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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Abysmal Brute, by Jack London
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Abysmal Brute
-
-Author: Jack London
-
-Illustrator: Gordon Grant
-
-Release Date: November 12, 2017 [EBook #55948]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ABYSMAL BRUTE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
-Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously
-made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- ABYSMAL BRUTE
-
- BY
- JACK LONDON
- Author of "The Call of the Wild,"
- "The Sea Wolf," "Smoke Bellew,"
- "The Night Born," etc.
-
-
- NEW YORK
- THE CENTURY CO.
- 1913
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE ABYSMAL BRUTE
-
-I
-
-
-Sam Stubener ran through his mail carelessly and rapidly. As became a
-manager of prize-fighters, he was accustomed to a various and bizarre
-correspondence. Every crank, sport, near sport, and reformer seemed
-to have ideas to impart to him. From dire threats against his life
-to milder threats, such as pushing in the front of his face, from
-rabbit-foot fetishes to lucky horse-shoes, from dinky jerkwater bids
-to the quarter-of-a-million-dollar offers of irresponsible nobodies,
-he knew the whole run of the surprise portion of his mail. In his time
-having received a razor-strop made from the skin of a lynched negro,
-and a finger, withered and sun-dried, cut from the body of a white
-man found in Death Valley, he was of the opinion that never again
-would the postman bring him anything that could startle him. But this
-morning he opened a letter that he read a second time, put away in
-his pocket, and took out for a third reading. It was postmarked from
-some unheard-of post-office in Siskiyou County, and it ran:
-
-
- Dear Sam:
-
- You don't know me, except my reputation. You come after my time,
- and I've been out of the game a long time. But take it from
- me I ain't been asleep. I've followed the whole game, and I've
- followed you, from the time Kal Aufman knocked you out to your
- last handling of Nat Belson, and I take it you're the niftiest
- thing in the line of managers that ever came down the pike.
-
- I got a proposition for you. I got the greatest unknown that ever
- happened. This ain't con. It's the straight goods. What do you
- think of a husky that tips the scales at two hundred and twenty
- pounds fighting weight, is twenty-two years old, and can hit a
- kick twice as hard as my best ever? That's him, my boy, Young
- Pat Glendon, that's the name he'll fight under. I've planned it
- all out. Now the best thing you can do is hit the first train
- and come up here.
-
- I bred him and I trained him. All that I ever had in my head I've
- hammered into his. And maybe you won't believe it, but he's added
- to it. He's a born fighter. He's a wonder at time and distance. He
- just knows to the second and the inch, and he don't have to think
- about it at all. His six-inch jolt is more the real sleep medicine
- than the full-arm swing of most geezers.
-
- Talk about the hope of the white race. This is him. Come and
- take a peep. When you was managing Jeffries you was crazy about
- hunting. Come along and I'll give you some real hunting and
- fishing that will make your moving picture winnings look like
- thirty cents. I'll send Young Pat out with you. I ain't able to
- get around. That's why I'm sending for you. I was going to manage
- him myself. But it ain't no use. I'm all in and likely to pass out
- any time. So get a move on. I want you to manage him. There's a
- fortune in it for both of you, but I want to draw up the contract.
-
-
- Yours truly,
-
- PAT GLENDON.
-
-
-Stubener was puzzled. It seemed, on the face of it, a joke--the men
-in the fighting game were notorious jokers--and he tried to discern
-the fine hand of Corbett or the big friendly paw of Fitzsimmons in
-the screed before him. But if it were genuine, he knew it was worth
-looking into. Pat Glendon was before his time, though, as a cub, he
-had once seen Old Pat spar at the benefit for Jack Dempsey. Even then
-he was called "Old" Pat, and had been out of the ring for years. He
-had antedated Sullivan, in the old London Prize Ring Rules, though
-his last fading battles had been put up under the incoming Marquis
-of Queensbury Rules.
-
-What ring-follower did not know of Pat Glendon?--though few were
-alive who had seen him in his prime, and there were not many more
-who had seen him at all. Yet his name had come down in the history
-of the ring, and no sporting writer's lexicon was complete without
-it. His fame was paradoxical. No man was honored higher, and yet
-he had never attained championship honors. He had been unfortunate,
-and had been known as the unlucky fighter.
-
-Four times he all but won the heavyweight championship, and each
-time he had deserved to win it. There was the time on the barge, in
-San Francisco Bay, when, at the moment he had the champion going,
-he snapped his own forearm; and on the island in the Thames,
-sloshing about in six inches of rising tide, he broke a leg at
-a similar stage in a winning fight; in Texas, too, there was the
-never-to-be-forgotten day when the police broke in just as he had
-his man going in all certainty. And finally, there was the fight in
-the Mechanics' Pavilion in San Francisco, when he was secretly jobbed
-from the first by a gun-fighting bad man of a referee backed by a small
-syndicate of bettors. Pat Glendon had had no accidents in that fight,
-but when he had knocked his man cold with a right to the jaw and a
-left to the solar plexus, the referee calmly disqualified him for
-fouling. Every ringside witness, every sporting expert, and the whole
-sporting world, knew there had been no foul. Yet, like all fighters,
-Pat Glendon had agreed to abide by the decision of the referee. Pat
-abided, and accepted it as in keeping with the rest of his bad luck.
-
-This was Pat Glendon. What bothered Stubener was whether or not Pat
-had written the letter. He carried it down town with him. What's
-become of Pat Glendon? Such was his greeting to all sports that
-morning. Nobody seemed to know. Some thought he must be dead, but none
-knew positively. The fight editor of a morning daily looked up the
-records and was able to state that his death had not been noted. It
-was from Tim Donovan, that he got a clue.
-
-"Sure an' he ain't dead," said Donovan. "How could that be?--a man of
-his make that never boozed or blew himself? He made money, and what's
-more, he saved it and invested it. Didn't he have three saloons at the
-one time? An' wasn't he makin' slathers of money with them when he
-sold out? Now that I'm thinkin', that was the last time I laid eyes
-on him--when he sold them out. 'Twas all of twenty years and more
-ago. His wife had just died. I met him headin' for the Ferry. 'Where
-away, old sport?' says I. 'It's me for the woods,' says he. 'I've
-quit. Good-by, Tim, me boy.' And I've never seen him from that day
-to this. Of course he ain't dead."
-
-"You say when his wife died--did he have any children?" Stubener
-queried.
-
-"One, a little baby. He was luggin' it in his arms that very day."
-
-"Was it a boy?"
-
-"How should I be knowin'?"
-
-It was then that Sam Stubener reached a decision, and that night found
-him in a Pullman speeding toward the wilds of Northern California.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Stubener was dropped off the overland at Deer Lick in the early
-morning, and he kicked his heels for an hour before the one saloon
-opened its doors. No, the saloonkeeper didn't know anything about Pat
-Glendon, had never heard of him, and if he was in that part of the
-country he must be out beyond somewhere. Neither had the one hanger-on
-ever heard of Pat Glendon. At the hotel the same ignorance obtained,
-and it was not until the storekeeper and postmaster opened up that
-Stubener struck the trail. Oh, yes, Pat Glendon lived out beyond. You
-took the stage at Alpine, which was forty miles and which was a
-logging camp. From Alpine, on horseback, you rode up Antelope Valley
-and crossed the divide to Bear Creek. Pat Glendon lived somewhere
-beyond that. The people of Alpine would know. Yes, there was a young
-Pat. The storekeeper had seen him. He had been in to Deer Lick two
-years back. Old Pat had not put in an appearance for five years. He
-bought his supplies at the store, and always paid by check, and he was
-a white-haired, strange old man. That was all the storekeeper knew,
-but the folks at Alpine could give him final directions.
-
-It looked good to Stubener. Beyond doubt there was a young Pat Glendon,
-as well as an old one, living out beyond. That night the manager spent
-at the logging camp of Alpine, and early the following morning he rode
-a mountain cayuse up Antelope Valley. He rode over the divide and down
-Bear Creek. He rode all day, through the wildest, roughest country
-he had ever seen, and at sunset turned up Pinto Valley on a trail so
-stiff and narrow that more than once he elected to get off and walk.
-
-It was eleven o'clock when he dismounted before a log cabin and was
-greeted by the baying of two huge deer-hounds. Then Pat Glendon opened
-the door, fell on his neck, and took him in.
-
-"I knew ye'd come, Sam, me boy," said Pat, the while he limped about,
-building a fire, boiling coffee, and frying a big bear-steak. "The
-young un ain't home the night. We was gettin' short of meat, and he
-went out about sundown to pick up a deer. But I'll say no more. Wait
-till ye see him. He'll be home in the morn, and then you can try him
-out. There's the gloves. But wait till ye see him.
-
-"As for me, I'm finished. Eighty-one come next January, an' pretty good
-for an ex-bruiser. But I never wasted meself, Sam, nor kept late hours
-an' burned the candle at all ends. I had a damned good candle, an' made
-the most of it, as you'll grant at lookin' at me. And I've taught the
-same to the young un. What do you think of a lad of twenty-two that's
-never had a drink in his life nor tasted tobacco? That's him. He's
-a giant, and he's lived natural all his days. Wait till he takes you
-out after deer. He'll break your heart travelin' light, him a carryin'
-the outfit and a big buck deer belike. He's a child of the open air,
-an' winter nor summer has he slept under a roof. The open for him,
-as I taught him. The one thing that worries me is how he'll take
-to sleepin' in houses, an' how he'll stand the tobacco smoke in the
-ring. 'Tis a terrible thing, that smoke, when you're fighting hard an'
-gaspin' for air. But no more, Sam, me boy. You're tired an' sure should
-be sleepin'. Wait till you see him, that's all. Wait till you see him."
-
-But the garrulousness of age was on old Pat, and it was long before
-he permitted Stubener's eyes to close.
-
-"He can run a deer down with his own legs, that young un," he broke out
-again. "'Tis the dandy trainin' for the lungs, the hunter's life. He
-don't know much of else, though, he's read a few books at times an'
-poetry stuff. He's just plain pure natural, as you'll see when you
-clap eyes on him. He's got the old Irish strong in him. Sometimes, the
-way he moons about, it's thinkin' strong I am that he believes in the
-fairies and such-like. He's a nature lover if ever there was one, an'
-he's afeard of cities. He's read about them, but the biggest he was
-ever in was Deer Lick. He misliked the many people, and his report
-was that they'd stand weedin' out. That was two years agone--the
-first and the last time he's seen a locomotive and a train of cars.
-
-"Sometimes it's wrong I'm thinkin' I am, bringin' him up a
-natural. It's given him wind and stamina and the strength o' wild
-bulls. No city-grown man can have a look-in against him. I'm willin' to
-grant that Jeffries at his best could 'a' worried the young un a bit,
-but only a bit. The young un could 'a' broke him like a straw. An'
-he don't look it. That's the everlasting wonder of it. He's only a
-fine-seeming young husky; but it's the quality of his muscle that's
-different. But wait till ye see him, that's all.
-
-"A strange liking the boy has for posies, an' little meadows, a bit of
-pine with the moon beyond, windy sunsets, or the sun o' morns from the
-top of old Baldy. An' he has a hankerin' for the drawin' o' pitchers
-of things, an' of spouting about 'Lucifer or night' from the poetry
-books he got from the red-headed school teacher. But 'tis only his
-youngness. He'll settle down to the game once we get him started, but
-watch out for grouches when it first comes to livin' in a city for him.
-
-"A good thing; he's woman-shy. They'll not bother him for years. He
-can't bring himself to understand the creatures, an' damn few of
-them has he seen at that. 'Twas the school teacher over at Samson's
-Flat that put the poetry stuff in his head. She was clean daffy
-over the young un, an' he never a-knowin'. A warm-haired girl she
-was--not a mountain girl, but from down in the flat-lands--an' as
-time went by she was fair desperate, an' the way she went after him
-was shameless. An' what d'ye think the boy did when he tumbled to
-it? He was scared as a jackrabbit. He took blankets an' ammunition
-an' hiked for tall timber. Not for a month did I lay eyes on him, an'
-then he sneaked in after dark and was gone in the morn. Nor would he
-as much as peep at her letters. 'Burn 'em,' he said. An' burn 'em I
-did. Twice she rode over on a cayuse all the way from Samson's Flat,
-an' I was sorry for the young creature. She was fair hungry for the
-boy, and she looked it in her face. An' at the end of three months
-she gave up school an' went back to her own country, an' then it was
-that the boy came home to the shack to live again.
-
-"Women ha' ben the ruination of many a good fighter, but they won't
-be of him. He blushes like a girl if anything young in skirts looks
-at him a second time or too long the first one. An' they all look at
-him. But when he fights, when he fights!--God! it's the old savage
-Irish that flares in him, an' drives the fists of him. Not that he
-goes off his base. Don't walk away with that. At my best I was never
-as cool as he. I misdoubt 'twas the wrath of me that brought the
-accidents. But he's an iceberg. He's hot an' cold at the one time,
-a live wire in an ice-chest."
-
-Stubener was dozing, when the old man's mumble aroused him. He
-listened drowsily.
-
-"I made a man o' him, by God! I made a man o' him, with the two fists
-of him, an' the upstanding legs of him, an' the straight-seein'
-eyes. And I know the game in my head, an' I've kept up with the
-times and the modern changes. The crouch? Sure, he knows all the
-styles an' economies. He never moves two inches when an inch and a
-half will do the turn. And when he wants he can spring like a buck
-kangaroo. In-fightin'? Wait till you see. Better than his out-fightin',
-and he could sure 'a' sparred with Peter Jackson an' outfooted Corbett
-in his best. I tell you, I've taught'm it all, to the last trick, and
-he's improved on the teachin'. He's a fair genius at the game. An'
-he's had plenty of husky mountain men to try out on. I gave him the
-fancy work and they gave him the sloggin'. Nothing shy or delicate
-about them. Roarin' bulls an' big grizzly bears, that's what they are,
-when it comes to huggin' in a clinch or swingin' rough-like in the
-rushes. An' he plays with 'em. Man, d'ye hear me?--he plays with them,
-like you an' me would play with little puppy-dogs."
-
-Another time Stubener awoke, to hear the old man mumbling:
-
-"'Tis the funny think he don't take fightin' seriously. It's that
-easy to him he thinks it play. But wait till he's tapped a swift
-one. That's all, wait. An' you'll see'm throw on the juice in that
-cold storage plant of his an' turn loose the prettiest scientific
-wallopin' that ever you laid eyes on."
-
-In the shivery gray of mountain dawn, Stubener was routed from his
-blankets by old Pat.
-
-"He's comin' up the trail now," was the hoarse whisper. "Out with
-ye an' take your first peep at the biggest fightin' man the ring has
-ever seen, or will ever see in a thousand years again."
-
-The manager peered through the open door, rubbing the sleep from his
-heavy eyes, and saw a young giant walk into the clearing. In one hand
-was a rifle, across his shoulders a heavy deer under which he moved
-as if it were weightless. He was dressed roughly in blue overalls
-and woolen shirt open at the throat. Coat he had none, and on his
-feet, instead of brogans, were moccasins. Stubener noted that his
-walk was smooth and catlike, without suggestion of his two hundred
-and twenty pounds of weight to which that of the deer was added. The
-fight manager was impressed from the first glimpse. Formidable the
-young fellow certainly was, but the manager sensed the strangeness
-and unusualness of him. He was a new type, something different
-from the run of fighters. He seemed a creature of the wild, more a
-night-roaming figure from some old fairy story or folk tale than a
-twentieth-century youth.
-
-A thing Stubener quickly discovered was that young Pat was not much
-of a talker. He acknowledged old Pat's introduction with a grip of
-the hand but without speech, and silently set to work at building
-the fire and getting breakfast. To his father's direct questions he
-answered in monosyllables, as, for instance, when asked where he had
-picked up the deer.
-
-"South Fork," was all he vouchsafed.
-
-"Eleven miles across the mountains," the old man exposited pridefully
-to Stubener, "an' a trail that'd break your heart."
-
-Breakfast consisted of black coffee, sourdough bread, and an immense
-quantity of bear-meat broiled over the coals. Of this the young
-fellow ate ravenously, and Stubener divined that both the Glendons
-were accustomed to an almost straight meat diet. Old Pat did all the
-talking, though it was not till the meal was ended that he broached
-the subject he had at heart.
-
-"Pat, boy," he began, "you know who the gentleman is?"
-
-Young Pat nodded, and cast a quick, comprehensive glance at the
-manager.
-
-"Well, he'll be takin' you away with him and down to San Francisco."
-
-"I'd sooner stay here, dad," was the answer.
-
-Stubener felt a prick of disappointment. It was a wild goose chase
-after all. This was no fighter, eager and fretting to be at it. His
-huge brawn counted for nothing. It was nothing new. It was the big
-fellows that usually had the streak of fat.
-
-But old Pat's Celtic wrath flared up, and his voice was harsh with
-command.
-
-"You'll go down to the cities an' fight, me boy. That's what I've
-trained you for, an' you'll do it."
-
-"All right," was the unexpected response, rumbled apathetically from
-the deep chest.
-
-"And fight like hell," the old man added.
-
-Again Stubener felt disappointment at the absence of flash and fire
-in the young man's eyes as he answered:
-
-"All right. When do we start?"
-
-"Oh, Sam, here, he'll be wantin' a little huntin' and to fish a bit,
-as well as to try you out with the gloves." He looked at Sam, who
-nodded. "Suppose you strip and give'm a taste of your quality."
-
-An hour later, Sam Stubener had his eyes opened. An ex-fighter himself,
-a heavyweight at that, he was even a better judge of fighters, and
-never had he seen one strip to like advantage.
-
-"See the softness of him," old Pat chanted. "'Tis the true stuff. Look
-at the slope of the shoulders, an' the lungs of him. Clean, all clean,
-to the last drop an' ounce of him. You're lookin' at a man, Sam, the
-like of which was never seen before. Not a muscle of him bound. No
-weight-lifter or Sandow exercise artist there. See the fat snakes
-of muscles a-crawlin' soft an' lazy-like. Wait till you see them
-flashin' like a strikin' rattler. He's good for forty rounds this
-blessed instant, or a hundred. Go to it! Time!"
-
-They went to it, for three-minute rounds with a minute rests, and
-Sam Stubener was immediately undeceived. Here was no streak of fat,
-no apathy, only a lazy, good-natured play of gloves and tricks, with
-a brusk stiffness and harsh sharpness in the contacts that he knew
-belonged only to the trained and instinctive fighting man.
-
-"Easy, now, easy," old Pat warned. "Sam's not the man he used to be."
-
-This nettled Sam, as it was intended to do, and he played his most
-famous trick and favorite punch--a feint for a clinch and a right
-rip to the stomach. But, quickly as it was delivered, young Pat saw
-it, and, though it landed, his body was going away. The next time,
-his body did not go away. As the rip started, he moved forward and
-twisted his left hip to meet it. It was only a matter of several
-inches, yet it blocked the blow. And thereafter, try as he would,
-Stubener's glove got no farther than that hip.
-
-Stubener had roughed it with big men in his time, and, in exhibition
-bouts, had creditably held his own. But there was no holding his own
-here. Young Pat played with him, and in the clinches made him feel
-as powerful as a baby, landing on him seemingly at will, locking
-and blocking with masterful accuracy, and scarcely noticing or
-acknowledging his existence. Half the time young Pat seemed to spend
-in gazing off and out at the landscape in a dreamy sort of way. And
-right here Stubener made another mistake. He took it for a trick of
-old Pat's training, tried to sneak in a short-arm jolt, found his
-arm in a lightning lock, and had both his ears cuffed for his pains.
-
-"The instinct for a blow," the old man chortled. "'Tis not put on,
-I'm tellin' you. He is a wiz. He knows a blow without the lookin',
-when it starts an' where, the speed, an' space, an' niceness of it. An'
-'tis nothing I ever showed him. 'Tis inspiration. He was so born."
-
-Once, in a clinch, the fight manager heeled his glove on young Pat's
-mouth, and there was just a hint of viciousness in the manner of doing
-it. A moment later, in the next clinch, Sam received the heel of the
-other's glove on his own mouth. There was nothing snappy about it,
-but the pressure, stolidly lazy as it was, put his head back till the
-joints cracked and for the moment he thought his neck was broken. He
-slacked his body and dropped his arms in token that the bout was over,
-felt the instant release, and staggered clear.
-
-"He'll--he'll do," he gasped, looking the admiration he lacked the
-breath to utter.
-
-Old Pat's eyes were brightly moist with pride and triumph.
-
-"An' what will you be thinkin' to happen when some of the gay an'
-ugly ones tries to rough it on him?" he asked.
-
-"He'll kill them, sure," was Stubener's verdict.
-
-"No; he's too cool for that. But he'll just hurt them some for their
-dirtiness."
-
-"Let's draw up the contract," said the manager.
-
-"Wait till you know the whole worth of him!" Old Pat answered. "'Tis
-strong terms I'll be makin' you come to. Go for a deer-hunt with
-the boy over the hills an' learn the lungs and the legs of him. Then
-we'll sign up iron-clad and regular."
-
-Stubener was gone two days on that hunt, and he learned all and
-more than old Pat had promised, and came back a very weary and
-very humble man. The young fellow's innocence of the world had
-been startling to the case-hardened manager, but he had found him
-nobody's fool. Virgin though his mind was, untouched by all save a
-narrow mountain experience, nevertheless he had proved possession
-of a natural keenness and shrewdness far beyond the average. In a
-way he was a mystery to Sam, who could not understand his terrible
-equanimity of temper. Nothing ruffled him or worried him, and his
-patience was of an enduring primitiveness. He never swore, not even
-the futile and emasculated cuss-words of sissy-boys.
-
-"I'd swear all right if I wanted to," he had explained, when challenged
-by his companion. "But I guess I've never come to needing it. When
-I do, I'll swear, I suppose."
-
-Old Pat, resolutely adhering to his decision, said good-by at the
-cabin.
-
-"It won't be long, Pat, boy, when I'll be readin' about you in the
-papers. I'd like to go along, but I'm afeard it's me for the mountains
-till the end."
-
-And then, drawing the manager aside, the old man turned loose on him
-almost savagely.
-
-"Remember what I've ben tellin' ye over an' over. The boy's clean an'
-he's honest. He knows nothing of the rottenness of the game. I kept it
-all away from him, I tell you. He don't know the meanin' of fake. He
-knows only the bravery, an' romance an' glory of fightin', and I've
-filled him up with tales of the old ring heroes, though little enough,
-God knows, it's set him afire. Man, man, I'm tellin' you that I clipped
-the fight columns from the newspapers to keep it 'way from him--him
-a-thinkin' I was wantin' them for me scrap book. He don't know a man
-ever lay down or threw a fight. So don't you get him in anything that
-ain't straight. Don't turn the boy's stomach. That's why I put in the
-null and void clause. The first rottenness and the contract's broke of
-itself. No snide division of stake-money; no secret arrangements with
-the movin' pitcher men for guaranteed distance. There's slathers o'
-money for the both of you. But play it square or you lose. Understand?
-
-"And whatever you'll be doin' watch out for the women," was old Pat's
-parting admonishment, young Pat astride his horse and reining in
-dutifully to hear. "Women is death an' damnation, remember that. But
-when you do find the one, the only one, hang on to her. She'll be
-worth more than glory an' money. But first be sure, an' when you're
-sure, don't let her slip through your fingers. Grab her with the two
-hands of you and hang on. Hang on if all the world goes to smash an'
-smithereens. Pat, boy, a good woman is ... a good woman. 'Tis the
-first word and the last."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-Once in San Francisco, Sam Stubener's troubles began. Not that young
-Pat had a nasty temper, or was grouchy as his father had feared. On
-the contrary, he was phenomenally sweet and mild. But he was homesick
-for his beloved mountains. Also, he was secretly appalled by the city,
-though he trod its roaring streets imperturbable as a red Indian.
-
-"I came down here to fight," he announced, at the end of the first
-week.
-
-"Where's Jim Hanford?"
-
-Stubener whistled.
-
-"A big champion like him wouldn't look at you," was his answer. "'Go
-and get a reputation,' is what he'd say."
-
-"I can lick him."
-
-"But the public doesn't know that. If you licked him you'd be champion
-of the world, and no champion ever became so with his first fight."
-
-"I can."
-
-"But the public doesn't know it, Pat. It wouldn't come to see
-you fight. And it's the crowd that brings the money and the
-big purses. That's why Jim Hanford wouldn't consider you for a
-second. There'd be nothing in it for him. Besides, he's getting
-three thousand a week right now in vaudeville, with a contract for
-twenty-five weeks. Do you think he'd chuck that for a go with a
-man no one ever heard of? You've got to do something first, make a
-record. You've got to begin on the little local dubs that nobody ever
-heard of--guys like Chub Collins, Rough-House Kelly, and the Flying
-Dutchman. When you've put them away, you're only started on the first
-round of the ladder. But after that you'll go up like a balloon."
-
-"I'll meet those three named in the same ring one after the other,"
-was Pat's decision. "Make the arrangements accordingly."
-
-Stubener laughed.
-
-"What's wrong? Don't you think I can put them away?"
-
-"I know you can," Stubener assured him. "But it can't be arranged that
-way. You've got to take them one at a time. Besides, remember, I know
-the game and I'm managing you. This proposition has to be worked up,
-and I'm the boy that knows how. If we're lucky, you may get to the
-top in a couple of years and be the champion with a mint of money."
-
-Pat sighed at the prospect, then brightened up.
-
-"And after that I can retire and go back home to the old man," he said.
-
-Stubener was about to reply, but checked himself. Strange as was
-this championship material, he felt confident that when the top was
-reached it would prove very similar to that of all the others who
-had gone before. Besides, two years was a long way off, and there
-was much to be done in the meantime.
-
-When Pat fell to moping around his quarters, reading endless poetry
-books and novels drawn from the public library, Stubener sent him off
-to live on a Contra Costa ranch across the Bay, under the watchful eye
-of Spider Walsh. At the end of a week Spider whispered that the job
-was a cinch. His charge was away and over the hills from dawn till
-dark, whipping the streams for trout, shooting quail and rabbits,
-and pursuing the one lone and crafty buck famous for having survived
-a decade of hunters. It was the Spider who waxed lazy and fat, while
-his charge kept himself in condition.
-
-As Stubener expected, his unknown was laughed at by the fight club
-managers. Were not the woods full of unknowns who were always breaking
-out with championship rashes? A preliminary, say of four rounds--yes,
-they would grant him that. But the main event--never. Stubener was
-resolved that young Pat should make his debut in nothing less than a
-main event, and, by the prestige of his own name he at last managed
-it. With much misgiving, the Mission Club agreed that Pat Glendon
-could go fifteen rounds with Rough-House Kelly for a purse of one
-hundred dollars. It was the custom of young fighters to assume the
-names of old ring heroes, so no one suspected that he was the son of
-the great Pat Glendon, while Stubener held his peace. It was a good
-press surprise package to spring later.
-
-Came the night of the fight, after a month of waiting. Stubener's
-anxiety was keen. His professional reputation was staked that his man
-would make a showing, and he was astounded to see Pat, seated in his
-corner a bare five minutes, lose the healthy color from his cheeks,
-which turned a sickly yellow.
-
-"Cheer up, boy," Stubener said, slapping him on the shoulder. "The
-first time in the ring is always strange, and Kelly has a way
-of letting his opponent wait for him on the chance of getting
-stage-fright."
-
-"It isn't that," Pat answered. "It's the tobacco smoke. I'm not used
-to it, and it's making me fair sick."
-
-His manager experienced the quick shock of relief. A man who turned
-sick from mental causes, even if he were a Samson, could never win
-to place in the prize ring. As for tobacco smoke, the youngster would
-have to get used to it, that was all.
-
-Young Pat's entrance into the ring had been met with silence, but
-when Rough-House Kelly crawled through the ropes his greeting was
-uproarious. He did not belie his name. He was a ferocious-looking
-man, black and hairy, with huge, knotty muscles, weighing a full two
-hundred pounds. Pat looked across at him curiously, and received a
-savage scowl. After both had been introduced to the audience, they
-shook hands. And even as their gloves gripped, Kelly ground his teeth,
-convulsed his face with an expression of rage, and muttered:
-
-"You've got yer nerve wid yeh." He flung Pat's hand roughly from his,
-and hissed, "I'll eat yeh up, ye pup!"
-
-The audience laughed at the action, and it guessed hilariously at
-what Kelly must have said.
-
-Back in his corner, and waiting the gong, Pat turned to Stubener.
-
-"Why is he angry with me?" he asked.
-
-"He ain't," Stubener answered. "That's his way, trying to scare
-you. It's just mouth-fighting."
-
-"It isn't boxing," was Pat's comment; and Stubener, with a quick
-glance, noted that his eyes were as mildly blue as ever.
-
-"Be careful," the manager warned, as the gong for the first round
-sounded and Pat stood up. "He's liable to come at you like a
-man-eater."
-
-And like a man-eater Kelly did come at him, rushing across the ring
-in wild fury. Pat, who in his easy way had advanced only a couple of
-paces, gauged the other's momentum, side-stepped, and brought his
-stiff-arched right across to the jaw. Then he stood and looked on
-with a great curiosity. The fight was over. Kelly had fallen like
-a stricken bullock to the floor, and there he lay without movement
-while the referee, bending over him, shouted the ten seconds in
-his unheeding ear. When Kelly's seconds came to lift him, Pat was
-before them. Gathering the huge, inert bulk of the man in his arms,
-he carried him to his corner and deposited him on the stool and in
-the arms of his seconds.
-
-Half a minute later, Kelly's head lifted and his eyes wavered open. He
-looked about him stupidly and then to one of his seconds.
-
-"What happened?" he queried hoarsely. "Did the roof fall on me?"
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-As a result of his fight with Kelly, though the general opinion was
-that he had won by a fluke, Pat was matched with Rufe Mason. This took
-place three weeks later, and the Sierra Club audience at Dreamland
-Rink failed to see what happened. Rufe Mason was a heavyweight,
-noted locally for his cleverness. When the gong for the first round
-sounded, both men met in the center of the ring. Neither rushed. Nor
-did they strike a blow. They felt around each other, their arms bent,
-their gloves so close together that they almost touched. This lasted
-for perhaps five seconds. Then it happened, and so quickly that
-not one in a hundred of the audience saw. Rufe Mason made a feint
-with his right. It was obviously not a real feint, but a feeler,
-a mere tentative threatening of a possible blow. It was at this
-instant that Pat loosed his punch. So close together were they that
-the distance the blow traveled was a scant eight inches. It was a
-short-arm left jolt, and it was accomplished by a twist of the left
-forearm and a thrust of the shoulder. It landed flush on the point
-of the chin and the astounded audience saw Rufe Mason's legs crumple
-under him as his body sank to the floor. But the referee had seen,
-and he promptly proceeded to count him out. Again Pat carried his
-opponent to his corner, and it was ten minutes before Rufe Mason,
-supported by his seconds, with sagging knees and rolling, glassy eyes,
-was able to move down the aisle through the stupefied and incredulous
-audience on the way to his dressing room.
-
-"No wonder," he told a reporter, "that Rough-House Kelly thought the
-roof hit him."
-
-After Chub Collins had been put out in the twelfth second of the
-first round of a fifteen-round contest, Stubener felt compelled to
-speak to Pat.
-
-"Do you know what they're calling you now?" he asked.
-
-Pat shook his head.
-
-"One Punch Glendon."
-
-Pat smiled politely. He was little interested in what he was called. He
-had certain work cut out which he must do ere he could win back to
-his mountains, and he was phlegmatically doing it, that was all.
-
-"It won't do," his manager continued, with an ominous shake of the
-head. "You can't go on putting your men out so quickly. You must give
-them more time."
-
-"I'm here to fight, ain't I?" Pat demanded in surprise.
-
-Again Stubener shook his head.
-
-"It's this way, Pat. You've got to be big and generous in the fighting
-game. Don't get all the other fighters sore. And it's not fair to
-the audience. They want a run for their money. Besides, no one will
-fight you. They'll all be scared out. And you can't draw crowds with
-ten-second fights. I leave it to you. Would you pay a dollar, or five,
-to see a ten-second fight?"
-
-Pat was convinced, and he promised to give future audiences the
-requisite run for their money, though he stated that, personally,
-he preferred going fishing to witnessing a hundred rounds of fighting.
-
-And still, Pat had got practically nowhere in the game. The local
-sports laughed when his name was mentioned. It called to mind funny
-fights and Rough-House Kelly's remark about the roof. Nobody knew
-how Pat could fight. They had never seen him. Where was his wind,
-his stamina, his ability to mix it with rough customers through long
-grueling contests? He had demonstrated nothing but the possession of
-a lucky punch and a depressing proclivity for flukes.
-
-So it was that his fourth match was arranged with Pete Sosso,
-a Portuguese fighter from Butchertown, known only for the amazing
-tricks he played in the ring. Pat did not train for the fight. Instead
-he made a flying and sorrowful trip to the mountains to bury his
-father. Old Pat had known well the condition of his heart, and it
-had stopped suddenly on him.
-
-Young Pat arrived back in San Francisco with so close a margin of time
-that he changed into his fighting togs directly from his traveling
-suit, and even then the audience was kept waiting ten minutes.
-
-"Remember, give him a chance," Stubener cautioned him as he climbed
-through the ropes. "Play with him, but do it seriously. Let him go
-ten or twelve rounds, then get him."
-
-Pat obeyed instructions, and, though it would have been easy enough
-to put Sosso out, so tricky was he that to stand up to him and not
-put him out kept his hands full. It was a pretty exhibition, and
-the audience was delighted. Sosso's whirlwind attacks, wild feints,
-retreats, and rushes, required all Pat's science to protect himself,
-and even then he did not escape unscathed.
-
-Stubener praised him in the minute-rests, and all would have been well,
-had not Sosso, in the fourth round, played one of his most spectacular
-tricks. Pat, in a mix-up, had landed a hook to Sosso's jaw, when to
-his amazement, the latter dropped his hands and reeled backward, eyes
-rolling, legs bending and giving, in a high state of grogginess. Pat
-could not understand. It had not been a knock-out blow, and yet there
-was his man all ready to fall to the mat. Pat dropped his own hands and
-wonderingly watched his reeling opponent. Sosso staggered away, almost
-fell, recovered, and staggered obliquely and blindly forward again.
-
-For the first and the last time in his fighting career, Pat was caught
-off his guard. He actually stepped aside to let the reeling man go
-by. Still reeling, Sosso suddenly loosed his right. Pat received it
-full on his jaw with an impact that rattled all his teeth. A great
-roar of delight went up from the audience. But Pat did not hear. He
-saw only Sosso before him, grinning and defiant, and not the least
-bit groggy. Pat was hurt by the blow, but vastly more outraged by the
-trick. All the wrath that his father ever had surged up in him. He
-shook his head as if to get rid of the shock of the blow and steadied
-himself before his man. It all occurred in the next second. With
-a feint that drew his opponent, Pat fetched his left to the solar
-plexus, almost at the same instant whipping his right across to the
-jaw. The latter blow landed on Sosso's mouth ere his falling body
-struck the floor. The club doctors worked half an hour to bring him
-to. After that they put eleven stitches in his mouth and packed him
-off in an ambulance.
-
-"I'm sorry," Pat told his manager, "I'm afraid I lost my temper. I'll
-never do it again in the ring. Dad always cautioned me about it. He
-said it had made him lose more than one battle. I didn't know I could
-lose my temper that way, but now that I know I'll keep it in control."
-
-And Stubener believed him. He was coming to the stage where he could
-believe anything about his young charge.
-
-"You don't need to get angry," he said, "you're so thoroughly the
-master of your man at any stage."
-
-"At any inch or second of the fight," Pat affirmed.
-
-"And you can put them out any time you want."
-
-"Sure I can. I don't want to boast. But I just seem to possess the
-ability. My eyes show me the opening that my skill knows how to make,
-and time and distance are second nature to me. Dad called it a gift,
-but I thought he was blarneying me. Now that I've been up against
-these men, I guess he was right. He said I had the mind and muscle
-correlation."
-
-"At any inch or second of the fight," Stubener repeated musingly.
-
-Pat nodded, and Stubener, absolutely believing him, caught a vision
-of a golden future that should have fetched old Pat out of his grave.
-
-"Well, don't forget, we've got to give the crowd a run for its money,"
-he said. "We'll fix it up between us how many rounds a fight should
-go. Now your next bout will be with the Flying Dutchman. Suppose you
-let it run the full fifteen and put him out in the last round. That
-will give you a chance to make a showing as well."
-
-"All right, Sam," was the answer.
-
-"It will be a test for you," Stubener warned. "You may fail to put
-him out in that last round."
-
-"Watch me." Pat paused to put weight to his promise, and picked up
-a volume of Longfellow. "If I don't I'll never read poetry again,
-and that's going some."
-
-"You bet it is," his manager proclaimed jubilantly, "though what you
-see in such stuff is beyond me."
-
-Pat sighed, but did not reply. In all his life he had found but one
-person who cared for poetry, and that had been the red-haired school
-teacher who scared him off into the woods.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-"Where are you going?" Stubener demanded in surprise, looking at
-his watch.
-
-Pat, with his hand on the door-knob, paused and turned around.
-
-"To the Academy of Sciences," he said. "There's a professor who's
-going to give a lecture there on Browning to-night, and Browning
-is the sort of writer you need assistance with. Sometimes I think I
-ought to go to night school."
-
-"But great Scott, man!" exclaimed the horrified manager. "You're on
-with the Flying Dutchman to-night."
-
-"I know it. But I won't enter the ring a moment before half past nine
-or quarter to ten. The lecture will be over at nine fifteen. If you
-want to make sure, come around and pick me up in your machine."
-
-Stubener shrugged his shoulders helplessly.
-
-"You've got no kick coming," Pat assured him. "Dad used to tell me a
-man's worst time was in the hours just before a fight, and that many a
-fight was lost by a man's breaking down right there, with nothing to
-do but think and be anxious. Well, you'll never need to worry about
-me that way. You ought to be glad I can go off to a lecture."
-
-And later that night, in the course of watching fifteen splendid
-rounds, Stubener chuckled to himself more than once at the idea
-of what that audience of sports would think, did it know that this
-magnificent young prize-fighter had come to the ring directly from
-a Browning lecture.
-
-The Flying Dutchman was a young Swede who possessed an unwonted
-willingness to fight and who was blessed with phenomenal endurance. He
-never rested, was always on the offensive, and rushed and fought from
-gong to gong. In the out-fighting his arms whirled about like flails,
-in the in-fighting he was forever shouldering or half-wrestling and
-starting blows whenever he could get a hand free. From start to finish
-he was a whirlwind, hence his name. His failing was lack of judgment
-in time and distance. Nevertheless he had won many fights by virtue of
-landing one in each dozen or so of the unending fusillades of punches
-he delivered. Pat, with strong upon him the caution that he must not
-put his opponent out, was kept busy. Nor, though he escaped vital
-damage, could he avoid entirely those eternal flying gloves. But it
-was good training, and in a mild way he enjoyed the contest.
-
-"Could you get him now?" Stubener whispered in his ear during the
-minute rest at the end of the fifth round.
-
-"Sure," was Pat's answer.
-
-"You know he's never yet been knocked out by any one," Stubener warned
-a couple of rounds later.
-
-"Then I'm afraid I'll have to break my knuckles," Pat smiled. "I know
-the punch I've got in me, and when I land it something's got to go. If
-he won't, my knuckles will."
-
-"Do you think you could get him now?" Stubener asked at the end of
-the thirteenth round.
-
-"Anytime, I tell you."
-
-"Well, then, Pat, let him run to the fifteenth."
-
-In the fourteenth round the Flying Dutchman exceeded himself. At the
-stroke of the gong he rushed clear across the ring to the opposite
-corner where Pat was leisurely getting to his feet. The house cheered,
-for it knew the Flying Dutchman had cut loose. Pat, catching the
-fun of it, whimsically decided to meet the terrific onslaught with
-a wholly passive defense and not to strike a blow. Nor did he strike
-a blow, nor feint a blow, during the three minutes of whirlwind that
-followed. He gave a rare exhibition of stalling, sometimes hugging his
-bowed face with his left arm, his abdomen with his right; at other
-times, changing as the point of attack changed, so that both gloves
-were held on either side his face, or both elbows and forearms guarded
-his mid-section; and all the time moving about, clumsily shouldering,
-or half-falling forward against his opponent and clogging his efforts;
-himself never striking nor threatening to strike, the while rocking
-with the impacts of the storming blows that beat upon his various
-guards the devil's own tattoo.
-
-Those close at the ringside saw and appreciated, but the rest of
-the audience, fooled, arose to its feet and roared its applause in
-the mistaken notion that Pat, helpless, was receiving a terrible
-beating. With the end of the round, the audience, dumbfounded, sank
-back into its seats as Pat walked steadily to his corner. It was not
-understandable. He should have been beaten to a pulp, and yet nothing
-had happened to him.
-
-"Now are you going to get him?" Stubener queried anxiously.
-
-"Inside ten seconds," was Pat's confident assertion. "Watch me."
-
-There was no trick about it. When the gong struck and Pat bounded
-to his feet, he advertised it unmistakably that for the first
-time in the fight he was starting after his man. Not one onlooker
-misunderstood. The Flying Dutchman read the advertisement, too, and for
-the first time in his career, as they met in the center of the ring,
-visibly hesitated. For the fraction of a second they faced each other
-in position. Then the Flying Dutchman leaped forward upon his man,
-and Pat, with a timed right-cross, dropped him cold as he leaped.
-
-It was after this battle that Pat Glendon started on his upward rush
-to fame. The sports and the sporting writers took him up. For the first
-time the Flying Dutchman had been knocked out. His conqueror had proved
-a wizard of defense. His previous victories had not been flukes. He had
-a kick in both his hands. Giant that he was, he would go far. The time
-was already past, the writers asserted, for him to waste himself on the
-third-raters and chopping blocks. Where were Ben Menzies, Rege Rede,
-Bill Tarwater, and Ernest Lawson? It was time for them to meet this
-young cub that had suddenly shown himself a fighter of quality. Where
-was his manager anyway, that he was not issuing the challenges?
-
-And then fame came in a day; for Stubener divulged the secret that
-his man was none other than the son of Pat Glendon, Old Pat, the
-old-time ring hero. "Young" Pat Glendon, he was promptly christened,
-and sports and writers flocked about him to admire him, and back him,
-and write him up.
-
-Beginning with Ben Menzies and finishing with Bill Tarwater, he
-challenged, fought, and knocked out the four second-raters. To do this,
-he was compelled to travel, the battles taking place in Goldfield,
-Denver, Texas, and New York. To accomplish it required months, for
-the bigger fights were not easily arranged, and the men themselves
-demanded more time for training.
-
-The second year saw him running to cover and disposing of the
-half-dozen big fighters that clustered just beneath the top of
-the heavyweight ladder. On this top, firmly planted, stood "Big"
-Jim Hanford, the undefeated world champion. Here, on the top rungs,
-progress was slower, though Stubener was indefatigable in issuing
-challenges and in promoting sporting opinion to force the man to
-fight. Will King was disposed of in England, and Glendon pursued
-Tom Harrison half way around the world to defeat him on Boxing Day
-in Australia.
-
-But the purses grew larger and larger. In place of a hundred dollars,
-such as his first battles had earned him, he was now receiving
-from twenty to thirty thousand dollars a fight, as well as equally
-large sums from the moving picture men. Stubener took his manager's
-percentage of all this, according to the terms of the contract old Pat
-had drawn up, and both he and Glendon, despite their heavy expenses,
-were waxing rich. This was due, more than anything else, to the clean
-lives they lived. They were not wasters.
-
-Stubener was attracted to real estate, and his holdings in San
-Francisco, consisting of building flats and apartment houses, were
-bigger than Glendon ever dreamed. There was a secret syndicate of
-bettors, however, which could have made an accurate guess at the
-size of Stubener's holdings, while heavy bonus after heavy bonus,
-of which Glendon never heard, was paid over to his manager by the
-moving picture men.
-
-Stubener's most serious task was in maintaining the innocence of
-his young gladiator. Nor did he find it difficult. Glendon, who had
-nothing to do with the business end, was little interested. Besides,
-wherever his travels took him, he spent his spare time in hunting
-and fishing. He rarely mingled with those of the sporting world,
-was notoriously shy and secluded, and preferred art galleries and
-books of verse to sporting gossip. Also, his trainers and sparring
-partners were rigorously instructed by the manager to keep their
-tongues away from the slightest hints of ring rottenness. In every
-way Stubener intervened between Glendon and the world. He was never
-even interviewed save in Stubener's presence.
-
-Only once was Glendon approached. It was just prior to his battle
-with Henderson, and an offer of a hundred thousand was made to him
-to throw the fight. It was made hurriedly, in swift whispers, in a
-hotel corridor, and it was fortunate for the man that Pat controlled
-his temper and shouldered past him without reply. He brought the tale
-of it to Stubener, who said:
-
-"It's only con, Pat. They were trying to josh you." He noted the blue
-eyes blaze. "And maybe worse than that. If they could have got you
-to fall for it, there might have been a big sensation in the papers
-that would have finished you. But I doubt it. Such things don't happen
-any more. It's a myth, that's what it is, that has come down from the
-middle history of the ring. There has been rottenness in the past,
-but no fighter or manager of reputation would dare anything of the
-sort to-day. Why, Pat, the men in the game are as clean and straight
-as those in professional baseball, than which there is nothing cleaner
-or straighter."
-
-And all the while he talked, Stubener knew in his heart that the
-forthcoming fight with Henderson was not to be shorter than twelve
-rounds--this for the moving pictures--and not longer than the
-fourteenth round. And he knew, furthermore, so big were the stakes
-involved, that Henderson himself was pledged not to last beyond
-the fourteenth.
-
-And Glendon, never approached again, dismissed the matter from his mind
-and went out to spend the afternoon in taking color photographs. The
-camera had become his latest hobby. Loving pictures, yet unable to
-paint, he had compromised by taking up photography. In his hand baggage
-was one grip packed with books on the subject, and he spent long hours
-in the dark room, realizing for himself the various processes. Never
-had there been a great fighter who was as aloof from the fighting world
-as he. Because he had little to say with those he encountered, he was
-called sullen and unsocial, and out of this a newspaper reputation
-took form that was not an exaggeration so much as it was an entire
-misconception. Boiled down, his character in print was that of an
-ox-muscled and dumbly stupid brute, and one callow sporting writer
-dubbed him the "abysmal brute." The name stuck. The rest of the
-fraternity hailed it with delight, and thereafter Glendon's name never
-appeared in print unconnected with it. Often, in a headline or under
-a photograph, "The Abysmal Brute," capitalized and without quotation
-marks, appeared alone. All the world knew who was this brute. This
-made him draw into himself closer than ever, while it developed a
-bitter prejudice against newspaper folk.
-
-Regarding fighting itself, his earlier mild interest grew stronger. The
-men he now fought were anything but dubs, and victory did not come
-so easily. They were picked men, experienced ring generals, and each
-battle was a problem. There were occasions when he found it impossible
-to put them out in any designated later round of a fight. Thus, with
-Sulzberger, the gigantic German, try as he would in the eighteenth
-round, he failed to get him, in the nineteenth it was the same story,
-and not till the twentieth did he manage to break through the baffling
-guard and drop him. Glendon's increasing enjoyment of the game was
-accompanied by severer and prolonged training. Never dissipating,
-spending much of his time on hunting trips in the hills, he was
-practically always in the pink of condition, and, unlike his father,
-no unfortunate accidents marred his career. He never broke a bone,
-nor injured so much as a knuckle. One thing that Stubener noted with
-secret glee was that his young fighter no longer talked of going
-permanently back to his mountains when he had won the championship
-away from Jim Hanford.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-The consummation of his career was rapidly approaching. The great
-champion had even publicly intimated his readiness to take on Glendon
-as soon as the latter had disposed of the three or four aspirants for
-the championship who intervened. In six months Pat managed to put away
-Kid McGrath and Philadelphia Jack McBride, and there remained only Nat
-Powers and Tom Cannam. And all would have been well had not a certain
-society girl gone adventuring into journalism, and had not Stubener
-agreed to an interview with the woman reporter of the San Francisco
-"Courier-Journal."
-
-Her work was always published over the name of Maud Sangster, which,
-by the way, was her own name. The Sangsters were a notoriously
-wealthy family. The founder, old Jacob Sangster, had packed his
-blankets and worked as a farm-hand in the West. He had discovered an
-inexhaustible borax deposit in Nevada, and, from hauling it out by
-mule-teams, had built a railroad to do the freighting. Following that,
-he had poured the profits of borax into the purchase of hundreds and
-thousands of square miles of timber lands in California, Oregon, and
-Washington. Still later, he had combined politics with business, bought
-statesmen, judges, and machines, and become a captain of complicated
-industry. And after that he had died, full of honor and pessimism,
-leaving his name a muddy blot for future historians to smudge,
-and also leaving a matter of a couple of hundreds of millions for
-his four sons to squabble over. The legal, industrial, and political
-battles that followed, vexed and amused California for a generation,
-and culminated in deadly hatred and unspeaking terms between the four
-sons. The youngest, Theodore, in middle life experienced a change of
-heart, sold out his stock farms and racing stables, and plunged into
-a fight with all the corrupt powers of his native state, including
-most of its millionaires, in a quixotic attempt to purge it of the
-infamy which had been implanted by old Jacob Sangster.
-
-Maud Sangster was Theodore's oldest daughter. The Sangster stock
-uniformly bred fighters among the men and beauties among the women. Nor
-was Maud an exception. Also, she must have inherited some of the virus
-of adventure from the Sangster breed, for she had come to womanhood
-and done a multitude of things of which no woman in her position should
-have been guilty. A match in ten thousand, she remained unmarried. She
-had sojourned in Europe without bringing home a nobleman for spouse,
-and had declined a goodly portion of her own set at home. She had
-gone in for outdoor sports, won the tennis championship of the state,
-kept the society weeklies agog with her unconventionalities, walked
-from San Mateo to Santa Cruz against time on a wager, and once caused
-a sensation by playing polo in a men's team at a private Burlingame
-practice game. Incidentally, she had gone in for art, and maintained
-a studio in San Francisco's Latin Quarter.
-
-All this had been of little moment until her father's reform attack
-became acute. Passionately independent, never yet having met the man
-to whom she could gladly submit, and bored by those who had aspired,
-she resented her father's interference with her way of life and put the
-climax on all her social misdeeds by leaving home and going to work on
-the "Courier-Journal." Beginning at twenty dollars a week, her salary
-had swiftly risen to fifty. Her work was principally musical, dramatic,
-and art criticism, though she was not above mere journalistic stunts if
-they promised to be sufficiently interesting. Thus she scooped the big
-interview with Morgan at a time when he was being futilely trailed by a
-dozen New York star journalists, went down to the bottom of the Golden
-Gate in a diver's suit, and flew with Rood, the bird man, when he
-broke all records of continuous flight by reaching as far as Riverside.
-
-Now it must not be imagined that Maud Sangster was a hard-bitten
-Amazon. On the contrary, she was a gray-eyed, slender young woman,
-of three or four and twenty, of medium stature, and possessing
-uncommonly small hands and feet for an outdoor woman or any other
-kind of a woman. Also, far in excess of most outdoor women, she knew
-how to be daintily feminine.
-
-It was on her own suggestion that she received the editor's commission
-to interview Pat Glendon. With the exception of having caught a
-glimpse, once, of Bob Fitzsimmons in evening dress at the Palace
-Grill, she had never seen a prizefighter in her life. Nor was she
-curious to see one--at least she had not been curious until Young
-Pat Glendon came to San Francisco to train for his fight with Nat
-Powers. Then his newspaper reputation had aroused her. The Abysmal
-Brute!--it certainly must be worth seeing. From what she read of him
-she gleaned that he was a man-monster, profoundly stupid and with
-the sullenness and ferocity of a jungle beast. True, his published
-photographs did not show all that, but they did show the hugeness of
-brawn that might be expected to go with it. And so, accompanied by
-a staff photographer, she went out to the training quarters at the
-Cliff House at the hour appointed by Stubener.
-
-That real estate owner was having trouble. Pat was rebellious. He sat,
-one big leg dangling over the side of the arm chair and Shakespeare's
-Sonnets face downward on his knee, orating against the new woman.
-
-"What do they want to come butting into the game for?" he
-demanded. "It's not their place. What do they know about it anyway? The
-men are bad enough as it is. I'm not a holy show. This woman's coming
-here to make me one. I never have stood for women around the training
-quarters, and I don't care if she is a reporter."
-
-"But she's not an ordinary reporter," Stubener interposed. "You've
-heard of the Sangsters?--the millionaires?"
-
-Pat nodded.
-
-"Well, she's one of them. She's high society and all that stuff. She
-could be running with the Blingum crowd now if she wanted to instead
-of working for wages. Her old man's worth fifty millions if he's
-worth a cent."
-
-"Then what's she working on a paper for?--keeping some poor devil
-out of a job."
-
-"She and the old man fell out, had a tiff or something, about
-the time he started to clean up San Francisco. She quit. That's
-all--left home and got a job. And let me tell you one thing, Pat:
-she can everlastingly sling English. There isn't a pen-pusher on the
-Coast can touch her when she gets going."
-
-Pat began to show interest, and Stubener hurried on.
-
-"She writes poetry, too--the regular la-de-dah stuff, just like
-you. Only I guess hers is better, because she published a whole book
-of it once. And she writes up the shows. She interviews every big
-actor that hits this burg."
-
-"I've seen her name in the papers," Pat commented.
-
-"Sure you have. And you're honored, Pat, by her coming to interview
-you. It won't bother you any. I'll stick right by and give her most
-of the dope myself. You know I've always done that."
-
-Pat looked his gratitude.
-
-"And another thing, Pat: don't forget you've got to put up with this
-interviewing. It's part of your business. It's big advertising, and it
-comes free. We can't buy it. It interests people, draws the crowds, and
-it's crowds that pile up the gate receipts." He stopped and listened,
-then looked at his watch. "I think that's her now. I'll go and get her
-and bring her in. I'll tip it off to her to cut it short, you know,
-and it won't take long." He turned in the doorway. "And be decent,
-Pat. Don't shut up like a clam. Talk a bit to her when she asks
-you questions."
-
-Pat put the Sonnets on the table, took up a newspaper, and was
-apparently deep in its contents when the two entered the room and he
-stood up. The meeting was a mutual shock. When blue eyes met gray,
-it was almost as if the man and the woman shouted triumphantly to
-each other, as if each had found something sought and unexpected. But
-this was for the instant only. Each had anticipated in the other
-something so totally different that the next moment the clear cry of
-recognition gave way to confusion. As is the way of women, she was
-the first to achieve control, and she did it without having given
-any outward sign that she had ever lost it. She advanced most of the
-distance across the floor to meet Glendon. As for him, he scarcely
-knew how he stumbled through the introduction. Here was a woman,
-a WOMAN. He had not known that such a creature could exist. The few
-women he had noticed had never prefigured this. He wondered what Old
-Pat's judgment would have been of her, if she was the sort he had
-recommended to hang on to with both his hands. He discovered that
-in some way he was holding her hand. He looked at it, curious and
-fascinated, marveling at its fragility.
-
-She, on the other hand, had proceeded to obliterate the echoes of that
-first clear call. It had been a peculiar experience, that was all,
-this sudden out-rush of her toward this strange man. For was not he
-the abysmal brute of the prize-ring, the great, fighting, stupid bulk
-of a male animal who hammered up his fellow males of the same stupid
-order? She smiled at the way he continued to hold her hand.
-
-"I'll have it back, please, Mr. Glendon," she said. "I ... I really
-need it, you know."
-
-He looked at her blankly, followed her gaze to her imprisoned hand,
-and dropped it in a rush of awkwardness that sent the blood in a
-manifest blush to his face.
-
-She noted the blush, and the thought came to her that he did not seem
-quite the uncouth brute she had pictured. She could not conceive of a
-brute blushing at anything. And also, she found herself pleased with
-the fact that he lacked the easy glibness to murmur an apology. But
-the way he devoured her with his eyes was disconcerting. He stared
-at her as if in a trance, while his cheeks flushed even more redly.
-
-Stubener by this time had fetched a chair for her, and Glendon
-automatically sank down into his.
-
-"He's in fine shape, Miss Sangster, in fine shape," the manager was
-saying. "That's right, isn't it, Pat? Never felt better in your life?"
-
-Glendon was bothered by this. His brows contracted in a troubled way,
-and he made no reply.
-
-"I've wanted to meet you for a long time, Mr. Glendon," Miss Sangster
-said. "I never interviewed a pugilist before, so if I don't go about
-it expertly you'll forgive me, I am sure."
-
-"Maybe you'd better start in by seeing him in action," was the
-manager's suggestion. "While he's getting into his fighting togs I
-can tell you a lot about him--fresh stuff, too. We'll call in Walsh,
-Pat, and go a couple of rounds."
-
-"We'll do nothing of the sort," Glendon growled roughly, in just the
-way an abysmal brute should. "Go ahead with the interview."
-
-The business went ahead unsatisfactorily. Stubener did most of the
-talking and suggesting, which was sufficient to irritate Maud Sangster,
-while Pat volunteered nothing. She studied his fine countenance, the
-eyes clear blue and wide apart, the well-modeled, almost aquiline,
-nose, the firm, chaste lips that were sweet in a masculine way in
-their curl at the corners and that gave no hint of any sullenness. It
-was a baffling personality, she concluded, if what the papers said
-of him was so. In vain she sought for earmarks of the brute. And in
-vain she attempted to establish contacts. For one thing, she knew too
-little about prize-fighters and the ring, and whenever she opened up a
-lead it was promptly snatched away by the information-oozing Stubener.
-
-"It must be most interesting, this life of a pugilist," she said
-once, adding with a sigh, "I wish I knew more about it. Tell me:
-why do you fight?--Oh, aside from money reasons." (This latter to
-forestall Stubener). "Do you enjoy fighting? Are you stirred by it,
-by pitting yourself against other men? I hardly know how to express
-what I mean, so you must be patient with me."
-
-Pat and Stubener began speaking together, but for once Pat bore his
-manager down.
-
-"I didn't care for it at first--"
-
-"You see, it was too dead easy for him," Stubener interrupted.
-
-"But later," Pat went on, "when I encountered the better fighters,
-the real big clever ones, where I was more--"
-
-"On your mettle?" she suggested.
-
-"Yes; that's it, more on my mettle, I found I did care for it ... a
-great deal, in fact. But still, it's not so absorbing to me as it might
-be. You see, while each battle is a sort of problem which I must work
-out with my wits and muscle, yet to me the issue is never in doubt--"
-
-"He's never had a fight go to a decision," Stubener proclaimed. "He's
-won every battle by the knock-out route."
-
-"And it's this certainty of the outcome that robs it of what I imagine
-must be its finest thrills," Pat concluded.
-
-"Maybe you'll get some of them thrills when you go up against Jim
-Hanford," said the manager.
-
-Pat smiled, but did not speak.
-
-"Tell me some more," she urged, "more about the way you feel when
-you are fighting."
-
-And then Pat amazed his manager, Miss Sangster, and himself, by
-blurting out:
-
-"It seems to me I don't want to talk with you on such things. It's as
-if there are things more important for you and me to talk about. I--"
-
-He stopped abruptly, aware of what he was saying but unaware of why
-he was saying it.
-
-"Yes," she cried eagerly. "That's it. That is what makes a good
-interview--the real personality, you know."
-
-But Pat remained tongue-tied, and Stubener wandered away on a
-statistical comparison of his champion's weights, measurements, and
-expansions with those of Sandow, the Terrible Turk, Jeffries, and the
-other modern strong men. This was of little interest to Maud Sangster,
-and she showed that she was bored. Her eyes chanced to rest on the
-Sonnets. She picked the book up and glanced inquiringly at Stubener.
-
-"That's Pat's," he said. "He goes in for that kind of stuff, and color
-photography, and art exhibits, and such things. But for heaven's sake
-don't publish anything about it. It would ruin his reputation."
-
-She looked accusingly at Glendon, who immediately became awkward. To
-her it was delicious. A shy young man, with the body of a giant,
-who was one of the kings of bruisers, and who read poetry, and went
-to art exhibits, and experimented with color photography! Of a surety
-there was no abysmal brute here. His very shyness she divined now was
-due to sensitiveness and not stupidity. Shakespeare's Sonnets! This
-was a phase that would bear investigation. But Stubener stole the
-opportunity away and was back chanting his everlasting statistics.
-
-A few minutes later, and most unwittingly, she opened up the biggest
-lead of all. That first sharp attraction toward him had begun to stir
-again after the discovery of the Sonnets. The magnificent frame of his,
-the handsome face, the chaste lips, the clear-looking eyes, the fine
-forehead which the short crop of blond hair did not hide, the aura
-of physical well-being and cleanness which he seemed to emanate--all
-this, and more that she sensed, drew her as she had never been drawn
-by any man, and yet through her mind kept running the nasty rumors
-that she had heard only the day before at the "Courier-Journal" office.
-
-"You were right," she said. "There is something more important to
-talk about. There is something in my mind I want you to reconcile
-for me. Do you mind?"
-
-Pat shook his head.
-
-"If I am frank?--abominably frank? I've heard the men, sometimes,
-talking of particular fights and of the betting odds, and, while I
-gave no heed to it at the time, it seemed to me it was firmly agreed
-that there was a great deal of trickery and cheating connected with
-the sport. Now, when I look at you, for instance, I find it hard to
-understand how you can be a party to such cheating. I can understand
-your liking the sport for a sport, as well as for the money it brings
-you, but I can't understand--"
-
-"There's nothing to understand," Stubener broke in, while Pat's lips
-were wreathed in a gentle, tolerant smile. "It's all fairy tales,
-this talk about faking, about fixed fights, and all that rot. There's
-nothing to it, Miss Sangster, I assure you. And now let me tell
-you about how I discovered Mr. Glendon. It was a letter I got from
-his father--"
-
-But Maud Sangster refused to be side-tracked, and addressed herself
-to Pat.
-
-"Listen. I remember one case particularly. It was some fight that
-took place several months ago--I forget the contestants. One of
-the editors of the "Courier-Journal" told me he intended to make a
-good winning. He didn't hope; he said he intended. He said he was on
-the inside and was betting on the number of rounds. He told me the
-fight would end in the nineteenth. This was the night before. And
-the next day he triumphantly called my attention to the fact that it
-had ended in that very round. I didn't think anything of it one way
-or the other. I was not interested in prize-fighting then. But I am
-now. At the time it seemed quite in accord with the vague conception
-I had about fighting. So you see, it isn't all fairy tales, is it?"
-
-"I know that fight," Glendon said. "It was Owen and Murgweather. And
-it did end in the nineteenth round, Sam. And she said she heard that
-round named the day before. How do you account for it, Sam?"
-
-"How do you account for a man picking a lucky lottery ticket?" the
-manager evaded, while getting his wits together to answer. "That's
-the very point. Men who study form and condition and seconds and
-rules and such things often pick the number of rounds, just as
-men have been known to pick hundred-to-one shots in the races. And
-don't forget one thing: for every man that wins, there's another
-that loses, there's another that didn't pick right. Miss Sangster,
-I assure you, on my honor, that faking and fixing in the fight game
-is ... is non-existent."
-
-"What is your opinion, Mr. Glendon?" she asked.
-
-"The same as mine," Stubener snatched the answer. "He knows what I say
-is true, every word of it. He's never fought anything but a straight
-fight in his life. Isn't that right, Pat?"
-
-"Yes; it's right," Pat affirmed, and the peculiar thing to Maud
-Sangster was that she was convinced he spoke the truth.
-
-She brushed her forehead with her hand, as if to rid herself of the
-bepuzzlement that clouded her brain.
-
-"Listen," she said. "Last night the same editor told me that your
-forthcoming fight was arranged to the very round in which it would
-end."
-
-Stubener was verging on a panic, but Pat's speech saved him from
-replying.
-
-"Then the editor lies," Pat's voice boomed now for the first time.
-
-"He did not lie before, about that other fight," she challenged.
-
-"What round did he say my fight with Nat Powers would end in?"
-
-Before she could answer, the manager was into the thick of it.
-
-"Oh, rats, Pat!" he cried. "Shut up. It's only the regular run of
-ring rumors. Let's get on with this interview."
-
-He was ignored by Glendon, whose eyes, bent on hers, were no longer
-mildly blue, but harsh and imperative. She was sure now that she had
-stumbled on something tremendous, something that would explain all
-that had baffled her. At the same time she thrilled to the mastery
-of his voice and gaze. Here was a male man who would take hold of
-life and shake out of it what he wanted.
-
-"What round did the editor say?" Glendon reiterated his demand.
-
-"For the love of Mike, Pat, stop this foolishness," Stubener broke in.
-
-"I wish you would give me a chance to answer," Maud Sangster said.
-
-"I guess I'm able to talk with Miss Sangster," Glendon added. "You
-get out, Sam. Go off and take care of that photographer."
-
-They looked at each other for a tense, silent moment, then the manager
-moved slowly to the door, opened it, and turned his head to listen.
-
-"And now what round did he say?"
-
-"I hope I haven't made a mistake," she said tremulously, "but I am
-very sure that he said the sixteenth round."
-
-She saw surprise and anger leap into Glendon's face, and the anger
-and accusation in the glance he cast at his manager, and she knew
-the blow had driven home.
-
-And there was reason for his anger. He knew he had talked it over
-with Stubener, and they had reached a decision to give the audience
-a good run for its money without unnecessarily prolonging the fight,
-and to end it in the sixteenth. And here was a woman, from a newspaper
-office, naming the very round.
-
-Stubener, in the doorway, looked limp and pale, and it was evident
-he was holding himself together by an effort.
-
-"I'll see you later," Pat told him. "Shut the door behind you."
-
-The door closed, and the two were left alone. Glendon did not
-speak. The expression on his face was frankly one of trouble and
-perplexity.
-
-"Well?" she asked.
-
-He got up and towered above her, then sat down again, moistening his
-lips with his tongue.
-
-"I'll tell you one thing," he finally said "The fight won't end in
-the sixteenth round."
-
-She did not speak, but her unconvinced and quizzical smile hurt him.
-
-"You wait and see, Miss Sangster, and you'll see that editor man
-is mistaken."
-
-"You mean the program is to be changed?" she queried audaciously.
-
-He quivered to the cut of her words.
-
-"I am not accustomed to lying," he said stiffly, "even to women."
-
-"Neither have you to me, nor have you denied the program is to be
-changed. Perhaps, Mr. Glendon, I am stupid, but I fail to see the
-difference in what number the final round occurs so long as it is
-predetermined and known."
-
-"I'll tell you that round, and not another soul shall know."
-
-She shrugged her shoulders and smiled.
-
-"It sounds to me very much like a racing tip. They are always given
-that way, you know. Furthermore, I am not quite stupid, and I know
-there is something wrong here. Why were you made angry by my naming
-the round? Why were you angry with your manager? Why did you send
-him from the room?"
-
-For reply, Glendon walked over to the window, as if to look out,
-where he changed his mind and partly turned, and she knew, without
-seeing, that he was studying her face. He came back and sat down.
-
-"You've said I haven't lied to you, Miss Sangster, and you were
-right. I haven't." He paused, groping painfully for a correct statement
-of the situation. "Now do you think you can believe what I am going
-to tell you? Will you take the word of a ... prize-fighter?"
-
-She nodded gravely, looking him straight in the eyes and certain that
-what he was about to tell was the truth.
-
-"I've always fought straight and square. I've never touched a piece
-of dirty money in my life, nor attempted a dirty trick. Now I can
-go on from that. You've shaken me up pretty badly by what you told
-me. I don't know what to make of it. I can't pass a snap judgment
-on it. I don't know. But it looks bad. That's what troubles me. For
-see you, Stubener and I have talked this fight over, and it was
-understood between us that I would end the fight in the sixteenth
-round. Now you bring the same word. How did that editor know? Not from
-me. Stubener must have let it out ... unless...." He stopped to debate
-the problem. "Unless that editor is a lucky guesser. I can't make up my
-mind about it. I'll have to keep my eyes open and wait and learn. Every
-word I've given you is straight, and there's my hand on it."
-
-Again he towered out of his chair and over to her. Her small hand was
-gripped in his big one as she arose to meet him, and after a fair,
-straight look into the eyes between them, both glanced unconsciously
-at the clasped hands. She felt that she had never been more aware
-that she was a woman. The sex emphasis of those two hands--the
-soft and fragile feminine and the heavy, muscular masculine--was
-startling. Glendon was the first to speak.
-
-"You could be hurt so easily," he said; and at the same time she felt
-the firmness of his grip almost caressingly relax.
-
-She remembered the old Prussian king's love for giants, and laughed
-at the incongruity of the thought-association as she withdrew her hand.
-
-"I am glad you came here to-day," he said, then hurried on awkwardly
-to make an explanation which the warm light of admiration in his eyes
-belied. "I mean because maybe you have opened my eyes to the crooked
-dealing that has been going on."
-
-"You have surprised me," she urged. "It seemed to me that it is so
-generally understood that prize-fighting is full of crookedness, that
-I cannot understand how you, one of its chief exponents, could be
-ignorant of it. I thought as a matter of course that you would know
-all about it, and now you have convinced me that you never dreamed
-of it. You must be different from other fighters."
-
-He nodded his head.
-
-"That explains it, I guess. And that's what comes of keeping away from
-it--from the other fighters, and promoters, and sports. It was easy
-to pull the wool over my eyes. Yet it remains to be seen whether it
-has really been pulled over or not. You see, I am going to find out
-for myself."
-
-"And change it?" she queried, rather breathlessly, convinced somehow
-that he could do anything he set out to accomplish.
-
-"No; quit it," was his answer. "If it isn't straight I won't have
-anything more to do with it. And one thing is certain: this coming
-fight with Nat Powers won't end in the sixteenth round. If there is
-any truth in that editor's tip, they'll all be fooled. Instead of
-putting him out in the sixteenth, I'll let the fight run on into the
-twenties. You wait and see."
-
-"And I'm not to tell the editor?"
-
-She was on her feet now, preparing to go.
-
-"Certainly not. If he is only guessing, let him take his chances. And
-if there's anything rotten about it he deserves to lose all he
-bets. This is to be a little secret between you and me. I'll tell
-you what I'll do. I'll name the round to you. I won't run it into
-the twenties. I'll stop Nat Powers in the eighteenth."
-
-"And I'll not whisper it," she assured him.
-
-"I'd like to ask you a favor," he said tentatively. "Maybe it's a
-big favor."
-
-She showed her acquiescence in her face, as if it were already granted,
-and he went on:
-
-"Of course, I know you won't use this faking in the interview. But
-I want more than that. I don't want you to publish anything at all."
-
-She gave him a quick look with her searching gray eyes, then surprised
-herself by her answer.
-
-"Certainly," she said. "It will not be published. I won't write a
-line of it."
-
-"I knew it," he said simply.
-
-For the moment she was disappointed by the lack of thanks, and the
-next moment she was glad that he had not thanked her. She sensed the
-different foundation he was building under this meeting of an hour
-with her, and she became daringly explorative.
-
-"How did you know it?" she asked.
-
-"I don't know." He shook his head. "I can't explain it. I knew it
-as a matter of course. Somehow it seems to me I know a lot about you
-and me."
-
-"But why not publish the interview? As your manager says, it is
-good advertising."
-
-"I know it," he answered slowly. "But I don't want to know you that
-way. I think it would hurt if you should publish it. I don't want to
-think that I knew you professionally. I'd like to remember our talk
-here as a talk between a man and a woman. I don't know whether you
-understand what I'm driving at. But it's the way I feel. I want to
-remember this just as a man and a woman."
-
-As he spoke, in his eyes was all the expression with which a man
-looks at a woman. She felt the force and beat of him, and she felt
-strangely tongue-tied and awkward before this man who had been reputed
-tongue-tied and awkward. He could certainly talk straighter to the
-point and more convincingly than most men, and what struck her most
-forcibly was her own inborn certainty that it was mere naïve and
-simple frankness on his part and not a practised artfulness.
-
-He saw her into her machine, and gave her another thrill when he said
-good-by. Once again their hands were clasped as he said:
-
-"Some day I'll see you again. I want to see you again. Somehow I have
-a feeling that the last word has not been said between us."
-
-And as the machine rolled away she was aware of a similar feeling. She
-had not seen the last of this very disquieting Pat Glendon, king of
-the bruisers and abysmal brute.
-
-Back in the training quarters, Glendon encountered his perturbed
-manager.
-
-"What did you fire me out for?" Stubener demanded. "We're finished. A
-hell of a mess you've made. You've never stood for meeting a reporter
-alone before, and now you'll see when that interview comes out."
-
-Glendon, who had been regarding him with cool amusement, made as if
-to turn and pass on, and then changed his mind.
-
-"It won't come out," he said.
-
-Stubener looked up sharply.
-
-"I asked her not to," Glendon explained.
-
-Then Stubener exploded.
-
-"As if she'd kill a juicy thing like that."
-
-Glendon became very cold and his voice was harsh and grating.
-
-"It won't be published. She told me so. And to doubt it is to call
-her a liar."
-
-The Irish flame was in his eyes, and by that, and by the unconscious
-clenching of his passion-wrought hands, Stubener, who knew the strength
-of them, and of the man he faced, no longer dared to doubt.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-It did not take Stubener long to find out that Glendon intended
-extending the distance of the fight, though try as he would he could
-get no hint of the number of the round. He wasted no time, however,
-and privily clinched certain arrangements with Nat Powers and Nat
-Powers' manager. Powers had a faithful following of bettors, and the
-betting syndicate was not to be denied its harvest.
-
-On the night of the fight, Maud Sangster was guilty of a more daring
-unconventionality than any she had yet committed, though no whisper of
-it leaked out to shock society. Under the protection of the editor,
-she occupied a ring-side seat. Her hair and most of her face were
-hidden under a slouch hat, while she wore a man's long overcoat that
-fell to her heels. Entering in the thick of the crowd, she was not
-noticed; nor did the newspaper men, in the press seats against the
-ring directly in front of her, recognize her.
-
-As was the growing custom, there were no preliminary bouts, and she had
-barely gained her seat when roars of applause announced the arrival
-of Nat Powers. He came down the aisle in the midst of his seconds,
-and she was almost frightened by the formidable bulk of him. Yet he
-leaped the ropes as lightly as a man half his weight, and grinned
-acknowledgment to the tumultuous greeting that arose from all the
-house. He was not pretty. Two cauliflower ears attested his profession
-and its attendant brutality, while his broken nose had been so often
-spread over his face as to defy the surgeon's art to reconstruct it.
-
-Another uproar heralded the arrival of Glendon, and she watched him
-eagerly as he went through the ropes to his corner. But it was not
-until the tedious time of announcements, introductions, and challenges
-was over, that the two men threw off their wraps and faced each other
-in ring costume. Concentrated upon them from overhead was the white
-glare of many electric lights--this for the benefit of the moving
-picture cameras; and she felt, as she looked at the two sharply
-contrasted men, that it was in Glendon that she saw the thoroughbred
-and in Powers the abysmal brute. Both looked their parts--Glendon,
-clean cut in face and form, softly and massively beautiful, Powers
-almost asymmetrically rugged and heavily matted with hair.
-
-As they made their preliminary pose for the cameras, confronting
-each other in fighting attitudes, it chanced that Glendon's gaze
-dropped down through the ropes and rested on her face. Though he
-gave no sign, she knew, with a swift leap of the heart, that he had
-recognized her. The next moment the gong sounded, the announcer cried
-"Let her go!" and the battle was on.
-
-It was a good fight. There was no blood, no marring, and both were
-clever. Half of the first round was spent in feeling each other out,
-but Maud Sangster found the play and feint and tap of the gloves
-sufficiently exciting. During some of the fiercer rallies in later
-stages of the fight, the editor was compelled to touch her arm to
-remind her who she was and where she was.
-
-Powers fought easily and cleanly, as became the hero of half a
-hundred ring battles, and an admiring claque applauded his every
-cleverness. Yet he did not unduly exert himself save in occasional
-strenuous rallies that brought the audience yelling to its feet in
-the mistaken notion that he was getting his man.
-
-It was at such a moment, when her unpractised eye could not inform
-her that Glendon was escaping serious damage, that the editor leaned
-to her and said:
-
-"Young Pat will win all right. He's a comer, and they can't stop
-him. But he'll win in the sixteenth and not before."
-
-"Or after?" she asked.
-
-She almost laughed at the certitude of her companion's negative. She
-knew better.
-
-Powers was noted for hunting his man from moment to moment and round to
-round, and Glendon was content to accede to this program. His defense
-was admirable, and he threw in just enough of offense to whet the edge
-of the audience's interest. Though he knew he was scheduled to lose,
-Powers had had too long a ring experience to hesitate from knocking his
-man out if the opportunity offered. He had had the double cross worked
-too often on him to be chary in working it on others. If he got his
-chance he was prepared to knock his man out and let the syndicate go
-hang. Thanks to clever press publicity, the idea was prevalent that at
-last Young Glendon had met his master. In his heart, Powers, however,
-knew that it was himself who had encountered the better man. More than
-once, in the faster in-fighting, he received the weight of punches
-that he knew had been deliberately made no heavier.
-
-On Glendon's part, there were times and times when a slip or error
-of judgment could have exposed him to one of his antagonist's
-sledge-hammer blows and lost him the fight. Yet his was that almost
-miraculous power of accurate timing and distancing, and his confidence
-was not shaken by the several close shaves he experienced. He had
-never lost a fight, never been knocked down, and he had always been
-so thoroughly the master of the man he faced, that such a possibility
-was unthinkable.
-
-At the end of the fifteenth round, both men were in good condition,
-though Powers was breathing a trifle heavily and there were men in
-the ringside seats offering odds that he would "blow up."
-
-It was just before the gong for the sixteenth round struck that
-Stubener, leaning over Glendon from behind in his corner, whispered:
-
-"Are you going to get him now?"
-
-Glendon, with a back toss of his head, shook it and laughed mockingly
-up into his manager's anxious face.
-
-With the stroke of the gong for the sixteenth round, Glendon was
-surprised to see Powers cut loose. From the first second it was
-a tornado of fighting, and Glendon was hard put to escape serious
-damage. He blocked, clinched, ducked, sidestepped, was rushed backward
-against the ropes and was met by fresh rushes when he surged out to
-center. Several times Powers left inviting openings, but Glendon
-refused to loose the lightning-bolt of a blow that would drop his
-man. He was reserving that blow for two rounds later. Not in the
-whole fight had he ever exerted his full strength, nor struck with
-the force that was in him.
-
-For two minutes, without the slightest let-up, Powers went at him
-hammer and tongs. In another minute the round would be over and the
-betting syndicate hard hit. But that minute was not to be. They had
-just come together in the center of the ring. It was as ordinary
-a clinch as any in the fight, save that Powers was struggling and
-roughing it every instant. Glendon whipped his left over in a crisp
-but easy jolt to the side of the face. It was like any of a score of
-similar jolts he had already delivered in the course of the fight. To
-his amazement he felt Powers go limp in his arms and begin sinking
-to the floor on sagging, spraddling legs that refused to bear his
-weight. He struck the floor with a thump, rolled half over on his
-side, and lay with closed eyes and motionless. The referee, bending
-above him, was shouting the count.
-
-At the cry of "Nine!" Powers quivered as if making a vain effort
-to rise.
-
-"Ten!--and out!" cried the referee.
-
-He caught Glendon's hand and raised it aloft to the roaring audience
-in token that he was the winner.
-
-For the first time in the ring, Glendon was dazed. It had not been a
-knockout blow. He could stake his life on that. It had not been to
-the jaw but to the side of the face, and he knew it had gone there
-and nowhere else. Yet the man was out, had been counted out, and he
-had faked it beautifully. That final thump on the floor had been a
-convincing masterpiece. To the audience it was indubitably a knockout,
-and the moving picture machines would perpetuate the lie. The editor
-had called the turn after all, and a crooked turn it was.
-
-Glendon shot a swift glance through the ropes to the face of Maud
-Sangster. She was looking straight at him, but her eyes were bleak and
-hard, and there was neither recognition nor expression in them. Even
-as he looked, she turned away unconcernedly and said something to
-the man beside her.
-
-Powers' seconds were carrying him to his corner, a seeming limp wreck
-of a man. Glendon's seconds were advancing upon him to congratulate him
-and to remove his gloves. But Stubener was ahead of them. His face was
-beaming as he caught Glendon's right glove in both his hands and cried:
-
-"Good boy, Pat. I knew you'd do it."
-
-Glendon pulled his glove away. And for the first time in the years
-they had been together, his manager heard him swear.
-
-"You go to hell," he said, and turned to hold out his hands for his
-seconds to pull off the gloves.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-That night, after receiving the editor's final dictum that there was
-not a square fighter in the game, Maud Sangster cried quietly for a
-moment on the edge of her bed, grew angry, and went to sleep hugely
-disgusted with herself, prize-fighters, and the world in general.
-
-The next afternoon she began work on an interview with Henry Addison
-that was destined never to be finished. It was in the private room
-that was accorded her at the "Courier-Journal" office that the thing
-happened. She had paused in her writing to glance at a headline in the
-afternoon paper announcing that Glendon was matched with Tom Cannam,
-when one of the door-boys brought in a card. It was Glendon's.
-
-"Tell him I can't be seen," she told the boy.
-
-In a minute he was back.
-
-"He says he's coming in anyway, but he'd rather have your permission."
-
-"Did you tell him I was busy?" she asked.
-
-"Yes'm, but he said he was coming just the same."
-
-She made no answer, and the boy, his eyes shining with admiration
-for the importunate visitor, rattled on.
-
-"I know'm. He's a awful big guy. If he started roughhousing he could
-clean the whole office out. He's young Glendon, who won the fight
-last night."
-
-"Very well, then. Bring him in. We don't want the office cleaned out,
-you know."
-
-No greetings were exchanged when Glendon entered. She was as cold and
-inhospitable as a gray day, and neither invited him to a chair nor
-recognized him with her eyes, sitting half turned away from him at
-her desk and waiting for him to state his business. He gave no sign
-of how this cavalier treatment affected him, but plunged directly
-into his subject.
-
-"I want to talk to you," he said shortly. "That fight. It did end in
-that round."
-
-She shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"I knew it would."
-
-"You didn't," he retorted. "You didn't. I didn't."
-
-She turned and looked at him with quiet affectation of boredom.
-
-"What is the use?" she asked. "Prize-fighting is prize-fighting,
-and we all know what it means. The fight did end in the round I told
-you it would."
-
-"It did," he agreed. "But you didn't know it would. In all the world
-you and I were at least two that knew Powers wouldn't be knocked out
-in the sixteenth."
-
-She remained silent.
-
-"I say you knew he wouldn't." He spoke peremptorily, and, when
-she still declined to speak, stepped nearer to her. "Answer me,"
-he commanded.
-
-She nodded her head.
-
-"But he was," she insisted.
-
-"He wasn't. He wasn't knocked out at all. Do you get that? I am
-going to tell you about it, and you are going to listen. I didn't
-lie to you. Do you get that? I didn't lie to you. I was a fool,
-and they fooled me, and you along with me. You thought you saw him
-knocked out. Yet the blow I struck was not heavy enough. It didn't
-hit him in the right place either. He made believe it did. He faked
-that knockout."
-
-He paused and looked at her expectantly. And somehow, with a leap
-and thrill, she knew that she believed him, and she felt pervaded by
-a warm happiness at the reinstatement of this man who meant nothing
-to her and whom she had seen but twice in her life.
-
-"Well?" he demanded, and she thrilled anew at the compellingness
-of him.
-
-She stood up, and her hand went out to his.
-
-"I believe you," she said. "And I am glad, most glad."
-
-It was a longer grip than she had anticipated. He looked at her
-with eyes that burned and to which her own unconsciously answered
-back. Never was there such a man, was her thought. Her eyes dropped
-first, and his followed, so that, as before, both gazed at the clasped
-hands. He made a movement of his whole body toward her, impulsive
-and involuntary, as if to gather her to him, then checked himself
-abruptly, with an unmistakable effort. She saw it, and felt the pull
-of his hand as it started to draw her to him. And to her amazement
-she felt the desire to yield, the desire almost overwhelmingly to be
-drawn into the strong circle of those arms. And had he compelled,
-she knew that she would not have refrained. She was almost dizzy,
-when he checked himself and with a closing of his fingers that half
-crushed hers, dropped her hand, almost flung it from him.
-
-"God!" he breathed. "You were made for me."
-
-He turned partly away from her, sweeping his hand to his forehead. She
-knew she would hate him forever if he dared one stammered word of
-apology or explanation. But he seemed to have the way always of doing
-the right thing where she was concerned. She sank into her chair,
-and he into another, first drawing it around so as to face her across
-the corner of the desk.
-
-"I spent last night in a Turkish bath," he said. "I sent for an old
-broken-down bruiser. He was a friend of my father in the old days. I
-knew there couldn't be a thing about the ring he didn't know, and
-I made him talk. The funny thing was that it was all I could do to
-convince him that I didn't know the things I asked him about. He
-called me the babe in the woods. I guess he was right. I was raised
-in the woods, and woods is about all I know.
-
-"Well, I received an education from that old man last night. The ring
-is rottener than you told me. It seems everybody connected with it is
-crooked. The very supervisors that grant the fight permits graft off
-of the promoters; and the promoters, managers, and fighters graft off
-of each other and off the public. It's down to a system, in one way,
-and on the other hand they're always--do you know what the double
-cross is?" (She nodded.) "Well, they don't seem to miss a chance to
-give each other the double cross.
-
-"The stuff that old man told me took my breath away. And here I've been
-in the thick of it for several years and knew nothing of it. I was a
-real babe in the woods. And yet I can see how I've been fooled. I was
-so made that nobody could stop me. I was bound to win, and, thanks
-to Stubener, everything crooked was kept away from me. This morning
-I cornered Spider Walsh and made him talk. He was my first trainer,
-you know, and he followed Stubener's instructions. They kept me in
-ignorance. Besides, I didn't herd with the sporting crowd. I spent my
-time hunting and fishing and monkeying with cameras and such things. Do
-you know what Walsh and Stubener called me between themselves?--the
-Virgin. I only learned it this morning from Walsh, and it was like
-pulling teeth. And they were right. I was a little innocent lamb.
-
-"And Stubener was using me for crookedness, too, only I didn't know
-it. I can look back now and see how it was worked. But you see,
-I wasn't interested enough in the game to be suspicious. I was born
-with a good body and a cool head, I was raised in the open, and I was
-taught by my father, who knew more about fighting than any man living
-or dead. It was too easy. The ring didn't absorb me. There was never
-any doubt of the outcome. But I'm done with it now."
-
-She pointed to the headline announcing his match with Tom Cannam.
-
-"That's Stubener's work," he explained. "It was programmed months
-ago. But I don't care. I'm heading for the mountains. I've quit."
-
-She glanced at the unfinished interview on the desk and sighed.
-
-"How lordly men are," she said. "Masters of destiny. They do as
-they please--"
-
-"From what I've heard," he interrupted, "you've done pretty much as you
-please. It's one of the things I like about you. And what has struck
-me hard from the first was the way you and I understand each other."
-
-He broke off and looked at her with burning eyes.
-
-"Well, the ring did one thing for me," he went on. "It made me
-acquainted with you. And when you find the one woman, there's just
-one thing to do. Take her in your two hands and don't let go. Come on,
-let us start for the mountains."
-
-It had come with the suddenness of a thunder-clap, and yet she
-felt that she had been expecting it. Her heart was beating up and
-almost choking her in a strangely delicious way. Here at least was
-the primitive and the simple with a vengeance. Then, too, it seemed a
-dream. Such things did not take place in modern newspaper offices. Love
-could not be made in such fashion; it only so occurred on the stage
-and in novels.
-
-He had arisen, and was holding out both hands to her.
-
-"I don't dare," she said in a whisper, half to herself. "I don't dare."
-
-And thereat she was stung by the quick contempt that flashed in his
-eyes but that swiftly changed to open incredulity.
-
-"You'd dare anything you wanted," he was saying. "I know that. It's
-not a case of dare, but of want. Do you want?"
-
-She had arisen, and was now swaying as if in a dream. It flashed into
-her mind to wonder if it were hypnotism. She wanted to glance about her
-at the familiar objects of the room in order to identify herself with
-reality, but she could not take her eyes from his. Nor did she speak.
-
-He had stepped beside her. His hand was on her arm, and she leaned
-toward him involuntarily. It was all part of the dream, and it
-was no longer hers to question anything. It was the great dare. He
-was right. She could dare what she wanted, and she did want. He was
-helping her into her jacket. She was thrusting the hat-pins through her
-hair. And even as she realized it, she found herself walking beside him
-through the opened door. The "Flight of the Duchess" and "The Statue
-and the Bust," darted through her mind. Then she remembered "Waring."
-
-"'What's become of Waring?'" she murmured.
-
-"'Land travel or sea-faring?'" he murmured back.
-
-And to her this kindred sufficient note was a vindication of her
-madness.
-
-At the entrance of the building he raised his hand to call a taxi,
-but was stopped by her touch on his arm.
-
-"Where are we going?" she breathed.
-
-"To the Ferry. We've just time to catch that Sacramento train."
-
-"But I can't go this way," she protested. "I ... I haven't even a
-change of handkerchiefs."
-
-He held up his hand again before replying.
-
-"You can shop in Sacramento. We'll get married there and catch the
-night overland north. I'll arrange everything by telegraph from
-the train."
-
-As the cab drew to the curb, she looked quickly about her at the
-familiar street and the familiar throng, then, with almost a flurry
-of alarm, into Glendon's face.
-
-"I don't know a thing about you," she said.
-
-"We know everything about each other," was his answer.
-
-She felt the support and urge of his arms, and lifted her foot to
-the step. The next moment the door had closed, he was beside her, and
-the cab was heading down Market Street. He passed his arm around her,
-drew her close, and kissed her. When next she glimpsed his face she
-was certain that it was dyed with a faint blush.
-
-"I ... I've heard there was an art in kissing," he stammered. "I
-don't know anything about it myself, but I'll learn. You see, you're
-the first woman I ever kissed."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Where a jagged peak of rock thrust above the vast virgin forest,
-reclined a man and a woman. Beneath them, on the edge of the trees,
-were tethered two horses. Behind each saddle were a pair of small
-saddle-bags. The trees were monotonously huge. Towering hundreds
-of feet into the air, they ran from eight to ten and twelve feet in
-diameter. Many were much larger. All morning they had toiled up the
-divide through this unbroken forest, and this peak of rock had been
-the first spot where they could get out of the forest in order to
-see the forest.
-
-Beneath them and away, far as they could see, lay range upon range
-of haze-empurpled mountains. There was no end to these ranges. They
-rose one behind another to the dim, distant skyline, where they faded
-away with a vague promise of unending extension beyond. There were
-no clearings in the forest; north, south, east, and west, untouched,
-unbroken, it covered the land with its mighty growth.
-
-They lay, feasting their eyes on the sight, her hand clasped in one
-of his; for this was their honeymoon, and these were the redwoods
-of Mendocino. Across from Shasta they had come, with horses and
-saddle-bags, and down through the wilds of the coast counties, and they
-had no plan except to continue until some other plan entered their
-heads. They were roughly dressed, she in travel-stained khaki, he in
-overalls and woolen shirt. The latter was open at the sunburned neck,
-and in his hugeness he seemed a fit dweller among the forest giants,
-while for her, as a dweller with him, there were no signs of aught
-else but happiness.
-
-"Well, Big Man," she said, propping herself up on an elbow to gaze
-at him, "it is more wonderful than you promised. And we are going
-through it together."
-
-"And there's a lot of the rest of the world we'll go through together,"
-he answered, shifting his position so as to get her hand in both
-of his.
-
-"But not till we've finished with this," she urged. "I seem never to
-grow tired of the big woods ... and of you."
-
-He slid effortlessly into a sitting posture and gathered her into
-his arms.
-
-"Oh, you lover," she whispered. "And I had given up hope of finding
-such a one."
-
-"And I never hoped at all. I must just have known all the time that
-I was going to find you. Glad?"
-
-Her answer was a soft pressure where her hand rested on his neck,
-and for long minutes they looked out over the great woods and dreamed.
-
-"You remember I told you how I ran away from the red-haired school
-teacher? That was the first time I saw this country. I was on foot, but
-forty or fifty miles a day was play for me. I was a regular Indian. I
-wasn't thinking about you then. Game was pretty scarce in the redwoods,
-but there was plenty of fine trout. That was when I camped on these
-rocks. I didn't dream that some day I'd be back with you, YOU."
-
-"And be a champion of the ring, too," she suggested.
-
-"No; I didn't think about that at all. Dad had always told me I was
-going to be, and I took it for granted. You see, he was very wise. He
-was a great man."
-
-"But he didn't see you leaving the ring."
-
-"I don't know. He was so careful in hiding its crookedness from me,
-that I think he feared it. I've told you about the contract with
-Stubener. Dad put in that clause about crookedness. The first crooked
-thing my manager did was to break the contract."
-
-"And yet you are going to fight this Tom Cannam. Is it worth while?"
-
-He looked at her quickly.
-
-"Don't you want me to?"
-
-"Dear lover, I want you to do whatever you want."
-
-So she said, and to herself, her words still ringing in her ears,
-she marveled that she, not least among the stubbornly independent of
-the breed of Sangster, should utter them. Yet she knew they were true,
-and she was glad.
-
-"It will be fun," he said.
-
-"But I don't understand all the gleeful details."
-
-"I haven't worked them out yet. You might help me. In the first place
-I'm going to double-cross Stubener and the betting syndicate. It
-will be part of the joke. I am going to put Cannam out in the
-first round. For the first time I shall be really angry when I
-fight. Poor Tom Cannam, who's as crooked as the rest, will be the
-chief sacrifice. You see, I intend to make a speech in the ring. It's
-unusual, but it will be a success, for I am going to tell the
-audience all the inside workings of the game. It's a good game, too,
-but they're running it on business principles, and that's what spoils
-it. But there, I'm giving the speech to you instead of at the ring."
-
-"I wish I could be there to hear," she said.
-
-He looked at her and debated.
-
-"I'd like to have you. But it's sure to be a rough time. There is no
-telling what may happen when I start my program. But I'll come straight
-to you as soon as it's over. And it will be the last appearance of
-Young Glendon in the ring, in any ring."
-
-"But, dear, you've never made a speech in your life," she
-objected. "You might fail."
-
-He shook his head positively.
-
-"I'm Irish," he announced, "and what Irishman was there who couldn't
-speak?" He paused to laugh merrily. "Stubener thinks I'm crazy. Says a
-man can't train on matrimony. A lot he knows about matrimony, or me,
-or you, or anything except real estate and fixed fights. But I'll
-show him that night, and poor Tom, too. I really feel sorry for Tom."
-
-"My dear abysmal brute is going to behave most abysmally and brutally,
-I fear," she murmured.
-
-He laughed.
-
-"I'm going to make a noble attempt at it. Positively my last
-appearance, you know. And then it will be you, YOU. But if you don't
-want that last appearance, say the word."
-
-"Of course I want it, Big Man. I want my Big Man for himself, and to
-be himself he must be himself. If you want this, I want it for you,
-and for myself, too. Suppose I said I wanted to go on the stage,
-or to the South Seas or the North Pole?"
-
-He answered slowly, almost solemnly.
-
-"Then I'd say go ahead. Because you are you and must be yourself and
-do whatever you want. I love you because you are you."
-
-"And we're both a silly pair of lovers," she said, when his embrace
-had relaxed.
-
-"Isn't it great!" he cried.
-
-He stood up, measured the sun with his eye, and extended his hand
-out over the big woods that covered the serried, purple ranges.
-
-"We've got to sleep out there somewhere. It's thirty miles to the
-nearest camp."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Who, of all the sports present, will ever forget the memorable night
-at the Golden Gate Arena, when Young Glendon put Tom Cannam to sleep
-and an even greater one than Tom Cannam, kept the great audience
-on the ragged edge of riot for an hour, caused the subsequent graft
-investigation of the supervisors and the indictments of the contractors
-and the building commissioners, and pretty generally disrupted the
-whole fight game. It was a complete surprise. Not even Stubener had
-the slightest apprehension of what was coming. It was true that his
-man had been insubordinate after the Nat Powers affair, and had run
-off and got married; but all that was over. Young Pat had done the
-expected, swallowed the inevitable crookedness of the ring, and come
-back into it again.
-
-The Golden Gate Arena was new. This was its first fight, and it was
-the biggest building of the kind San Francisco had ever erected. It
-seated twenty-five thousand, and every seat was occupied. Sports had
-traveled from all the world to be present, and they had paid fifty
-dollars for their ring-side seats. The cheapest seat in the house
-had sold for five dollars.
-
-The old familiar roar of applause went up when Billy Morgan, the
-veteran announcer, climbed through the ropes and bared his gray
-head. As he opened his mouth to speak, a heavy crash came from a near
-section where several tiers of low seats had collapsed. The crowd
-broke into loud laughter and shouted jocular regrets and advice to
-the victims, none of whom had been hurt. The crash of the seats and
-the hilarious uproar caused the captain of police in charge to look
-at one of his lieutenants and lift his brows in token that they would
-have their hands full and a lively night.
-
-One by one, welcomed by uproarious applause, seven doughty old ring
-heroes climbed through the ropes to be introduced. They were all
-ex-heavy-weight champions of the world. Billy Morgan accompanied
-each presentation to the audience with an appropriate phrase. One was
-hailed as "Honest John" and "Old Reliable," another was "the squarest
-two-fisted fighter the ring ever saw." And of others: "the hero of a
-hundred battles and never threw one and never lay down"; "the gamest
-of the old guard"; "the only one who ever came back"; "the greatest
-warrior of them all"; and "the hardest nut in the ring to crack."
-
-All this took time. A speech was insisted on from each of them, and
-they mumbled and muttered in reply with proud blushes and awkward
-shamblings. The longest speech was from "Old Reliable" and lasted
-nearly a minute. Then they had to be photographed. The ring filled up
-with celebrities, with champion wrestlers, famous conditioners, and
-veteran time-keepers and referees. Light-weights and middle-weights
-swarmed. Everybody seemed to be challenging everybody. Nat Powers
-was there, demanding a return match from Young Glendon, and so were
-all the other shining lights whom Glendon had snuffed out. Also,
-they all challenged Jim Hanford, who, in turn, had to make his
-statement, which was to the effect that he would accord the next
-fight to the winner of the one that was about to take place. The
-audience immediately proceeded to name the winner, half of it wildly
-crying "Glendon," and the other half "Powers." In the midst of the
-pandemonium another tier of seats went down, and half a dozen rows
-were on between cheated ticket holders and the stewards who had been
-reaping a fat harvest. The captain despatched a message to headquarters
-for additional police details.
-
-The crowd was feeling good. When Cannam and Glendon made their ring
-entrances the Arena resembled a national political convention. Each was
-cheered for a solid five minutes. The ring was now cleared. Glendon sat
-in his corner surrounded by his seconds. As usual, Stubener was at his
-back. Cannam was introduced first, and after he had scraped and ducked
-his head, he was compelled to respond to the cries for a speech. He
-stammered and halted, but managed to grind out several ideas.
-
-"I'm proud to be here to-night," he said, and found space to capture
-another thought while the applause was thundering. "I've fought
-square. I've fought square all my life. Nobody can deny that. And
-I'm going to do my best to-night."
-
-There were loud cries of: "That's right, Tom!" "We know that!" "Good
-boy, Tom!" "You're the boy to fetch the bacon home!"
-
-Then came Glendon's turn. From him, likewise, a speech was demanded,
-though for principals to give speeches was an unprecedented thing in
-the prize-ring. Billy Morgan held up his hand for silence, and in a
-clear, powerful voice Glendon began.
-
-"Everybody has told you they were proud to be here to-night,"
-he said. "I am not" The audience was startled, and he paused long
-enough to let it sink home, "I am not proud of my company. You wanted
-a speech. I'll give you a real one. This is my last fight. After
-to-night I leave the ring for good. Why? I have already told you. I
-don't like my company. The prize-ring is so crooked that no man
-engaged in it can hide behind a corkscrew. It is rotten to the core,
-from the little professional clubs right up to this affair to-night."
-
-The low rumble of astonishment that had been rising at this point
-burst into a roar. There were loud boos and hisses, and many began
-crying: "Go on with the fight!" "We want the fight!" "Why don't you
-fight?" Glendon, waiting, noted that the principal disturbers near the
-ring were promoters and managers and fighters. In vain did he strive
-to make himself heard. The audience was divided, half crying out,
-"Fight!" and the other half, "Speech! Speech!"
-
-Ten minutes of hopeless madness prevailed. Stubener, the referee, the
-owner of the Arena, and the promoter of the fight, pleaded with Glendon
-to go on with the fight. When he refused, the referee declared that
-he would award the fight in forfeit to Cannam if Glendon did not fight.
-
-"You can't do it," the latter retorted. "I'll sue you in all the
-courts if you try that on, and I'll not promise you that you'll
-survive this crowd if you cheat it out of the fight. Besides, I'm
-going to fight. But before I do I'm going to finish my speech."
-
-"But it's against the rules," protested the referee.
-
-"It's nothing of the sort. There's not a word in the rules against
-ring-side speeches. Every big fighter here to-night has made a speech."
-
-"Only a few words," shouted the promoter in Glendon's ear. "But you're
-giving a lecture."
-
-"There's nothing in the rules against lectures," Glendon answered. "And
-now you fellows get out of the ring or I'll throw you out."
-
-The promoter, apoplectic and struggling, was dropped over the ropes by
-his coat-collar. He was a large man, but so easily had Glendon done
-it with one hand that the audience went wild with delight. The cries
-for a speech increased in volume. Stubener and the owner beat a wise
-retreat. Glendon held up his hands to be heard, whereupon those that
-shouted for the fight redoubled their efforts. Two or three tiers
-of seats crashed down, and numbers who had thus lost their places,
-added to the turmoil by making a concerted rush to squeeze in on the
-still intact seats, while those behind, blocked from sight of the ring,
-yelled and raved for them to sit down.
-
-Glendon walked to the ropes and spoke to the police captain. He was
-compelled to bend over and shout in his ear.
-
-"If I don't give this speech," he said, "this crowd will wreck
-the place. If they break loose you can never hold them, you know
-that. Now you've got to help. You keep the ring clear and I'll silence
-the crowd."
-
-He went back to the center of the ring and again held up his hands.
-
-"You want that speech?" he shouted in a tremendous voice.
-
-Hundreds near the ring heard him and cried "Yes!"
-
-"Then let every man who wants to hear shut up the noise-maker next
-to him!"
-
-The advice was taken, so that when he repeated it, his voice penetrated
-farther. Again and again he shouted it, and slowly, zone by zone,
-the silence pressed outward from the ring, accompanied by a muffled
-undertone of smacks and thuds and scuffles as the obstreperous
-were subdued by their neighbors. Almost had all confusion been
-smothered, when a tier of seats near the ring went down. This was
-greeted with fresh roars of laughter, which of itself died away,
-so that a lone voice, far back, was heard distinctly as it piped:
-"Go on, Glendon! We're with you!"
-
-Glendon had the Celt's intuitive knowledge of the psychology of the
-crowd. He knew that what had been a vast disorderly mob five minutes
-before was now tightly in hand, and for added effect he deliberately
-delayed. Yet the delay was just long enough and not a second too
-long. For thirty seconds the silence was complete, and the effect
-produced was one of awe. Then, just as the first faint hints of
-restlessness came to his ears, he began to speak:
-
-"When I finish this speech," he said, "I am going to fight. I promise
-you it will be a real fight, one of the few real fights you have ever
-seen. I am going to get my man in the shortest possible time. Billy
-Morgan, in making his final announcement, will tell you that it is
-to be a forty-five-round contest. Let me tell you that it will be
-nearer forty-five seconds.
-
-"When I was interrupted I was telling you that the ring was rotten. It
-is--from top to bottom. It is run on business principles, and you all
-know what business principles are. Enough said. You are the suckers,
-every last one of you that is not making anything out of it. Why
-are the seats falling down to-night? Graft. Like the fight game,
-they were built on business principles."
-
-He now held the audience stronger than ever, and knew it.
-
-"There are three men squeezed on two seats. I can see that
-everywhere. What does it mean? Graft. The stewards don't get any
-wages. They are supposed to graft. Business principles again. You
-pay. Of course you pay. How are the fight permits obtained? Graft. And
-now let me ask you: if the men who build the seats graft, if the
-stewards graft, if the authorities graft, why shouldn't those higher
-up in the fight game graft? They do. And you pay.
-
-"And let me tell you it is not the fault of the fighters. They don't
-run the game. The promoters and managers run it; they're the business
-men. The fighters are only fighters. They begin honestly enough, but
-the managers and promoters make them give in or kick them out. There
-have been straight fighters. And there are now a few, but they don't
-earn much as a rule. I guess there have been straight managers. Mine
-is about the best of the boiling. But just ask him how much he's got
-salted down in real estate and apartment houses."
-
-Here the uproar began to drown his voice.
-
-"Let every man who wants to hear shut up the man alongside of
-him!" Glendon instructed.
-
-Again, like the murmur of a surf, there was a rustling of smacks,
-and thuds, and scuffles, and the house quieted down.
-
-"Why does every fighter work overtime insisting that he's always
-fought square? Why are they called Honest Johns, and Honest Bills,
-and Honest Blacksmiths, and all the rest? Doesn't it ever strike you
-that they seem to be afraid of something? When a man comes to you
-shouting he is honest, you get suspicious. But when a prize-fighter
-passes the same dope out to you, you swallow it down.
-
-"May the best man win! How often have you heard Billy Morgan say
-that! Let me tell you that the best man doesn't win so often, and
-when he does it's usually arranged for him. Most of the grudge fights
-you've heard or seen were arranged, too. It's a program. The whole
-thing is programmed. Do you think the promoters and managers are in
-it for their health? They're not. They're business men.
-
-"Tom, Dick, and Harry are three fighters. Dick is the best man. In
-two fights he could prove it. But what happens? Tom licks Harry. Dick
-licks Tom. Harry licks Dick. Nothing proved. Then come the return
-matches. Harry licks Tom. Tom licks Dick. Dick licks Harry. Nothing
-proved. Then they try again. Dick is kicking. Says he wants to get
-along in the game. So Dick licks Tom, and Dick licks Harry. Eight
-fights to prove Dick the best man, when two could have done it. All
-arranged. A regular program. And you pay for it, and when your seats
-don't break down you get robbed of them by the stewards.
-
-"It's a good game, too, if it were only square. The fighters would
-be square if they had a chance. But the graft is too big. When a
-handful of men can divide up three-quarters of a million dollars on
-three fights--"
-
-A wild outburst compelled him to stop. Out of the medley of cries
-from all over the house, he could distinguish such as "What million
-dollars?" "What three fights?" "Tell us!" "Go on!" Likewise there
-were boos and hisses, and cries of "Muckraker! Muckraker!"
-
-"Do you want to hear?" Glendon shouted. "Then keep order!"
-
-Once more he compelled the impressive half minute of silence.
-
-"What is Jim Hanford planning? What is the program his crowd and mine
-are framing up? They know I've got him. He knows I've got him. I
-can whip him in one fight. But he's the champion of the world. If
-I don't give in to the program, they'll never give me a chance to
-fight him. The program calls for three fights. I am to win the first
-fight. It will be pulled off in Nevada if San Francisco won't stand
-for it. We are to make it a good fight. To make it good, each of us
-will put up a side bet of twenty thousand. It will be real money, but
-it won't be a real bet. Each gets his own slipped back to him. The
-same way with the purse. We'll divide it evenly, though the public
-division will be thirty-five and sixty-five. The purse, the moving
-picture royalties, the advertisements, and all the rest of the drags
-won't be a cent less than two hundred and fifty thousand. We'll divide
-it, and go to work on the return match. Hanford will win that, and
-we divide again. Then comes the third fight; I win as I have every
-right to; and we have taken three-quarters of a million out of the
-pockets of the fighting public. That's the program, but the money is
-dirty. And that's why I am quitting the ring to-night--"
-
-It was at this moment that Jim Hanford, kicking a clinging policeman
-back among the seat-holders, heaved his huge frame through the ropes,
-bellowing:
-
-"It's a lie!"
-
-He rushed like an infuriated bull at Glendon, who sprang back,
-and then, instead of meeting the rush, ducked cleanly away. Unable
-to check himself, the big man fetched up against the ropes. Flung
-back by the spring of them, he was turning to make another rush,
-when Glendon landed him. Glendon, cool, clear-seeing, distanced his
-man perfectly to the jaw and struck the first full-strength blow of
-his career. All his strength, and his reserve of strength, went into
-that one smashing muscular explosion.
-
-Hanford was dead in the air--in so far as unconsciousness may resemble
-death. So far as he was concerned, he ceased at the moment of contact
-with Glendon's fist. His feet left the floor and he was in the air
-until he struck the topmost rope. His inert body sprawled across it,
-sagged at the middle, and fell through the ropes and down out of the
-ring upon the heads of the men in the press seats.
-
-The audience broke loose. It had already seen more than it had paid to
-see, for the great Jim Hanford, the world champion, had been knocked
-out. It was unofficial, but it had been with a single punch. Never had
-there been such a night in fistiana. Glendon looked ruefully at his
-damaged knuckles, cast a glance through the ropes to where Hanford
-was groggily coming to, and held up his hands. He had clinched his
-right to be heard, and the audience grew still.
-
-"When I began to fight," he said, "they called me 'One-Punch
-Glendon.' You saw that punch a moment ago. I always had that punch. I
-went after my men and got them on the jump, though I was careful not
-to hit with all my might. Then I was educated. My manager told me it
-wasn't fair to the crowd. He advised me to make long fights so that
-the crowd could get a run for its money. I was a fool, a mutt. I was
-a green lad from the mountains. So help me God, I swallowed it as
-the truth. My manager used to talk over with me what round I would
-put my man out in. Then he tipped it off to the betting syndicate,
-and the betting syndicate went to it. Of course you paid. But I am
-glad for one thing. I never touched a cent of the money. They didn't
-dare offer it to me, because they knew it would give the game away.
-
-"You remember my fight with Nat Powers. I never knocked him out. I had
-got suspicious. So the gang framed it up with him. I didn't know. I
-intended to let him go a couple of rounds over the sixteenth. That last
-punch in the sixteenth didn't shake him. But he faked the knock-out
-just the same and fooled all of you."
-
-"How about to-night?" a voice called out. "Is it a frame-up?"
-
-"It is," was Glendon's answer. "How's the syndicate betting? That
-Cannam will last to the fourteenth."
-
-Howls and hoots went up. For the last time Glendon held up his hand
-for silence.
-
-"I'm almost done now. But I want to tell you one thing. The syndicate
-gets landed to-night. This is to be a square fight. Tom Cannam won't
-last till the fourteenth round. He won't last the first round."
-
-Cannam sprang to his feet in his corner and cried out in a fury:
-
-"You can't do it. The man don't live who can get me in one round!"
-
-Glendon ignored him and went on.
-
-"Once now in my life I have struck with all my strength. You saw that
-a moment ago when I caught Hanford. To-night, for the second time,
-I am going to hit with all my strength--that is, if Cannam doesn't
-jump through the ropes right now and get away. And now I'm ready."
-
-He went to his corner and held out his hands for his gloves. In the
-opposite corner Cannam raged while his seconds tried vainly to calm
-him. At last Billy Morgan managed to make the final announcement.
-
-"This will be a forty-five round contest," he shouted. "Marquis of
-Queensbury Rules! And may the best man win! Let her go!"
-
-The gong struck. The two men advanced. Glendon's right hand was
-extended for the customary shake, but Cannam, with an angry toss of
-the head, refused to take it. To the general surprise, he did not
-rush. Angry though he was, he fought carefully, his touched pride
-impelling him to bend every effort to last out the round. Several
-times he struck, but he struck cautiously, never relaxing his
-defense. Glendon hunted him about the ring, ever advancing with the
-remorseless tap-tap of his left foot. Yet he struck no blows, nor
-attempted to strike. He even dropped his hands to his sides and hunted
-the other defenselessly in an effort to draw him out. Cannam grinned
-defiantly, but declined to take advantage of the proffered opening.
-
-Two minutes passed, and then a change came over Glendon. By every
-muscle, by every line of his face, he advertised that the moment
-had come for him to get his man. Acting it was, and it was well
-acted. He seemed to have become a thing of steel, as hard and
-pitiless as steel. The effect was apparent on Cannam, who redoubled
-his caution. Glendon quickly worked him into a corner and herded and
-held him there. Still he struck no blow, nor attempted to strike,
-and the suspense on Cannam's part grew painful. In vain he tried to
-work out of the corner, while he could not summon resolution to rush
-upon his opponent in an attempt to gain the respite of a clinch.
-
-Then it came--a swift series of simple feints that were muscle
-flashes. Cannam was dazzled. So was the audience. No two of the
-onlookers could agree afterward as to what took place. Cannam ducked
-one feint and at the same time threw up his face guard to meet another
-feint for his jaw. He also attempted to change position with his
-legs. Ring-side witnesses swore that they saw Glendon start the blow
-from his right hip and leap forward like a tiger to add the weight
-of his body to it. Be that as it may, the blow caught Cannam on the
-point of the chin at the moment of his shift of position. And like
-Hanford, he was unconscious in the air before he struck the ropes
-and fell through on the heads of the reporters.
-
-Of what happened afterward that night in the Golden Gate Arena,
-columns in the newspapers were unable adequately to describe. The
-police kept the ring clear, but they could not save the Arena. It was
-not a riot. It was an orgy. Not a seat was left standing. All over the
-great hall, by main strength, crowding and jostling to lay hands on
-beams and boards, the crowd uprooted and over-turned. Prize-fighters
-sought protection of the police, but there were not enough police to
-escort them out, and fighters, managers, and promoters were beaten
-and battered. Jim Hanford alone was spared. His jaw, prodigiously
-swollen, earned him this mercy. Outside, when finally driven from the
-building, the crowd fell upon a new seven-thousand-dollar motor car
-belonging to a well-known fight promoter and reduced it to scrapiron
-and kindling wood.
-
-Glendon, unable to dress amid the wreckage of dressing rooms, gained
-his automobile, still in his ring costume and wrapped in a bath robe,
-but failed to escape. By weight of numbers the crowd caught and held
-his machine. The police were too busy to rescue him, and in the end
-a compromise was effected, whereby the car was permitted to proceed
-at a walk escorted by five thousand cheering madmen.
-
-It was midnight when this storm swept past Union Square and down upon
-the St. Francis. Cries for a speech went up, and though at the hotel
-entrance, Glendon was good-naturedly restrained from escaping. He
-even tried leaping out upon the heads of the enthusiasts, but his
-feet never touched the pavement. On heads and shoulders, clutched at
-and uplifted by every hand that could touch his body, he went back
-through the air to the machine. Then he gave his speech, and Maud
-Glendon, looking down from an upper window at her young Hercules
-towering on the seat of the automobile, knew, as she always knew,
-that he meant it when he repeated that he had fought his last fight
-and retired from the ring forever.
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Abysmal Brute, by Jack London
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