee Hall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I sees this yere lady a year ago in Tombstone,&rdquo; asserted that veracious
- chronicler, &ldquo;where she cooks at the stage station; an' she gives it out
- she's Prescott&mdash;Mollie Prescott&mdash;an' most likely she knows her
- name, an' knows it a year ago.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Cherokee was a historian of known firmness of statement, no one cared
- to challenge either his facts or his conclusions. The true name of &ldquo;The
- Cactus&rdquo; was accepted by the Wolfville public as Prescott.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; was personable, and her advent into Wolfville society caused
- something of a flutter. Her mission was to cook, and in the fulfilment of
- her destiny she presided over the range at the stage station.
- </p>
- <p>
- Being publicly hailed as &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; seemed in no wise to depress her. It
- was even possible she took a secret glow over an epithet, meant by the
- critical taste awarding it, to illustrate those thorns in her nature which
- repelled and held in check the amorous male of Wolfville.
- </p>
- <p>
- Women were not frequent in Wolfville, and on her coming, &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; had
- many admirers. Every man in camp loved her the moment she stepped from the
- Tucson stage; that is, every man save Cherokee Hall. That scientist, given
- wholly to faro as a philosophy, had no time&mdash;in a day before he met
- Faro Nell&mdash;for so dulcet an affair as love. Also Cherokee had
- scruples born of his business.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Life behind a deal box is a mighty sight too fantastic,&rdquo; observed the
- thoughtful Cherokee, &ldquo;for a fam'ly. It does well enough for
- single-footers, which it don't make much difference with when some gent
- they've mortified an' hurt, pulls his six-shooter an' sends them lopin'
- home to heaven all spraddled out. But a lady ain't got no business with a
- sport who turns kyards as a pursoot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As time unfurled, the train of lovers to sigh on the daily trail of &ldquo;The
- Cactus&rdquo; dwindled. There were those who grew dispirited.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm clean-strain enough,&rdquo; said Dan Boggs, in apologetic description of
- his failure to persevere, &ldquo;but I knows when I've got through. I'll play a
- game to a finish, but when it's down to the turn an' my last chip's gone
- over to the dealer, why! I shoves my chair back an' quits. An' it's about
- that a-way of an' concernin' my yearnin's for this yere Cactus girl. I
- jest can't get her none, an' that settles it. I now drops out an' gives up
- my seat complete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's whatever!&rdquo; said Texas Thompson, who was an interested listener to
- the defeated Boggs, &ldquo;an' you can gamble I'm with you on them views! Seein'
- as how my wife in Laredo gets herse'f that divorce, I turns in an' loves
- this Cactus person myse'f to a frightful degree. Thar's times I simply
- goes about sobbin' them sentiments publicly. But yere awhile back I comes
- wanderin' 'round her kitchen, an' bing! arrives a skillet at my head. That
- lets me out! You bet! I don't pursoo them explorations 'round her no more.
- I has exper'ence with one, an' I don't aim to get any lariat onto a second
- female who is that callous as to go a-chunkin' of kitchen bric-a-brac at a
- heart which is merely pinin' for her smiles.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There were two at the shrine of &ldquo;The Cactus,&rdquo; who were known to Wolfville,
- respectively, as Cottonwood Wasson and Cape Jinks. These were
- distinguished for the ardour wherewith they made siege to the affection of
- &ldquo;The Cactus,&rdquo; and the energy of their demands for her capitulation.
- </p>
- <p>
- That virgin, however, paid neither heed to their court, nor took an
- interest in the comment of onlook-ing Wolfville. She pursued her path in
- life, even and unmoved. She set her tables, washed her dishes, and
- perfected her daily beefsteaks by the ingenious process, popular in the
- Southwest, of burning them on the griddles of the range, and all with a
- composure bordering hard on the stolid.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All I'm afraid of,&rdquo; said Old Man Enright, the head of the local vigilance
- committee, &ldquo;is that some of these yere young bucks'll take to pawin'
- 'round for trouble with each other. As the upshot of sech doin's would
- most likely be the stringin' of the survivors by the committee, nuptials,
- which now looks plenty feasible, would be plumb busted an' alienated, an'
- the camp get a setback it would be hard to rally from. I wishes this
- maiden would tip her hand to some discreet gent, so a play could be made
- in advance to get the wrong parties over to Tucson or some'ers. Whatever
- do you think yourse'f, Cherokee?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a delicate deal,&rdquo; replied that philosopher, &ldquo;to go tamperin' 'round
- a lady for the secret of her soul. But I shorely deems the occasion a
- crisis, an* public interest demands somethin' is done. I wish Doc Peets
- was yere; he knows these skirted cattle like I does an ace. But Peets
- won't be back for a month; pendin' of which, onless we-alls interferes,
- it's my jedgment some of this yere amorousness 'll come off in the smoke.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar ought to be statoots,&rdquo; observed Texas Thompson, with a fine air of
- wisdom, &ldquo;ag'in love-makin' in the far West. The East should be kept for
- sech purposes speshul; same as reservations for Injuns. The Western
- climate's too exyooberant for love.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;S'pose me an' you an' Thompson yere goes to this young person, an' all
- p'lite an' congenial like, we ups an' asks her intentions?&rdquo; remarked
- Enright. This was offered to Cherokee.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Excuse me, pards!&rdquo; said Texas Thompson with eagerness, &ldquo;but I don't
- reckon I wants kyards in this at all. 'The Cactus' is a mighty fine young
- bein', but you-alls recalls as how I've been ha'ntin' 'round her somewhat
- in the past myse'f. For which reason, with others, she might take my
- comin' on sech errants derisive, an' bust me over the forehead with a
- dipper, or some sech objectionable play. I allows I better keep out of
- this embroglio a whole lot. I ain't aiming to shirk nothin', but it'll be
- a heap more shore to win.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thompson ain't onlikely to be plenty right about this,&rdquo; said Cherokee,
- &ldquo;an' I reckons, Enright, we-alls better take this trick ourse'ves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The mission was not a success. When the worthy pair of peace-preservers
- appeared in the presence of &ldquo;The Cactus,&rdquo; and made the inquiries noted,
- the scorn of that damsel was excited beyond the power of words to
- describe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What be you-alls doin' in my kitchen?&rdquo; she cried, her face a-flush with
- rage and noonday cookery. &ldquo;Who sends you-alls curvin' over to me, a-makin'
- of them insultin' bluffs? I demands to know!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' yere,&rdquo; said Cherokee Hall, relating the exploit in the Red Light
- immediately thereafter, &ldquo;she stamps her foot like a buck antelope, an'
- lets fly a stovelifter at us; an' all with a proud, high air, which
- reminds me a mighty sight of a goddess.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At the time, it would seem, the duo attempted to show popular cause for
- their presence, and made an effort to point out to &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; the crying
- public need of some decision on her part.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You-all don't want the young male persons of this village to take to
- shootin' of each other all up none, do you?&rdquo; asked Enright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wants you two beasts to get outen my kitchen!&rdquo; replied &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo;
- vigorously; &ldquo;an' I wants you to move some hurried, too. Don't never let me
- find your moccasin tracks 'round yere no more, or I'll turn in an' mark
- you up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0014" id="linkimage-0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0287.jpg" alt="0287 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0287.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yere, you!&rdquo; she continued as the ambassadors were about to leave,
- something cast down by the conference; &ldquo;you-alls can tell the folks of
- this town, that if they're idiots enough to go makin' a gun play over me,
- to make it. They has shore pestered me enough!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I don't wonder none at Thompson bein' reluctant an' doobious about
- seein' this Cactus lady,&rdquo; said Enright, as the two walked away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;She's some fiery, an' that's a fact!&rdquo; observed Cherokee in assent.
- </p>
- <p>
- The result of the talk with &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; found its way about Wolfville,
- and in less than an hour bore its hateful fruit. The peaceful quiet of the
- Red Light, which, as a rule, was wounded by no harsher notes than the
- flutter of a stack of chips, was rudely broken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Gents who ain't interested, better hunt a lower limb!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the voice of Cottonwood Wasson. The trained instincts of Wolfville
- at once grasped the trouble, and proceeded to hide its many heads behind
- barrels, tables, counters, and anything which promised refuge from the
- bullets.
- </p>
- <p>
- All but one; Cape Jinks. He knew it meant him the moment Cottonwood Wasson
- uttered the first syllable, and his pistol came bluntly to the fore
- without a word. His rival's was already there, and the shooting set in
- like a hailstorm. As a result, Cottonwood Wasson received an injury that
- crippled his arm for days, while Cape Jinks was picked up with a hole in
- his side, which even the sanguine sentiment of Wolfville, inclined to a
- hardy optimism at all times, called dangerous.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well!&rdquo; said Old Man Enright, drawing a deep, troubled breath, after the
- duellists were cared for at the O. K. House, &ldquo;yere we be ag'in an' nothin'
- settled! Thar's all this shootin', an' this blood-lettin', an' the camp
- gets all torn up; an' thar's as many of these people now as thar is
- before, an' most likely the whole deal to go over ag'in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shore 'bominates things a-splittin' even that a-way!&rdquo; said Cherokee.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day a new face was given the affair when &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; was
- observed, clothed in her best frock and with two violent red roses in her
- straw hat, to take the stage for Tucson. The stage company reported, in
- deference to the excited state of the Wolfville mind, that &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo;
- would return in a week.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Goin' for her weddin' trowsoo, most likely,&rdquo; said Dan Boggs, as he gazed
- after the stage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let's drink to the hope she wins out a red dress!&rdquo; remarked Texas
- Thompson. &ldquo;Set up the bottles, bar-keep, an' don't let no gent pass up the
- play. Which red is my fav'rite colour!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No one seemed to know the intentions of &ldquo;The Cactus.&rdquo; The shooting would
- appear to have in nowise disturbed her. That may have been her obdurate
- heart, or it may have come from a familiarity with the evanescent tenure
- of human life, born of her years on the border. Be that as one will, she
- expressed not the least concern touching her brace of wounded lovers, and
- took the stage without saying good-bye to any one.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' some fools say women is talkers!&rdquo; remarked Jack Moore, the Marshal,
- in high disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three days later Old Monte, the stage driver, came in with thrilling news.
- &ldquo;The Cactus&rdquo; had wedded a man in Tucson, and would bring him to Wolfville
- in a week.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When I first hears of it,&rdquo; went on Old Monte with a groan, &ldquo;an' when I
- thinks of them two pore boys a-layin' in Wolfville, an' their claims bein'
- raffled off in that heartless way, I shore thinks I'll take my Winchester
- an' stop them marriage rites if I has to crease the preacher. But, pards,
- the Tucson marshal wouldn't have it. He stan's me off. So she nails him;
- an' the barkeep at the Oriental Saloon tells me over thar, how she's been
- organisin' to wed this yere prairie dog before she ever hops into
- Wolfville at all. I sees him afterwards; an', gents! for looks, he don't
- break even with horned toads!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thar you be!&rdquo; said Enright, making a deprecatory gesture, &ldquo;another case
- of woman, lovely woman! However, even if this Cactus lady has done rung in
- a cold hand onto us, we must still prance 'round an' show her a good time
- when she trails in with her prey. Where the honour of the camp is
- concerned, we whoops it up! Of course the Cactus don't please us none with
- this deal; but most likely she pleases herse'f, which, after all, is the
- next best thing. Gents,&rdquo; concluded Enright, after a pause, &ldquo;the return of
- the new couple will be the signal of a general upheaval in their honour.
- It's to be hoped our young friends, Cottonwood an' Jinks, will by then be
- healthful enough to participate tharin. Barkeep! the liquor, please! Boys,
- the limit's off; wherefore drink hearty!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which I has preemonitions from the first, this yere Cactus female is a
- brace game,&rdquo; remarked Texas Thompson, as he filled his glass; &ldquo;that's
- whatever!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh! I don't know!&rdquo; replied Cherokee Hall thoughtfully. &ldquo;She has her right
- to place her bets to please herse'f, an' win or lose, this camp should be
- proud to turn for her. Wolfville can't always make a killin'&mdash;can't
- always be on velvet; but as long as the Cactus an' her victim pitches camp
- yere, Wolfville can call herse'f ahead on the deal. I sees no room for
- cavil, an' I yereby freights my glass to the Cactus an' the shorthorn
- she's tied down.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0075" id="link2H_4_0075"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- ANNA MARIE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>nna Marie was to
- be a new woman. She had decided that for herself. In the carrying out of
- her destinies, Anna Marie had cut her hair short. She also made a
- specialty of very mannish costumes, and, outwardly, at least, became as
- virile as a woman might be with a make-up the basis of which was bound to
- be a skirt.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie was motherless, and at the age of nineteen, when she determined
- to become a new woman, had no advice save her father's to depend on. When
- she discussed an adoption of broader and more masculine methods on her
- girlish part with her father, the old gentleman looked puzzled, and said:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, my dear! I have great confidence in your judgment. There is nothing
- like experience, so go ahead. You will find, however, before you have gone
- far, that you labour under many structural defects. The great Architect
- didn't lay you out for a man, Anna Marie; you were not intended for such a
- fate.&rdquo; However, Anna Marie kept on. She was looking for a fuller liberty
- and a wider field. She was too delicately and too accurately determined in
- her tastes to be a fool to cigarettes, or swept down in a current of
- profanity. Bad language she would leave to the real man; in her career as
- a new woman nothing so vigorous was needed.
- </p>
- <p>
- But men did other things, had other freedoms; and from that long male list
- of liberties Anna Marie proceeded to pick out a line of freedom for
- herself. She had had enough of that pent-up Utica which confines the
- conventional woman. What she wanted was more room: that is, of proper,
- decorous sort.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course, as Anna Marie proceeded up the long trail of masculinity, it
- was noted by critics that she still continued essentially feminine as to
- many common male accomplishments. She could not throw a stone, except in
- that vague, pawey, overhand fashion usual with ladies, and which confers
- on the missile neither direction nor force. And when Anna Marie essayed to
- run, she still put everybody in mind of a cow trying to keep an
- engagement.
- </p>
- <p>
- While others noted those solemn truths, Anna Marie did not. She thought
- she was making strenuous progress, and combed her short hair as a man
- combs his, and walked with long, decided stride.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie rode a bike, and decided to don bloomers for this ceremony. She
- came to the bloomer decision hesitatingly, but made up her mind at last.
- Secretly she regarded bloomers as the Rubicon. It was bloomers which
- flowed between herself and the new woman in full standing; and once Anna
- Marie had broken on the world in this ill-considered costume, she would
- feel herself graduated, and no longer at school to Destiny. Therefore,
- there dawned a day when Anna Marie came down the avenue on her bike,
- be-bloomered to heart's content. She had made the plunge; the Rubicon was
- crossed, and Anna Marie felt now like a female Cæsar who must conquer or
- die.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the bike-bloomer occasion Anna Marie was weak enough to hurry. She put
- her unbridled steed to fullest speed, and flashed by the onlookers like
- unto some sweet meteor. She blamed herself afterward for being such a
- craven, but concluded that by sticking to her bloomers she would acquire
- heart and slacken speed in time.
- </p>
- <p>
- The worst feature about the bloomer business was that Anna Marie wotted
- not how hideous she looked. She did not know that a printer on his way to
- his case, caught a fleeting impression of her as she sped by, and that he
- at once &ldquo;put on a sub.,&rdquo; took a night off, and became dejectedly yet fully
- drunk. Nor did she wist that a nervous person was so affected by the awful
- tout ensemble of herself, bike, and bloomers that he repaired to
- Bloomingdale and sternly demanded admission as a right.
- </p>
- <p>
- No; Anna Marie rode all too frightened and too fast to reap these truths.
- Still, she might not have altered her system if she had known. For Anna
- Marie was resolute. Bent as Anna Marie was on her completion as a new
- woman, she resolved to inhabit bloomers and ride her two-wheeled vehicle
- even unto a grey old age. How else, indeed, could she be a new woman? A
- girl friend who had stood appalled at the vigour of Anna Marie asked her
- as to the bloomers.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They are good things,&rdquo; observed Anna Marie. &ldquo;There's a comfort in
- bloomers which lurks not in the tangled wilderness of the ordinary skirt.
- Their fault is that in donning bloomers one does not put them on over
- one's head. It is a great defect. As it is, one never feels more than
- half-dressed.&rdquo; Anna Marie declared that the great want of the day was
- bloomers, through which one thrust one's arms and head in the process of
- harnessing.
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie had a brother George. This youth was twelve years of age.
- George was essentially masculine. Anna Marie could see that, and it came
- to her as a thought that in the course of becoming a new woman of fullest
- feather, a good, ripe method would be to study George. Should she do as
- George did, young though he was, she was sure to succeed. George would do
- from instinct what she must do by imitation. Anna Marie felt these things
- without really and definitely thinking them. It so fell out that, without
- telling George, Anna Marie began to take him as guide, philosopher and
- friend. And all without really knowing it herself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Unconsciously, George loved her all the better because of this, and, moved
- by a warm, ingenuous lack of years, began to take Anna Marie into his
- confidence like true comrade. Anna Marie encouraged his frankness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;George,&rdquo; said Anna Marie, one day, &ldquo;whenever you are about to do anything
- peculiarly boyish and interesting, always tell me, so that I may join you
- in your sport.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- George said he would, and he did.
- </p>
- <p>
- It so befell one day, as the fruit of this comradeship, that George
- changed the channel of Anna Marie's manly determination, and caused her to
- abandon the rôle of a new woman. This is the story, and it all taught Anna
- Marie, with the rush of a landslide, that, however industriously she might
- prune and train her habits to the trellis of the male, she would never be
- able to bring her nature to that state of icy, egotistical, cold-blooded
- hardihood absolutely necessary to the perfect man, and therefore
- indispensable to the new woman. But the story.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anna Marie,&rdquo; said George, coming on her one day, &ldquo;Anna Marie, me and
- Billy Sweet wants you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, George?&rdquo; asked Anna Marie.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We're going to hang a dog out back of the barn,&rdquo; explained George. &ldquo;Me
- and Billy are to be the jury, and we want you for judge. Hurry up, now!
- that's a good fellow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie felt a shock at thought of taking the life of anything. Her
- first feeling was that George was a brute&mdash;a mere animal himself. But
- Anna Marie quickly reflected, that, whatever George might be, at least his
- hardened sex was the promontory the new woman must steer by. She put down
- the garment she was sewing and sought the scene of canine trial.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see, Anna Marie!&rdquo; explained George, pointing to a saffron-coloured
- dog, which stood with dolorous tail between his legs and looked very
- repentant, &ldquo;he murdered a kitten, and we are going to try to convict and
- hang him. You sit down there by the fence, and the trial won't take a
- minute. Billy and me have got our minds made up, and we won't take no time
- to decide. There's the rope, and we're going to hang him to the limb of
- that maple.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie felt worried. Still, she allowed herself to be installed, and
- the trial proceeded. It was very brief. George produced the defunct
- kitten,&mdash;which looked indeed, very dead,&mdash;with the remark, &ldquo;Say,
- you yellow dog! you're charged with murdering this cat; have you got
- anything to say against being hung?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The yellow cur feebly wagged his disreputable tail, and looked at Anna
- Marie in a fashion of sneaking appeal. He said as plain as words: &ldquo;Save
- me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wouldn't hang the poor thing, George,&rdquo; said Anna Marie, and she began
- to pat the felon yellow cur.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're a great judge!&rdquo; remonstrated George, indignantly. &ldquo;It ain't for
- you to decide; it's for me and Billy. We are the jury, and in favour of
- hanging him, ain't we, Billy?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Billy nodded emphatically.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, George,&rdquo; expostulated Anna Marie, &ldquo;it is so cruel! so brutal!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Brutal!&rdquo; scoffed George. &ldquo;Don't they hang folks for murder every day? You
- wear bloomers and talk of being a new woman and having the rights of a
- man! I have heard you with that Sanford girl! And now you come out here
- and try to talk off a yellow dog who is guilty of murder, and admits it by
- his silence! You would act nice if it was a real man and a real murder
- case! Come on, Billy; let's string him up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Here George seized on the cowering victim of lynch law, and started for
- the maple, where the rope already dangled for its prey. Anna Marie became
- utterly feminine at this, and burst into tears. Her nineteen years and her
- progress toward a new womanhood did not save her. In her distress she
- turned to the other member of the jury.
- </p>
- <p>
- Billy Sweet, at the age of thirteen, was an ardent admirer of George's
- sister, loved her dearly, if secretly, and meant to marry her in ten or
- fifteen years, when he grew up. At present he played with George and kept
- a loving eye on his future bride. Anna Marie knew of Billy's partiality,
- so she cunningly turned on this admirer, like a true daughter of the olden
- woman.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You think as I do, don't you, Billy?&rdquo; And Anna Marie's tone had a caress
- in it which made Billy's ears a happy red.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, ma'am!&rdquo; said Billy.
- </p>
- <p>
- George was disgusted.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You are the kind of a juryman,&rdquo; said George, full of contempt, &ldquo;that
- makes me tired. There, Anna Marie, take your yellow dog, and don't try to
- play with me no more. You are too soft!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Anna Marie felt that some vast deposit of good, hard sense lay hidden in
- George's last remark. On her way to the house she did a good deal of
- thinking, as girls whose mothers are dead do now and then. The development
- of her cogitations was told in a remark to her girl friend:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's so tiresome, this being a new woman! I am going to give it up. I am
- afraid, as father says, I am 'not built right.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And thus it ended. Marie is exceedingly the olden woman now. She has
- beaten her sword into a pruning-hook, her bike into a spinning-wheel! She
- no longer walks with long, decided stride. She is a woman in all things,
- and will scream and chase a street car as if it were the last going that
- way for a week, like the tenderest and frailest of her kind. She has
- retracted as to bloomers. Anna Marie has returned to the agency, and
- forever abandoned the warpath of a new and manly womanhood.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0076" id="link2H_4_0076"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE PETERSENS
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>HEN Chucky came
- into the little doggery where we were wont to converse, there arrived with
- him an emphatic odour of kerosene. Also Chucky's face was worn and sad,
- and his hands were muffled with many bandages. To add to it all Chucky was
- not in spirits.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the trouble?&rdquo; I asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We've been havin 'd' run in' of our lives,&rdquo; replied Chucky, as he called
- to the barkeeper for his usual bracer, &ldquo;an' our tenement is just standin'
- on its nut right now, an' that's for straight!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell me about it,&rdquo; I urged.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' racket this time over to d' joint,&rdquo; said Chucky, &ldquo;is about a Swede
- skirt named Petersen who croaks herself be d' gas play last night. D'
- place is full of cops an' hobos an' all sorts of blokes, pipin' off d'
- play, while a corner mug is holdin' an inkwest over d' stiff, see! What
- you smells is d' coal oil on me mits. I soaks me hooks in it to take d'
- boin away. Me Rag gives me d' tip; an' say! it's a winner at that. D'
- boins ain't half so bad as dey was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I don't understand,&rdquo; I replied. &ldquo;How did you come to burn your hands?
- If the gas was burning, I don't see how the woman could have committed
- suicide.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Youse is gettin' away on d' wrong hoof,&rdquo; said Chucky. &ldquo;I don't boin me
- fins over d' Petersen moll croakin' herself. I cremates 'em puttin' out d'
- flames when d' Petersen kid takes fire d' day before. This inkwest which
- d' cor'oner guy is holdin' to-day, is d' secont one. He holds d' foist
- yesterday over d' kid.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;On d' level! I don't catch on to d' need of inkwests anyhow. If a mark's
- dead, he's dead. It don't need no sawbones an' a mob of snoozers to be
- 'panelled for a jury, see! to put youse on. It looks to me like a dead
- case of shakin' down d' public for d' fees; these inkwests do, Cor'ners, I
- s'spose, has to have some excuse for livin', so when some poor duck
- croaks, dey comes chasin' 'round wit' a inkwest to see if he's surely done
- up, an' to put a bit of dough in their kecks. Well! I figgers it's law all
- right, all right, an' mebby it's d' proper caper. Anyhow, I passes it up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What about this Petersen push? Well, if ever a household strikes it hard,
- I'm here to say it's d' Petersens. When it comes to d' boss hard luck
- story, I'll place me bets wit' that outfit every time.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's two spaces back when this Petersen gang comes ashore at Ellis
- Island. There's t'ree of 'em; husband, wife, an' kid, see! Dey comes in as
- steerage, an' naturally, d' Ellis Island gezebos collars 'em an' t'rows
- 'em into hock d' moment dey hits d' pier. Nit; dey ain't arrested. But
- youse is on, how dey puts d' clamps to emigrants. Dey 'detains' 'em, as
- it's called.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Every mug who comes steerage has to spring his plant when he lands, an'
- if he ain't as strong as $30, dey&mdash;d' offishuls&mdash;don't do a
- t'ing but chase him back on d' nex' boat. He's a pauper, see! an' he gets
- d' razzle dazzle an 'd' gran' rinky dink. Back he goes where he hails
- from, like a bundle of old clothes. Paupers is barred at Ellis Island; dey
- don't go wit' these United States, not on your overshoes!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So d' Petersens is stood up, like I tells youse, at Ellis Island to see
- be dey tramps. It toins out, nit. Dey ain't paupers. Petersen has more'n
- enough money to get be d' gate, see! Petersen has a hundred an' fifty
- plunks, an' bein' there's only t'ree, it's plenty to go 'round an' show
- $30 for each.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Still them Ellis Island snoozers detains d' Petersens a week just d'
- same. D' place where dey stays is worse'n any holdover or station house
- I'm ever in; an', bein' d' weather's winter, an' this 'detention' pen is
- wet an' cold, Petersen himself cops off d' pneumonia an' out goes his
- light before ever he leaves Ellis Island at all. Dey plants him in d'
- graveyard dey has for emigrants, an 'd' wife an' kid comes over to d' city
- alone.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' foist I knows of d' Petersens. D' mother an' kid takes a
- back-room in our tenement; an' after dey gets 'quainted, she tells me Rag
- about her man dyin'. She ain't so old, this Petersen woman, an' only she's
- all broke up about her man croakin', she ain't a bad looker, see! wit'
- blue eyes an' a mop of gold hair. D' kid's name is Hilda, an,' except
- she's only seven years an' no bigger'n a drink of whiskey, she's a ringer
- for her mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well! like I says, d' Petersens&mdash;what's left of 'em after d' man
- quits livin'&mdash;organised in d' back room on our floor. An' because
- folks who wants to chew must woik, d' Petersen woman gets a curve on an'
- goes to doin' stunts wit' a tub. She chases 'round doin' washin', see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's when d' old goil is away slingin' suds that I gets nex' wit 'd' kid.
- She's dropped her ragbaby down be a gratin' one day an' her heart is
- broke. She t'inks it's a cinch case of all over wit' d' poor ragbaby, an'
- she's cryin' to beat d' band.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But she gets it ag'in. Me an' a big fat cop who comes waddlin' along,
- tears up d' gratin' an' fishes out Hilda's doll, an' after that me an' her
- gets to be dead chummy; what youse might call * pals.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hilda's shy at foist, an' a bit leary of me&mdash;I ain't no bute at me
- best&mdash;but she gets used to seein' me about, an' as I stakes her to
- or'nges onct or twict, at last she gets stuck on me.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' Petersens, an' me, an' me Rag is neighbours on d' same floor for near
- two years. An' days when I comes home early, an' me breat' ain't smellin'
- of booze&mdash;for d' kid welches every time she sniffs d' lush on me,
- see!&mdash;I used to go in an' kiss Hilda same as she's me own. An'
- between youse an' me,&rdquo; and here a drop gathered in Chucky's cold eye, &ldquo;I
- ain't above tippin' it off on d' quiet, I t'inks a heap of this young-one,
- an' feels better every time I gets me lamps on her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' finish comes t'ree days ago. D' old goil Petersen is away woikin', an'
- Hilda, for all it's so cold, is playin' in d' passage-way. There's one of
- them plumber hold-ups fixin 'd' water pipe where it's sprung a leak, an'
- he's got one of them dinky little fire pots which plumbers lug 'round wit'
- em.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;While this plumber stiff is busy wit' his graft, poor little Hilda t'inks
- she'll warm her dolly's mits be d' blaze. She's holdin' her ragbaby's
- hooks over d' plumber's fire as I comes up d' stairs; an' as she hears me
- foot, an' toins smilin' to make sure it's me, her frock catches, an' when
- she chases screechin' into me arms, she's a bundle of live flame. Say! I'd
- sooner ten to one it was me, an' that's no bluff!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wraps me coat over her, an' gives d' fire d' quick smother, see! An' I
- boins me dukes until it comes to bein' mighty near a case of stumps wit'
- Chucky d' balance of his joiney to d' tomb.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what th' 'ell! It all don't do no good. D' poor kid has swallered d'
- fire, an' she's d' deadest ever before even I takes her out of me coat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We lays Hilda out, me Rag an' me, on d' Petersens' bed; an' d' cor'ner
- sucker, as I says at d' be-ginnin', comes sprintin' over an' goes to
- holdin' his inkwests.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bimeby, d' mother gets home from her tubs, an' that's where d' hard play
- comes in. Me Rag tells her as easy as she can; but youse could see it was
- a centre shot all d' same. It soaked her where she lived.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Foist d' man, an' then d' baby!' says d' Petersen woman, as she sets on
- d' floor an' mourns; 'now I'll soon go hunt for 'em.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me Rag tries to get her to come in wit' us, but she won't stan' for it.
- All t'rough d' night we hears her mournin' an' groanin' on d' floor be d'
- side of little Hilda's coffin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' kid's fun'ral was yesterday, an' a pulpit sharp from one of d'
- Missions gets in on d' play, an' offishiates. Sure! it's a case of
- Potter's Field&mdash;for d' mother ain't got d' dough to make good for a
- grave&mdash;but me an' me Rag gets a car, an' takes d' mother out to see
- little Hilda planted. No, she don't cry much at that; but me Rag toins in
- an' don't do a t'ing but break d' record for tears. If Hilda was her own
- kid, she couldn't have made more of a row. When it comes to what youse
- might call 'd' outward evidences of grief,' me Rag simply lose d' Petersen
- mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D' mother was feelin' it all d' same. She keeps whisperin' to herself:
- 'Soon I'll go find 'em!' like that; an' that's d' limit of what youse
- could get out of her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's last night, after little Hilda's put away,&mdash;it's mebby, say,
- t'ree this mornin', when wit'out a woid of warnin' me Rag sets up straight
- in bed an' gives a sniff.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Be d' mother of d' Holy Mary! it's gas!' she says, an' nex' she makes a
- straight wake for d' Petersen door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' me Rag guesses right d' very foist time, like d' kid in d' song. Gas
- it was; d' poor Petersen mother toins it on full blast. She's croaked an'
- cold as a wedge, hours before we tumbles to her game.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's d' finish. As I states d' foist dash out of d' box, it's d' dandy
- hard luck story of d' year. D' whole Petersen push is wiped out, same as
- that bar-keep would swab off his bar. On d' dead! it's all too many for
- me! What's d' use of folks bein' born at all, if dey's goin' to get yanked
- in like that&mdash;t'ree at a clatter, an' all young!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do dey have re-latiffs? Some in d' old country, I takes it. There's a
- note d' Petersen woman leaves for me Rag, astin' her to write d' hist'ry
- of d' last round an' wind-up to d' folks at home, an' givin' d' address.
- But me ownliest own says 'nit!' an* chucks d' note in d' stove.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Dey's better off not knowin',' says me Rag.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0077" id="link2H_4_0077"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- BOWLDER'S BURGLAR
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>owlder's wife and
- offspring were away at the time; and the time was a night last summer.
- Mrs. B. was in Long Branch, and Bowlder, left lonely and forlorn, to look
- after the house and earn money, was having a sad, bad time, indeed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not that Bowlder really lacked anything; but he missed his wife and little
- ones. Where before the merry prattle of his children made the racket of a
- boiler shop, all was solemn peace and hush. The Bowlder mansion was like a
- graveyard.
- </p>
- <p>
- Naturally Bowlder felt lonesome; and to avoid, as much as might be, having
- his loneliness thrust upon him by the empty desolation of the house, he
- made it a rule during his wife's absence not to go home until 3 o'clock A.
- M.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was &ldquo;dead on his legs&rdquo; by that time, as he expressed it, and went at
- once to sleep, before the absence of Mrs. B. began to prey upon him.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the night, or more properly morning, in question, Bowlder wended
- homeward at sharp 3. He had been missing Mrs. B. painfully all the
- evening, and, to uphold himself, subscribed to divers drinks. These last
- Bowlder put safely away within his belt, and they cherished him and taught
- him resignation, and he didn't miss his wife as much as he had.
- </p>
- <p>
- The hoary truth is that as Bowlder drew near his home, he had so far
- conquered his sense of abandonment that he wasn't even thinking of his
- wife. He was plodding along in the middle of the street for fear of
- footpads, whom he fancied might be sauntering in the shadows on either
- side, and was really in quite a happy, fortunate frame of mind. As Bowlder
- turned in toward his door he was softly repeating the lines:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent10">
- &ldquo;'Tis sweet to hear the watch dog's honest bark,
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Bay deep-mouthed welcome as we draw near home,
- </p>
- <p class="indent10">
- 'Tis sweet to know there is an eye will mark
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Our coming, and grow brighter when we come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Not that Bowlder had a watch dog, honest or otherwise, to bay him
- deep-mouthed welcome. And inasmuch as they had discharged the exile from
- Erin, who aforetime did service as the Bowlder maid-of-all-work, when Mrs.
- B. took flight for the summer, there was slight hope of an eye on the
- premises to grow brighter when he came.
- </p>
- <p>
- No; it was not that Bowlder was really looking for deep-mouthed bays or
- brightening eyes; he was naturally musical and poetical, and the drinks he
- had corralled had unlocked his nature in that behalf. Bowlder was reciting
- the lines quoted for the pleasure he drew from their beauty; not from the
- prophecy they put forth of any meeting to which he looked forward. A
- remark which escaped Bowlder as he climbed his steps and dexterously
- fitted his night key to the day keyhole showed this.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I ought to have stayed at a hotel,&rdquo; said Bowlder. &ldquo;There's nobody here to
- rake me over the coals for it, and I'm going to have a great head on me
- when I wake up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder at last by mistake got his latchkey into the keyhole to which it
- related, and the door swung inward. This was a distinct success and
- Bowlder heaved a breath of relief. This door, which had grown singularly
- obdurate since Mrs. B.'s departure, had been known to hold Bowlder at bay
- for twenty minutes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder had just cast his hat on the hall floor&mdash;he intended to hang
- it up in the morning when he would have more time&mdash;and got as far on
- a journey to the second story as one step, when a noise in the basement
- dining-room enlisted Bowlder's attention. His curiosity rather than his
- fears was aroused; another happy effect of his libations.
- </p>
- <p>
- Without one thought of burglars, Bowlder deferred his journey upstairs,
- and repaired instead to the dining-room below. Bowlder would investigate
- the untoward noises which, while soft and light, were still of such volume
- as might tell upon the ear.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wonder 'f the houshe is haunted?&rdquo; observed Bowlder as he went deviously
- below.
- </p>
- <p>
- It has already been noted that Bowlder not once bethought him of burglars.
- In truth he had often scoffed at burglars while conversing with Mrs. B. on
- this subject so interesting to ladies. Bowlder had said that no burglar
- could make day wages robbing the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- It had all the thrill of perfect surprise then when, as Bowlder turned
- into his dining-room, he beheld a bull's-eye lantern shedding a malevolent
- stream of light in his face, and caught the shadowy outlines of a tall man
- behind it who seemed engaged in pointing a pistol at him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold up your hands!&rdquo; said the tall man, &ldquo;and don't come a step further,
- or out goes your light!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0015" id="linkimage-0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0307.jpg" alt="0307 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0307.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well! I like thish!&rdquo; squeaked Bowlder, in a tone of querulous complaint,
- at the same time, however, clasping his hands above his head; &ldquo;I like
- thish! What's the row here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The tall man made no reply, but came across and deftly ran his hands over
- Bowlder for possible arms. Bowlder had no gun. The tall man seemed
- satisfied, and stepping back, told Bowlder he might sit down on a chair
- and rest his hands in his lap. Bowlder took advantage of the permission.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any 'bjections to me lighting a shegar?&rdquo; queried Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; said the tall man.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder was soon puffing away. Being friendly, not to say polite by
- nature, Bowlder bestowed one on his visitor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it a mild cigar?&rdquo; asked the burglar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Colorado claro,&rdquo; said Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right!&rdquo; assented the other. &ldquo;I don't like a strong smoke; it
- makes my head ache.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As the visitor lighted the cigar, Bowlder noticed that he wore a black
- mask across his eyes, and that the latter shone through the apertures cut
- for their convenience like beads. The mask gave Bowlder a chill which the
- pistol had not evoked. Indeed, it came very near destroying the whole
- force of the drinks he had accumulated.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the stranger had lighted his cigar, Bowlder and he puffed at each
- other a moment without a word.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What are you doing in my houshe?&rdquo; at last demanded Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger smiled and puffed on. Then he kicked a large sack with his
- foot. Bowlder had not observed this sack before. As the stranger touched
- it with his foot, it gave out a metallic clinking.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder's eyes roamed instinctively to the sideboard. There wasn't much
- light; enough, however, to show Bowlder that the sideboard's burden of
- silverware was gone. With such a start, Bowlder was able to infer a great
- deal.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Made a clean shweep, eh?&rdquo; remarked Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- The masked stranger nodded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you've got all there is loose and little in the houshe,&rdquo; said Bowlder&mdash;he
- was talking plainer every moment now&mdash;&ldquo;you've got $1,500 worth. Been
- up-shtairs yet?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the man of the mask nodded. Also he exhibited symptoms of being
- about to depart.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't go yet!&rdquo; remonstrated Bowlder. &ldquo;Want to talk to you. Did you get
- the old lady's jewellery upstairs?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the burglar nodded. He seemed disinclined to use his voice unless it
- was necessary.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thash's bad!&rdquo; remarked Bowlder reflectively; referring to the conquest of
- his wife's jewellery. &ldquo;The old lady won't do a thing but make me buy her
- some more. And the worst of it is, she'll put up the figures on what
- jimcracks you've got, and insisht they're worth four times their true
- value. I'm lucky if she don't put it higher than $1,000. And they ain't
- worth $200; you'll be lucky if you get that on 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The burglar looked hopeful as well as he could with a mask, but retorted
- nothing to Bowlder. The latter mused sorrowfully over his wife's jewels.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You see it putsh me in the hole!&rdquo; said Bowlder. &ldquo;I get it going and
- coming. You come along and rob me; and then Mrs. B. comes home and robs me
- again. Don't you think that's a little rough?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The stranger said it was rough. He didn't nod this time, but used his
- voice. Encouraged by the agreement with his views, Bowlder urged the
- return of his wife's jewellery.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just gimme back what's hers,&rdquo; said Bowlder, &ldquo;and you can keep the rest.
- That'll let me out with her, and I don't care for the balance.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But the man of midnight stoutly objected. It would be a dead loss of $200,
- he said, and worse yet, it would be unprofessional.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder thought deeply a moment. Then he took a new tack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Any 'bjections to taking a drink with me?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;None in the world!&rdquo; said the burglar.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder explored his coat pocket for a bottle he'd brought home to restore
- him after his sleep. He proffered the bottle to the burglar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After you is manners!&rdquo; said that person.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder drank and then the burglar did the same.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You a Republican?&rdquo; demanded Bowlder suddenly. &ldquo;I s'pose even burglars
- have their politics!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Administration Republican!&rdquo; said the burglar; &ldquo;that's what I am. I
- believe in Imperialism and a sound currency.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm an Administration Republican, too,&rdquo; remarked Bowlder. &ldquo;I knew we'd
- find common ground at last. Now, as a member of the same party as
- yourself, I want to ask a favour of you. You've got about $1,500 worth of
- plunder there; and yet, you see yourself, there's a good deal of furniture
- you're leaving behind; piano upstairs and all that. I'll play you one game
- of ten-point seven-up to see whether you take all or nothing. Come, now,
- as a favour!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The burglar hesitated. He feared there was a trap in it. Bowlder gave him
- his word as a goldbug that he made the proffer in all honesty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If you win,&rdquo; said Bowlder, &ldquo;you can cart the furniture away to-morrow.
- I'll order you a waggon as I go down, and you can sleep in the house and
- see that I don't carry off anything or hold out on you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But it ain't worth as much as what I've got,&rdquo; demurred the burglar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, see here!&rdquo; said Bowlder&mdash;sober he was now&mdash;&ldquo;to avoid
- spoiling sport I'll throw in my watch and $30. That's square!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The burglar admitted that the proposal was fair, but stuck for seven
- points.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I like straight seven-up,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Make it a seven-point game and I'll
- go you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder produced a deck of cards from the sewing-machine drawer. At the
- burglar's own suggestion they lighted one gas jet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cut for deal!&rdquo; said Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- The burglar cut a ten-spot, Bowlder a deuce. The burglar had the deal.
- </p>
- <p>
- The king of diamonds was turned as trump.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Beg!&rdquo; said Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Take it!&rdquo; remarked the burglar.
- </p>
- <p>
- The hands were played. Bowlder had the queen and six-spot of diamonds; the
- marauder had the ten, nine, and seven of diamonds. Bowlder took high, low
- and the burglar counted game.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No jack out!&rdquo; remarked Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the other. And then in an abused tone; &ldquo;Say! you don't beg nor
- nuthin', do you? The idee of a gent's beggin' in a two-hand game,
- a-holdin' of the queen and six.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- They played three hands; Jack had been out once. Bowlder was keeping
- score. It stood:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bowl, I I I I I I.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Burg, I I I I.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was Bowlder's deal. He riffled the cards with the deftness of one who
- plays often and well.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bound to settle it this time!&rdquo; said the burglar. &ldquo;The score stands 6 to
- 4. You bet your life! I'll stand on the bare jack if I get it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder threw the cards around and turned trump with a snap. It was the
- jack of clubs.
- </p>
- <p>
- The burglar looked at it wistfully, even sadly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's square, is it?&rdquo; he said to Bowlder in a tone of half reproach.
- &ldquo;You ain't the party to go and turn a jack on a poor crook from the bottom
- of the deck, and you only one to go?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bowlder assured him the transaction was perfectly honest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I guess it was,&rdquo; said the burglar, rising. &ldquo;I was watching you, and
- I guess it was straight. It's just my luck, that's all. Well! I must go;
- it's getting along towards 4: 30 o'clock.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have a drink!&rdquo; said Bowlder, &ldquo;and take another cigar!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cracksman took a drink. Then he selected a cigar from Bowlder's
- proffered case.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If it's all the same to youse,&rdquo; said the burglar, &ldquo;I'll smoke this later
- on&mdash;after breakfast.&rdquo; And he put the cigar in his pocket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here; let me show you out this way,&rdquo; said Bowlder, leading the way to the
- front basement door.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hates to ask it of a stranger,&rdquo; said the burglar, as he hesitated just
- outside the door, &ldquo;but the Eight' Avenoo cars'll be runnin' in a little
- while now, and would you mind lendin' me a nickel? I lives down be the
- Desbrosses Ferry.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Of course Bowlder would lend him car-fare. This somewhat raised the
- burglar's spirits, made sad by seven-up. As he closed the door behind him,
- the burglar looked back at Bowlder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know, pard,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if it wasn't for my weakness for gamblin',
- I'd been a rich man a dozen times.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0078" id="link2H_4_0078"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- ANGELINA McLAURIN
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (By the Office Boy)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>ngelina McLaurin's
- was a rare face; a beautiful face. It had but one defect: Angelina's nose
- was curved like the wing of a gull. This gave her an air of resolution and
- command that affected the onlooker like a sign which says: &ldquo;Look out for
- the engine.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Still, Angelina McLaurin was bewitchingly lovely, a result much aided in
- its coming about by a form so admirably upholstered that to look upon her
- would have made Diana tired.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a soft, sensuous September afternoon. Angelina McLaurin was
- impatiently holding down a richly cushioned chair in the library of the
- noble McLaurin mansion&mdash;one of those stately piles which are the
- pride of Washington Heights. She was awaiting the coming of her affianced
- husband, George Maurice St. John.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why does he prove so dilatory?&rdquo; she murmured. &ldquo;Methinks true love would
- not own such leaden feet!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Angelina McLaurin arose to gaze from the window she rocked on the tail
- of the ample Angora cat.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cat made it a point to hang out in the library every afternoon. On
- this occasion, while Angelina McLaurin was dreaming of her lover, the cat
- had taken advantage of her abstraction to deftly bestow his tail beneath
- the rocker of her chair. When Angelina arose, as stated, the cat got the
- worst of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the rocker came down on the cat's tail, the cat exploded into
- observations in Angorese that are unfit for these pages. Angelina was not
- only startled out of herself, but almost out of her frock. Angelina and
- the cat arose hastily, and stood there panting.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the shrieks of the wronged exile from Angora were uplifted into space,
- the door of the library burst violently open.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is the matter, dearest? Are you injured? Why do you cry for help?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was George Maurice St. John who asked the question. As he did so, he
- caught Angelina McLaurin in his powerful arms, while the Angora cat, his
- worst fears now realised, chased himself down the hall with tail excited
- to lamp-cleaner size.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it, love?&rdquo; asked George Maurice St. John, as he tenderly unloaded
- his delicious burden onto a sofa, &ldquo;Speak! it is the voice of your George
- who bids you. Has any one dared to insult the coming bride of a St. John?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bear with me, George!&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;Believe me, I will be better
- anon!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- After a few moments she recovered, and was able to smile through her tears
- at the alarm of her dear one. Then she told George all: how the cat had
- been ass enough to leave his tail lying around loose while asleep; how, in
- the intensity of her waiting, she had put a crimp in it with the fell
- rocker of the chair; and how the cat had been drawn into statements, by
- sheer dint of agony, which it was impolitic as well as useless to repeat.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So I was just in time, Angelina, to relieve both you and the cat of what
- was doubtless an awkward situation.&rdquo; And George Maurice St. John laughed
- gaily.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he kissed her with a fervour that left nothing to be wished for, and
- Angelina took a brace and sat erect on the sofa.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I feel better now!&rdquo; she remarked.
- </p>
- <p>
- George tried to get in another kiss, but she stood him off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't crowd your luck, dear!&rdquo; she said, with a sweet softness. &ldquo;I am
- yours for ever, and there is not the slightest need for any excess of
- osculatory zeal. You are to have me with you always, so set a brake or two
- and take the grades easy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus repulsed, George Maurice St. John sat abashed. A pained look seamed
- his features; he bit his lips and was silent.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Daylight became twilight, and twilight retreated into the darkness of a
- new night. It struck eight o'clock in the adjoining tower, and George
- Maurice St John was a-hungered. His stomach was the first to tip it off to
- him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't we feed to-night?&rdquo; asked George Maurice St. John.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lovers for two hours had chattered aimlessly, as ones wandering in a
- wilderness of bliss. This was the first pointed remark.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Anon! love; we will feed anon!&rdquo; replied Angelina McLaurin dreamily. &ldquo;But,
- George, before we get in our gustatory work, I would a word with you&mdash;indeed!
- sundry words.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Aim low, and send 'em along!&rdquo; said George. &ldquo;What is it my Queen would
- learn from her slave?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In his ecstacy he achieved a &ldquo;half Nelson&rdquo; on the lovely girl, and caught
- her in the back of the neck with a kiss.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Angora cat, who was stealthily threading the hall, intending to play a
- return game with the library rug, gave a great convulsive start, at the
- kiss, which carried him out of the mansion, and over the alley fence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They're a mark too high for me!&rdquo; said the Angora to himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then inflating his lungs to the last limit of expansion, the Angora sent a
- song of invitation down the line that set every Tabby in the block to
- washing her face and combing her ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your Queen wants a square heel-and-toe talk, George,&rdquo; said the sweet
- girl, as she tucked up her silken locks, dishevelled by his caresses into
- querulous little rings. &ldquo;And your Queen wants straight goods this time,
- and no guff! Oh, darling!&rdquo; continued Angelina McLaurin in a passionate
- outburst, &ldquo;be square with me, and make me those promises upon which my
- life's happiness depends!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- George Maurice St. John strained Angelina to his bosom.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll promise anything!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What wouldst thou have me do? My life,
- my fortune, my honour&mdash;my all, I lay at your feet! Monkey with them
- as thou wilt.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then listen!&rdquo; said Angelina.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;George, we are to be wedded in a month, are we not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We are!&rdquo; he cried exultantly; and again he essayed the &ldquo;half Nelson,&rdquo; and
- attempted to bury his nose in her mane.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't get gay, George!&rdquo; she said mournfully, as she broke George's lock,
- and gently but firmly pushed his bows off a point; &ldquo;don't get funny! but
- hear me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; said George, and his tones showed that his failure pierced him
- like a javelin. &ldquo;We are to be wedded in a month. What then, lady?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;George,&rdquo; said Angelina McLaurin, and the tear-jewels shone in her eyes,
- &ldquo;don't think me unwomanly, but you know how I am fixed;&mdash;father and
- mother both dead! I am an orphan, George, and must heel-and-handle
- myself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Even so!&rdquo; said George, and his face showed his sympathy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, George, before we take that step to the altar,&rdquo; she went on
- steadily enough, but with a quaver in her voice which his ear, made
- sensitive by great love, did not fail to detect: &ldquo;before we take that
- step, I say, from which there is no retreat, I must know certain things.
- You must make me certain promises.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Name them,&rdquo; he whispered, and his deep voice overran her like a melody.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, George,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;is it too much to ask that $100,000 worth of
- property be settled upon me at this time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My solicitors have already received my instructions to make it a
- million.&rdquo; George Maurice St. John's voice dwelt fondly on the settlement.
- &ldquo;It is but a beggarly ante in such a game of table-stakes as this!&rdquo; This
- time Angelina McLaurin did not decline his endearments. When he let up,
- she continued:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And it's dead sure I go to the Shore each summer?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is a welded cinch,&rdquo; he replied, as he drew her nearer to him. &ldquo;You
- take in the coast from Bar Harbour to the Florida Keys.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And servants?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A mob shall minister unto thee,&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I have but one more boon, George,&rdquo; she murmured, &ldquo;grant that, and I
- am thine forever.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Board the card!&rdquo; cried George; &ldquo;I promise before you ask.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say not so,&rdquo; she said with a sweet sadness; &ldquo;but muzzle your lips and
- listen. You must quit golf.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What!&rdquo; shrieked George, with an energy that sent the Angora backward off
- a shed-roof of dubious repute, from which he was carolling to his low
- companions; &ldquo;what!&rdquo; he repeated. &ldquo;Woman, think!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have thought, George,&rdquo; responded Angelina Mc-Laurin, with an air of
- sorrowful firmness. &ldquo;There is but one alternative: saw short off,&mdash;saw
- short off on golf, or give me up forever!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is this some horrid dream?&rdquo; he hissed, as he strode up and down the
- library.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last he paused before her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Woman,&rdquo; he said sternly, &ldquo;look on me! Is this some lightsome bluff, or
- does it go? Dost mean it, woman?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay! I mean it!&rdquo; answered Angelina, while her cheek paled and her breath
- came quick and fast. &ldquo;Don't make any mistake on that; I mean it. My talk
- goes. And my hand is off my chips.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is this your love?&rdquo; he sneered, bitterly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is,&rdquo; she faltered. &ldquo;I have spoken, and I abide your answer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then, girl,&rdquo; said George Maurice St. John, and his words were cold and
- hard, &ldquo;all is over between us. You would drive me into a corner and take
- away my golf! I say No! No! a thousand times, No!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this outbreak the curve in Angelina's nose became more intense. She
- dried her eyes. Her features, too, became as flint. She even cut loose a
- low, mocking laugh.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Be it so!&rdquo; she said; &ldquo;sirrah, take your ring!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He seized the bauble and ground it beneath his heel. As he did so her
- strength failed her, and she sank to the floor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That knocked her out!&rdquo; he muttered, and he started to count: &ldquo;One!&mdash;Two!&mdash;Three&mdash;Four!-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, not necessarily!&rdquo; she said, struggling to her feet. &ldquo;I'm still in it;
- and I say again, give up golf, or give up me!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The die is cast!&rdquo; and as he spoke the fatal words, the eyes of George
- Maurice St. John took on the firm, irrevocable expression of a fish's set
- in death. &ldquo;I wouldn't give up golf for the best woman that ever put a
- dress on over her head. Maiden, you ask too much; you come too high!
- Damsel, I quit you cold!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- George Maurice St. John rushed from the scene. The ponderous door, as it
- slammed behind him, echoed and re-echoed through the vaulted apartments of
- the McLaurin mansion. Angelina McLaurin listened until his footsteps died
- away far up the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He has flew the coop on me!&rdquo; she wailed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then she gave way to a torrent of tears. In her distress Angelina McLaurin
- was more beautiful than ever. Two minutes! Five minutes! Ten minutes went
- by! Her tears still fell like rain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I have turned the hose on my hopes!&rdquo; she said.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was the thought that crossed her mind; but she desperately womanned
- (word coined since advent of new woman) herself to bear it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Still afloat on the sad currents of her tears, her head bowed, a light
- sound beat upon the tympanum of Angelina McLaurin. She looked quickly up
- and squared herself to emit a glad cry, if one should be necessary.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was it?
- </p>
- <p>
- Something had come back.
- </p>
- <p>
- True! it was the Angora cat.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the Angora flung himself upon the rug with an air of reckless abandon,
- Angelina McLaurin gazed at him with a wistful fixedness. One eye was
- closed, his fur was torn, blood dripped from his lacerated ears. He was,
- in good sooth, but a tattered Angora! Angelina McLaurin laughed long and
- wildly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He, too,' has got it in the neck!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0079" id="link2H_4_0079"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- DINKY PETE
- </h2>
- <h3>
- (Annals of The Bend)
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>o we have romances
- on t' East Side!&rdquo; and Chucky's voice was vibrant with the scorn my doubts
- provoked. &ldquo;Do we have romances! Well, I don't t'ink! Say! there's days
- when we don't have nothin' else.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this crisis Chucky called for another glass; did it without invitation.
- This last spoke of and betrayed a sense of injury.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me tell youse,&rdquo; continued Chucky, &ldquo;an' d' yarn don't cost you a cent,
- see! how Dinky Pete sends Jimmy d' barkeep back to his wife. It's what I
- calls romantic for a hundred plunks.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not that Jimmy ever leaves her, for that matter; that is, he don't leave
- her for fair! But he's sort o' organisin' for d' play when Dinky Pete puts
- d' kybosh on d' notion, an' wit' that Jimmy don't chase at all, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jimmy d' barkeep is some soft in d' nut, see! Nit, he ain't really got
- w'eels; ain't bad enough for d' bug house; but he's a bit funny in his
- cocoa&mdash;mostly be way of bein' dead stuck on himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' bein' weak d' way I says, Jimmy is a high roller for clothes; always
- sports a w'ite t'ree-sheet, wit' a rock blazin' in d' centre, big enough
- to trip a dog. An' say! his necktie's a dream, an' his hat's d' limit!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's a t'ree-sheet? an' what's a rock? I don't want to give you no
- insultin' tips, but on d' square! youse ought to take a toim at night
- school. Why! a t'ree-sheet is his shirt, an' d' rock I names is Jimmy's
- spark! Of course, d' spark ain't d' real t'ing; only a rhinestone; but it
- goes in d' Bend all d' same for a 2-carat headlight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jimmy makes a tidy bit of dough, see! He gets, mebby it's fifteen bones a
- week, an' I makes no doubt he shakes down d' bar for ten more, which is
- far from bad graft. So it ain't s'prisin' one day when Jimmy gets it stuck
- in his frizzes he'll be married.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jimmy's Bundle is all right at that. Her name's Annie, an' she's a proper
- straight chip. An' that ain't no song an' dance; square as a die she was.
- An' a bute! She was d' pick of d' Bowery crush, an' don't youse doubt it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, Jimmy an' Annie goes on wit' their courtships, I takes it, same as
- if dey lives on Fift' Avenoo. Annie's a mil'ner, an' while she don't have
- money to t'row to d' boids, she woiks for enough so it's as good as a
- stan'-off on livin', which is all her hand calls for an' all she asts. If
- she don't quit winner after trimmin' hats a week, at any rate she don't
- get in d' hole, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, yes; she an' Jimmy gets action on d' sights. Now an' then it's Coney
- Island; then ag'in it's a front seat at d' People's; or mebby if some of
- d' squeeze has a dance, dey pulls on their skates an' steps in on d'
- spiel. An' say! as a spieler Annie's a wonder, an' don't youse forget it.
- I has d' woid for it from me own Rag, an' when it comes to pickin' out a
- dancer, you can trust me Rag to be dead on in a minute. D' loidy can do a
- dizzy stunt or two on a wax floor herself when it comes to a show-down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But about me romance. Jimmy has chased around wit' Annie, say it's t'ree
- mont's. An' all this time his strong play is voylets, see! Annie is gone
- on voylets, so each evenin' Jimmy toins in on Dinky Pete, who sells
- poipers an' peanuts, an' some of this hard, bum candy you breaks your
- teet's on. Dinky also deals a little flower game, wit' about a 5-cent
- limit, an' that's what gets Jimmy. Just as I says, each evenin' Jimmy
- sticks in a nickel for a bunch of voylets at Dinky's an' sends some kid&mdash;Dinky's
- joint is a great hang-out for d' kids&mdash;to take 'em up to Annie.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' them voylets tickles Annie to death.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At last all goes well, an' Jimmy an' Annie gets spliced. An' it's all
- right at that! Me Rag, who calls on 'em, says Jimmy an' Annie's d'
- happiest ever, an' gettin 'd' boss run for their money.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's about a year when Annie don't do a t'ing but have a kid. At foist
- Jimmy likes it, an' lets on it's d' racket of his career. But after a
- while Jimmy gets chilly&mdash;sort o' gets sore on d' kid. Me Rag gives me
- a pointer it's mostly Annie's fault. She stars d' kid too heavy, an' it
- makes Jimmy feel like a deuce in a bum deck; makes him t'ink he ain't so
- strong&mdash;ain't so warm as he was. An' it toins out' Annie, bein'
- always busy monkeyin' wit 'd' young-one, an' givin' Jimmy d' languid eye,
- d' nex' news you get, Jimmy is back on d' street when he is off watch,
- tryin' to pipe off some fun.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never knows where she catches on wit' Jimmy, but it ain't no time when
- one of them razzle-dazzle blondes has him on d' string. She's doin' d'
- grand at that, see! an' givin' him d' haughty stand-off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mebby Jimmy met her on d' street onct or twict, when for d' foist time,
- Goldie&mdash;which is this blonde tart's name&mdash;says Jimmy can come
- an' see her.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's been mont's since Jimmy's done d' flower act at Dinkey Pete's. But
- d' sucker t'inks it's d' night of his life, an' so he chases in an' goes
- ag'inst Pete's counter for a bunch.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This Dinky Pete's a dead queer little mug. He's a short, sawed-off mark,
- wit' a humpy back an' a bum lamp. But you can gamble your life Î Dinky
- Pete's heart is on straight, whether his back is or not.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's be chanct I'm in Dinky Pete's meself d' time Jimmy is out to meet
- this blonde mash. Now, at d* time I ain't onto Jimmy's curves; I don't
- tumble to d' play till a week later, when me Rag puts me on.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;W'at was I doin' in Dinky Pete's? Flowers? Nit; not on your life! Naw; I
- wants to change me luck. I'd got d' gaff at draw poker d' night before,
- an' I'm layin' for Dinky Pete for to rub his hump on d' sly. Sure!
- Youse'll have luck out of sight. Only you mustn't let d' humpback guy get
- on. If he notices you rubbin' his hump it'll give youse bad luck, see!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jimmy comes in, an' at foist, be force of habit, I s'spose, he's goin' to
- plunge on voylets. But he t'inks of Annie, an' he can't stand for it. Wit'
- that, Jimmy shifts his brush an' tells Dinky Pete to toin him out some
- roses.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'An' make 'em d' reddest in d' joint, see!' says Jimmy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dinky Pete's got his mits on some voylets, but when Jimmy says 'roses'
- Dinky comes to a stan' still.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;' W'at! roses?' says Dinky Pete, an' his ratty eyes&mdash;one of 'em on
- d' hog, as I states&mdash;looks dead sharp at Jimmy. 'Roses?' he repeats.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'That's what I says!' is d' way Jimmy comes back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;' Better take voylets,' says Dinky, an' he stops foolin' wit 'd' flowers
- an' gives Jimmy d' gimlet eye.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Nit,' declares Jimmy; * I'm dead onto me needs. Give me roses.'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'But roses won't last,' says Dinky, an' his look is sharp an' soft an'
- sad all at onct. 'Roses won't last, an' that's for fair,' says Dinky,
- 'while voylets is stayers. Better take voylets, Jimmy!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But Jimmy gets sullen an' won't have no voylets, see! An' he swings an'
- rattles wit' Dinky that he wants roses&mdash;roses red as blood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Roses has thorns,' goes on Dinky, still holdin' his lamps on Jimmy in d'
- same queer way; 'you don't want roses, Jimmy; you just t'inks you want
- roses! Be a square bloke, Jimmy; be yourself an' take voylets!'
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' I'm damned!&rdquo; declares Chucky, &ldquo;if Jimmy don't begin to look like a
- whipped kid, an' d' foist t'ing I knows, he welches on roses, grabs off a
- bunch of voylets big enough to make a salad, an' goes chasin' home to
- Annie. Me Rag is there when Jimmy pours in.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! It's d' finish of d' blonde! She ain't in it! Me rag, on d' quiet,
- gives Annie d' chin-chin of her existence, an' shows her Jimmy ain't
- gettin' a square deal. An' Annie&mdash;who, for all she's nutty about d'
- kid, is a dead wise fowl just d' same&mdash;takes a tumble, an' from that
- time she makes d' bettin' even money on* bot 'd' young-one an' Jimmy. D'
- last time I sees Jimmy he stops to tell me that Annie's a peach, an' d'
- kid's a wonder. An' he's lookin' like a nine-times winner himself. Now
- don't youse call that a romance for Dinky Pete to get onto Jimmy's game so
- quick, an' stickin' to him till he takes d' voylet steer? Ain't it a
- romance? Well! I should kiss a pig!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0080" id="link2H_4_0080"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CRIB OR COFFIN?
- </h2>
- <h3>
- I
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>OUNG Jones stood
- in the telegraph office&mdash;the one at Twenty-third Street and Broadway.
- There was an air of triumph about Jones, an atmosphere of insolent
- sagacity, which might belong to one who, by some sudden, skilful sleight
- had caught a starling. Yet Jones's victory was in nowise uncommon. Others
- had achieved it many a time and oft. It was simply a baby; young Jones had
- become a papa, and it was this that gave him those frills which we have
- chronicled. The presence of young Jones in the telegraph office might be
- explained by looking over his shoulder. This is the message he wrote:
- </p>
- <p>
- New York City, Dec. 8, '99.
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps,
- </p>
- <p>
- Albany, N. Y.
- </p>
- <p>
- I still take it you are interested in the census of your family. Recent
- events in this city have altered the figures. Don't attempt to write a
- history of the tribe of Van Epps without consulting Sanford Jones.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There!&rdquo; said young Jones, &ldquo;that ought to fetch him. He won't know whether
- I mean the birth of a baby or Mary's death. If he doesn't come to see her
- now, I will mark him off my list for good. I would as it stands, if it
- were not for Mary.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Won't father worry, dear?&rdquo; asked Mary, when young Jones repeated the
- ambiguous message he had aimed at his up-the-State father-in-law.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I expect him to shed apprehensive tears all the way to New York,&rdquo; replied
- young Jones. &ldquo;But don't fret, Mary; I am sure he will come; and a tear or
- two won't hurt him. They will help his eyes, even though they do his heart
- no good. I don't resent his treatment of me, but his neglect of you is not
- so easy to forgive.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- II
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>his was the story:
- </p>
- <p>
- Back four years, Albany would have shown you young Jones opening his law
- office in that hamlet. Mary was &ldquo;Mary Van Epps.&rdquo; At that time seventeen
- years was all the family register allowed to her for age.
- </p>
- <p>
- Her father, Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps, was one of the leading citizens
- of Albany. While not a millionaire, he was of sufficient wealth to dazzle
- the local eye, and he was always mentioned by the denizens of his native
- place as &ldquo;rich.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps had a weakness. He was slave to the pedigree
- habit. Never a day went by but he called somebody's attention to those
- celebrities who aforetime founded and set flowing the family of Van Epps;
- and he proposed at some hour in the future to write a history of that
- eminent house. With his wealth and his family pride to prompt him, it came
- easy one day for Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps to object with decision and
- vigour to a match between young Jones and his daughter Mary.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They were both fools!&rdquo; he said.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he pointed out that the day would never dawn when a plebeian like
- unto Jones, without lineage or lucre, boasting nothing better than a law
- office vacant of practice, and on which the rent was in arrears three
- months, would wed a daughter of the Van Epps. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps,
- in elaboration of his objection, showed that beyond a taste to drink
- whiskey and a speculative bent toward draw poker, he knew of nothing which
- young Jones possessed. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps closed, as he began,
- with the emphatic announcement that no orange blossoms would ever blow for
- the nuptials of young Jones and Mary Van Epps.
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps in his attitude will have the indorsement of
- all good Christian people. He was right as a father. As a prophet touching
- orange blossoms, however, he was what vulgar souls call &ldquo;off.&rdquo; Of that
- anon.
- </p>
- <h3>
- III
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>OUNG Jones more
- than half believed that Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps was right. So far as
- whiskey and draw poker were concerned, he went with him; but with Colonel
- Stuyvesant Van Epps' objections to him, based on the lack of pedigree and
- a failure of pocket-book, he didn't sympathise.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I may be poor, and my family tree may be a mullein stalk, but I am still
- a fitting mate for any member of the Van Epps tribe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus spake young Jones to Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. He then took the
- earliest private occasion to kiss Mary good-bye, give her his picture, and
- make her his promise to wed her within five years.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Would she wait?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I would wait a century,&rdquo; said Mary.
- </p>
- <p>
- Young Jones kissed Mary again after that. The next day Albany was short
- one citizen, and that citizen was young Jones. Albany is short to this
- day.
- </p>
- <h3>
- IV
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>et us drop
- details. Good luck came to young Jones, hard on the lonely heels of his
- evacuation of Albany. He was named a junior partner of a New York City law
- firm. His income equalled his hope. He dismissed whiskey and draw poker,
- and he wrote to Mary Van Epps:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Could he claim her now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps said &ldquo;No&rdquo; again. Young Jones still lacked
- ancestry, and a taste for whiskey and four aces still lurked in his blood.
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps would not consent. This served for a time to
- abate the bridal preparations.
- </p>
- <h3>
- V
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>wo years deserted
- the future for the past. A great deal of water will run under a bridge in
- two years. Mary Van Epps was nineteen. She went on a visit to a Trenton
- relative. Young Jones became abundant in Trenton at that very time. They
- took in a parson while on a stroll one day, and when that experienced
- divine got through with them they were man and wife. They wired their
- entangled condition to Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. He sent them a message
- of wrath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I cast Mary off for ever! Never let me see her face again!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Very well!&rdquo; remarked young Jones as he read the wire; &ldquo;I shall need Mary
- myself, in New York. Casting her off, therefore, at Albany, cuts no great
- figure. As for Mary's face, I will look at it all the more to make up for
- her brutal dad's abatement of interest therein.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Then he kissed Mary as if the feat were entirely fresh. And while Mary
- wept, she still felt very happy. Next they came to a modest home in the
- city.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VI
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>wo years more
- trailed the otners into history. Young Jones was held a fortunate man. His
- work was a success. Whiskey and poker were now so far astern as to be
- hull-down in the horizon. And he loved Mary better than ever. She was the
- triumph of his life, and he told her so every day.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It is certainly wonderful,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;how much more beautiful you become
- every day.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This pleased Mary; and while her heart turned to her hard old father, she
- did not repent that episode at Trenton, which changed her name to Jones.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once a month Mary faithfully addressed a letter, new and fresh each time
- with the love that fails and fades not, to &ldquo;Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps,
- Albany, N. Y.&rdquo; And once a month Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps read it,
- gulped a little, and made no reply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I will never see her again!&rdquo; Colonel Stuyvesant
- </p>
- <p>
- Van Epps remarked to himself on these letter occasions.
- </p>
- <p>
- All the time he knew he lived for nothing else. But he thought of his
- family and mustered his pride, and of course became a limitless fool at
- once, as do those who give way to an attack of pedigree.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the Jones baby was born; and young Jones concluded to try his hand on
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps. Mary wanted him to come, and that settled the
- whole matter so far as young Jones was concerned. In his new victory as a
- successful father, he felt that he could look down on Colonel Stuyvesant
- Van Epps. He therefore wrote the message referred to in our first chapter
- with perfect confidence, that, turn as matters might, he had nothing to
- fear.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The past, at least, is secure!&rdquo; said young Jones; &ldquo;and, come what may, I
- have Mary and the baby.&rdquo; Both Mary and young Jones, however, awaited the
- returns from Albany with anxiety;&mdash;Mary, because she loved her father
- and mourned for his old face, and young Jones because he loved Mary. They
- were relieved when the bell rang at 7 P. M., and a bicycle boy handed in a
- yellow paper, which read: &ldquo;Will be there to-morrow on the 8:30.&mdash;Stuyvesant
- Van Epps.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Mary was all gladness. Young Jones was calm, but gave way sufficiently to
- say:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mary, we will call the cub 'Stuyvesant Van Epps Jones.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0016" id="linkimage-0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0335.jpg" alt="0335 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0335.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <h3>
- VII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>OUNG Jones met
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps at the Forty-Second Street station. The old
- gentleman had been torn by doubts and grievous misgivings all the way
- down. What did young Jones' ambiguous message mean? Was Mary dead? Was he
- bound to a funeral? or a christening? Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps knew
- that something tremendous had happened. But what?
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps walked up to young Jones at the station, and
- without pausing to greet him, remarked:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Crib or coffin?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Crib!&rdquo; said young Jones.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps fell into a storm of tears, and began to
- shake young Jones by the hand for the first time in his life.
- </p>
- <h3>
- VIII
- </h3>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he three happiest
- people in the world that night were Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps, Mary and
- young Jones. The baby was the one member of the family who did not give
- way to emotion. He received his grandfather with a stolid phlegm which
- became a Van Epps.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And his name is Stuyvesant Van Epps Jones,&rdquo; said Mary.
- </p>
- <p>
- Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps kissed Mary again at this cheering news, and
- shook hands with young Jones for the second time in his life.
- </p>
- <p>
- That is all there is to a very true story. Colonel Stuyvesant Van Epps
- lives now in New York City, and Albany is shy a second citizen. Mary is
- happy, young Jones feels like a conqueror, and the infant, Stuyvesant Van
- Epps Jones, beneath the eye of his grandsire, waxes apace.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0081" id="link2H_4_0081"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- OHIO DAYS
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0082" id="link2H_4_0082"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- I&mdash;AT THE LEES
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>unt Ann, be we
- goin' to the spellin' to-night at the Block schoolhouse?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee always called his wife &ldquo;Aunt Ann.&rdquo; So did everybody except her
- daughter Lydia. She called Aunt Ann &ldquo;Mother.&rdquo; But to Jim Lee and the other
- inhabitants of Stowe Township, she was &ldquo;Aunt Ann Lee.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- As Jim Lee asked Aunt Ann the question, he threw down the armful of maple
- wood and retreated to the back door to stamp the snow off his boots.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I want to know,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;so's to do the chores in time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann was chopping mince-meat. She was a clean, beautiful woman of the
- buxom sort. Her eyes were very blue, while her hair was very black with
- not a strand of silver, for all her forty-seven years. Jim Lee held Aunt
- Ann in great respect. Aunt Ann on her part was a tender soul and true,
- although Jim Lee had found her quite firm at times.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now and then she's a morsel hard on the bit,&rdquo; said Jim Lee,
- descriptively.
- </p>
- <p>
- Perhaps the two old-maid Spranglers meant the same thing when they said:
- &ldquo;There never was a body with blue eyes and black hair who didn't have the
- snap in 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; replied Aunt Ann to Jim Lee's question &ldquo;yes, of course we'll go.
- I've got to see Mrs. Au about some rag carpets she's weavin' for me, and
- she be there. Better get the Morgan colt and the cutter ready, father;
- we'll go in that.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That'll only hold two,&rdquo; said Jim Lee. &ldquo;How Lide goin' to go?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lide's goin' with Ed Church. She's over to Jenn Ruple's now; she and Jen
- are goin' to choose up for the spellin' bee. But she'll be back in time,
- and Ed Church is comin' for her at half-past seven.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee's face showed that he didn't like Ed Church He said nothing for
- five minutes, and pulling off his kip-skin boots began to give them a coat
- of tallow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where's Ezra?&rdquo; at last he asked. Ezra was the heir of the house of Lee.
- His age was eleven; he was twenty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ezra's down cellar sortin' over that bin of peach blows,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann,
- busy with her mince-me; and chopping-bowl; &ldquo;they'd started to rot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I wanted to send him to the Corners for the mail,&rdquo; suggested Jim Lee, as
- he kneaded the wax tallow into the instep of his boot to soften the
- leather.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0018" id="linkimage-0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0341.jpg" alt="0341 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0341.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'd better hitch up the colt a mite early,&rdquo; answered
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann, &ldquo;and go to the Corners before we start to the spellin'. Ezra's
- got to churn as soon; he's done the peachblows.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was another pause. Jim Lee softly drew on his freshly tallowed
- boots, and then stood up an tried them by raising his heels one after the
- other bending the boots at the toes as if testing a couple of Damascus
- sword blades.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't like this here Ed Church sparkin' our Lide,&rdquo; remarked Jim Lee at
- last; &ldquo;bimeby they'll want to get married.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father!&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, raising her blue eyes with a look of cold
- criticism from the mince-meat she was massacring.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Has he asked Lide yet?&rdquo; said Jim Lee.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, he ain't,&rdquo; replied Aunt Ann, &ldquo;but he's goin' to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do you know?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do I know?&rdquo; repeated Aunt Ann, as she set the chopping-bowl on the
- kitchen table, and turned to put a few select sticks of maple into the
- oven to the end that they become kiln-dried and highly inflammable; &ldquo;how
- do I know Ed Church is goin' to marry Lide? Humph! I can see it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm goin' to put a stop to it,&rdquo; said Jim Lee. &ldquo;This Church boy is goin'
- to keep away from Lide.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father, you're goin' to do nothing of the kind,&rdquo; and Aunt Ann's eyes
- began to sparkle. &ldquo;You can run the farm and Ezra, father; I'll run Lide
- and the house. The only person who's goin' to have a syllable to say about
- Lide's marryin' when the time comes, is Lide herself. If she wants Ed
- Church she's goin' to have him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Aunt Ann, I'm s'prised at you upholdin' for this Church boy!&rdquo; Jim Lee
- threw into his tone a strain of strong reproof. &ldquo;Ed Church drinks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ed Church don't drink,&rdquo; retorted Aunt Ann sharply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How about that time two years ago last summer? Waren't Ed Church drunk
- over at the Royalton Fair?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, he was,&rdquo; answered Aunt Ann, &ldquo;and that's the only time. But so was my
- father drunk once at a barn-raisin' when he was a boy, for I've heerd him
- tell it; and I guess my father, William H. Pickering, was as good as any
- Lee who ever greased his boots. One swallow don't make a summer, and one
- drunk don't make a drunkard. Ed Church told me himself that he ain't took
- a drop since.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm goin' to break up this nonsense between him and Lide, at any rate,&rdquo;
- said Jim Lee. His mood was dogged, and it served to irritate Aunt Ann.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All you've got ag'inst Ed Church, father,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, &ldquo;is that his
- father voted ag'in you for pathmaster, and I'm glad he did. What under the
- sun you ever wanted to be pathmaster for, and go about ploughin' up good
- roads to make 'em bad, was more'n I could see. I'm glad you was beat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm goin' to stop this Church boy hangin' 'round Lide, jest the same,&rdquo;
- was the closing remark of Jim Lee. At this point he went out to the barn
- to put some straw in the cutter and harness the Morgan colt. Aunt Ann
- turned again to her duties.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father is so exasperatin',&rdquo; remarked Aunt Ann, as she poured some boiling
- water over a dozen slices of salt pork to &ldquo;freshen it,&rdquo; in the line of
- preparing them for the evening frying-pan. &ldquo;He'll find out, though, that
- I'll have a tolerable lot to say about Lide's marriage.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0083" id="link2H_4_0083"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- II&mdash;ED CHURCH AND LIDE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>t half-past seven,
- Ed Church swung into Jim Lee's yard, with a horse all bells, and a cutter
- a billow of buffalo robes. He did not dare leave Grey Eagle, his pet colt,
- for Grey Eagle was restless with the wintry evening air and wanted to go.
- So Ed Church notified Lide of his coming by shouting, &ldquo;House!&rdquo; with a
- great voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Grey Eagle made a plunge at the sound, but was brought up by the bit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How'dy do, Ed,&rdquo; said Lide, as she came out the side door. She looked rosy
- and pretty with her muskrat muff and cape.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hello, Lide,&rdquo; said Ed. &ldquo;You'll have to scramble in yourself. I can hardly
- hold the colt this weather, when he don't have nothin' to do but eat.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide scrambled in. As Ed Church stood up in the cutter to allow Lide a
- chance to be seated, her face came close to his. Taking his eyes from Grey
- Eagle for the mere fraction of a second, he kissed her dexterously. Lide
- received the caress with the most admirable composure, and Ed Church
- himself did not act as if the idea was a discovery or the experiment new.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let him out, Ed!&rdquo; said Lide, when they were well into the road.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a foot of snow on the ground. The fence corners showed great
- drifts, while each rail of the fence had a ruffle of its own of cold,
- white snow. As far as one could see in the moonlight, the fields to each
- side were like milk. In the background stood the grey woods laced against
- the sky. Here and there a lamp shone in a neighbour's window like an eye
- of fire.
- </p>
- <p>
- Stowe Township was out that night. The steady beat of the bells could be
- heard ahead and behind. Ed Church sent Grey Eagle forward with long
- strides, the cutter following over the hard, packed snow with no more of
- resistance than a feather. Lide held her muff to her face, so that she
- might open her mouth to talk without catching any of the flying snowballs
- from Grey Eagle's nervous hoofs.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It'll be a big spellin'-school to-night,&rdquo; said Lide.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I guess it will,&rdquo; replied Ed. &ldquo;I hear folks are comin' clear from
- Hammond Corners.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If that Gentry girl comes,&rdquo; said Lide, &ldquo;mind! you're not to speak to her,
- Ed. If you do, you can go home alone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Ed grinned with an air of pleased superiority.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Get up,&rdquo; he said to Grey Eagle. Then to Lide: &ldquo;Go on! You're jealous!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I ain't!&rdquo; said Lide, with a lofty intonation. &ldquo;Speak to her if you
- want to! What do I care!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I won't speak to her, Lide.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Ed looked at his sweetheart to see how she received his submission. As the
- road was level and straight at this point, and Grey Eagle had worn away
- the wire edge of his appetite to &ldquo;go,&rdquo; Ed put his face in behind the
- muskrat muff and kissed Lide again. The victim abetted the outrage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I saw ye!&rdquo; yelled a happy voice behind. It was Ben Francis with Jennie
- Ruple. They also were enthroned in a cutter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What if you did?&rdquo; retorted Lide with a toss.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do it again if I want to!&rdquo; shouted Ed Church with much joyous hardihood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I never asked you to marry me yet, did I, Lide?&rdquo; observed Ed Church,
- after two minutes of silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you didn't,&rdquo; said Lide from behind the muskrat muff. The words would
- have sounded hard, if it were not for the sudden soft sweetness of the
- voice, which was half a whisper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'll do it now,&rdquo; said Ed, with much resolution, but a little shake
- in the tone. &ldquo;You'll marry me, Lide, when we get ready?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ed, what do you think father 'll say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Ed Church knew Lide's father found no joy in him. The next time his voice
- took on a moody, half-sullen sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't care what he says! I ain't marryin' the hull Lee family.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But s'pose he says we can't?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If he does, I'll run away with you, Lide,&rdquo; and Ed Church's tones were
- touched with storm. &ldquo;I'm goin* to marry you even if all the Lees in the
- state stand in the way!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide crowded a bit closer to Ed at this, and, holding the muskrat muff
- against her face to keep her nose from getting red, said nothing. Lide was
- thinking what a noble fellow Ed was, and how much she admired him.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0084" id="link2H_4_0084"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- III&mdash;THE SPELLING SCHOOL
- </h2>
- <p>
- The Block schoolhouse was crowded. Lide and Ed made their way toward the
- back benches. Jim Lee spoke to his daughter and growled gruffly at Ed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The latter half growled back. Aunt Ann was all smiles and approval of Ed.
- At this, Ed thought her the best woman on earth except his own mother, and
- mentally put her next that excellent old lady in his heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a Mr. Parker who taught at the Block school-house. At 8 o'clock he
- rapped on the teacher's desk with a ruler, and everybody who was standing
- up hunted for a seat. Those who could find none&mdash;they were all young
- men and boys&mdash;crouched down along the walls of the big school-room
- and made seats of their heels. Mr. Parker came down from his desk and
- opened the stove door with the end of the ruler. The stove&mdash;a
- long-bodied air-tight&mdash;was raging red hot from the four-foot wood
- blazing in its interior. When the door was opened the heat almost singed
- Mr. Parker's eyebrows. At this he started back nervously, and Ben Weld and
- Will Jenkins, two very small boys, laughed. The stove on its part began to
- cool off and the cherry colour faded from its hot sides, leaving them
- brown and rusty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lydia Lee and Jennie Ruple have been selected to choose sides for the
- spelling contest,&rdquo; said Mr. Parker.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide and Jennie seated themselves side by side on the bench which ran
- along the rear of the room. It was Lide's first choice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ed Church,&rdquo; called Lide in a low voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- Several young persons giggled, while Ed, blushing deeply to have his
- sweetheart's preference thus forced into prominence, blundered along the
- aisle and sat down by Lide. It was Jennie's choice. Jennie selected Ben
- Francis.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course!&rdquo; said Ada Farr in a loud whisper to
- </p>
- <p>
- Myrtle Jones, &ldquo;they'd choose their beaux first, so as to sit by 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- There was no gainsaying the Farr girl's statement. The &ldquo;choosing up,&rdquo;
- however, went on. At last everybody, young and old, from the grey-headed
- grandpa to the five-year-old just sent to his first school that winter,
- had been chosen by Lide or Jennie. Then Mr. Parker began to give out the
- words.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ed Church failed on the first word. It was &ldquo;emphasis.&rdquo; Ed thought there
- was an &ldquo;f&rdquo; in it. He straightway sat down and spelled no more that night.
- Lide made a better showing, and lasted through five words. She tripped on
- &ldquo;suet&rdquo; upon which she conferred an &ldquo;i.&rdquo; Lide then joined Ed among the
- silenced ones.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lide Lee missed on purpose,&rdquo; whispered the Farr girl to her neighbour
- Myrtle Jones, &ldquo;so she could sit and talk with Ed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee spelled well, but fell a prey to &ldquo;moustache.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At last only three were left standing&mdash;Nellie Brad-dock, a girl from
- Hammond Corners, and Aunt Ann. Mr. Parker turned over to the back part of
- the spelling book where the hard words lived. Nellie Braddock fell before
- &ldquo;umbrageous.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The struggle between the girl from Hammond Corners and Aunt Ann was a
- battle of the giantesses. The girl from Hammond Corners was the champion
- speller of her region, and had spelled down every school so far that
- winter. The interest was intense, as first to Aunt Ann and then to the
- girl from Hammond Corners, Mr. Parker put out:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fantasy.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Autobiographer.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thaumaturgie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cosmography.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At last the girl from Hammond Corners tripped on:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sibylline.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- She made it &ldquo;syb.&rdquo; Mr. Parker had to show her the spelling book to
- convince the girl from Hammond Corners that she had missed. She glanced in
- the spelling book where Mr. Parker's finger pointed, and then burst into
- tears. At this an unknown young man, presumably from Hammond Corners, got
- up and excitedly declared the book to be wrong. Nobody took any notice of
- him, however, and Aunt Ann Lee was named the victor. She had spelled down
- the school.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0085" id="link2H_4_0085"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- IV&mdash;THE FIGHT
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">E</span>d CHURCH left Lide
- talking with the girls in the schoolhouse while he went back to the waggon
- shed to get Grey Eagle and bring him and the cutter to the door. As Ed was
- in the entry of the schoolhouse he was stopped by little Joe Barnes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say! Fan Brown's out there waitin' for you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What about Fan Brown?&rdquo; asked Ed Church.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fan Brown was the bully of Hinckley. He boasted that he could thrash any
- man between Bath Lakes and the Hinckley Ridge.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He says he's goin' to wallop you for shootin' his dawg last summer,&rdquo; said
- little Joe Barnes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Joe, will you do something for me?&rdquo; asked Ed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yep!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You go and tell Lide Lee in there that I'm goin' over to Square Chanler's
- to get a neck-yoke he borrowed and I'll be right back. Tell her to wait in
- the school-house till I come.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's afraid of Fan Brown and is runnin' over to Square Chanler's to get
- the constable,&rdquo; said little Joe Barnes to himself. For this he despised Ed
- Church very much, but went in and delivered the message.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right!&rdquo; said Lide, and then went on gossiping with the girls.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ed Church stepped out of the schoolhouse and started for the horse-sheds.
- </p>
- <p>
- He noticed a knot of men standing at the rear corner of the building;
- among them he discerned the stocky, bull-necked bully of Hinckley, Fan
- Brown.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here he comes now!&rdquo; said one, as Ed approached.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let him come!&rdquo; gritted the bully; &ldquo;I'll fix him! I'll show him whose dog
- he's been shootin! As fine a coon dog, boys, as ever went into a corn
- field. He shot him, and I ain't goin' back to Hinckley till I mash his
- face.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the row here?&rdquo; said Ed Church, walking straight to the little
- huddle about Fan Brown. His tones were brittle and bold; a note of ready
- war ran through them. Not at all the voice in which he talked to Lide. &ldquo;I
- understand somebody's lookin' for me. Who is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's me, by G&mdash;d! You killed my dog last summer, and I'm goin'&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, you ain't,&rdquo; said Ed, interrupting; &ldquo;you ain't goin' to do a thing.
- You may be the bully of Hinckley, Fan Brown, but you can't scare me. Your
- dog was killin' sheep; he was a good deal like you; but bein' a dog I
- could shoot him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, and I ain't goin' back to Hinckley until I maul you so you won't
- shoot another dog as long as you live.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Enough said!&rdquo; replied Ed, &ldquo;come right down in the hollow back of the
- horse sheds, where the folks won't see, and do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just then a small, meagre man approached. He walked with a lounging gait,
- and when he spoke he had a thin, mealy voice.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter here?&rdquo; piped the meagre little man.
- </p>
- <p>
- His name was Dick Bond. He was renowned widely as a wrestler. Gladiators
- had come from far and near, and at town meetings and barn raisings,
- wrestled with little Dick Bond. Where a hundred tried not one succeeded.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had not lost a &ldquo;fall&rdquo; for four years. His skill had given birth to a
- half proverb, and when somebody said he would do something, and somebody
- else doubted it, the latter would observe with laughing scorn: &ldquo;Yes;
- you'll do it when somebody throws Dick Bond.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Such was the fell repute of this invincible little man that when his
- shrill, light voice made the inquiry chronicled, a silence fell on the
- crowd and no one answered.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who's goin' to fight?&rdquo; asked Dick Bond more pointedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm goin' to fight Fan Brown,&rdquo; said Ed.
- </p>
- <p>
- There was a load of ferocity in the way he said it, which showed that Ed,
- himself, had a latent hunger for battle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I guess I'll go 'long and see it,&rdquo; said Dick Bond pipingly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do you want to fight?&rdquo; asked Ed of Fan Brown when each had buttoned
- up his coat tight to the chin. &ldquo;Stand up, or rough and tumble?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Rough and tumble,&rdquo; said Fan Brown savagely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, boys,&rdquo; said Dick Bond when all was ready, &ldquo;I'll give the word and
- then you're goin' to fight until one of you says 'enough.' And remember!
- there's no bitin' no gougin', no scratchin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bitin' goes?&rdquo; declared Fan Brown, in a fashion of savage interrogatory.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bitin' don't go!&rdquo; replied the lean little referee, &ldquo;and if you offer to
- bite or gouge, Fan Brown, I'll break your neck. You'll never go back to
- Hinckley short of being carried in a blanket.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0019" id="linkimage-0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0353.jpg" alt="0353 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0353.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- The battle was brief and bloody. It didn't last ten minutes. When it was
- over, Ed Church, bleeding, but victorious, walked back to the sheds to get
- Grey Eagle. Fan Brown was unable to rise from the snow without help. His
- face was beaten badly, and he was a thoroughly whipped person. Dick Bond
- expressed great satisfaction, and in his high voice said it was a splendid
- fight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But, Brown,&rdquo; said Dick Bond to the beaten one, &ldquo;I can't see how you got
- it into your head you could lick Ed Church. Why, man! he was all over you
- like a panther.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The news of the fight ran like wildfire. Everybody knew of it before an
- hour passed. It was a source of general satisfaction that Ed Church had
- whipped Fan Brown, the Hinckley bully, yet no one failed to stamp the
- whole proceeding as disgraceful; that is, among the older men at least.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide, however, when she heard of the valour of her lover felt a great
- tenderness for him, and was never kinder than when they drove Grey Eagle
- back from the Block schoolhouse spelling-bee that crisp winter night.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0086" id="link2H_4_0086"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- V&mdash;JIM LEE INTERFERES
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>OTHER,&rdquo; sobbed
- Lide, as she threw herself down on the chintz lounge without pausing to
- take off her hat or cape, &ldquo;father has just told Ed never to come to the
- house nor speak to me again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee and Aunt Ann got home before the lovers. The news of the broil
- overtook them, however. Jim Lee declared it a scandal and a scorn.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now you see,&rdquo; he said to Aunt Ann, &ldquo;what sort of ruffian the Church boy
- is!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I'm glad he whipped that miserable Fan Brown,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann. &ldquo;He's
- done nothin' for ten years but come over here to Stowe Township and raise
- a fuss. I'm glad somebody's at last spunked up and thrashed him. I'd done
- it years ago if I had been a man.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Aunt Ann Lee!&rdquo; said Jim Lee, hitting the Morgan colt a blow with the whip
- which set that sprightly animal almost astride the thills&mdash;&ldquo;Aunt Ann,
- do you tell me you approve of Ed Church lickin' Fan Brown?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, I do,&rdquo; retorted Aunt Ann, stoutly, &ldquo;and so will Lide. If you
- imagine, father, a woman finds fault with a man because he'll fight other
- men you don't know the sex.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee moaned. Absolutely! for the first time in his life Aunt Ann had
- shocked him. Not another word was spoken by Jim Lee all the way home.
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann went into the house when they arrived, while Jim Lee remained to
- put up the Morgan colt. He was busy in the barn when Ed and Lide drove
- into the yard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Father came up to Ed,&rdquo; sobbed Lide, as she lay on the lounge, &ldquo;and called
- him a brawler and a drunkard, and said he'd got to keep away from me.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What did Ed say?&rdquo; asked Aunt Ann, as she sat down by her daughter and
- began, with kind hands, to take off her hat and cape. Every touch was full
- of motherly love and tenderness.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh! Ed didn't say much,&rdquo; said Lide, giving way to long-drawn sighs; a
- fashion of dead swell following the storm of sobs. &ldquo;He said he'd marry me
- whether father was willing or not. Then he drove away.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann smiled.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I guess Ed Church is pretty high strung,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, &ldquo;but that won't
- hurt him any.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee came in at that moment, looking a bit sheepish and guilty; but
- over it all an atmosphere of victory.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That Church boy will stay away now, I guess!&rdquo; said Jim Lee, as he got the
- bootjack and began pulling off his boots.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jim Lee, you're an awful fool!&rdquo; observed Aunt Ann with the air of a sibyl
- settling all things. &ldquo;You're the biggest numbskull in Stowe Township!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why?&rdquo; asked Jim Lee.
- </p>
- <p>
- He was disturbed because Aunt Ann addressed him by his full name.
- Experience had taught him that defeat ever followed hard on the heels of
- his full name, when Aunt Ann made use of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never mind why!&rdquo; said Aunt Ann.
- </p>
- <p>
- And not another word could Jim Lee get from her.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0087" id="link2H_4_0087"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- VI&mdash;THEY DECORATE
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was a month
- after the spelling-school. Stowe Township was decorating the Church for
- Christmas. For time out of mind Stowe Township had had a Christmas tree at
- the Church, and everybody, rich or poor, high or low, young or old, great
- or small, got a present if it were nothing but a gauze stocking full of
- painted popcorn.
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann, as usual, was at the head of the decorating committee. The
- Church was full of long strings of evergreen, which Aunt Ann's satellites
- were festooning about the walls, and to that end there was much climbing
- of step-ladders, much standing on tip-toe, much pounding of thumbs with
- caitiff tack-hammers, vilely wielded by girlish hands. Occasionally some
- fair step-ladder maid gave the public a glimpse of a well-filled woollen
- stocking as she went up and down, or stood on her toes on the top step. At
- this, the young men present always blushed, while the maidens tittered.
- Most people don't know it, but the male of our species is more modest,
- more easily embarrassed, than the female.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Christmas tree had just arrived. It had been contributed by &ldquo;Square&rdquo;
- Chanler. The tree was a noble hemlock; thick and feathery of bough,
- perfect of general outline. Old Curl, the Rip Van Winkle of Stowe, had cut
- it down and hauled it to the church on &ldquo;Square&rdquo; Chanler's bob-sleds. All
- the smallfry of the Corners had gone with Old Curl after the Christmas
- tree, and were faithful to him to the last. Every one of them was
- clamorously forward in unloading the tree and getting it into the Church.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then it was taken charge of by Aunt Ann, who put the smallfry to flight.
- They were to be beneficiaries of the tree, and it was held that their joy
- would be enhanced if they were not allowed to remain while the tree was
- decorated, and were debarred all sight thereof until Christmas Eve, when
- the presents would be cut from the boughs and bestowed upon their owners.
- </p>
- <p>
- One little boy had a cold, and Aunt Ann let him remain in the Church. This
- little boy perched himself in a window where his fellows outside might see
- and envy him. There was a three-cornered hole in the window pane near him,
- and the little boy was wont every few moments to place his mouth to this
- crevice and say to the boys outside:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My! but you ought to see what Aunt Ann's tyin' on the tree now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; would chorus the outside boys.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Can't tell you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boy with the cold became the most unpopular child in Stowe Township,
- and several of his fellows outside in their agony threatened him with
- personal violence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll lick you when I ketch you!&rdquo; shouted children in the rabble rout to
- the lucky child with the cold.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't care!&rdquo; said the child inside, &ldquo;you just ought to see the tree
- now!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide Lee was aiding the others to festoon the church. Under the maternal
- direction she was fitting tawdry little wax candles among the branches of
- the Christmas tree, and tying on Barlow knives for all the little boys,
- and &ldquo;Housewives&rdquo; for all the little girls.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lide had not seen Ed save once since the spelling-school, and then she met
- him in the village drug-store by chance. But they wrote to each other, and
- some progress in this way had been made toward an elopement which was
- scheduled for the coming Spring. Aunt Ann in the depths of her sagacity,
- suspected the arrangement, but it gave her no alarm. As for Jim Lee, so
- fatuous was he that he believed he had ended all ties between his daughter
- and Ed Church.
- </p>
- <p>
- While decorations were in progress in the church, Jim Lee suddenly drove
- up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Aunt Ann,&rdquo; said Jim Lee, after pausing to admire the garish display,
- &ldquo;Aunt Ann, I've just got a line from Ludlow, and there's goin' to be a
- special meetin' of the board of directors of our Ice Company, and I've got
- to mosey into the city.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jim Lee had an air of importance. He liked to appear before Aunt Ann in
- the attitude of a much-sought-for man of business.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pshaw! father, that's too bad!&rdquo; said Aunt Ann. &ldquo;Can't you be back by
- Christmas Eve?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; Christmas Eve is only day after to-morrow, and the Ice Company
- business ought to last a week, so Ludlow says.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well!&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, &ldquo;if you must go, you must. Ezra can do most of the
- chores while you're away, and I'll have Old Curl come and do the heaviest
- of 'em.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- So Jim Lee kissed Aunt Ann, and then kissed Lide. This latter caress was a
- trifle strained, for Jim Lee felt guilty when he looked at his daughter;
- and Lide hadn't half forgiven him his actions toward her idolised Ed.
- Since Ed had been forbidden her society, Lide loved him much better than
- before.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus started Jim Lee for the city on Ice Company matters, Tuesday
- afternoon. Christmas Eve was the following Thursday. Jim Lee would return
- on the Monday or Tuesday after. He was fated to find some startling
- changes on his coming back.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0088" id="link2H_4_0088"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- VII&mdash;AUNT ANN PLOTS
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>UNT Ann found much
- to occupy her during the hours before Christmas Eve. There were
- forty-eight of these hours. Aunt Ann needed them all.
- </p>
- <p>
- For one matter she made Ezra drive her over to the County Seat. She wanted
- to see her brother, Will Pickering, who was Probate Judge of the County.
- Aunt Ann also dispatched a letter by trusty messenger to her sister, Mary
- Newton, who lived at Eastern Crossroads, some seven miles from Stowe. As a
- last assignment, Aunt Ann told Ezra to go over and ask Ed to come up to
- the house.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You'll be at the Christmas tree at the church tonight, won't you, Ed?&rdquo;
- asked Aunt Ann, after making some excuse for sending for him. She put the
- question quite casually.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well! be sure and come, Ed,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann. &ldquo;And more'n that, be sure and
- dress yourself up. I think I'll need you to help me get things off the
- high limbs.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Aunt Ann, as she led Lide to his side. &ldquo;Now, Brother Crandall, if you will
- perform the ceremony&mdash;the short form, please, and leave out the word
- 'obey'&mdash;the distribution will be complete.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But the licence!&rdquo; gasped the Rev. Crandall.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There it is,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, &ldquo;with my brother Will's seal and signature
- as Probate Judge on it. You don't s'pose I had Ezra drive me clear to the
- County Seat in the dead of winter for nothing?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The ceremony was over. Ed and Lide were &ldquo;Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Church;&rdquo; and
- the entire population of Stowe, some in tears, all in earnest, were
- kissing the bride and shaking hearty hands with the groom. That latter
- young gentleman was dazed and happy, and looked both.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, Ed,&rdquo; said Aunt Ann, after kissing him and then kissing Lide, &ldquo;I'm
- your mother; and I'll begin to tell you what to do. You put Lide in your
- cutter and head Grey Eagle for Eastern Cross-roads. I sent Mary word you
- were coming, and there's a trunk full of Lide's things gone over. Stay a
- week. If you need collars, or shirts or anything, Mary will give you some
- of John's. Stay a week and then come home. Father will be back from the
- Ice Company Tuesday, and by Thursday of next week, when you return, I'll
- have him fully convinced that all is ordered for the best, and whatever
- is, is right. So kiss your mother again, children, and start. I hear Grey
- Eagle's bells a-jingling, where Dick Bond's brought him to the door.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <h3>
- THE END
- </h3>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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