HEART OF THE WEST
by O. Henry
CONTENTS
HEART OF THE WEST
I
HEARTS AND CROSSES
Baldy Woods reached for the
bottle, and got it. Whenever Baldy went for anything he usually—but this is not
Baldy’s story. He poured out a third drink that was larger by a finger than the
first and second. Baldy was in consultation; and the consultee is worthy of his
hire.
“I’d be king if I was you,”
said Baldy, so positively that his holster creaked and his spurs rattled.
Webb Yeager pushed back his
flat-brimmed Stetson, and made further disorder in his straw-coloured hair. The
tonsorial recourse being without avail, he followed the liquid example of the
more resourceful Baldy.
“If a man marries a queen,
it oughtn’t to make him a two-spot,” declared Webb, epitomising his grievances.
“Sure not,” said Baldy,
sympathetic, still thirsty, and genuinely solicitous concerning the relative
value of the cards. “By rights you’re a king. If I was you, I’d call for a new
deal. The cards have been stacked on you—I’ll tell you what you are, Webb
Yeager.”
“What?” asked Webb, with a
hopeful look in his pale-blue eyes.
“You’re a prince-consort.”
“Go easy,” said Webb. “I
never blackguarded you none.”
“It’s a title,” explained
Baldy, “up among the picture-cards; but it don’t take no tricks. I’ll tell you,
Webb. It’s a brand they’re got for certain animals in Europe. Say that you or
me or one of them Dutch dukes marries in a royal family. Well, by and by our
wife gets to be queen. Are we king? Not in a million years. At the coronation
ceremonies we march between little casino and the Ninth Grand Custodian of the
Royal Hall Bedchamber. The only use we are is to appear in photographs, and
accept the responsibility for the heir-apparent. That ain’t any square deal.
Yes, sir, Webb, you’re a prince-consort; and if I was you, I’d start a
interregnum or a habeus corpus or somethin’; and I’d be king if I had to turn
from the bottom of the deck.”
Baldy emptied his glass to
the ratification of his Warwick pose.
“Baldy,” said Webb,
solemnly, “me and you punched cows in the same outfit for years. We been
runnin’ on the same range, and ridin’ the same trails since we was boys. I
wouldn’t talk about my family affairs to nobody but you. You was line-rider on
the Nopalito Ranch when I married Santa McAllister. I was foreman then; but
what am I now? I don’t amount to a knot in a stake rope.”
“When old McAllister was the
cattle king of West Texas,” continued Baldy with Satanic sweetness, “you was
some tallow. You had as much to say on the ranch as he did.”
“I did,” admitted Webb, “up
to the time he found out I was tryin’ to get my rope over Santa’s head. Then he
kept me out on the range as far from the ranch-house as he could. When the old
man died they commenced to call Santa the ‘cattle queen.’ I’m boss of the
cattle—that’s all. She ’tends to all the business; she handles all the money; I
can’t sell even a beef-steer to a party of campers, myself. Santa’s the
‘queen’; and I’m Mr. Nobody.”
“I’d be king if I was you,”
repeated Baldy Woods, the royalist. “When a man marries a queen he ought to
grade up with her—on the hoof— dressed—dried—corned—any old way from the
chaparral to the packing-house. Lots of folks thinks it’s funny, Webb, that you
don’t have the say-so on the Nopalito. I ain’t reflectin’ none on Miz
Yeager—she’s the finest little lady between the Rio Grande and next
Christmas—but a man ought to be boss of his own camp.”
The smooth, brown face of
Yeager lengthened to a mask of wounded melancholy. With that expression, and his
rumpled yellow hair and guileless blue eyes, he might have been likened to a
schoolboy whose leadership had been usurped by a youngster of superior
strength. But his active and sinewy seventy-two inches, and his girded
revolvers forbade the comparison.
“What was that you called
me, Baldy?” he asked. “What kind of a concert was it?”
“A ‘consort,’” corrected
Baldy—“a ‘prince-consort.’ It’s a kind of short-card pseudonym. You come in
sort of between Jack-high and a four-card flush.”
Webb Yeager sighed, and gathered
the strap of his Winchester scabbard from the floor.
“I’m ridin’ back to the
ranch to-day,” he said half-heartedly. “I’ve got to start a bunch of beeves for
San Antone in the morning.”
“I’m your company as far as
Dry Lake,” announced Baldy. “I’ve got a round-up camp on the San Marcos cuttin’
out two-year-olds.”
The two compañeros mounted
their ponies and trotted away from the little railroad settlement, where they
had foregathered in the thirsty morning.
At Dry Lake, where their
routes diverged, they reined up for a parting cigarette. For miles they had
ridden in silence save for the soft drum of the ponies’ hoofs on the matted
mesquite grass, and the rattle of the chaparral against their wooden stirrups.
But in Texas discourse is seldom continuous. You may fill in a mile, a meal,
and a murder between your paragraphs without detriment to your thesis. So,
without apology, Webb offered an addendum to the conversation that had begun
ten miles away.
“You remember, yourself,
Baldy, that there was a time when Santa wasn’t quite so independent. You
remember the days when old McAllister was keepin’ us apart, and how she used to
send me the sign that she wanted to see me? Old man Mac promised to make me
look like a colander if I ever come in gun-shot of the ranch. You remember the
sign she used to send, Baldy—the heart with a cross inside of it?”
“Me?” cried Baldy, with
intoxicated archness. “You old sugar-stealing coyote! Don’t I remember! Why,
you dad-blamed old long-horned turtle-dove, the boys in camp was all
cognoscious about them hiroglyphs. The ‘gizzard-and-crossbones’ we used to call
it. We used to see ’em on truck that was sent out from the ranch. They was
marked in charcoal on the sacks of flour and in lead-pencil on the newspapers.
I see one of ’em once chalked on the back of a new cook that old man McAllister
sent out from the ranch—danged if I didn’t.”
“Santa’s father,” explained
Webb gently, “got her to promise that she wouldn’t write to me or send me any
word. That heart-and-cross sign was her scheme. Whenever she wanted to see me
in particular she managed to put that mark on somethin’ at the ranch that she
knew I’d see. And I never laid eyes on it but what I burnt the wind for the
ranch the same night. I used to see her in that coma mott back of the little
horse-corral.”
“We knowed it,” chanted
Baldy; “but we never let on. We was all for you. We knowed why you always kept
that fast paint in camp. And when we see that gizzard-and-crossbones figured
out on the truck from the ranch we knowed old Pinto was goin’ to eat up miles
that night instead of grass. You remember Scurry—that educated horse-wrangler
we had— the college fellow that tangle-foot drove to the range? Whenever Scurry
saw that come-meet-your-honey brand on anything from the ranch, he’d wave his
hand like that, and say, ‘Our friend Lee Andrews will again swim the Hell’s
point to-night.’”
“The last time Santa sent me
the sign,” said Webb, “was once when she was sick. I noticed it as soon as I
hit camp, and I galloped Pinto forty mile that night. She wasn’t at the coma
mott. I went to the house; and old McAllister met me at the door. ‘Did you come
here to get killed?’ says he; ‘I’ll disoblige you for once. I just started a
Mexican to bring you. Santa wants you. Go in that room and see her. And then
come out here and see me.’
“Santa was lyin’ in bed
pretty sick. But she gives out a kind of a smile, and her hand and mine lock
horns, and I sets down by the bed— mud and spurs and chaps and all. ‘I’ve heard
you ridin’ across the grass for hours, Webb,’ she says. ‘I was sure you’d come.
You saw the sign?’ she whispers. ‘The minute I hit camp,’ says I. ‘’Twas marked
on the bag of potatoes and onions.’ ‘They’re always together,’ says she, soft
like—‘always together in life.’ ‘They go well together,’ I says, ‘in a stew.’
‘I mean hearts and crosses,’ says Santa. ‘Our sign—to love and to suffer—that’s
what they mean.’
“And there was old Doc
Musgrove amusin’ himself with whisky and a palm-leaf fan. And by and by Santa
goes to sleep; and Doc feels her forehead; and he says to me: ‘You’re not such
a bad febrifuge. But you’d better slide out now; for the diagnosis don’t call
for you in regular doses. The little lady’ll be all right when she wakes up.’
“I seen old McAllister
outside. ‘She’s asleep,’ says I. ‘And now you can start in with your
colander-work. Take your time; for I left my gun on my saddle-horn.’
“Old Mac laughs, and he says
to me: ‘Pumpin’ lead into the best ranch-boss in West Texas don’t seem to me
good business policy. I don’t know where I could get as good a one. It’s the
son-in-law idea, Webb, that makes me admire for to use you as a target. You
ain’t my idea for a member of the family. But I can use you on the Nopalito if
you’ll keep outside of a radius with the ranch-house in the middle of it. You
go upstairs and lay down on a cot, and when you get some sleep we’ll talk it
over.’”
Baldy Woods pulled down his
hat, and uncurled his leg from his saddle-horn. Webb shortened his rein, and
his pony danced, anxious to be off. The two men shook hands with Western
ceremony.
“Adios, Baldy,” said
Webb, “I’m glad I seen you and had this talk.”
With a pounding rush that
sounded like the rise of a covey of quail, the riders sped away toward
different points of the compass. A hundred yards on his route Baldy reined in
on the top of a bare knoll, and emitted a yell. He swayed on his horse; had he
been on foot, the earth would have risen and conquered him; but in the saddle
he was a master of equilibrium, and laughed at whisky, and despised the centre
of gravity.
Webb turned in his saddle at
the signal.
“If I was you,” came Baldy’s
strident and perverting tones, “I’d be king!”
At eight o’clock on the
following morning Bud Turner rolled from his saddle in front of the Nopalito
ranch-house, and stumbled with whizzing rowels toward the gallery. Bud was in
charge of the bunch of beef-cattle that was to strike the trail that morning
for San Antonio. Mrs. Yeager was on the gallery watering a cluster of hyacinths
growing in a red earthenware jar.
“King” McAllister had bequeathed
to his daughter many of his strong characteristics—his resolution, his gay
courage, his contumacious self-reliance, his pride as a reigning monarch of
hoofs and horns. Allegro and fortissimo had
been McAllister’s temp and tone. In Santa they survived, transposed to the
feminine key. Substantially, she preserved the image of the mother who had been
summoned to wander in other and less finite green pastures long before the
waxing herds of kine had conferred royalty upon the house. She had her mother’s
slim, strong figure and grave, soft prettiness that relieved in her the
severity of the imperious McAllister eye and the McAllister air of royal
independence.
Webb stood on one end of the
gallery giving orders to two or three sub-bosses of various camps and outfits
who had ridden in for instructions.
“Morning,” said Bud briefly.
“Where do you want them beeves to go in town—to Barber’s, as usual?”
Now, to answer that had been
the prerogative of the queen. All the reins of business—buying, selling, and
banking—had been held by her capable fingers. The handling of cattle had been
entrusted fully to her husband. In the days of “King” McAllister, Santa had
been his secretary and helper; and she had continued her work with wisdom and
profit. But before she could reply, the prince-consort spake up with calm
decision:
“You drive that bunch to
Zimmerman and Nesbit’s pens. I spoke to Zimmerman about it some time ago.”
Bud turned on his high
boot-heels.
“Wait!” called Santa
quickly. She looked at her husband with surprise in her steady gray eyes.
“Why, what do you mean,
Webb?” she asked, with a small wrinkle gathering between her brows. “I never
deal with Zimmerman and Nesbit. Barber has handled every head of stock from
this ranch in that market for five years. I’m not going to take the business
out of his hands.” She faced Bud Turner. “Deliver those cattle to Barber,” she
concluded positively.
Bud gazed impartially at the
water-jar hanging on the gallery, stood on his other leg, and chewed a
mesquite-leaf.
“I want this bunch of beeves
to go to Zimmerman and Nesbit,” said Webb, with a frosty light in his blue
eyes.
“Nonsense,” said Santa
impatiently. “You’d better start on, Bud, so as to noon at the Little Elm
water-hole. Tell Barber we’ll have another lot of culls ready in about a
month.”
Bud allowed a hesitating eye
to steal upward and meet Webb’s. Webb saw apology in his look, and fancied he
saw commiseration.
“You deliver them cattle,”
he said grimly, “to—”
“Barber,” finished Santa
sharply. “Let that settle it. Is there anything else you are waiting for, Bud?”
“No, m’m,” said Bud. But
before going he lingered while a cow’s tail could have switched thrice; for man
is man’s ally; and even the Philistines must have blushed when they took Samson
in the way they did.
“You hear your boss!” cried
Webb sardonically. He took off his hat, and bowed until it touched the floor
before his wife.
“Webb,” said Santa
rebukingly, “you’re acting mighty foolish to-day.”
“Court fool, your Majesty,”
said Webb, in his slow tones, which had changed their quality. “What else can
you expect? Let me tell you. I was a man before I married a cattle-queen. What
am I now? The laughing-stock of the camps. I’ll be a man again.”
Santa looked at him closely.
“Don’t be unreasonable,
Webb,” she said calmly. “You haven’t been slighted in any way. Do I ever
interfere in your management of the cattle? I know the business side of the
ranch much better than you do. I learned it from Dad. Be sensible.”
“Kingdoms and queendoms,”
said Webb, “don’t suit me unless I am in the pictures, too. I punch the cattle
and you wear the crown. All right. I’d rather be High Lord Chancellor of a
cow-camp than the eight-spot in a queen-high flush. It’s your ranch; and Barber
gets the beeves.”
Webb’s horse was tied to the
rack. He walked into the house and brought out his roll of blankets that he
never took with him except on long rides, and his “slicker,” and his longest
stake-rope of plaited raw-hide. These he began to tie deliberately upon his
saddle. Santa, a little pale, followed him.
Webb swung up into the
saddle. His serious, smooth face was without expression except for a stubborn
light that smouldered in his eyes.
“There’s a herd of cows and
calves,” said he, “near the Hondo water-hole on the Frio that ought to be moved
away from timber. Lobos have killed three of the calves. I forgot to leave
orders. You’d better tell Simms to attend to it.”
Santa laid a hand on the
horse’s bridle, and looked her husband in the eye.
“Are you going to leave me,
Webb?” she asked quietly.
“I am going to be a man
again,” he answered.
“I wish you success in a
praiseworthy attempt,” she said, with a sudden coldness. She turned and walked
directly into the house.
Webb Yeager rode to the
southeast as straight as the topography of West Texas permitted. And when he
reached the horizon he might have ridden on into blue space as far as knowledge
of him on the Nopalito went. And the days, with Sundays at their head, formed
into hebdomadal squads; and the weeks, captained by the full moon, closed ranks
into menstrual companies crying “Tempus fugit” on their banners; and the months
marched on toward the vast camp-ground of the years; but Webb Yeager came no
more to the dominions of his queen.
One day a being named
Bartholomew, a sheep-man—and therefore of little account—from the lower Rio
Grande country, rode in sight of the Nopalito ranch-house, and felt hunger
assail him. Ex consuetudine he was soon seated at the mid-day
dining table of that hospitable kingdom. Talk like water gushed from him: he
might have been smitten with Aaron’s rod—that is your gentle shepherd when an
audience is vouchsafed him whose ears are not overgrown with wool.
“Missis Yeager,” he babbled,
“I see a man the other day on the Rancho Seco down in Hidalgo County by your
name—Webb Yeager was his. He’d just been engaged as manager. He was a tall,
light-haired man, not saying much. Perhaps he was some kin of yours, do you
think?”
“A husband,” said Santa
cordially. “The Seco has done well. Mr. Yeager is one of the best stockmen in
the West.”
The dropping out of a
prince-consort rarely disorganises a monarchy. Queen Santa had appointed
as mayordomo of the ranch a trusty subject, named Ramsay, who
had been one of her father’s faithful vassals. And there was scarcely a ripple
on the Nopalito ranch save when the gulf-breeze created undulations in the
grass of its wide acres.
For several years the
Nopalito had been making experiments with an English breed of cattle that
looked down with aristocratic contempt upon the Texas long-horns. The
experiments were found satisfactory; and a pasture had been set aside for the
blue-bloods. The fame of them had gone forth into the chaparral and pear as far
as men ride in saddles. Other ranches woke up, rubbed their eyes, and looked
with new dissatisfaction upon the long-horns.
As a consequence, one day a
sunburned, capable, silk-kerchiefed nonchalant youth, garnished with revolvers,
and attended by three Mexican vaqueros, alighted at the Nopalito
ranch and presented the following business-like epistle to the queen thereof:
Mrs. Yeager—The Nopalito
Ranch:
Dear Madam:
I am instructed by the owners of the Rancho Seco to
purchase 100 head of two and three-year-old cows of the Sussex breed owned by
you. If you can fill the order please deliver the cattle to the bearer; and a
check will be forwarded to you at once.
Respectfully,
Webster Yeager,
Manager the Rancho Seco.
Business is business,
even—very scantily did it escape being written “especially”—in a kingdom.
That night the 100 head of
cattle were driven up from the pasture and penned in a corral near the
ranch-house for delivery in the morning.
When night closed down and
the house was still, did Santa Yeager throw herself down, clasping that formal
note to her bosom, weeping, and calling out a name that pride (either in one or
the other) had kept from her lips many a day? Or did she file the letter, in
her business way, retaining her royal balance and strength?
Wonder, if you will; but
royalty is sacred; and there is a veil. But this much you shall learn:
At midnight Santa slipped
softly out of the ranch-house, clothed in something dark and plain. She paused
for a moment under the live-oak trees. The prairies were somewhat dim, and the
moonlight was pale orange, diluted with particles of an impalpable, flying mist.
But the mock-bird whistled on every bough of vantage; leagues of flowers
scented the air; and a kindergarten of little shadowy rabbits leaped and played
in an open space near by. Santa turned her face to the southeast and threw
three kisses thitherward; for there was none to see.
Then she sped silently to
the blacksmith-shop, fifty yards away; and what she did there can only be
surmised. But the forge glowed red; and there was a faint hammering such as
Cupid might make when he sharpens his arrow-points.
Later she came forth with a
queer-shaped, handled thing in one hand, and a portable furnace, such as are
seen in branding-camps, in the other. To the corral where the Sussex cattle
were penned she sped with these things swiftly in the moonlight.
She opened the gate and
slipped inside the corral. The Sussex cattle were mostly a dark red. But among
this bunch was one that was milky white—notable among the others.
And now Santa shook from her
shoulder something that we had not seen before—a rope lasso. She freed the loop
of it, coiling the length in her left hand, and plunged into the thick of the
cattle.
The white cow was her
object. She swung the lasso, which caught one horn and slipped off. The next
throw encircled the forefeet and the animal fell heavily. Santa made for it
like a panther; but it scrambled up and dashed against her, knocking her over
like a blade of grass.
Again she made her cast,
while the aroused cattle milled around the four sides of the corral in a
plunging mass. This throw was fair; the white cow came to earth again; and
before it could rise Santa had made the lasso fast around a post of the corral
with a swift and simple knot, and had leaped upon the cow again with the
rawhide hobbles.
In one minute the feet of
the animal were tied (no record-breaking deed) and Santa leaned against the
corral for the same space of time, panting and lax.
And then she ran swiftly to
her furnace at the gate and brought the branding-iron, queerly shaped and
white-hot.
The bellow of the outraged
white cow, as the iron was applied, should have stirred the slumbering
auricular nerves and consciences of the near-by subjects of the Nopalito, but
it did not. And it was amid the deepest nocturnal silence that Santa ran like a
lapwing back to the ranch-house and there fell upon a cot and sobbed—sobbed as
though queens had hearts as simple ranchmen’s wives have, and as though she
would gladly make kings of prince-consorts, should they ride back again from
over the hills and far away.
In the morning the capable,
revolvered youth and his vaqueros set forth, driving the bunch
of Sussex cattle across the prairies to the Rancho Seco. Ninety miles it was; a
six days’ journey, grazing and watering the animals on the way.
The beasts arrived at Rancho
Seco one evening at dusk; and were received and counted by the foreman of the
ranch.
The next morning at eight
o’clock a horseman loped out of the brush to the Nopalito ranch-house. He
dismounted stiffly, and strode, with whizzing spurs, to the house. His horse
gave a great sigh and swayed foam-streaked, with down-drooping head and closed
eyes.
But waste not your pity upon
Belshazzar, the flea-bitten sorrel. To-day, in Nopalito horse-pasture he
survives, pampered, beloved, unridden, cherished record-holder of long-distance
rides.
The horseman stumbled into
the house. Two arms fell around his neck, and someone cried out in the voice of
woman and queen alike: “Webb— oh, Webb!”
“I was a skunk,” said Webb
Yeager.
“Hush,” said Santa, “did you
see it?”
“I saw it,” said Webb.
What they meant God knows;
and you shall know, if you rightly read the primer of events.
“Be the cattle-queen,” said
Webb; “and overlook it if you can. I was a mangy, sheep-stealing coyote.”
“Hush!” said Santa again,
laying her fingers upon his mouth. “There’s no queen here. Do you know who I
am? I am Santa Yeager, First Lady of the Bedchamber. Come here.”
She dragged him from the
gallery into the room to the right. There stood a cradle with an infant in it—a
red, ribald, unintelligible, babbling, beautiful infant, sputtering at life in
an unseemly manner.
“There’s no queen on this
ranch,” said Santa again. “Look at the king. He’s got your eyes, Webb. Down on
your knees and look at his Highness.”
But jingling rowels sounded
on the gallery, and Bud Turner stumbled there again with the same query that he
had brought, lacking a few days, a year ago.
“‘Morning. Them beeves is
just turned out on the trail. Shall I drive ’em to Barber’s, or—”
He saw Webb and stopped,
open-mouthed.
“Ba-ba-ba-ba-ba-ba!”
shrieked the king in his cradle, beating the air with his fists.
“You hear your boss, Bud,”
said Webb Yeager, with a broad grin—just as he had said a year ago.
And that is all, except that
when old man Quinn, owner of the Rancho Seco, went out to look over the herd of
Sussex cattle that he had bought from the Nopalito ranch, he asked his new
manager:
“What’s the Nopalito ranch
brand, Wilson?”
“X Bar Y,” said Wilson.
“I thought so,” said Quinn.
“But look at that white heifer there; she’s got another brand—a heart with a
cross inside of it. What brand is that?”
II
THE RANSOM OF MACK
Me and old Mack Lonsbury, we
got out of that Little Hide-and-Seek gold mine affair with about $40,000
apiece. I say “old” Mack; but he wasn’t old. Forty-one, I should say; but he
always seemed old.
“Andy,” he says to me, “I’m
tired of hustling. You and me have been working hard together for three years.
Say we knock off for a while, and spend some of this idle money we’ve coaxed
our way.”
“The proposition hits me
just right,” says I. “Let’s be nabobs for a while and see how it feels. What’ll
we do—take in the Niagara Falls, or buck at faro?”
“For a good many years,”
says Mack, “I’ve thought that if I ever had extravagant money I’d rent a
two-room cabin somewhere, hire a Chinaman to cook, and sit in my stocking feet
and read Buckle’s History of Civilisation.”
“That sounds self-indulgent
and gratifying without vulgar ostentation,” says I; “and I don’t see how money
could be better invested. Give me a cuckoo clock and a Sep Winner’s
Self-Instructor for the Banjo, and I’ll join you.”
A week afterwards me and
Mack hits this small town of Piña, about thirty miles out from Denver, and
finds an elegant two-room house that just suits us. We deposited half-a-peck of
money in the Piña bank and shook hands with every one of the 340 citizens in
the town. We brought along the Chinaman and the cuckoo clock and Buckle and the
Instructor with us from Denver; and they made the cabin seem like home at once.
Never believe it when they
tell you riches don’t bring happiness. If you could have seen old Mack sitting
in his rocking-chair with his blue-yarn sock feet up in the window and
absorbing in that Buckle stuff through his specs you’d have seen a picture of
content that would have made Rockefeller jealous. And I was learning to pick out
“Old Zip Coon” on the banjo, and the cuckoo was on time with his remarks, and
Ah Sing was messing up the atmosphere with the handsomest smell of ham and eggs
that ever laid the honeysuckle in the shade. When it got too dark to make out
Buckle’s nonsense and the notes in the Instructor, me and Mack would light our
pipes and talk about science and pearl diving and sciatica and Egypt and
spelling and fish and trade-winds and leather and gratitude and eagles, and a
lot of subjects that we’d never had time to explain our sentiments about
before.
One evening Mack spoke up
and asked me if I was much apprised in the habits and policies of women folks.
“Why, yes,” says I, in a
tone of voice; “I know ’em from Alfred to Omaha. The feminine nature and
similitude,” says I, “is as plain to my sight as the Rocky Mountains is to a
blue-eyed burro. I’m onto all their little side-steps and punctual
discrepancies.”
“I tell you, Andy,” says
Mack, with a kind of sigh, “I never had the least amount of intersection with
their predispositions. Maybe I might have had a proneness in respect to their
vicinity, but I never took the time. I made my own living since I was fourteen;
and I never seemed to get my ratiocinations equipped with the sentiments
usually depicted toward the sect. I sometimes wish I had,” says old Mack.
“They’re an adverse study,”
says I, “and adapted to points of view. Although they vary in rationale, I have
found ’em quite often obviously differing from each other in divergences of
contrast.”
“It seems to me,” goes on
Mack, “that a man had better take ’em in and secure his inspirations of the
sect when he’s young and so preordained. I let my chance go by; and I guess I’m
too old now to go hopping into the curriculum.”
“Oh, I don’t know,” I tells
him. “Maybe you better credit yourself with a barrel of money and a lot of
emancipation from a quantity of uncontent. Still, I don’t regret my knowledge
of ’em,” I says. “It takes a man who understands the symptoms and by-plays of
women-folks to take care of himself in this world.”
We stayed on in Piña because
we liked the place. Some folks might enjoy their money with noise and rapture
and locomotion; but me and Mack we had had plenty of turmoils and hotel towels.
The people were friendly; Ah Sing got the swing of the grub we liked; Mack and
Buckle were as thick as two body-snatchers, and I was hitting out a cordial
resemblance to “Buffalo Gals, Can’t You Come Out To-night,” on the banjo.
One day I got a telegram
from Speight, the man that was working on a mine I had an interest in out in
New Mexico. I had to go out there; and I was gone two months. I was anxious to
get back to Piña and enjoy life once more.
When I struck the cabin I
nearly fainted. Mack was standing in the door; and if angels ever wept, I saw
no reason why they should be smiling then.
That man was a spectacle.
Yes; he was worse; he was a spyglass; he was the great telescope in the Lick
Observatory. He had on a coat and shiny shoes and a white vest and a high silk
hat; and a geranium as big as an order of spinach was spiked onto his front.
And he was smirking and warping his face like an infernal storekeeper or a kid
with colic.
“Hello, Andy,” says Mack,
out of his face. “Glad to see you back. Things have happened since you went
away.”
“I know it,” says I, “and a sacrilegious
sight it is. God never made you that way, Mack Lonsbury. Why do you scarify His
works with this presumptuous kind of ribaldry?”
“Why, Andy,” says he,
“they’ve elected me justice of the peace since you left.”
I looked at Mack close. He
was restless and inspired. A justice of the peace ought to be disconsolate and
assuaged.
Just then a young woman
passed on the sidewalk; and I saw Mack kind of half snicker and blush, and then
he raised up his hat and smiled and bowed, and she smiled and bowed, and went
on by.
“No hope for you,” says I,
“if you’ve got the Mary-Jane infirmity at your age. I thought it wasn’t going
to take on you. And patent leather shoes! All this in two little short months!”
“I’m going to marry the
young lady who just passed to-night,” says Mack, in a kind of flutter.
“I forgot something at the
post-office,” says I, and walked away quick.
I overtook that young woman
a hundred yards away. I raised my hat and told her my name. She was about
nineteen; and young for her age. She blushed, and then looked at me cool, like
I was the snow scene from the “Two Orphans.”
“I understand you are to be
married to-night,” I said.
“Correct,” says she. “You
got any objections?”
“Listen, sissy,” I begins.
“My name is Miss Rebosa
Redd,” says she in a pained way.
“I know it,” says I. “Now,
Rebosa, I’m old enough to have owed money to your father. And that old,
specious, dressed-up, garbled, sea-sick ptomaine prancing about avidiously like
an irremediable turkey gobbler with patent leather shoes on is my best friend.
Why did you go and get him invested in this marriage business?”
“Why, he was the only chance
there was,” answers Miss Rebosa.
“Nay,” says I, giving a
sickening look of admiration at her complexion and style of features; “with
your beauty you might pick any kind of a man. Listen, Rebosa. Old Mack ain’t
the man you want. He was twenty-two when you was née Reed, as
the papers say. This bursting into bloom won’t last with him. He’s all
ventilated with oldness and rectitude and decay. Old Mack’s down with a case of
Indian summer. He overlooked his bet when he was young; and now he’s suing
Nature for the interest on the promissory note he took from Cupid instead of
the cash. Rebosa, are you bent on having this marriage occur?”
“Why, sure I am,” says she,
oscillating the pansies on her hat, “and so is somebody else, I reckon.”
“What time is it to take
place?” I asks.
“At six o’clock,” says she.
I made up my mind right away
what to do. I’d save old Mack if I could. To have a good, seasoned, ineligible
man like that turn chicken for a girl that hadn’t quit eating slate pencils and
buttoning in the back was more than I could look on with easiness.
“Rebosa,” says I, earnest,
drawing upon my display of knowledge concerning the feminine intuitions of
reason—“ain’t there a young man in Piña—a nice young man that you think a heap
of?”
“Yep,” says Rebosa, nodding
her pansies—“Sure there is! What do you think! Gracious!”
“Does he like you?” I asks.
“How does he stand in the matter?”
“Crazy,” says Rebosa. “Ma
has to wet down the front steps to keep him from sitting there all the time.
But I guess that’ll be all over after to-night,” she winds up with a sigh.
“Rebosa,” says I, “you don’t
really experience any of this adoration called love for old Mack, do you?”
“Lord! no,” says the girl,
shaking her head. “I think he’s as dry as a lava bed. The idea!”
“Who is this young man that
you like, Rebosa?” I inquires.
“It’s Eddie Bayles,” says
she. “He clerks in Crosby’s grocery. But he don’t make but thirty-five a month.
Ella Noakes was wild about him once.”
“Old Mack tells me,” I says,
“that he’s going to marry you at six o’clock this evening.”
“That’s the time,” says she.
“It’s to be at our house.”
“Rebosa,” says I, “listen to
me. If Eddie Bayles had a thousand dollars cash—a thousand dollars, mind you,
would buy him a store of his own—if you and Eddie had that much to excuse
matrimony on, would you consent to marry him this evening at five o’clock?”
The girl looks at me a
minute; and I can see these inaudible cogitations going on inside of her, as
women will.
“A thousand dollars?” says
she. “Of course I would.”
“Come on,” says I. “We’ll go
and see Eddie.”
We went up to Crosby’s store
and called Eddie outside. He looked to be estimable and freckled; and he had
chills and fever when I made my proposition.
“At five o’clock?” says he,
“for a thousand dollars? Please don’t wake me up! Well, you are the
rich uncle retired from the spice business in India! I’ll buy out old Crosby
and run the store myself.”
We went inside and got old
man Crosby apart and explained it. I wrote my check for a thousand dollars and
handed it to him. If Eddie and Rebosa married each other at five he was to turn
the money over to them.
And then I gave ’em my
blessing, and went to wander in the wildwood for a season. I sat on a log and
made cogitations on life and old age and the zodiac and the ways of women and
all the disorder that goes with a lifetime. I passed myself congratulations
that I had probably saved my old friend Mack from his attack of Indian summer.
I knew when he got well of it and shed his infatuation and his patent leather
shoes, he would feel grateful. “To keep old Mack disinvolved,” thinks I, “from
relapses like this, is worth more than a thousand dollars.” And most of all I
was glad that I’d made a study of women, and wasn’t to be deceived any by their
means of conceit and evolution.
It must have been half-past
five when I got back home. I stepped in; and there sat old Mack on the back of
his neck in his old clothes with his blue socks on the window and the History
of Civilisation propped up on his knees.
“This don’t look like
getting ready for a wedding at six,” I says, to seem innocent.
“Oh,” says Mack, reaching
for his tobacco, “that was postponed back to five o’clock. They sent me over a
note saying the hour had been changed. It’s all over now. What made you stay
away so long, Andy?”
“You heard about the
wedding?” I asks.
“I operated it,” says he. “I
told you I was justice of the peace. The preacher is off East to visit his
folks, and I’m the only one in town that can perform the dispensations of
marriage. I promised Eddie and Rebosa a month ago I’d marry ’em. He’s a busy
lad; and he’ll have a grocery of his own some day.”
“He will,” says I.
“There was lots of women at
the wedding,” says Mack, smoking up. “But I didn’t seem to get any ideas from
’em. I wish I was informed in the structure of their attainments like you said
you was.”
“That was two months ago,”
says I, reaching up for the banjo.
III
TELEMACHUS, FRIEND
Returning from a hunting trip,
I waited at the little town of Los Piños, in New Mexico, for the south-bound
train, which was one hour late. I sat on the porch of the Summit House and
discussed the functions of life with Telemachus Hicks, the hotel proprietor.
Perceiving that personalities
were not out of order, I asked him what species of beast had long ago twisted
and mutilated his left ear. Being a hunter, I was concerned in the evils that
may befall one in the pursuit of game.
“That ear,” says Hicks, “is
the relic of true friendship.”
“An accident?” I persisted.
“No friendship is an
accident,” said Telemachus; and I was silent.
“The only perfect case of
true friendship I ever knew,” went on my host, “was a cordial intent between a
Connecticut man and a monkey. The monkey climbed palms in Barranquilla and
threw down cocoanuts to the man. The man sawed them in two and made dippers,
which he sold for two reales each and bought rum. The monkey
drank the milk of the nuts. Through each being satisfied with his own share of
the graft, they lived like brothers.
“But in the case of human
beings, friendship is a transitory art, subject to discontinuance without
further notice.
“I had a friend once, of the
entitlement of Paisley Fish, that I imagined was sealed to me for an endless
space of time. Side by side for seven years we had mined, ranched, sold patent
churns, herded sheep, took photographs and other things, built wire fences, and
picked prunes. Thinks I, neither homocide nor flattery nor riches nor sophistry
nor drink can make trouble between me and Paisley Fish. We was friends an
amount you could hardly guess at. We was friends in business, and we let our
amicable qualities lap over and season our hours of recreation and folly. We
certainly had days of Damon and nights of Pythias.
“One summer me and Paisley
gallops down into these San Andrés mountains for the purpose of a month’s
surcease and levity, dressed in the natural store habiliments of man. We hit
this town of Los Piños, which certainly was a roof-garden spot of the world,
and flowing with condensed milk and honey. It had a street or two, and air, and
hens, and a eating-house; and that was enough for us.
“We strikes the town after
supper-time, and we concludes to sample whatever efficacy there is in this
eating-house down by the railroad tracks. By the time we had set down and pried
up our plates with a knife from the red oil-cloth, along intrudes Widow Jessup
with the hot biscuit and the fried liver.
“Now, there was a woman that
would have tempted an anchovy to forget his vows. She was not so small as she
was large; and a kind of welcome air seemed to mitigate her vicinity. The pink
of her face was the in hoc signo of a culinary temper and a
warm disposition, and her smile would have brought out the dogwood blossoms in
December.
“Widow Jessup talks to us a
lot of garrulousness about the climate and history and Tennyson and prunes and
the scarcity of mutton, and finally wants to know where we came from.
“‘Spring Valley,’ says I.
“‘Big Spring Valley,’ chips
in Paisley, out of a lot of potatoes and knuckle-bone of ham in his mouth.
“That was the first sign I
noticed that the old fidus Diogenes business between me and
Paisley Fish was ended forever. He knew how I hated a talkative person, and yet
he stampedes into the conversation with his amendments and addendums of syntax.
On the map it was Big Spring Valley; but I had heard Paisley himself call it
Spring Valley a thousand times.
“Without saying any more, we
went out after supper and set on the railroad track. We had been pardners too
long not to know what was going on in each other’s mind.
“‘I reckon you understand,’
says Paisley, ‘that I’ve made up my mind to accrue that widow woman as part and
parcel in and to my hereditaments forever, both domestic, sociable, legal, and
otherwise, until death us do part.’
“‘Why, yes,’ says I, ‘I read
it between the lines, though you only spoke one. And I suppose you are aware,’
says I, ‘that I have a movement on foot that leads up to the widow’s changing
her name to Hicks, and leaves you writing to the society column to inquire
whether the best man wears a japonica or seamless socks at the wedding!’
“‘There’ll be some hiatuses
in your program,’ says Paisley, chewing up a piece of a railroad tie. ‘I’d give
in to you,’ says he, ‘in ’most any respect if it was secular affairs, but this
is not so. The smiles of woman,’ goes on Paisley, ‘is the whirlpool of Squills
and Chalybeates, into which vortex the good ship Friendship is often drawn and
dismembered. I’d assault a bear that was annoying you,’ says Paisley, ‘or I’d
endorse your note, or rub the place between your shoulder-blades with opodeldoc
the same as ever; but there my sense of etiquette ceases. In this fracas with
Mrs. Jessup we play it alone. I’ve notified you fair.’
“And then I collaborates
with myself, and offers the following resolutions and by-laws:
“‘Friendship between man and
man,’ says I, ‘is an ancient historical virtue enacted in the days when men had
to protect each other against lizards with eighty-foot tails and flying
turtles. And they’ve kept up the habit to this day, and stand by each other
till the bellboy comes up and tells them the animals are not really there. I’ve
often heard,’ I says, ‘about ladies stepping in and breaking up a friendship
between men. Why should that be? I’ll tell you, Paisley, the first sight and
hot biscuit of Mrs. Jessup appears to have inserted a oscillation into each of
our bosoms. Let the best man of us have her. I’ll play you a square game, and
won’t do any underhanded work. I’ll do all of my courting of her in your
presence, so you will have an equal opportunity. With that arrangement I don’t
see why our steamboat of friendship should fall overboard in the medicinal
whirlpools you speak of, whichever of us wins out.’
“‘Good old hoss!’ says
Paisley, shaking my hand. ‘And I’ll do the same,’ says he. ‘We’ll court the
lady synonymously, and without any of the prudery and bloodshed usual to such
occasions. And we’ll be friends still, win or lose.’
“At one side of Mrs.
Jessup’s eating-house was a bench under some trees where she used to sit in the
breeze after the south-bound had been fed and gone. And there me and Paisley
used to congregate after supper and make partial payments on our respects to
the lady of our choice. And we was so honorable and circuitous in our calls
that if one of us got there first we waited for the other before beginning any
gallivantery.
“The first evening that Mrs.
Jessup knew about our arrangement I got to the bench before Paisley did. Supper
was just over, and Mrs. Jessup was out there with a fresh pink dress on, and
almost cool enough to handle.
“I sat down by her and made
a few specifications about the moral surface of nature as set forth by the
landscape and the contiguous perspective. That evening was surely a case in
point. The moon was attending to business in the section of sky where it
belonged, and the trees was making shadows on the ground according to science
and nature, and there was a kind of conspicuous hullabaloo going on in the
bushes between the bullbats and the orioles and the jack-rabbits and other
feathered insects of the forest. And the wind out of the mountains was singing
like a Jew’s-harp in the pile of old tomato-cans by the railroad track.
“I felt a kind of sensation
in my left side—something like dough rising in a crock by the fire. Mrs. Jessup
had moved up closer.
“‘Oh, Mr. Hicks,’ says she,
‘when one is alone in the world, don’t they feel it more aggravated on a
beautiful night like this?’
“I rose up off the bench at
once.
“‘Excuse me, ma’am,’ says I,
‘but I’ll have to wait till Paisley comes before I can give a audible hearing
to leading questions like that.’
“And then I explained to her
how we was friends cinctured by years of embarrassment and travel and
complicity, and how we had agreed to take no advantage of each other in any of
the more mushy walks of life, such as might be fomented by sentiment and
proximity. Mrs. Jessup appears to think serious about the matter for a minute,
and then she breaks into a species of laughter that makes the wildwood resound.
“In a few minutes Paisley
drops around, with oil of bergamot on his hair, and sits on the other side of
Mrs. Jessup, and inaugurates a sad tale of adventure in which him and Pieface
Lumley has a skinning-match of dead cows in ’95 for a silver-mounted saddle in
the Santa Rita valley during the nine months’ drought.
“Now, from the start of that
courtship I had Paisley Fish hobbled and tied to a post. Each one of us had a
different system of reaching out for the easy places in the female heart.
Paisley’s scheme was to petrify ’em with wonderful relations of events that he
had either come across personally or in large print. I think he must have got
his idea of subjugation from one of Shakespeare’s shows I see once called
‘Othello.’ There is a coloured man in it who acquires a duke’s daughter by
disbursing to her a mixture of the talk turned out by Rider Haggard, Lew
Dockstader, and Dr. Parkhurst. But that style of courting don’t work well off
the stage.
“Now, I give you my own
recipe for inveigling a woman into that state of affairs when she can be
referred to as ‘née Jones.’ Learn how to pick up her hand and hold
it, and she’s yours. It ain’t so easy. Some men grab at it so much like they
was going to set a dislocation of the shoulder that you can smell the arnica
and hear ’em tearing off bandages. Some take it up like a hot horseshoe, and
hold it off at arm’s length like a druggist pouring tincture of asafœtida in a
bottle. And most of ’em catch hold of it and drag it right out before the
lady’s eyes like a boy finding a baseball in the grass, without giving her a
chance to forget that the hand is growing on the end of her arm. Them ways are
all wrong.
“I’ll tell you the right
way. Did you ever see a man sneak out in the back yard and pick up a rock to
throw at a tomcat that was sitting on a fence looking at him? He pretends he
hasn’t got a thing in his hand, and that the cat don’t see him, and that he
don’t see the cat. That’s the idea. Never drag her hand out where she’ll have
to take notice of it. Don’t let her know that you think she knows you have the
least idea she is aware you are holding her hand. That was my rule of tactics;
and as far as Paisley’s serenade about hostilities and misadventure went, he
might as well have been reading to her a time-table of the Sunday trains that
stop at Ocean Grove, New Jersey.
“One night when I beat
Paisley to the bench by one pipeful, my friendship gets subsidised for a
minute, and I asks Mrs. Jessup if she didn’t think a ‘H’ was easier to write
than a ‘J.’ In a second her head was mashing the oleander flower in my
button-hole, and I leaned over and—but I didn’t.
“‘If you don’t mind,’ says
I, standing up, ‘we’ll wait for Paisley to come before finishing this. I’ve
never done anything dishonourable yet to our friendship, and this won’t be
quite fair.’
“‘Mr. Hicks,’ says Mrs.
Jessup, looking at me peculiar in the dark, ‘if it wasn’t for but one thing,
I’d ask you to hike yourself down the gulch and never disresume your visits to
my house.’
“‘And what is that, ma’am?’
I asks.
“‘You are too good a friend
not to make a good husband,’ says she.
“In five minutes Paisley was
on his side of Mrs. Jessup.
“‘In Silver City, in the
summer of ’98,’ he begins, ‘I see Jim Batholomew chew off a Chinaman’s ear in
the Blue Light Saloon on account of a crossbarred muslin shirt that—what was
that noise?’
“I had resumed matters again
with Mrs. Jessup right where we had left off.
“‘Mrs. Jessup,’ says I, ‘has
promised to make it Hicks. And this is another of the same sort.’
“Paisley winds his feet
round a leg of the bench and kind of groans.
“‘Lem,’ says he, ‘we been
friends for seven years. Would you mind not kissing Mrs. Jessup quite so loud?
I’d do the same for you.’
“‘All right,’ says I. ‘The
other kind will do as well.’
“‘This Chinaman,’ goes on
Paisley, ‘was the one that shot a man named Mullins in the spring of ’97, and
that was—’
“Paisley interrupted himself
again.
“‘Lem,’ says he, ‘if you was
a true friend you wouldn’t hug Mrs. Jessup quite so hard. I felt the bench
shake all over just then. You know you told me you would give me an even chance
as long as there was any.’
“‘Mr. Man,’ says Mrs.
Jessup, turning around to Paisley, ‘if you was to drop in to the celebration of
mine and Mr. Hicks’s silver wedding, twenty-five years from now, do you think
you could get it into that Hubbard squash you call your head that you are nix
cum rous in this business? I’ve put up with you a long time because
you was Mr. Hicks’s friend; but it seems to me it’s time for you to wear the
willow and trot off down the hill.’
“‘Mrs. Jessup,’ says I,
without losing my grasp on the situation as fiancé, ‘Mr. Paisley is my friend,
and I offered him a square deal and a equal opportunity as long as there was a
chance.’
“‘A chance!’ says she.
‘Well, he may think he has a chance; but I hope he won’t think he’s got a
cinch, after what he’s been next to all the evening.’
“Well, a month afterwards me
and Mrs. Jessup was married in the Los Piños Methodist Church; and the whole
town closed up to see the performance.
“When we lined up in front
and the preacher was beginning to sing out his rituals and observances, I looks
around and misses Paisley. I calls time on the preacher. ‘Paisley ain’t here,’
says I. ‘We’ve got to wait for Paisley. A friend once, a friend always—that’s
Telemachus Hicks,’ says I. Mrs. Jessup’s eyes snapped some; but the preacher
holds up the incantations according to instructions.
“In a few minutes Paisley
gallops up the aisle, putting on a cuff as he comes. He explains that the only
dry-goods store in town was closed for the wedding, and he couldn’t get the
kind of a boiled shirt that his taste called for until he had broke open the
back window of the store and helped himself. Then he ranges up on the other
side of the bride, and the wedding goes on. I always imagined that Paisley
calculated as a last chance that the preacher might marry him to the widow by
mistake.
“After the proceedings was
over we had tea and jerked antelope and canned apricots, and then the populace
hiked itself away. Last of all Paisley shook me by the hand and told me I’d
acted square and on the level with him and he was proud to call me a friend.
“The preacher had a small
house on the side of the street that he’d fixed up to rent; and he allowed me
and Mrs. Hicks to occupy it till the ten-forty train the next morning, when we
was going on a bridal tour to El Paso. His wife had decorated it all up with
hollyhocks and poison ivy, and it looked real festal and bowery.
“About ten o’clock that
night I sets down in the front door and pulls off my boots a while in the cool
breeze, while Mrs. Hicks was fixing around in the room. Right soon the light
went out inside; and I sat there a while reverberating over old times and
scenes. And then I heard Mrs. Hicks call out, ‘Ain’t you coming in soon, Lem?’
“‘Well, well!’ says I, kind
of rousing up. ‘Durn me if I wasn’t waiting for old Paisley to—’
“But when I got that far,”
concluded Telemachus Hicks, “I thought somebody had shot this left ear of mine
off with a forty-five. But it turned out to be only a lick from a broomhandle
in the hands of Mrs. Hicks.”
IV
THE HANDBOOK OF HYMEN
’Tis the opinion of myself,
Sanderson Pratt, who sets this down, that the educational system of the United
States should be in the hands of the weather bureau. I can give you good
reasons for it; and you can’t tell me why our college professors shouldn’t be
transferred to the meteorological department. They have been learned to read;
and they could very easily glance at the morning papers and then wire in to the
main office what kind of weather to expect. But there’s the other side of the
proposition. I am going on to tell you how the weather furnished me and Idaho
Green with an elegant education.
We was up in the Bitter Root
Mountains over the Montana line prospecting for gold. A chin-whiskered man in
Walla-Walla, carrying a line of hope as excess baggage, had grubstaked us; and
there we was in the foothills pecking away, with enough grub on hand to last an
army through a peace conference.
Along one day comes a
mail-rider over the mountains from Carlos, and stops to eat three cans of
greengages, and leave us a newspaper of modern date. This paper prints a system
of premonitions of the weather, and the card it dealt Bitter Root Mountains
from the bottom of the deck was “warmer and fair, with light westerly breezes.”
That evening it began to
snow, with the wind strong in the east. Me and Idaho moved camp into an old
empty cabin higher up the mountain, thinking it was only a November flurry. But
after falling three foot on a level it went to work in earnest; and we knew we
was snowed in. We got in plenty of firewood before it got deep, and we had grub
enough for two months, so we let the elements rage and cut up all they thought
proper.
If you want to instigate the
art of manslaughter just shut two men up in a eighteen by twenty-foot cabin for
a month. Human nature won’t stand it.
When the first snowflakes
fell me and Idaho Green laughed at each other’s jokes and praised the stuff we
turned out of a skillet and called bread. At the end of three weeks Idaho makes
this kind of a edict to me. Says he:
“I never exactly heard sour
milk dropping out of a balloon on the bottom of a tin pan, but I have an idea
it would be music of the spears compared to this attenuated stream of
asphyxiated thought that emanates out of your organs of conversation. The kind
of half-masticated noises that you emit every day puts me in mind of a cow’s
cud, only she’s lady enough to keep hers to herself, and you ain’t.”
“Mr. Green,” says I, “you
having been a friend of mine once, I have some hesitations in confessing to you
that if I had my choice for society between you and a common yellow,
three-legged cur pup, one of the inmates of this here cabin would be wagging a
tail just at present.”
This way we goes on for two
or three days, and then we quits speaking to one another. We divides up the
cooking implements, and Idaho cooks his grub on one side of the fireplace, and
me on the other. The snow is up to the windows, and we have to keep a fire all
day.
You see me and Idaho never
had any education beyond reading and doing “if John had three apples and James
five” on a slate. We never felt any special need for a university degree,
though we had acquired a species of intrinsic intelligence in knocking around
the world that we could use in emergencies. But, snowbound in that cabin in the
Bitter Roots, we felt for the first time that if we had studied Homer or Greek
and fractions and the higher branches of information, we’d have had some
resources in the line of meditation and private thought. I’ve seen them Eastern
college fellows working in camps all through the West, and I never noticed but
what education was less of a drawback to ’em than you would think. Why, once
over on Snake River, when Andrew McWilliams’ saddle horse got the botts, he
sent a buckboard ten miles for one of these strangers that claimed to be a
botanist. But that horse died.
One morning Idaho was poking
around with a stick on top of a little shelf that was too high to reach. Two
books fell down to the floor. I started toward ’em, but caught Idaho’s eye. He
speaks for the first time in a week.
“Don’t burn your fingers,”
says he. “In spite of the fact that you’re only fit to be the companion of a
sleeping mud-turtle, I’ll give you a square deal. And that’s more than your
parents did when they turned you loose in the world with the sociability of a
rattle-snake and the bedside manner of a frozen turnip. I’ll play you a game of
seven-up, the winner to pick up his choice of the book, the loser to take the
other.”
We played; and Idaho won. He
picked up his book; and I took mine. Then each of us got on his side of the
house and went to reading.
I never was as glad to see a
ten-ounce nugget as I was that book. And Idaho took at his like a kid looks at
a stick of candy.
Mine was a little book about
five by six inches called “Herkimer’s Handbook of Indispensable Information.” I
may be wrong, but I think that was the greatest book that ever was written.
I’ve got it to-day; and I can stump you or any man fifty times in five minutes
with the information in it. Talk about Solomon or the New York Tribune! Herkimer
had cases on both of ’em. That man must have put in fifty years and travelled a
million miles to find out all that stuff. There was the population of all
cities in it, and the way to tell a girl’s age, and the number of teeth a camel
has. It told you the longest tunnel in the world, the number of the stars, how
long it takes for chicken pox to break out, what a lady’s neck ought to
measure, the veto powers of Governors, the dates of the Roman aqueducts, how
many pounds of rice going without three beers a day would buy, the average
annual temperature of Augusta, Maine, the quantity of seed required to plant an
acre of carrots in drills, antidotes for poisons, the number of hairs on a
blond lady’s head, how to preserve eggs, the height of all the mountains in the
world, and the dates of all wars and battles, and how to restore drowned
persons, and sunstroke, and the number of tacks in a pound, and how to make
dynamite and flowers and beds, and what to do before the doctor comes—and a
hundred times as many things besides. If there was anything Herkimer didn’t
know I didn’t miss it out of the book.
I sat and read that book for
four hours. All the wonders of education was compressed in it. I forgot the
snow, and I forgot that me and old Idaho was on the outs. He was sitting still
on a stool reading away with a kind of partly soft and partly mysterious look
shining through his tan-bark whiskers.
“Idaho,” says I, “what kind
of a book is yours?”
Idaho must have forgot, too,
for he answered moderate, without any slander or malignity.
“Why,” says he, “this here
seems to be a volume by Homer K. M.”
“Homer K. M. what?” I asks.
“Why, just Homer K. M.,”
says he.
“You’re a liar,” says I, a
little riled that Idaho should try to put me up a tree. “No man is going ’round
signing books with his initials. If it’s Homer K. M. Spoopendyke, or Homer K.
M. McSweeney, or Homer K. M. Jones, why don’t you say so like a man instead of
biting off the end of it like a calf chewing off the tail of a shirt on a
clothes-line?”
“I put it to you straight,
Sandy,” says Idaho, quiet. “It’s a poem book,” says he, “by Homer K. M. I
couldn’t get colour out of it at first, but there’s a vein if you follow it up.
I wouldn’t have missed this book for a pair of red blankets.”
“You’re welcome to it,” says
I. “What I want is a disinterested statement of facts for the mind to work on,
and that’s what I seem to find in the book I’ve drawn.”
“What you’ve got,” says
Idaho, “is statistics, the lowest grade of information that exists. They’ll
poison your mind. Give me old K. M.’s system of surmises. He seems to be a kind
of a wine agent. His regular toast is ‘nothing doing,’ and he seems to have a
grouch, but he keeps it so well lubricated with booze that his worst kicks
sound like an invitation to split a quart. But it’s poetry,” says Idaho, “and I
have sensations of scorn for that truck of yours that tries to convey sense in
feet and inches. When it comes to explaining the instinct of philosophy through
the art of nature, old K. M. has got your man beat by drills, rows, paragraphs,
chest measurement, and average annual rainfall.”
So that’s the way me and
Idaho had it. Day and night all the excitement we got was studying our books.
That snowstorm sure fixed us with a fine lot of attainments apiece. By the time
the snow melted, if you had stepped up to me suddenly and said: “Sanderson
Pratt, what would it cost per square foot to lay a roof with twenty by
twenty-eight tin at nine dollars and fifty cents per box?” I’d have told you as
quick as light could travel the length of a spade handle at the rate of one
hundred and ninety-two thousand miles per second. How many can do it? You wake
up ’most any man you know in the middle of the night, and ask him quick to tell
you the number of bones in the human skeleton exclusive of the teeth, or what
percentage of the vote of the Nebraska Legislature overrules a veto. Will he
tell you? Try him and see.
About what benefit Idaho got
out of his poetry book I didn’t exactly know. Idaho boosted the wine-agent
every time he opened his mouth; but I wasn’t so sure.
This Homer K. M., from what
leaked out of his libretto through Idaho, seemed to me to be a kind of a dog
who looked at life like it was a tin can tied to his tail. After running
himself half to death, he sits down, hangs his tongue out, and looks at the can
and says:
“Oh, well, since we can’t
shake the growler, let’s get it filled at the corner, and all have a drink on
me.”
Besides that, it seems he was
a Persian; and I never hear of Persia producing anything worth mentioning
unless it was Turkish rugs and Maltese cats.
That spring me and Idaho
struck pay ore. It was a habit of ours to sell out quick and keep moving. We
unloaded our grubstaker for eight thousand dollars apiece; and then we drifted
down to this little town of Rosa, on the Salmon river, to rest up, and get some
human grub, and have our whiskers harvested.
Rosa was no mining-camp. It
laid in the valley, and was as free of uproar and pestilence as one of them
rural towns in the country. There was a three-mile trolley line champing its
bit in the environs; and me and Idaho spent a week riding on one of the cars,
dropping off at nights at the Sunset View Hotel. Being now well read as well as
travelled, we was soon pro re nata with the best society in
Rosa, and was invited out to the most dressed-up and high-toned entertainments.
It was at a piano recital and quail-eating contest in the city hall, for the
benefit of the fire company, that me and Idaho first met Mrs. De Ormond
Sampson, the queen of Rosa society.
Mrs. Sampson was a widow,
and owned the only two-story house in town. It was painted yellow, and
whichever way you looked from you could see it as plain as egg on the chin of
an O’Grady on a Friday. Twenty-two men in Rosa besides me and Idaho was trying
to stake a claim on that yellow house.
There was a dance after the
song books and quail bones had been raked out of the Hall. Twenty-three of the
bunch galloped over to Mrs. Sampson and asked for a dance. I side-stepped the
two-step, and asked permission to escort her home. That’s where I made a hit.
On the way home says she:
“Ain’t the stars lovely and
bright to-night, Mr. Pratt?”
“For the chance they’ve
got,” says I, “they’re humping themselves in a mighty creditable way. That big
one you see is sixty-six million miles distant. It took thirty-six years for
its light to reach us. With an eighteen-foot telescope you can see forty-three
millions of ’em, including them of the thirteenth magnitude, which, if one was
to go out now, you would keep on seeing it for twenty-seven hundred years.”
“My!” says Mrs. Sampson. “I
never knew that before. How warm it is! I’m as damp as I can be from dancing so
much.”
“That’s easy to account
for,” says I, “when you happen to know that you’ve got two million sweat-glands
working all at once. If every one of your perspiratory ducts, which are a
quarter of an inch long, was placed end to end, they would reach a distance of
seven miles.”
“Lawsy!” says Mrs. Sampson. “It
sounds like an irrigation ditch you was describing, Mr. Pratt. How do you get
all this knowledge of information?”
“From observation, Mrs.
Sampson,” I tells her. “I keep my eyes open when I go about the world.”
“Mr. Pratt,” says she, “I
always did admire a man of education. There are so few scholars among the
sap-headed plug-uglies of this town that it is a real pleasure to converse with
a gentleman of culture. I’d be gratified to have you call at my house whenever
you feel so inclined.”
And that was the way I got
the goodwill of the lady in the yellow house. Every Tuesday and Friday evening
I used to go there and tell her about the wonders of the universe as
discovered, tabulated, and compiled from nature by Herkimer. Idaho and the
other gay Lutherans of the town got every minute of the rest of the week that
they could.
I never imagined that Idaho
was trying to work on Mrs. Sampson with old K. M.’s rules of courtship till one
afternoon when I was on my way over to take her a basket of wild hog-plums. I
met the lady coming down the lane that led to her house. Her eyes was snapping,
and her hat made a dangerous dip over one eye.
“Mr. Pratt,” she opens up,
“this Mr. Green is a friend of yours, I believe.”
“For nine years,” says I.
“Cut him out,” says she. “He’s
no gentleman!”
“Why ma’am,” says I, “he’s a
plain incumbent of the mountains, with asperities and the usual failings of a
spendthrift and a liar, but I never on the most momentous occasion had the
heart to deny that he was a gentleman. It may be that in haberdashery and the
sense of arrogance and display Idaho offends the eye, but inside, ma’am, I’ve
found him impervious to the lower grades of crime and obesity. After nine years
of Idaho’s society, Mrs. Sampson,” I winds up, “I should hate to impute him,
and I should hate to see him imputed.”
“It’s right plausible of
you, Mr. Pratt,” says Mrs. Sampson, “to take up the curmudgeons in your
friend’s behalf; but it don’t alter the fact that he has made proposals to me
sufficiently obnoxious to ruffle the ignominy of any lady.”
“Why, now, now, now!” says
I. “Old Idaho do that! I could believe it of myself, sooner. I never knew but
one thing to deride in him; and a blizzard was responsible for that. Once while
we was snow-bound in the mountains he became a prey to a kind of spurious and
uneven poetry, which may have corrupted his demeanour.”
“It has,” says Mrs. Sampson.
“Ever since I knew him he has been reciting to me a lot of irreligious rhymes
by some person he calls Ruby Ott, and who is no better than she should be, if
you judge by her poetry.”
“Then Idaho has struck a new
book,” says I, “for the one he had was by a man who writes under the nom
de plume of K. M.”
“He’d better have stuck to
it,” says Mrs. Sampson, “whatever it was. And to-day he caps the vortex. I get
a bunch of flowers from him, and on ’em is pinned a note. Now, Mr. Pratt, you
know a lady when you see her; and you know how I stand in Rosa society. Do you
think for a moment that I’d skip out to the woods with a man along with a jug
of wine and a loaf of bread, and go singing and cavorting up and down under the
trees with him? I take a little claret with my meals, but I’m not in the habit
of packing a jug of it into the brush and raising Cain in any such style as
that. And of course he’d bring his book of verses along, too. He said so. Let
him go on his scandalous picnics alone! Or let him take his Ruby Ott with him.
I reckon she wouldn’t kick unless it was on account of there being too much
bread along. And what do you think of your gentleman friend now, Mr. Pratt?”
“Well, ’m,” says I, “it may
be that Idaho’s invitation was a kind of poetry, and meant no harm. May be it
belonged to the class of rhymes they call figurative. They offend law and
order, but they get sent through the mails on the grounds that they mean
something that they don’t say. I’d be glad on Idaho’s account if you’d overlook
it,” says I, “and let us extricate our minds from the low regions of poetry to
the higher planes of fact and fancy. On a beautiful afternoon like this, Mrs. Sampson,”
I goes on, “we should let our thoughts dwell accordingly. Though it is warm
here, we should remember that at the equator the line of perpetual frost is at
an altitude of fifteen thousand feet. Between the latitudes of forty degrees
and forty-nine degrees it is from four thousand to nine thousand feet.”
“Oh, Mr. Pratt,” says Mrs.
Sampson, “it’s such a comfort to hear you say them beautiful facts after
getting such a jar from that minx of a Ruby’s poetry!”
“Let us sit on this log at
the roadside,” says I, “and forget the inhumanity and ribaldry of the poets. It
is in the glorious columns of ascertained facts and legalised measures that
beauty is to be found. In this very log we sit upon, Mrs. Sampson,” says I, “is
statistics more wonderful than any poem. The rings show it was sixty years old.
At the depth of two thousand feet it would become coal in three thousand years.
The deepest coal mine in the world is at Killingworth, near Newcastle. A box
four feet long, three feet wide, and two feet eight inches deep will hold one
ton of coal. If an artery is cut, compress it above the wound. A man’s leg
contains thirty bones. The Tower of London was burned in 1841.”
“Go on, Mr. Pratt,” says
Mrs. Sampson. “Them ideas is so original and soothing. I think statistics are
just as lovely as they can be.”
But it wasn’t till two weeks
later that I got all that was coming to me out of Herkimer.
One night I was waked up by
folks hollering “Fire!” all around. I jumped up and dressed and went out of the
hotel to enjoy the scene. When I see it was Mrs. Sampson’s house, I gave forth
a kind of yell, and I was there in two minutes.
The whole lower story of the
yellow house was in flames, and every masculine, feminine, and canine in Rosa
was there, screeching and barking and getting in the way of the firemen. I saw
Idaho trying to get away from six firemen who were holding him. They was
telling him the whole place was on fire down-stairs, and no man could go in it
and come out alive.
“Where’s Mrs. Sampson?” I
asks.
“She hasn’t been seen,” says
one of the firemen. “She sleeps up-stairs. We’ve tried to get in, but we can’t,
and our company hasn’t got any ladders yet.”
I runs around to the light
of the big blaze, and pulls the Handbook out of my inside pocket. I kind of
laughed when I felt it in my hands —I reckon I was some daffy with the
sensation of excitement.
“Herky, old boy,” I says to
it, as I flipped over the pages, “you ain’t ever lied to me yet, and you ain’t
ever throwed me down at a scratch yet. Tell me what, old boy, tell me what!”
says I.
I turned to “What to do in
Case of Accidents,” on page 117. I run my finger down the page, and struck it.
Good old Herkimer, he never overlooked anything! It said:
Suffocation from Inhaling
Smoke or Gas.—There is nothing better than flaxseed. Place a few seed in the
outer corner of the eye.
I shoved the Handbook back
in my pocket, and grabbed a boy that was running by.
“Here,” says I, giving him
some money, “run to the drug store and bring a dollar’s worth of flaxseed.
Hurry, and you’ll get another one for yourself. Now,” I sings out to the crowd,
“we’ll have Mrs. Sampson!” And I throws away my coat and hat.
Four of the firemen and
citizens grabs hold of me. It’s sure death, they say, to go in the house, for
the floors was beginning to fall through.
“How in blazes,” I sings
out, kind of laughing yet, but not feeling like it, “do you expect me to put
flaxseed in a eye without the eye?”
I jabbed each elbow in a
fireman’s face, kicked the bark off of one citizen’s shin, and tripped the
other one with a side hold. And then I busted into the house. If I die first
I’ll write you a letter and tell you if it’s any worse down there than the
inside of that yellow house was; but don’t believe it yet. I was a heap more
cooked than the hurry-up orders of broiled chicken that you get in restaurants.
The fire and smoke had me down on the floor twice, and was about to shame
Herkimer, but the firemen helped me with their little stream of water, and I
got to Mrs. Sampson’s room. She’d lost conscientiousness from the smoke, so I
wrapped her in the bed clothes and got her on my shoulder. Well, the floors
wasn’t as bad as they said, or I never could have done it—not by no means.
I carried her out fifty
yards from the house and laid her on the grass. Then, of course, every one of
them other twenty-two plaintiff’s to the lady’s hand crowded around with tin
dippers of water ready to save her. And up runs the boy with the flaxseed.
I unwrapped the covers from
Mrs. Sampson’s head. She opened her eyes and says:
“Is that you, Mr. Pratt?”
“S-s-sh,” says I. “Don’t
talk till you’ve had the remedy.”
I runs my arm around her
neck and raises her head, gentle, and breaks the bag of flaxseed with the other
hand; and as easy as I could I bends over and slips three or four of the seeds
in the outer corner of her eye.
Up gallops the village doc
by this time, and snorts around, and grabs at Mrs. Sampson’s pulse, and wants
to know what I mean by any such sandblasted nonsense.
“Well, old Jalap and
Jerusalem oakseed,” says I, “I’m no regular practitioner, but I’ll show you my
authority, anyway.”
They fetched my coat, and I
gets out the Handbook.
“Look on page 117,” says I,
“at the remedy for suffocation by smoke or gas. Flaxseed in the outer corner of
the eye, it says. I don’t know whether it works as a smoke consumer or whether
it hikes the compound gastro-hippopotamus nerve into action, but Herkimer says
it, and he was called to the case first. If you want to make it a consultation,
there’s no objection.”
Old doc takes the book and
looks at it by means of his specs and a fireman’s lantern.
“Well, Mr. Pratt,” says he,
“you evidently got on the wrong line in reading your diagnosis. The recipe for
suffocation says: ‘Get the patient into fresh air as quickly as possible, and
place in a reclining position.’ The flaxseed remedy is for ‘Dust and Cinders in
the Eye,’ on the line above. But, after all—”
“See here,” interrupts Mrs.
Sampson, “I reckon I’ve got something to say in this consultation. That
flaxseed done me more good than anything I ever tried.” And then she raises up
her head and lays it back on my arm again, and says: “Put some in the other
eye, Sandy dear.”
And so if you was to stop
off at Rosa to-morrow, or any other day, you’d see a fine new yellow house with
Mrs. Pratt, that was Mrs. Sampson, embellishing and adorning it. And if you was
to step inside you’d see on the marble-top centre table in the parlour
“Herkimer’s Handbook of Indispensable Information,” all rebound in red morocco,
and ready to be consulted on any subject pertaining to human happiness and
wisdom.
V
THE PIMIENTA PANCAKES
While we were rounding up a
bunch of the Triangle-O cattle in the Frio bottoms a projecting branch of a
dead mesquite caught my wooden stirrup and gave my ankle a wrench that laid me
up in camp for a week.
On the third day of my
compulsory idleness I crawled out near the grub wagon, and reclined helpless
under the conversational fire of Judson Odom, the camp cook. Jud was a
monologist by nature, whom Destiny, with customary blundering, had set in a profession
wherein he was bereaved, for the greater portion of his time, of an audience.
Therefore, I was manna in
the desert of Jud’s obmutescence.
Betimes I was stirred by
invalid longings for something to eat that did not come under the caption of
“grub.” I had visions of the maternal pantry “deep as first love, and wild with
all regret,” and then I asked:
“Jud, can you make
pancakes?”
Jud laid down his
six-shooter, with which he was preparing to pound an antelope steak, and stood
over me in what I felt to be a menacing attitude. He further endorsed my
impression that his pose was resentful by fixing upon me with his light blue
eyes a look of cold suspicion.
“Say, you,” he said, with
candid, though not excessive, choler, “did you mean that straight, or was you
trying to throw the gaff into me? Some of the boys been telling you about me
and that pancake racket?”
“No, Jud,” I said,
sincerely, “I meant it. It seems to me I’d swap my pony and saddle for a stack
of buttered brown pancakes with some first crop, open kettle, New Orleans
sweetening. Was there a story about pancakes?”
Jud was mollified at once
when he saw that I had not been dealing in allusions. He brought some
mysterious bags and tin boxes from the grub wagon and set them in the shade of
the hackberry where I lay reclined. I watched him as he began to arrange them
leisurely and untie their many strings.
“No, not a story,” said Jud,
as he worked, “but just the logical disclosures in the case of me and that
pink-eyed snoozer from Mired Mule Canada and Miss Willella Learight. I don’t
mind telling you.
“I was punching then for old
Bill Toomey, on the San Miguel. One day I gets all ensnared up in aspirations
for to eat some canned grub that hasn’t ever mooed or baaed or grunted or been
in peck measures. So, I gets on my bronc and pushes the wind for Uncle Emsley
Telfair’s store at the Pimienta Crossing on the Nueces.
“About three in the
afternoon I throwed my bridle rein over a mesquite limb and walked the last
twenty yards into Uncle Emsley’s store. I got up on the counter and told Uncle
Emsley that the signs pointed to the devastation of the fruit crop of the
world. In a minute I had a bag of crackers and a long-handled spoon, with an
open can each of apricots and pineapples and cherries and greengages beside of
me with Uncle Emsley busy chopping away with the hatchet at the yellow clings.
I was feeling like Adam before the apple stampede, and was digging my spurs
into the side of the counter and working with my twenty-four-inch spoon when I
happened to look out of the window into the yard of Uncle Emsley’s house, which
was next to the store.
“There was a girl standing
there—an imported girl with fixings on— philandering with a croquet maul and
amusing herself by watching my style of encouraging the fruit canning industry.
“I slid off the counter and
delivered up my shovel to Uncle Emsley.
“‘That’s my niece,’ says he;
‘Miss Willella Learight, down from Palestine on a visit. Do you want that I
should make you acquainted?’
“‘The Holy Land,’ I says to
myself, my thoughts milling some as I tried to run ’em into the corral. ‘Why
not? There was sure angels in Pales—Why, yes, Uncle Emsley,’ I says out loud,
‘I’d be awful edified to meet Miss Learight.’
“So Uncle Emsley took me out
in the yard and gave us each other’s entitlements.
“I never was shy about
women. I never could understand why some men who can break a mustang before
breakfast and shave in the dark, get all left-handed and full of perspiration
and excuses when they see a bold of calico draped around what belongs to it.
Inside of eight minutes me and Miss Willella was aggravating the croquet balls
around as amiable as second cousins. She gave me a dig about the quantity of
canned fruit I had eaten, and I got back at her, flat-footed, about how a
certain lady named Eve started the fruit trouble in the first free-grass
pasture—‘Over in Palestine, wasn’t it?’ says I, as easy and pat as roping a
one-year-old.
“That was how I acquired
cordiality for the proximities of Miss Willella Learight; and the disposition
grew larger as time passed. She was stopping at Pimienta Crossing for her
health, which was very good, and for the climate, which was forty per cent.
hotter than Palestine. I rode over to see her once every week for a while; and
then I figured it out that if I doubled the number of trips I would see her
twice as often.
“One week I slipped in a
third trip; and that’s where the pancakes and the pink-eyed snoozer busted into
the game.
“That evening, while I set
on the counter with a peach and two damsons in my mouth, I asked Uncle Emsley
how Miss Willella was.
“‘Why,’ says Uncle Emsley,
‘she’s gone riding with Jackson Bird, the sheep man from over at Mired Mule
Canada.’
“I swallowed the peach seed
and the two damson seeds. I guess somebody held the counter by the bridle while
I got off; and then I walked out straight ahead till I butted against the
mesquite where my roan was tied.
“‘She’s gone riding,’ I
whisper in my bronc’s ear, ‘with Birdstone Jack, the hired mule from Sheep
Man’s Canada. Did you get that, old Leather-and-Gallops?’
“That bronc of mine wept, in
his way. He’d been raised a cow pony and he didn’t care for snoozers.
“I went back and said to
Uncle Emsley: ‘Did you say a sheep man?’
“‘I said a sheep man,’ says
Uncle Emsley again. ‘You must have heard tell of Jackson Bird. He’s got eight
sections of grazing and four thousand head of the finest Merinos south of the
Arctic Circle.’
“I went out and sat on the
ground in the shade of the store and leaned against a prickly pear. I sifted
sand into my boots with unthinking hands while I soliloquised a quantity about
this bird with the Jackson plumage to his name.
“I never had believed in
harming sheep men. I see one, one day, reading a Latin grammar on hossback, and
I never touched him! They never irritated me like they do most cowmen. You
wouldn’t go to work now, and impair and disfigure snoozers, would you, that eat
on tables and wear little shoes and speak to you on subjects? I had always let
’em pass, just as you would a jack-rabbit; with a polite word and a guess about
the weather, but no stopping to swap canteens. I never thought it was worth
while to be hostile with a snoozer. And because I’d been lenient, and let ’em
live, here was one going around riding with Miss Willella Learight!
“An hour by sun they come
loping back, and stopped at Uncle Emsley’s gate. The sheep person helped her
off; and they stood throwing each other sentences all sprightful and sagacious
for a while. And then this feathered Jackson flies up in his saddle and raises
his little stewpot of a hat, and trots off in the direction of his mutton
ranch. By this time I had turned the sand out of my boots and unpinned myself
from the prickly pear; and by the time he gets half a mile out of Pimienta, I
singlefoots up beside him on my bronc.
“I said that snoozer was
pink-eyed, but he wasn’t. His seeing arrangement was grey enough, but his
eye-lashes was pink and his hair was sandy, and that gave you the idea. Sheep
man?—he wasn’t more than a lamb man, anyhow—a little thing with his neck
involved in a yellow silk handkerchief, and shoes tied up in bowknots.
“‘Afternoon!’ says I to him.
‘You now ride with a equestrian who is commonly called Dead-Moral-Certainty
Judson, on account of the way I shoot. When I want a stranger to know me I
always introduce myself before the draw, for I never did like to shake hands
with ghosts.’
“‘Ah,’ says he, just like
that—‘Ah, I’m glad to know you, Mr. Judson. I’m Jackson Bird, from over at
Mired Mule Ranch.’
“Just then one of my eyes
saw a roadrunner skipping down the hill with a young tarantula in his bill, and
the other eye noticed a rabbit-hawk sitting on a dead limb in a water-elm. I
popped over one after the other with my forty-five, just to show him. ‘Two out
of three,’ says I. ‘Birds just naturally seem to draw my fire wherever I go.’
“‘Nice shooting,’ says the
sheep man, without a flutter. ‘But don’t you sometimes ever miss the third
shot? Elegant fine rain that was last week for the young grass, Mr. Judson?’
says he.
“‘Willie,’ says I, riding
over close to his palfrey, ‘your infatuated parents may have denounced you by
the name of Jackson, but you sure moulted into a twittering Willie—let us
slough off this here analysis of rain and the elements, and get down to talk
that is outside the vocabulary of parrots. That is a bad habit you have got of
riding with young ladies over at Pimienta. I’ve known birds,’ says I, ‘to be
served on toast for less than that. Miss Willella,’ says I, ‘don’t ever want
any nest made out of sheep’s wool by a tomtit of the Jacksonian branch of
ornithology. Now, are you going to quit, or do you wish for to gallop up
against this Dead-Moral-Certainty attachment to my name, which is good for two
hyphens and at least one set of funeral obsequies?’
“Jackson Bird flushed up
some, and then he laughed.
“‘Why, Mr. Judson,’ says he,
‘you’ve got the wrong idea. I’ve called on Miss Learight a few times; but not
for the purpose you imagine. My object is purely a gastronomical one.’
“I reached for my gun.
“‘Any coyote,’ says I, ‘that
would boast of dishonourable—’
“‘Wait a minute,’ says this
Bird, ‘till I explain. What would I do with a wife? If you ever saw that ranch
of mine! I do my own cooking and mending. Eating—that’s all the pleasure I get
out of sheep raising. Mr. Judson, did you ever taste the pancakes that Miss
Learight makes?’
“‘Me? No,’ I told him. ‘I
never was advised that she was up to any culinary manoeuvres.’
“‘They’re golden sunshine,’
says he, ‘honey-browned by the ambrosial fires of Epicurus. I’d give two years
of my life to get the recipe for making them pancakes. That’s what I went to
see Miss Learight for,’ says Jackson Bird, ‘but I haven’t been able to get it
from her. It’s an old recipe that’s been in the family for seventy-five years.
They hand it down from one generation to another, but they don’t give it away
to outsiders. If I could get that recipe, so I could make them pancakes for
myself on my ranch, I’d be a happy man,’ says Bird.
“‘Are you sure,’ I says to
him, ‘that it ain’t the hand that mixes the pancakes that you’re after?’
“‘Sure,’ says Jackson. ‘Miss
Learight is a mighty nice girl, but I can assure you my intentions go no
further than the gastro—’ but he seen my hand going down to my holster and he
changed his similitude—‘than the desire to procure a copy of the pancake recipe,’
he finishes.
“‘You ain’t such a bad
little man,’ says I, trying to be fair. ‘I was thinking some of making orphans
of your sheep, but I’ll let you fly away this time. But you stick to pancakes,’
says I, ‘as close as the middle one of a stack; and don’t go and mistake
sentiments for syrup, or there’ll be singing at your ranch, and you won’t hear
it.’
“‘To convince you that I am
sincere,’ says the sheep man, ‘I’ll ask you to help me. Miss Learight and you
being closer friends, maybe she would do for you what she wouldn’t for me. If
you will get me a copy of that pancake recipe, I give you my word that I’ll
never call upon her again.’
“‘That’s fair,’ I says, and
I shook hands with Jackson Bird. ‘I’ll get it for you if I can, and glad to
oblige.’ And he turned off down the big pear flat on the Piedra, in the
direction of Mired Mule; and I steered northwest for old Bill Toomey’s ranch.
“It was five days afterward
when I got another chance to ride over to Pimienta. Miss Willella and me passed
a gratifying evening at Uncle Emsley’s. She sang some, and exasperated the
piano quite a lot with quotations from the operas. I gave imitations of a
rattlesnake, and told her about Snaky McFee’s new way of skinning cows, and
described the trip I made to Saint Louis once. We was getting along in one
another’s estimations fine. Thinks I, if Jackson Bird can now be persuaded to
migrate, I win. I recollect his promise about the pancake receipt, and I thinks
I will persuade it from Miss Willella and give it to him; and then if I catches
Birdie off of Mired Mule again, I’ll make him hop the twig.
“So, along about ten
o’clock, I put on a wheedling smile and says to Miss Willella: ‘Now, if there’s
anything I do like better than the sight of a red steer on green grass it’s the
taste of a nice hot pancake smothered in sugar-house molasses.’
“Miss Willella gives a
little jump on the piano stool, and looked at me curious.
“‘Yes,’ says she, ‘they’re
real nice. What did you say was the name of that street in Saint Louis, Mr.
Odom, where you lost your hat?’
“‘Pancake Avenue,’ says I,
with a wink, to show her that I was on about the family receipt, and couldn’t
be side-corralled off of the subject. ‘Come, now, Miss Willella,’ I says;
‘let’s hear how you make ’em. Pancakes is just whirling in my head like wagon
wheels. Start her off, now—pound of flour, eight dozen eggs, and so on. How
does the catalogue of constituents run?’
“‘Excuse me for a moment,
please,’ says Miss Willella, and she gives me a quick kind of sideways look,
and slides off the stool. She ambled out into the other room, and directly
Uncle Emsley comes in in his shirt sleeves, with a pitcher of water. He turns
around to get a glass on the table, and I see a forty-five in his hip pocket.
‘Great post-holes!’ thinks I, ‘but here’s a family thinks a heap of cooking
receipts, protecting it with firearms. I’ve known outfits that wouldn’t do that
much by a family feud.’
“‘Drink this here down,’
says Uncle Emsley, handing me the glass of water. ‘You’ve rid too far to-day,
Jud, and got yourself over-excited. Try to think about something else now.’
“‘Do you know how to make
them pancakes, Uncle Emsley?’ I asked.
“‘Well, I’m not as apprised
in the anatomy of them as some,’ says Uncle Emsley, ‘but I reckon you take a
sifter of plaster of Paris and a little dough and saleratus and corn meal, and
mix ’em with eggs and buttermilk as usual. Is old Bill going to ship beeves to
Kansas City again this spring, Jud?’
“That was all the pancake
specifications I could get that night. I didn’t wonder that Jackson Bird found
it uphill work. So I dropped the subject and talked with Uncle Emsley for a
while about hollow-horn and cyclones. And then Miss Willella came and said
‘Good-night,’ and I hit the breeze for the ranch.
“About a week afterward I
met Jackson Bird riding out of Pimienta as I rode in, and we stopped on the
road for a few frivolous remarks.
“‘Got the bill of
particulars for them flapjacks yet?’ I asked him.
“‘Well, no,’ says Jackson.
‘I don’t seem to have any success in getting hold of it. Did you try?’
“‘I did,’ says I, ‘and ’twas
like trying to dig a prairie dog out of his hole with a peanut hull. That
pancake receipt must be a jookalorum, the way they hold on to it.’
“‘I’m most ready to give it
up,’ says Jackson, so discouraged in his pronunciations that I felt sorry for
him; ‘but I did want to know how to make them pancakes to eat on my lonely
ranch,’ says he. ‘I lie awake at nights thinking how good they are.’
“‘You keep on trying for
it,’ I tells him, ‘and I’ll do the same. One of us is bound to get a rope over
its horns before long. Well, so-long, Jacksy.’
“You see, by this time we
were on the peacefullest of terms. When I saw that he wasn’t after Miss
Willella, I had more endurable contemplations of that sandy-haired snoozer. In
order to help out the ambitions of his appetite I kept on trying to get that
receipt from Miss Willella. But every time I would say ‘pancakes’ she would get
sort of remote and fidgety about the eye, and try to change the subject. If I
held her to it she would slide out and round up Uncle Emsley with his pitcher
of water and hip-pocket howitzer.
“One day I galloped over to
the store with a fine bunch of blue verbenas that I cut out of a herd of wild
flowers over on Poisoned Dog Prairie. Uncle Emsley looked at ’em with one eye
shut and says:
“‘Haven’t ye heard the
news?’
“‘Cattle up?’ I asks.
“‘Willella and Jackson Bird
was married in Palestine yesterday,’ says he. ‘Just got a letter this morning.’
“I dropped them flowers in a
cracker-barrel, and let the news trickle in my ears and down toward my upper
left-hand shirt pocket until it got to my feet.
“‘Would you mind saying that
over again once more, Uncle Emsley?’ says I. ‘Maybe my hearing has got wrong,
and you only said that prime heifers was 4.80 on the hoof, or something like
that.’
“‘Married yesterday,’ says
Uncle Emsley, ‘and gone to Waco and Niagara Falls on a wedding tour. Why,
didn’t you see none of the signs all along? Jackson Bird has been courting
Willella ever since that day he took her out riding.’
“‘Then,’ says I, in a kind
of yell, ‘what was all this zizzaparoola he gives me about pancakes? Tell
me that.’
“When I said ‘pancakes’
Uncle Emsley sort of dodged and stepped back.
“‘Somebody’s been dealing me
pancakes from the bottom of the deck,’ I says, ‘and I’ll find out. I believe
you know. Talk up,’ says I, ‘or we’ll mix a panful of batter right here.’
“I slid over the counter
after Uncle Emsley. He grabbed at his gun, but it was in a drawer, and he
missed it two inches. I got him by the front of his shirt and shoved him in a
corner.
“‘Talk pancakes,’ says I,
‘or be made into one. Does Miss Willella make ’em?’
“‘She never made one in her
life and I never saw one,’ says Uncle Emsley, soothing. ‘Calm down now,
Jud—calm down. You’ve got excited, and that wound in your head is contaminating
your sense of intelligence. Try not to think about pancakes.’
“‘Uncle Emsley,’ says I,
‘I’m not wounded in the head except so far as my natural cognitive instincts
run to runts. Jackson Bird told me he was calling on Miss Willella for the
purpose of finding out her system of producing pancakes, and he asked me to
help him get the bill of lading of the ingredients. I done so, with the results
as you see. Have I been sodded down with Johnson grass by a pink-eyed snoozer,
or what?’
“‘Slack up your grip in my
dress shirt,’ says Uncle Emsley, ‘and I’ll tell you. Yes, it looks like Jackson
Bird has gone and humbugged you some. The day after he went riding with
Willella he came back and told me and her to watch out for you whenever you got
to talking about pancakes. He said you was in camp once where they was cooking
flapjacks, and one of the fellows cut you over the head with a frying pan.
Jackson said that whenever you got overhot or excited that wound hurt you and
made you kind of crazy, and you went raving about pancakes. He told us to just
get you worked off of the subject and soothed down, and you wouldn’t be
dangerous. So, me and Willella done the best by you we knew how. Well, well,’
says Uncle Emsley, ‘that Jackson Bird is sure a seldom kind of a snoozer.’”
During the progress of Jud’s
story he had been slowly but deftly combining certain portions of the contents
of his sacks and cans. Toward the close of it he set before me the finished
product—a pair of red-hot, rich-hued pancakes on a tin plate. From some secret
hoarding he also brought a lump of excellent butter and a bottle of golden
syrup.
“How long ago did these
things happen?” I asked him.
“Three years,” said Jud.
“They’re living on the Mired Mule Ranch now. But I haven’t seen either of ’em
since. They say Jackson Bird was fixing his ranch up fine with rocking chairs
and window curtains all the time he was putting me up the pancake tree. Oh, I
got over it after a while. But the boys kept the racket up.”
“Did you make these cakes by
the famous recipe?” I asked.
“Didn’t I tell you there
wasn’t no receipt?” said Jud. “The boys hollered pancakes till they got pancake
hungry, and I cut this recipe out of a newspaper. How does the truck taste?”
“They’re delicious,” I
answered. “Why don’t you have some, too, Jud?”
I was sure I heard a sigh.
“Me?” said Jud. “I don’t
ever eat ’em.”
VI
SEATS OF THE HAUGHTY
Golden by day and silver by
night, a new trail now leads to us across the Indian Ocean. Dusky kings and
princes have found our Bombay of the West; and few be their trails that do not
lead down to Broadway on their journey for to admire and for to see.
If chance should ever lead
you near a hotel that transiently shelters some one of these splendid touring
grandees, I counsel you to seek Lucullus Polk among the republican tuft-hunters
that besiege its entrances. He will be there. You will know him by his red,
alert, Wellington-nosed face, by his manner of nervous caution mingled with
determination, by his assumed promoter’s or broker’s air of busy impatience,
and by his bright-red necktie, gallantly redressing the wrongs of his
maltreated blue serge suit, like a battle standard still waving above a lost
cause. I found him profitable; and so may you. When you do look for him, look
among the light-horse troop of Bedouins that besiege the picket-line of the
travelling potentate’s guards and secretaries—among the wild-eyed genii of
Arabian Afternoons that gather to make astounding and egregrious demands upon
the prince’s coffers.
I first saw Mr. Polk coming
down the steps of the hotel at which sojourned His Highness the Gaekwar of
Baroda, most enlightened of the Mahratta princes, who, of late, ate bread and
salt in our Metropolis of the Occident.
Lucullus moved rapidly, as
though propelled by some potent moral force that imminently threatened to
become physical. Behind him closely followed the impetus—a hotel detective, if
ever white Alpine hat, hawk’s nose, implacable watch chain, and loud refinement
of manner spoke the truth. A brace of uniformed porters at his heels preserved
the smooth decorum of the hotel, repudiating by their air of disengagement any
suspicion that they formed a reserve squad of ejectment.
Safe on the sidewalk,
Lucullus Polk turned and shook a freckled fist at the caravansary. And, to my
joy, he began to breathe deep invective in strange words:
“Rides in howdays, does he?”
he cried loudly and sneeringly. “Rides on elephants in howdahs and calls
himself a prince! Kings—yah! Comes over here and talks horse till you would
think he was a president; and then goes home and rides in a private dining-room
strapped onto an elephant. Well, well, well!”
The ejecting committee
quietly retired. The scorner of princes turned to me and snapped his fingers.
“What do you think of that?”
he shouted derisively. “The Gaekwar of Baroda rides in an elephant in a howdah!
And there’s old Bikram Shamsher Jang scorching up and down the pig-paths of
Khatmandu on a motor-cycle. Wouldn’t that maharajah you? And the Shah of
Persia, that ought to have been Muley-on-the-spot for at least three, he’s got
the palanquin habit. And that funny-hat prince from Korea—wouldn’t you think he
could afford to amble around on a milk-white palfrey once in a dynasty or two?
Nothing doing! His idea of a Balaklava charge is to tuck his skirts under him
and do his mile in six days over the hog-wallows of Seoul in a bull-cart.
That’s the kind of visiting potentates that come to this country now. It’s a
hard deal, friend.”
I murmured a few words of
sympathy. But it was uncomprehending, for I did not know his grievance against
the rulers who flash, meteor-like, now and then upon our shores.
“The last one I sold,”
continued the displeased one, “was to that three-horse-tailed Turkish pasha
that came over a year ago. Five hundred dollars he paid for it, easy. I says to
his executioner or secretary—he was a kind of a Jew or a Chinaman—‘His Turkey
Gibbets is fond of horses, then?’
“‘Him?’ says the secretary.
‘Well, no. He’s got a big, fat wife in the harem named Bad Dora that he don’t
like. I believe he intends to saddle her up and ride her up and down the
board-walk in the Bulbul Gardens a few times every day. You haven’t got a pair
of extra-long spurs you could throw in on the deal, have you?’ Yes, sir;
there’s mighty few real rough-riders among the royal sports these days.”
As soon as Lucullus Polk got
cool enough I picked him up, and with no greater effort than you would employ
in persuading a drowning man to clutch a straw, I inveigled him into
accompanying me to a cool corner in a dim café.
And it came to pass that
man-servants set before us brewage; and Lucullus Polk spake unto me, relating
the wherefores of his beleaguering the antechambers of the princes of the
earth.
“Did you ever hear of the
S.A. & A.P. Railroad in Texas? Well, that don’t stand for Samaritan Actor’s
Aid Philanthropy. I was down that way managing a summer bunch of the gum and
syntax-chewers that play the Idlewild Parks in the Western hamlets. Of course,
we went to pieces when the soubrette ran away with a prominent barber of
Beeville. I don’t know what became of the rest of the company. I believe there
were some salaries due; and the last I saw of the troupe was when I told them
that forty-three cents was all the treasury contained. I say I never saw any of
them after that; but I heard them for about twenty minutes. I didn’t have time
to look back. But after dark I came out of the woods and struck the S.A. &
A.P. agent for means of transportation. He at once extended to me the
courtesies of the entire railroad, kindly warning me, however, not to get
aboard any of the rolling stock.
“About ten the next morning
I steps off the ties into a village that calls itself Atascosa City. I bought a
thirty-cent breakfast and a ten-cent cigar, and stood on the Main Street
jingling the three pennies in my pocket—dead broke. A man in Texas with only
three cents in his pocket is no better off than a man that has no money and
owes two cents.
“One of luck’s favourite
tricks is to soak a man for his last dollar so quick that he don’t have time to
look it. There I was in a swell St. Louis tailor-made, blue-and-green plaid
suit, and an eighteen-carat sulphate-of-copper scarf-pin, with no hope in sight
except the two great Texas industries, the cotton fields and grading new
railroads. I never picked cotton, and I never cottoned to a pick, so the
outlook had ultramarine edges.
“All of a sudden, while I
was standing on the edge of the wooden sidewalk, down out of the sky falls two
fine gold watches in the middle of the street. One hits a chunk of mud and
sticks. The other falls hard and flies open, making a fine drizzle of little
springs and screws and wheels. I looks up for a balloon or an airship; but not
seeing any, I steps off the sidewalk to investigate.
“But I hear a couple of
yells and see two men running up the street in leather overalls and high-heeled
boots and cartwheel hats. One man is six or eight feet high, with open-plumbed
joints and a heartbroken cast of countenance. He picks up the watch that has
stuck in the mud. The other man, who is little, with pink hair and white eyes,
goes for the empty case, and says, ‘I win.’ Then the elevated pessimist goes
down under his leather leg-holsters and hands a handful of twenty-dollar gold
pieces to his albino friend. I don’t know how much money it was; it looked as
big as an earthquake-relief fund to me.
“‘I’ll have this here case
filled up with works,’ says Shorty, ‘and throw you again for five hundred.’
“‘I’m your company,’ says
the high man. ‘I’ll meet you at the Smoked Dog Saloon an hour from now.’
“The little man hustles away
with a kind of Swiss movement toward a jewelry store. The heartbroken person
stoops over and takes a telescopic view of my haberdashery.
“‘Them’s a mighty slick
outfit of habiliments you have got on, Mr. Man,’ says he. ‘I’ll bet a hoss you
never acquired the right, title, and interest in and to them clothes in
Atascosa City.’
“‘Why, no,’ says I, being
ready enough to exchange personalities with this moneyed monument of
melancholy. ‘I had this suit tailored from a special line of coatericks,
vestures, and pantings in St. Louis. Would you mind putting me sane,’ says I,
‘on this watch-throwing contest? I’ve been used to seeing time-pieces treated
with more politeness and esteem—except women’s watches, of course, which by nature
they abuse by cracking walnuts with ’em and having ’em taken showing in tintype
pictures.’
“‘Me and George,’ he
explains, ‘are up from the ranch, having a spell of fun. Up to last month we
owned four sections of watered grazing down on the San Miguel. But along comes
one of these oil prospectors and begins to bore. He strikes a gusher that flows
out twenty thousand —or maybe it was twenty million—barrels of oil a day. And
me and George gets one hundred and fifty thousand dollars—seventy-five thousand
dollars apiece—for the land. So now and then we saddles up and hits the breeze
for Atascosa City for a few days of excitement and damage. Here’s a little
bunch of the dinero that I drawed out of the bank this
morning,’ says he, and shows a roll of twenties and fifties as big around as a
sleeping-car pillow. The yellowbacks glowed like a sunset on the gable end of
John D.’s barn. My knees got weak, and I sat down on the edge of the board
sidewalk.
“‘You must have knocked
around a right smart,’ goes on this oil Grease-us. ‘I shouldn’t be surprised if
you have saw towns more livelier than what Atascosa City is. Sometimes it seems
to me that there ought to be some more ways of having a good time than there is
here, ’specially when you’ve got plenty of money and don’t mind spending it.’
“Then this Mother Cary’s
chick of the desert sits down by me and we hold a conversationfest. It seems
that he was money-poor. He’d lived in ranch camps all his life; and he
confessed to me that his supreme idea of luxury was to ride into camp, tired
out from a round-up, eat a peck of Mexican beans, hobble his brains with a pint
of raw whisky, and go to sleep with his boots for a pillow. When this
barge-load of unexpected money came to him and his pink but perky partner,
George, and they hied themselves to this clump of outhouses called Atascosa
City, you know what happened to them. They had money to buy anything they
wanted; but they didn’t know what to want. Their ideas of spendthriftiness were
limited to three—whisky, saddles, and gold watches. If there was anything else
in the world to throw away fortunes on, they had never heard about it. So, when
they wanted to have a hot time, they’d ride into town and get a city directory
and stand in front of the principal saloon and call up the population
alphabetically for free drinks. Then they would order three or four new
California saddles from the storekeeper, and play crack-loo on the sidewalk
with twenty-dollar gold pieces. Betting who could throw his gold watch the
farthest was an inspiration of George’s; but even that was getting to be
monotonous.
“Was I on to the
opportunity? Listen.
“In thirty minutes I had
dashed off a word picture of metropolitan joys that made life in Atascosa City
look as dull as a trip to Coney Island with your own wife. In ten minutes more
we shook hands on an agreement that I was to act as his guide, interpreter and
friend in and to the aforesaid wassail and amenity. And Solomon Mills, which
was his name, was to pay all expenses for a month. At the end of that time, if
I had made good as director-general of the rowdy life, he was to pay me one
thousand dollars. And then, to clinch the bargain, we called the roll of
Atascosa City and put all of its citizens except the ladies and minors under
the table, except one man named Horace Westervelt St. Clair. Just for that we
bought a couple of hatfuls of cheap silver watches and egged him out of town
with ’em. We wound up by dragging the harness-maker out of bed and setting him
to work on three new saddles; and then we went to sleep across the railroad
track at the depot, just to annoy the S.A. & A.P. Think of having
seventy-five thousand dollars and trying to avoid the disgrace of dying rich in
a town like that!
“The next day George, who
was married or something, started back to the ranch. Me and Solly, as I now
called him, prepared to shake off our moth balls and wing our way against the
arc-lights of the joyous and tuneful East.
“‘No way-stops,’ says I to
Solly, ‘except long enough to get you barbered and haberdashed. This is no
Texas feet shampetter,’ says I, ‘where you eat chili-concarne-con-huevos and
then holler “Whoopee!” across the plaza. We’re now going against the real high
life. We’re going to mingle with the set that carries a Spitz, wears spats, and
hits the ground in high spots.’
“Solly puts six thousand
dollars in century bills in one pocket of his brown ducks, and bills of lading
for ten thousand dollars on Eastern banks in another. Then I resume diplomatic
relations with the S.A. & A.P., and we hike in a northwesterly direction on
our circuitous route to the spice gardens of the Yankee Orient.
“We stopped in San Antonio
long enough for Solly to buy some clothes, and eight rounds of drinks for the
guests and employees of the Menger Hotel, and order four Mexican saddles with
silver trimmings and white Angora suaderos to be shipped down
to the ranch. From there we made a big jump to St. Louis. We got there in time
for dinner; and I put our thumb-prints on the register of the most expensive
hotel in the city.
“‘Now,’ says I to Solly,
with a wink at myself, ‘here’s the first dinner-station we’ve struck where we
can get a real good plate of beans.’ And while he was up in his room trying to
draw water out of the gas-pipe, I got one finger in the buttonhole of the head
waiter’s Tuxedo, drew him apart, inserted a two-dollar bill, and closed him up
again.
“‘Frankoyse,’ says I, ‘I
have a pal here for dinner that’s been subsisting for years on cereals and
short stogies. You see the chef and order a dinner for us such as you serve to
Dave Francis and the general passenger agent of the Iron Mountain when they eat
here. We’ve got more than Bernhardt’s tent full of money; and we want the
nose-bags crammed with all the Chief Deveries de cuisine. Object is
no expense. Now, show us.’
“At six o’clock me and Solly
sat down to dinner. Spread! There’s nothing been seen like it since the Cambon
snack. It was all served at once. The chef called it dinnay à la poker.
It’s a famous thing among the gormands of the West. The dinner comes in threes
of a kind. There was guinea-fowls, guinea-pigs, and Guinness’s stout; roast
veal, mock turtle soup, and chicken pâté; shad-roe, caviar, and tapioca;
canvas-back duck, canvas-back ham, and cotton-tail rabbit; Philadelphia capon,
fried snails, and sloe-gin—and so on, in threes. The idea was that you eat
nearly all you can of them, and then the waiter takes away the discard and
gives you pears to fill on.
“I was sure Solly would be
tickled to death with these hands, after the bobtail flushes he’d been eating
on the ranch; and I was a little anxious that he should, for I didn’t remember
his having honoured my efforts with a smile since we left Atascosa City.
“We were in the main
dining-room, and there was a fine-dressed crowd there, all talking loud and enjoyable
about the two St. Louis topics, the water supply and the colour line. They mix
the two subjects so fast that strangers often think they are discussing
water-colours; and that has given the old town something of a rep as an art
centre. And over in the corner was a fine brass band playing; and now, thinks
I, Solly will become conscious of the spiritual oats of life nourishing and
exhilarating his system. But nong, mong frang.
“He gazed across the table
at me. There was four square yards of it, looking like the path of a cyclone
that has wandered through a stock-yard, a poultry-farm, a vegetable-garden, and
an Irish linen mill. Solly gets up and comes around to me.
“‘Luke,’ says he, ‘I’m
pretty hungry after our ride. I thought you said they had some beans here. I’m
going out and get something I can eat. You can stay and monkey with this
artificial layout of grub if you want to.’
“‘Wait a minute,’ says I.
“I called the waiter, and
slapped ‘S. Mills’ on the back of the check for thirteen dollars and fifty
cents.
“‘What do you mean,’ says I,
‘by serving gentlemen with a lot of truck only suitable for deck-hands on a
Mississippi steamboat? We’re going out to get something decent to eat.’
“I walked up the street with
the unhappy plainsman. He saw a saddle-shop open, and some of the sadness faded
from his eyes. We went in, and he ordered and paid for two more saddles—one
with a solid silver horn and nails and ornaments and a six-inch border of
rhinestones and imitation rubies around the flaps. The other one had to have a
gold-mounted horn, quadruple-plated stirrups, and the leather inlaid with
silver beadwork wherever it would stand it. Eleven hundred dollars the two cost
him.
“Then he goes out and heads
toward the river, following his nose. In a little side street, where there was
no street and no sidewalks and no houses, he finds what he is looking for. We
go into a shanty and sit on high stools among stevedores and boatmen, and eat
beans with tin spoons. Yes, sir, beans—beans boiled with salt pork.
“‘I kind of thought we’d
strike some over this way,’ says Solly.
“‘Delightful,’ says I, ‘That
stylish hotel grub may appeal to some; but for me, give me the husky table
d’goat.’
“When we had succumbed to
the beans I leads him out of the tarpaulin-steam under a lamp post and pulls
out a daily paper with the amusement column folded out.
“‘But now, what ho for a
merry round of pleasure,’ says I. ‘Here’s one of Hall Caine’s shows, and a
stock-yard company in “Hamlet,” and skating at the Hollowhorn Rink, and Sarah
Bernhardt, and the Shapely Syrens Burlesque Company. I should think, now, that
the Shapely—’
“But what does this healthy,
wealthy, and wise man do but reach his arms up to the second-story windows and
gape noisily.
“‘Reckon I’ll be going to
bed,’ says he; ‘it’s about my time. St. Louis is a kind of quiet place, ain’t
it?’
“‘Oh, yes,’ says I; ‘ever
since the railroads ran in here the town’s been practically ruined. And the
building-and-loan associations and the fair have about killed it. Guess we
might as well go to bed. Wait till you see Chicago, though. Shall we get
tickets for the Big Breeze to-morrow?’
“‘Mought as well,’ says
Solly. ‘I reckon all these towns are about alike.’
“Well, maybe the wise
cicerone and personal conductor didn’t fall hard in Chicago! Loolooville-on-the-Lake
is supposed to have one or two things in it calculated to keep the rural
visitor awake after the curfew rings. But not for the grass-fed man of the
pampas! I tried him with theatres, rides in automobiles, sails on the lake,
champagne suppers, and all those little inventions that hold the simple life in
check; but in vain. Solly grew sadder day by day. And I got fearful about my
salary, and knew I must play my trump card. So I mentioned New York to him, and
informed him that these Western towns were no more than gateways to the great
walled city of the whirling dervishes.
“After I bought the tickets
I missed Solly. I knew his habits by then; so in a couple of hours I found him
in a saddle-shop. They had some new ideas there in the way of trees and girths
that had strayed down from the Canadian mounted police; and Solly was so
interested that he almost looked reconciled to live. He invested about nine
hundred dollars in there.
“At the depot I telegraphed
a cigar-store man I knew in New York to meet me at the Twenty-third Street
ferry with a list of all the saddle-stores in the city. I wanted to know where
to look for Solly when he got lost.
“Now I’ll tell you what
happened in New York. I says to myself: ‘Friend Heherezade, you want to get
busy and make Bagdad look pretty to the sad sultan of the sour countenance, or
it’ll be the bowstring for yours.’ But I never had any doubt I could do it.
“I began with him like you’d
feed a starving man. I showed him the horse-cars on Broadway and the Staten Island
ferry-boats. And then I piled up the sensations on him, but always keeping a
lot of warmer ones up my sleeve.
“At the end of the third day
he looked like a composite picture of five thousand orphans too late to catch a
picnic steamboat, and I was wilting down a collar every two hours wondering how
I could please him and whether I was going to get my thou. He went to sleep
looking at the Brooklyn Bridge; he disregarded the sky-scrapers above the third
story; it took three ushers to wake him up at the liveliest vaudeville in town.
“Once I thought I had him. I
nailed a pair of cuffs on him one morning before he was awake; and I dragged
him that evening to the palm-cage of one of the biggest hotels in the city—to
see the Johnnies and the Alice-sit-by-the-hours. They were out in numerous
quantities, with the fat of the land showing in their clothes. While we were
looking them over, Solly divested himself of a fearful, rusty kind of
laugh—like moving a folding bed with one roller broken. It was his first in two
weeks, and it gave me hope.
“‘Right you are,’ says I.
‘They’re a funny lot of post-cards, aren’t they?’
“‘Oh, I wasn’t thinking of
them dudes and culls on the hoof,’ says he. ‘I was thinking of the time me and
George put sheep-dip in Horsehead Johnson’s whisky. I wish I was back in
Atascosa City,’ says he.
“I felt a cold chill run
down my back. ‘Me to play and mate in one move,’ says I to myself.
“I made Solly promise to
stay in the café for half an hour and I hiked out in a cab to Lolabelle
Delatour’s flat on Forty-third Street. I knew her well. She was a chorus-girl
in a Broadway musical comedy.
“‘Jane,’ says I when I found
her, ‘I’ve got a friend from Texas here. He’s all right, but—well, he carries
weight. I’d like to give him a little whirl after the show this
evening—bubbles, you know, and a buzz out to a casino for the whitebait and
pickled walnuts. Is it a go?’
“‘Can he sing?’ asks
Lolabelle.
“‘You know,’ says I, ‘that I
wouldn’t take him away from home unless his notes were good. He’s got pots of
money—bean-pots full of it.’
“‘Bring him around after the
second act,’ says Lolabelle, ‘and I’ll examine his credentials and securities.’
“So about ten o’clock that
evening I led Solly to Miss Delatour’s dressing-room, and her maid let us in.
In ten minutes in comes Lolabelle, fresh from the stage, looking stunning in
the costume she wears when she steps from the ranks of the lady grenadiers and
says to the king, ‘Welcome to our May-day revels.’ And you can bet it wasn’t
the way she spoke the lines that got her the part.
“As soon as Solly saw her he
got up and walked straight out through the stage entrance into the street. I
followed him. Lolabelle wasn’t paying my salary. I wondered whether anybody
was.
“‘Luke,’ says Solly,
outside, ‘that was an awful mistake. We must have got into the lady’s private
room. I hope I’m gentleman enough to do anything possible in the way of
apologies. Do you reckon she’d ever forgive us?’
“‘She may forget it,’ says
I. ‘Of course it was a mistake. Let’s go find some beans.’
“That’s the way it went. But
pretty soon afterward Solly failed to show up at dinner-time for several days.
I cornered him. He confessed that he had found a restaurant on Third Avenue
where they cooked beans in Texas style. I made him take me there. The minute I
set foot inside the door I threw up my hands.
“There was a young woman at
the desk, and Solly introduced me to her. And then we sat down and had beans.
“Yes, sir, sitting at the
desk was the kind of a young woman that can catch any man in the world as easy
as lifting a finger. There’s a way of doing it. She knew. I saw her working it.
She was healthy-looking and plain dressed. She had her hair drawn back from her
forehead and face—no curls or frizzes; that’s the way she looked. Now I’ll tell
you the way they work the game; it’s simple. When she wants a man, she manages
it so that every time he looks at her he finds her looking at him. That’s all.
“The next evening Solly was
to go to Coney Island with me at seven. At eight o’clock he hadn’t showed up. I
went out and found a cab. I felt sure there was something wrong.
“‘Drive to the Back Home
Restaurant on Third Avenue,’ says I. ‘And if I don’t find what I want there,
take in these saddle-shops.’ I handed him the list.
“‘Boss,’ says the cabby, ‘I
et a steak in that restaurant once. If you’re real hungry, I advise you to try
the saddle-shops first.’
“‘I’m a detective,’ says I,
‘and I don’t eat. Hurry up!’
“As soon as I got to the
restaurant I felt in the lines of my palms that I should beware of a tall, red,
damfool man, and I was going to lose a sum of money.
“Solly wasn’t there. Neither
was the smooth-haired lady.
“I waited; and in an hour
they came in a cab and got out, hand in hand. I asked Solly to step around the
corner for a few words. He was grinning clear across his face; but I had not
administered the grin.
“‘She’s the greatest that
ever sniffed the breeze,’ says he.
“‘Congrats,’ says I. ‘I’d
like to have my thousand now, if you please.’
“‘Well, Luke,’ says he, ‘I
don’t know that I’ve had such a skyhoodlin’ fine time under your tutelage and
dispensation. But I’ll do the best I can for you—I’ll do the best I can,’ he
repeats. ‘Me and Miss Skinner was married an hour ago. We’re leaving for Texas
in the morning.’
“‘Great!’ says I. ‘Consider
yourself covered with rice and Congress gaiters. But don’t let’s tie so many
satin bows on our business relations that we lose sight of ’em. How about my
honorarium?’
“‘Missis Mills,’ says he,
‘has taken possession of my money and papers except six bits. I told her what
I’d agreed to give you; but she says it’s an irreligious and illegal contract,
and she won’t pay a cent of it. But I ain’t going to see you treated unfair,’
says he. ‘I’ve got eighty-seven saddles on the ranch what I’ve bought on this
trip; and when I get back I’m going to pick out the best six in the lot and
send ’em to you.’”
“And did he?” I asked, when
Lucullus ceased talking.
“He did. And they are fit
for kings to ride on. The six he sent me must have cost him three thousand
dollars. But where is the market for ’em? Who would buy one except one of these
rajahs and princes of Asia and Africa? I’ve got ’em all on the list. I know
every tan royal dub and smoked princerino from Mindanao to the Caspian Sea.”
“It’s a long time between
customers,” I ventured.
“They’re coming faster,”
said Polk. “Nowadays, when one of the murdering mutts gets civilised enough to
abolish suttee and quit using his whiskers for a napkin, he calls himself the
Roosevelt of the East, and comes over to investigate our Chautauquas and cocktails.
I’ll place ’em all yet. Now look here.”
From an inside pocket he
drew a tightly folded newspaper with much-worn edges, and indicated a
paragraph.
“Read that,” said the
saddler to royalty. The paragraph ran thus:
His Highness Seyyid Feysal
bin Turkee, Imam of Muskat, is one of the most progressive and enlightened
rulers of the Old World. His stables contain more than a thousand horses of the
purest Persian breeds. It is said that this powerful prince contemplates a
visit to the United States at an early date.
“There!” said Mr. Polk
triumphantly. “My best saddle is as good as sold—the one with turquoises set in
the rim of the cantle. Have you three dollars that you could loan me for a
short time?”
It happened that I had; and
I did.
If this should meet the eye
of the Imam of Muskat, may it quicken his whim to visit the land of the free!
Otherwise I fear that I shall be longer than a short time separated from my
dollars three.
VII
HYGEIA AT THE SOLITO
If you are knowing in the
chronicles of the ring you will recall to mind an event in the early ’nineties
when, for a minute and sundry odd seconds, a champion and a “would-be” faced
each other on the alien side of an international river. So brief a conflict had
rarely imposed upon the fair promise of true sport. The reporters made what
they could of it, but, divested of padding, the action was sadly fugacious. The
champion merely smote his victim, turned his back upon him, remarking, “I know
what I done to dat stiff,” and extended an arm like a ship’s mast for his glove
to be removed.
Which accounts for a
trainload of extremely disgusted gentlemen in an uproar of fancy vests and
neck-wear being spilled from their pullmans in San Antonio in the early morning
following the fight. Which also partly accounts for the unhappy predicament in
which “Cricket” McGuire found himself as he tumbled from his car and sat upon
the depot platform, torn by a spasm of that hollow, racking cough so familiar
to San Antonian ears. At that time, in the uncertain light of dawn, that way
passed Curtis Raidler, the Nueces County cattleman—may his shadow never measure
under six foot two.
The cattleman, out this
early to catch the south-bound for his ranch station, stopped at the side of
the distressed patron of sport, and spoke in the kindly drawl of his ilk and
region, “Got it pretty bad, bud?”
“Cricket” McGuire,
ex-feather-weight prizefighter, tout, jockey, follower of the “ponies,”
all-round sport, and manipulator of the gum balls and walnut shells, looked up
pugnaciously at the imputation cast by “bud.”
“G’wan,” he rasped,
“telegraph pole. I didn’t ring for yer.”
Another paroxysm wrung him,
and he leaned limply against a convenient baggage truck. Raidler waited
patiently, glancing around at the white hats, short overcoats, and big cigars
thronging the platform. “You’re from the No’th, ain’t you, bud?” he asked when
the other was partially recovered. “Come down to see the fight?”
“Fight!” snapped McGuire.
“Puss-in-the-corner! ’Twas a hypodermic injection. Handed him just one like a
squirt of dope, and he’s asleep, and no tanbark needed in front of his
residence. Fight!” He rattled a bit, coughed, and went on, hardly addressing
the cattleman, but rather for the relief of voicing his troubles. “No more dead
sure t’ings for me. But Rus Sage himself would have snatched at it. Five to one
dat de boy from Cork wouldn’t stay t’ree rounds is what I invested in. Put my
last cent on, and could already smell the sawdust in dat all-night joint of
Jimmy Delaney’s on T’irty-seventh Street I was goin’ to buy. And den—say,
telegraph pole, what a gazaboo a guy is to put his whole roll on one turn of
the gaboozlum!”
“You’re plenty right,” said
the big cattleman; “more ’specially when you lose. Son, you get up and light
out for a hotel. You got a mighty bad cough. Had it long?”
“Lungs,” said McGuire
comprehensively. “I got it. The croaker says I’ll come to time for six months
longer—maybe a year if I hold my gait. I wanted to settle down and take care of
myself. Dat’s why I speculated on dat five to one perhaps. I had a t’ousand
iron dollars saved up. If I winned I was goin’ to buy Delaney’s café. Who’d a
t’ought dat stiff would take a nap in de foist round—say?”
“It’s a hard deal,”
commented Raidler, looking down at the diminutive form of McGuire crumpled against
the truck. “But you go to a hotel and rest. There’s the Menger and the
Maverick, and—”
“And the Fi’th Av’noo, and
the Waldorf-Astoria,” mimicked McGuire. “Told you I went broke. I’m on de bum
proper. I’ve got one dime left. Maybe a trip to Europe or a sail in me private
yacht would fix me up— pa-per!”
He flung his dime at a
newsboy, got his Express, propped his back against the truck, and
was at once rapt in the account of his Waterloo, as expanded by the ingenious
press.
Curtis Raidler interrogated
an enormous gold watch, and laid his hand on McGuire’s shoulder.
“Come on, bud,” he said. “We
got three minutes to catch the train.”
Sarcasm seemed to be
McGuire’s vein.
“You ain’t seen me cash in
any chips or call a turn since I told you I was broke, a minute ago, have you?
Friend, chase yourself away.”
“You’re going down to my
ranch,” said the cattleman, “and stay till you get well. Six months’ll fix you
good as new.” He lifted McGuire with one hand, and half-dragged him in the
direction of the train.
“What about the money?” said
McGuire, struggling weakly to escape.
“Money for what?” asked
Raidler, puzzled. They eyed each other, not understanding, for they touched
only as at the gear of bevelled cog-wheels—at right angles, and moving upon
different axes.
Passengers on the
south-bound saw them seated together, and wondered at the conflux of two such
antipodes. McGuire was five feet one, with a countenance belonging to either
Yokohama or Dublin. Bright-beady of eye, bony of cheek and jaw, scarred,
toughened, broken and reknit, indestructible, grisly, gladiatorial as a hornet,
he was a type neither new nor unfamiliar. Raidler was the product of a
different soil. Six feet two in height, miles broad, and no deeper than a
crystal brook, he represented the union of the West and South. Few accurate
pictures of his kind have been made, for art galleries are so small and the
mutoscope is as yet unknown in Texas. After all, the only possible medium of
portrayal of Raidler’s kind would be the fresco—something high and simple and
cool and unframed.
They were rolling southward
on the International. The timber was huddling into little, dense green motts at
rare distances before the inundation of the downright, vert prairies. This was
the land of the ranches; the domain of the kings of the kine.
McGuire sat, collapsed into
his corner of the seat, receiving with acid suspicion the conversation of the
cattleman. What was the “game” of this big “geezer” who was carrying him off?
Altruism would have been McGuire’s last guess. “He ain’t no farmer,” thought
the captive, “and he ain’t no con man, for sure. W’at’s his lay? You trail in,
Cricket, and see how many cards he draws. You’re up against it, anyhow. You got
a nickel and gallopin’ consumption, and you better lay low. Lay low and see
w’at’s his game.”
At Rincon, a hundred miles
from San Antonio, they left the train for a buckboard which was waiting there
for Raidler. In this they travelled the thirty miles between the station and
their destination. If anything could, this drive should have stirred the
acrimonious McGuire to a sense of his ransom. They sped upon velvety wheels
across an exhilarant savanna. The pair of Spanish ponies struck a nimble,
tireless trot, which gait they occasionally relieved by a wild, untrammelled
gallop. The air was wine and seltzer, perfumed, as they absorbed it, with the
delicate redolence of prairie flowers. The road perished, and the buckboard
swam the uncharted billows of the grass itself, steered by the practised hand
of Raidler, to whom each tiny distant mott of trees was a signboard, each
convolution of the low hills a voucher of course and distance. But McGuire
reclined upon his spine, seeing nothing but a desert, and receiving the
cattleman’s advances with sullen distrust. “W’at’s he up to?” was the burden of
his thoughts; “w’at kind of a gold brick has the big guy got to sell?” McGuire
was only applying the measure of the streets he had walked to a range bounded
by the horizon and the fourth dimension.
A week before, while riding
the prairies, Raidler had come upon a sick and weakling calf deserted and
bawling. Without dismounting he had reached and slung the distressed bossy
across his saddle, and dropped it at the ranch for the boys to attend to. It
was impossible for McGuire to know or comprehend that, in the eyes of the
cattleman, his case and that of the calf were identical in interest and demand
upon his assistance. A creature was ill and helpless; he had the power to
render aid—these were the only postulates required for the cattleman to act. They
formed his system of logic and the most of his creed. McGuire was the seventh
invalid whom Raidler had picked up thus casually in San Antonio, where so many
thousand go for the ozone that is said to linger about its contracted streets.
Five of them had been guests of Solito Ranch until they had been able to leave,
cured or better, and exhausting the vocabulary of tearful gratitude. One came
too late, but rested very comfortably, at last, under a ratama tree in the
garden.
So, then, it was no surprise
to the ranchhold when the buckboard spun to the door, and Raidler took up his
debile protégé like a handful of rags and set him down upon
the gallery.
McGuire looked upon things
strange to him. The ranch-house was the best in the country. It was built of brick
hauled one hundred miles by wagon, but it was of but one story, and its four
rooms were completely encircled by a mud floor “gallery.” The miscellaneous
setting of horses, dogs, saddles, wagons, guns, and cow-punchers’ paraphernalia
oppressed the metropolitan eyes of the wrecked sportsman.
“Well, here we are at home,”
said Raidler, cheeringly.
“It’s a h—l of a looking
place,” said McGuire promptly, as he rolled upon the gallery floor in a fit of
coughing.
“We’ll try to make it
comfortable for you, buddy,” said the cattleman gently. “It ain’t fine inside;
but it’s the outdoors, anyway, that’ll do you the most good. This’ll be your
room, in here. Anything we got, you ask for it.”
He led McGuire into the east
room. The floor was bare and clean. White curtains waved in the gulf breeze
through the open windows. A big willow rocker, two straight chairs, a long
table covered with newspapers, pipes, tobacco, spurs, and cartridges stood in
the centre. Some well-mounted heads of deer and one of an enormous black javeli
projected from the walls. A wide, cool cot-bed stood in a corner. Nueces County
people regarded this guest chamber as fit for a prince. McGuire showed his
eyeteeth at it. He took out his nickel and spun it up to the ceiling.
“T’ought I was lyin’ about
the money, did ye? Well, you can frisk me if you wanter. Dat’s the last
simoleon in the treasury. Who’s goin’ to pay?”
The cattleman’s clear grey
eyes looked steadily from under his grizzly brows into the huckleberry optics
of his guest. After a little he said simply, and not ungraciously, “I’ll be
much obliged to you, son, if you won’t mention money any more. Once was quite a
plenty. Folks I ask to my ranch don’t have to pay anything, and they very
scarcely ever offers it. Supper’ll be ready in half an hour. There’s water in
the pitcher, and some, cooler, to drink, in that red jar hanging on the
gallery.”
“Where’s the bell?” asked
McGuire, looking about.
“Bell for what?”
“Bell to ring for things. I
can’t—see here,” he exploded in a sudden, weak fury, “I never asked you to
bring me here. I never held you up for a cent. I never gave you a hard-luck
story till you asked me. Here I am fifty miles from a bellboy or a cocktail.
I’m sick. I can’t hustle. Gee! but I’m up against it!” McGuire fell upon the
cot and sobbed shiveringly.
Raidler went to the door and
called. A slender, bright-complexioned Mexican youth about twenty came quickly.
Raidler spoke to him in Spanish.
“Ylario, it is in my mind
that I promised you the position of vaquero on the San Carlos
range at the fall rodeo.”
“Si, señor, such was
your goodness.”
“Listen. This señorito is
my friend. He is very sick. Place yourself at his side. Attend to his wants at
all times. Have much patience and care with him. And when he is well, or—and
when he is well, instead of vaquero I will make you mayordomo of
the Rancho de las Piedras. Esta bueno?”
“Si, si—mil gracias,
señor.” Ylario tried to kneel upon the floor in his gratitude, but the
cattleman kicked at him benevolently, growling, “None of your opery-house antics,
now.”
Ten minutes later Ylario
came from McGuire’s room and stood before Raidler.
“The little señor,”
he announced, “presents his compliments” (Raidler credited Ylario with the
preliminary) “and desires some pounded ice, one hot bath, one gin feez-z, that
the windows be all closed, toast, one shave, one Newyorkheral’, cigarettes, and
to send one telegram.”
Raidler took a quart bottle
of whisky from his medicine cabinet. “Here, take him this,” he said.
Thus was instituted the
reign of terror at the Solito Ranch. For a few weeks McGuire blustered and
boasted and swaggered before the cow-punchers who rode in for miles around to
see this latest importation of Raidler’s. He was an absolutely new experience
to them. He explained to them all the intricate points of sparring and the
tricks of training and defence. He opened to their minds’ view all the
indecorous life of a tagger after professional sports. His jargon of slang was
a continuous joy and surprise to them. His gestures, his strange poses, his
frank ribaldry of tongue and principle fascinated them. He was like a being
from a new world.
Strange to say, this new
world he had entered did not exist to him. He was an utter egoist of bricks and
mortar. He had dropped out, he felt, into open space for a time, and all it
contained was an audience for his reminiscences. Neither the limitless freedom
of the prairie days nor the grand hush of the close-drawn, spangled nights
touched him. All the hues of Aurora could not win him from the pink pages of a
sporting journal. “Get something for nothing,” was his mission in life;
“Thirty-seventh” Street was his goal.
Nearly two months after his
arrival he began to complain that he felt worse. It was then that he became the
ranch’s incubus, its harpy, its Old Man of the Sea. He shut himself in his room
like some venomous kobold or flibbertigibbet, whining, complaining, cursing,
accusing. The keynote of his plaint was that he had been inveigled into a
gehenna against his will; that he was dying of neglect and lack of comforts.
With all his dire protestations of increasing illness, to the eye of others he
remained unchanged. His currant-like eyes were as bright and diabolic as ever;
his voice was as rasping; his callous face, with the skin drawn tense as a
drum-head, had no flesh to lose. A flush on his prominent cheek bones each
afternoon hinted that a clinical thermometer might have revealed a symptom, and
percussion might have established the fact that McGuire was breathing with only
one lung, but his appearance remained the same.
In constant attendance upon
him was Ylario, whom the coming reward of the mayordomoship must
have greatly stimulated, for McGuire chained him to a bitter existence. The
air—the man’s only chance for life—he commanded to be kept out by closed
windows and drawn curtains. The room was always blue and foul with cigarette
smoke; whosoever entered it must sit, suffocating, and listen to the imp’s
interminable gasconade concerning his scandalous career.
The oddest thing of all was
the relation existing between McGuire and his benefactor. The attitude of the
invalid toward the cattleman was something like that of a peevish, perverse
child toward an indulgent parent. When Raidler would leave the ranch McGuire
would fall into a fit of malevolent, silent sullenness. When he returned, he
would be met by a string of violent and stinging reproaches. Raidler’s attitude
toward his charge was quite inexplicable in its way. The cattleman seemed
actually to assume and feel the character assigned to him by McGuire’s intemperate
accusations—the character of tyrant and guilty oppressor. He seemed to have
adopted the responsibility of the fellow’s condition, and he always met his
tirades with a pacific, patient, and even remorseful kindness that never
altered.
One day Raidler said to him,
“Try more air, son. You can have the buckboard and a driver every day if you’ll
go. Try a week or two in one of the cow camps. I’ll fix you up plumb
comfortable. The ground, and the air next to it—them’s the things to cure you.
I knowed a man from Philadelphy, sicker than you are, got lost on the
Guadalupe, and slept on the bare grass in sheep camps for two weeks. Well, sir,
it started him getting well, which he done. Close to the ground—that’s where
the medicine in the air stays. Try a little hossback riding now. There’s a
gentle pony—”
“What’ve I done to yer?”
screamed McGuire. “Did I ever doublecross yer? Did I ask you to bring me here?
Drive me out to your camps if you wanter; or stick a knife in me and save
trouble. Ride! I can’t lift my feet. I couldn’t sidestep a jab from a
five-year-old kid. That’s what your d—d ranch has done for me. There’s nothing
to eat, nothing to see, and nobody to talk to but a lot of Reubens who don’t
know a punching bag from a lobster salad.”
“It’s a lonesome place, for
certain,” apologised Raidler abashedly. “We got plenty, but it’s rough enough.
Anything you think of you want, the boys’ll ride up and fetch it down for you.”
It was Chad Murchison, a
cow-puncher from the Circle Bar outfit, who first suggested that McGuire’s
illness was fraudulent. Chad had brought a basket of grapes for him thirty
miles, and four out of his way, tied to his saddle-horn. After remaining in the
smoke-tainted room for a while, he emerged and bluntly confided his suspicions
to Raidler.
“His arm,” said Chad, “is
harder’n a diamond. He interduced me to what he called a shore-perplexus punch,
and ’twas like being kicked twice by a mustang. He’s playin’ it low down on
you, Curt. He ain’t no sicker’n I am. I hate to say it, but the runt’s workin’
you for range and shelter.”
The cattleman’s ingenuous
mind refused to entertain Chad’s view of the case, and when, later, he came to
apply the test, doubt entered not into his motives.
One day, about noon, two men
drove up to the ranch, alighted, hitched, and came in to dinner; standing and
general invitations being the custom of the country. One of them was a great
San Antonio doctor, whose costly services had been engaged by a wealthy cowman
who had been laid low by an accidental bullet. He was now being driven back to
the station to take the train back to town. After dinner Raidler took him
aside, pushed a twenty-dollar bill against his hand, and said:
“Doc, there’s a young chap
in that room I guess has got a bad case of consumption. I’d like for you to
look him over and see just how bad he is, and if we can do anything for him.”
“How much was that dinner I
just ate, Mr. Raidler?” said the doctor bluffly, looking over his spectacles.
Raidler returned the money to his pocket. The doctor immediately entered
McGuire’s room, and the cattleman seated himself upon a heap of saddles on the
gallery, ready to reproach himself in the event the verdict should be
unfavourable.
In ten minutes the doctor
came briskly out. “Your man,” he said promptly, “is as sound as a new dollar.
His lungs are better than mine. Respiration, temperature, and pulse normal.
Chest expansion four inches. Not a sign of weakness anywhere. Of course I
didn’t examine for the bacillus, but it isn’t there. You can put my name to the
diagnosis. Even cigarettes and a vilely close room haven’t hurt him. Coughs,
does he? Well, you tell him it isn’t necessary. You asked if there is anything
we could do for him. Well, I advise you to set him digging post-holes or
breaking mustangs. There’s our team ready. Good-day, sir.” And like a puff of
wholesome, blustery wind the doctor was off.
Raidler reached out and
plucked a leaf from a mesquite bush by the railing, and began chewing it
thoughtfully.
The branding season was at
hand, and the next morning Ross Hargis, foreman of the outfit, was mustering
his force of some twenty-five men at the ranch, ready to start for the San
Carlos range, where the work was to begin. By six o’clock the horses were all
saddled, the grub wagon ready, and the cow-punchers were swinging themselves
upon their mounts, when Raidler bade them wait. A boy was bringing up an extra
pony, bridled and saddled, to the gate. Raidler walked to McGuire’s room and
threw open the door. McGuire was lying on his cot, not yet dressed, smoking.
“Get up,” said the
cattleman, and his voice was clear and brassy, like a bugle.
“How’s that?” asked McGuire,
a little startled.
“Get up and dress. I can
stand a rattlesnake, but I hate a liar. Do I have to tell you again?” He caught
McGuire by the neck and stood him on the floor.
“Say, friend,” cried McGuire
wildly, “are you bug-house? I’m sick— see? I’ll croak if I got to hustle.
What’ve I done to yer?”—he began his chronic whine—“I never asked yer to—”
“Put on your clothes,”
called Raidler in a rising tone.
Swearing, stumbling,
shivering, keeping his amazed, shining eyes upon the now menacing form of the
aroused cattleman, McGuire managed to tumble into his clothes. Then Raidler
took him by the collar and shoved him out and across the yard to the extra pony
hitched at the gate. The cow-punchers lolled in their saddles, open-mouthed.
“Take this man,” said
Raidler to Ross Hargis, “and put him to work. Make him work hard, sleep hard,
and eat hard. You boys know I done what I could for him, and he was welcome. Yesterday
the best doctor in San Antone examined him, and says he’s got the lungs of a
burro and the constitution of a steer. You know what to do with him, Ross.”
Ross Hargis only smiled
grimly.
“Aw,” said McGuire, looking
intently at Raidler, with a peculiar expression upon his face, “the croaker
said I was all right, did he? Said I was fakin’, did he? You put him onto me.
You t’ought I wasn’t sick. You said I was a liar. Say, friend, I talked rough,
I know, but I didn’t mean most of it. If you felt like I did—aw! I forgot—I
ain’t sick, the croaker says. Well, friend, now I’ll go work for yer. Here’s
where you play even.”
He sprang into the saddle
easily as a bird, got the quirt from the horn, and gave his pony a slash with
it. “Cricket,” who once brought in Good Boy by a neck at Hawthorne—and a 10 to
1 shot—had his foot in the stirrups again.
McGuire led the cavalcade as
they dashed away for San Carlos, and the cow-punchers gave a yell of applause
as they closed in behind his dust.
But in less than a mile he had
lagged to the rear, and was last man when they struck the patch of high
chaparral below the horse pens. Behind a clump of this he drew rein, and held a
handkerchief to his mouth. He took it away drenched with bright, arterial
blood, and threw it carefully into a clump of prickly pear. Then he slashed
with his quirt again, gasped “G’wan” to his astonished pony, and galloped after
the gang.
That night Raidler received
a message from his old home in Alabama. There had been a death in the family;
an estate was to divide, and they called for him to come. Daylight found him in
the buckboard, skimming the prairies for the station. It was two months before
he returned. When he arrived at the ranch house he found it well-nigh deserted
save for Ylario, who acted as a kind of steward during his absence. Little by
little the youth made him acquainted with the work done while he was away. The
branding camp, he was informed, was still doing business. On account of many
severe storms the cattle had been badly scattered, and the branding had been
accomplished but slowly. The camp was now in the valley of the Guadalupe,
twenty miles away.
“By the way,” said Raidler,
suddenly remembering, “that fellow I sent along with them—McGuire—is he working
yet?”
“I do not know,” said Ylario.
“Mans from the camp come verree few times to the ranch. So plentee work with
the leetle calves. They no say. Oh, I think that fellow McGuire he dead much
time ago.”
“Dead!” said Raidler. “What
you talking about?”
“Verree sick fellow,
McGuire,” replied Ylario, with a shrug of his shoulder. “I theenk he no live
one, two month when he go away.”
“Shucks!” said Raidler. “He
humbugged you, too, did he? The doctor examined him and said he was sound as a
mesquite knot.”
“That doctor,” said Ylario,
smiling, “he tell you so? That doctor no see McGuire.”
“Talk up,” ordered Raidler.
“What the devil do you mean?”
“McGuire,” continued the boy
tranquilly, “he getting drink water outside when that doctor come in room. That
doctor take me and pound me all over here with his fingers”—putting his hand to
his chest—“I not know for what. He put his ear here and here and here, and
listen— I not know for what. He put little glass stick in my mouth. He feel my
arm here. He make me count like whisper—so—twenty, treinta, cuarenta.
Who knows,” concluded Ylario, with a deprecating spread of his hands, “for what
that doctor do those verree droll and such-like things?”
“What horses are up?” asked
Raidler shortly.
“Paisano is grazing out
behind the little corral, señor.”
“Saddle him for me at once.”
Within a very few minutes
the cattleman was mounted and away. Paisano, well named after that ungainly but
swift-running bird, struck into his long lope that ate up the ground like a
strip of macaroni. In two hours and a quarter Raidler, from a gentle swell, saw
the branding camp by a water hole in the Guadalupe. Sick with expectancy of the
news he feared, he rode up, dismounted, and dropped Paisano’s reins. So gentle
was his heart that at that moment he would have pleaded guilty to the murder of
McGuire.
The only being in the camp
was the cook, who was just arranging the hunks of barbecued beef, and
distributing the tin coffee cups for supper. Raidler evaded a direct question
concerning the one subject in his mind.
“Everything all right in camp,
Pete?” he managed to inquire.
“So, so,” said Pete,
conservatively. “Grub give out twice. Wind scattered the cattle, and we’ve had
to rake the brush for forty mile. I need a new coffee-pot. And the mosquitos is
some more hellish than common.”
“The boys—all well?”
Pete was no optimist.
Besides, inquiries concerning the health of cow-punchers were not only
superfluous, but bordered on flaccidity. It was not like the boss to make them.
“What’s left of ’em don’t
miss no calls to grub,” the cook conceded.
“What’s left of ’em?”
repeated Raidler in a husky voice. Mechanically he began to look around for
McGuire’s grave. He had in his mind a white slab such as he had seen in the
Alabama church-yard. But immediately he knew that was foolish.
“Sure,” said Pete; “what’s
left. Cow camps change in two months. Some’s gone.”
Raidler nerved himself.
“That—chap—I sent
along—McGuire—did—he—”
“Say,” interrupted Pete,
rising with a chunk of corn bread in each hand, “that was a dirty shame,
sending that poor, sick kid to a cow camp. A doctor that couldn’t tell he was
graveyard meat ought to be skinned with a cinch buckle. Game as he was,
too—it’s a scandal among snakes—lemme tell you what he done. First night in
camp the boys started to initiate him in the leather breeches degree. Ross
Hargis busted him one swipe with his chaparreras, and what do you reckon the
poor child did? Got up, the little skeeter, and licked Ross. Licked Ross
Hargis. Licked him good. Hit him plenty and everywhere and hard. Ross’d just
get up and pick out a fresh place to lay down on agin.
“Then that McGuire goes off
there and lays down with his head in the grass and bleeds. A hem’ridge they
calls it. He lays there eighteen hours by the watch, and they can’t budge him.
Then Ross Hargis, who loves any man who can lick him, goes to work and damns
the doctors from Greenland to Poland Chiny; and him and Green Branch Johnson
they gets McGuire into a tent, and spells each other feedin’ him chopped raw
meat and whisky.
“But it looks like the kid
ain’t got no appetite to git well, for they misses him from the tent in the
night and finds him rootin’ in the grass, and likewise a drizzle fallin’.
‘G’wan,’ he says, ‘lemme go and die like I wanter. He said I was a liar and a
fake and I was playin’ sick. Lemme alone.’
“Two weeks,” went on the
cook, “he laid around, not noticin’ nobody, and then—”
A sudden thunder filled the
air, and a score of galloping centaurs crashed through the brush into camp.
“Illustrious rattlesnakes!”
exclaimed Pete, springing all ways at once; “here’s the boys come, and I’m an
assassinated man if supper ain’t ready in three minutes.”
But Raidler saw only one
thing. A little, brown-faced, grinning chap, springing from his saddle in the
full light of the fire. McGuire was not like that, and yet—
In another instant the
cattleman was holding him by the hand and shoulder.
“Son, son, how goes it?” was
all he found to say.
“Close to the ground, says
you,” shouted McGuire, crunching Raidler’s fingers in a grip of steel; “and
dat’s where I found it—healt’ and strengt’, and tumbled to what a cheap skate I
been actin’. T’anks fer kickin’ me out, old man. And—say! de joke’s on dat
croaker, ain’t it? I looked t’rough the window and see him playin’ tag on dat
Dago kid’s solar plexus.”
“You son of a tinker,” growled
the cattleman, “whyn’t you talk up and say the doctor never examined you?”
“Ah—g’wan!” said McGuire,
with a flash of his old asperity, “nobody can’t bluff me. You never ast me. You
made your spiel, and you t’rowed me out, and I let it go at dat. And, say,
friend, dis chasin’ cows is outer sight. Dis is de whitest bunch of sports I
ever travelled with. You’ll let me stay, won’t yer, old man?”
Raidler looked wonderingly
toward Ross Hargis.
“That cussed little runt,”
remarked Ross tenderly, “is the Jo-dartin’est hustler—and the hardest hitter in
anybody’s cow camp.”
VIII
AN AFTERNOON MIRACLE
At the United States end of
an international river bridge, four armed rangers sweltered in a little ’dobe
hut, keeping a fairly faithful espionage upon the lagging trail of passengers
from the Mexican side.
Bud Dawson, proprietor of
the Top Notch Saloon, had, on the evening previous, violently ejected from his
premises one Leandro Garcia, for alleged violation of the Top Notch code of
behaviour. Garcia had mentioned twenty-four hours as a limit, by which time he
would call and collect a painful indemnity for personal satisfaction.
This Mexican, although a
tremendous braggart, was thoroughly courageous, and each side of the river
respected him for one of these attributes. He and a following of similar
bravoes were addicted to the pastime of retrieving towns from stagnation.
The day designated by Garcia
for retribution was to be further signalised on the American side by a
cattlemen’s convention, a bull fight, and an old settlers’ barbecue and picnic.
Knowing the avenger to be a man of his word, and believing it prudent to court
peace while three such gently social relaxations were in progress, Captain
McNulty, of the ranger company stationed there, detailed his lieutenant and
three men for duty at the end of the bridge. Their instructions were to prevent
the invasion of Garcia, either alone or attended by his gang.
Travel was slight that
sultry afternoon, and the rangers swore gently, and mopped their brows in their
convenient but close quarters. For an hour no one had crossed save an old woman
enveloped in a brown wrapper and a black mantilla, driving before her a burro
loaded with kindling wood tied in small bundles for peddling. Then three shots
were fired down the street, the sound coming clear and snappy through the still
air.
The four rangers quickened
from sprawling, symbolic figures of indolence to alert life, but only one rose
to his feet. Three turned their eyes beseechingly but hopelessly upon the
fourth, who had gotten nimbly up and was buckling his cartridge-belt around
him. The three knew that Lieutenant Bob Buckley, in command, would allow no man
of them the privilege of investigating a row when he himself might go.
The agile, broad-chested
lieutenant, without a change of expression in his smooth, yellow-brown,
melancholy face, shot the belt strap through the guard of the buckle, hefted
his sixes in their holsters as a belle gives the finishing touches to her
toilette, caught up his Winchester, and dived for the door. There he paused
long enough to caution his comrades to maintain their watch upon the bridge,
and then plunged into the broiling highway.
The three relapsed into
resigned inertia and plaintive comment.
“I’ve heard of fellows,”
grumbled Broncho Leathers, “what was wedded to danger, but if Bob Buckley ain’t
committed bigamy with trouble, I’m a son of a gun.”
“Peculiarness of Bob is,”
inserted the Nueces Kid, “he ain’t had proper trainin’. He never learned how to
git skeered. Now, a man ought to be skeered enough when he tackles a fuss to
hanker after readin’ his name on the list of survivors, anyway.”
“Buckley,” commented Ranger
No. 3, who was a misguided Eastern man, burdened with an education, “scraps in
such a solemn manner that I have been led to doubt its spontaneity. I’m not
quite onto his system, but he fights, like Tybalt, by the book of arithmetic.”
“I never heard,” mentioned
Broncho, “about any of Dibble’s ways of mixin’ scrappin’ and cipherin’.”
“Triggernometry?” suggested
the Nueces infant.
“That’s rather better than I
hoped from you,” nodded the Easterner, approvingly. “The other meaning is that
Buckley never goes into a fight without giving away weight. He seems to dread
taking the slightest advantage. That’s quite close to foolhardiness when you
are dealing with horse-thieves and fence-cutters who would ambush you any
night, and shoot you in the back if they could. Buckley’s too full of sand.
He’ll play Horatius and hold the bridge once too often some day.”
“I’m on there,” drawled the
Kid; “I mind that bridge gang in the reader. Me, I go instructed for the other
chap—Spurious Somebody—the one that fought and pulled his freight, to fight ’em
on some other day.”
“Anyway,” summed up Broncho,
“Bob’s about the gamest man I ever see along the Rio Bravo. Great Sam Houston!
If she gets any hotter she’ll sizzle!” Broncho whacked at a scorpion with his
four-pound Stetson felt, and the three watchers relapsed into comfortless
silence.
How well Bob Buckley had
kept his secret, since these men, for two years his side comrades in countless
border raids and dangers, thus spake of him, not knowing that he was the most
arrant physical coward in all that Rio Bravo country! Neither his friends nor
his enemies had suspected him of aught else than the finest courage. It was
purely a physical cowardice, and only by an extreme, grim effort of will had he
forced his craven body to do the bravest deeds. Scourging himself always, as a
monk whips his besetting sin, Buckley threw himself with apparent recklessness
into every danger, with the hope of some day ridding himself of the despised
affliction. But each successive test brought no relief, and the ranger’s face,
by nature adapted to cheerfulness and good-humour, became set to the guise of
gloomy melancholy. Thus, while the frontier admired his deeds, and his prowess
was celebrated in print and by word of mouth in many camp-fires in the valley
of the Bravo, his heart was sick within him. Only himself knew of the horrible
tightening of the chest, the dry mouth, the weakening of the spine, the agony
of the strung nerves—the never-failing symptoms of his shameful malady.
One mere boy in his company
was wont to enter a fray with a leg perched flippantly about the horn of his
saddle, a cigarette hanging from his lips, which emitted smoke and original
slogans of clever invention. Buckley would have given a year’s pay to attain
that devil-may-care method. Once the debonair youth said to him: “Buck, you go
into a scrap like it was a funeral. Not,” he added, with a complimentary wave of
his tin cup, “but what it generally is.”
Buckley’s conscience was of
the New England order with Western adjustments, and he continued to get his
rebellious body into as many difficulties as possible; wherefore, on that
sultry afternoon he chose to drive his own protesting limbs to investigation of
that sudden alarm that had startled the peace and dignity of the State.
Two squares down the street
stood the Top Notch Saloon. Here Buckley came upon signs of recent upheaval. A
few curious spectators pressed about its front entrance, grinding beneath their
heels the fragments of a plate-glass window. Inside, Buckley found Bud Dawson
utterly ignoring a bullet wound in his shoulder, while he feelingly wept at
having to explain why he failed to drop the “blamed masquerooter,” who shot
him. At the entrance of the ranger Bud turned appealingly to him for
confirmation of the devastation he might have dealt.
“You know, Buck, I’d ’a’
plum got him, first rattle, if I’d thought a minute. Come in a-masque-rootin’,
playin’ female till he got the drop, and turned loose. I never reached for a
gun, thinkin’ it was sure Chihuahua Betty, or Mrs. Atwater, or anyhow one of
the Mayfield girls comin’ a-gunnin’, which they might, liable as not. I never
thought of that blamed Garcia until—”
“Garcia!” snapped Buckley.
“How did he get over here?”
Bud’s bartender took the
ranger by the arm and led him to the side door. There stood a patient grey
burro cropping the grass along the gutter, with a load of kindling wood tied
across its back. On the ground lay a black shawl and a voluminous brown dress.
“Masquerootin’ in them
things,” called Bud, still resisting attempted ministrations to his wounds.
“Thought he was a lady till he gave a yell and winged me.”
“He went down this side
street,” said the bartender. “He was alone, and he’ll hide out till night when
his gang comes over. You ought to find him in that Mexican lay-out below the
depot. He’s got a girl down there—Pancha Sales.”
“How was he armed?” asked
Buckley.
“Two pearl-handled sixes,
and a knife.”
“Keep this for me, Billy,”
said the ranger, handing over his Winchester. Quixotic, perhaps, but it was Bob
Buckley’s way. Another man—and a braver one—might have raised a posse to
accompany him. It was Buckley’s rule to discard all preliminary advantage.
The Mexican had left behind
him a wake of closed doors and an empty street, but now people were beginning
to emerge from their places of refuge with assumed unconsciousness of anything
having happened. Many citizens who knew the ranger pointed out to him with
alacrity the course of Garcia’s retreat.
As Buckley swung along upon
the trail he felt the beginning of the suffocating constriction about his
throat, the cold sweat under the brim of his hat, the old, shameful, dreaded
sinking of his heart as it went down, down, down in his bosom.
The morning train of the
Mexican Central had that day been three hours late, thus failing to connect
with the I. & G.N. on the other side of the river. Passengers for Los
Estados Unidos grumblingly sought entertainment in the little
swaggering mongrel town of two nations, for, until the morrow, no other train
would come to rescue them. Grumblingly, because two days later would begin the
great fair and races in San Antone. Consider that at that time San Antone was the
hub of the wheel of Fortune, and the names of its spokes were Cattle, Wool,
Faro, Running Horses, and Ozone. In those times cattlemen played at crack-loo
on the sidewalks with double-eagles, and gentlemen backed their conception of
the fortuitous card with stacks limited in height only by the interference of
gravity. Wherefore, thither journeyed the sowers and the reapers—they who
stampeded the dollars, and they who rounded them up. Especially did the
caterers to the amusement of the people haste to San Antone. Two greatest shows
on earth were already there, and dozens of smallest ones were on the way.
On a side track near the
mean little ’dobe depot stood a private car, left there by the Mexican train
that morning and doomed by an ineffectual schedule to ignobly await, amid
squalid surroundings, connection with the next day’s regular.
The car had been once a
common day-coach, but those who had sat in it and gringed to the conductor’s
hat-band slips would never have recognised it in its transformation. Paint and
gilding and certain domestic touches had liberated it from any suspicion of
public servitude. The whitest of lace curtains judiciously screened its
windows. From its fore end drooped in the torrid air the flag of Mexico. From
its rear projected the Stars and Stripes and a busy stovepipe, the latter
reinforcing in its suggestion of culinary comforts the general suggestion of
privacy and ease. The beholder’s eye, regarding its gorgeous sides, found
interest to culminate in a single name in gold and blue letters extending
almost its entire length—a single name, the audacious privilege of royalty and
genius. Doubly, then, was this arrogant nomenclature here justified; for the
name was that of “Alvarita, Queen of the Serpent Tribe.” This, her car, was back
from a triumphant tour of the principal Mexican cities, and now headed for San
Antonio, where, according to promissory advertisement, she would exhibit her
“Marvellous Dominion and Fearless Control over Deadly and Venomous Serpents,
Handling them with Ease as they Coil and Hiss to the Terror of Thousands of
Tongue-tied Tremblers!”
One hundred in the shade
kept the vicinity somewhat depeopled. This quarter of the town was a ragged
edge; its denizens the bubbling froth of five nations; its architecture
tent, jacal, and ’dobe; its distractions the hurdy-gurdy and the
informal contribution to the sudden stranger’s store of experience. Beyond this
dishonourable fringe upon the old town’s jowl rose a dense mass of trees,
surmounting and filling a little hollow. Through this bickered a small stream
that perished down the sheer and disconcerting side of the great cañon of the
Rio Bravo del Norte.
In this sordid spot was
condemned to remain for certain hours the impotent transport of the Queen of
the Serpent Tribe.
The front door of the car
was open. Its forward end was curtained off into a small reception-room. Here
the admiring and propitiatory reporters were wont to sit and transpose the
music of Señorita Alvarita’s talk into the more florid key of the press. A picture
of Abraham Lincoln hung against a wall; one of a cluster of school-girls
grouped upon stone steps was in another place; a third was Easter lilies in a
blood-red frame. A neat carpet was under foot. A pitcher, sweating cold drops,
and a glass stood on a fragile stand. In a willow rocker, reading a newspaper,
sat Alvarita.
Spanish, you would say;
Andalusian, or, better still, Basque; that compound, like the diamond, of
darkness and fire. Hair, the shade of purple grapes viewed at midnight. Eyes,
long, dusky, and disquieting with their untroubled directness of gaze. Face,
haughty and bold, touched with a pretty insolence that gave it life. To hasten
conviction of her charm, but glance at the stacks of handbills in the corner,
green, and yellow, and white. Upon them you see an incompetent presentment of
the señorita in her professional garb and pose. Irresistible, in black lace and
yellow ribbons, she faces you; a blue racer is spiralled upon each bare arm;
coiled twice about her waist and once about her neck, his horrid head close to
hers, you perceive Kuku, the great eleven-foot Asian python.
A hand drew aside the
curtain that partitioned the car, and a middle-aged, faded woman holding a
knife and a half-peeled potato looked in and said:
“Alviry, are you right
busy?”
“I’m reading the home paper,
ma. What do you think! that pale, tow-headed Matilda Price got the most votes
in the News for the prettiest girl in Gallipo—lees.”
“Shush! She wouldn’t of done
it if you’d been home, Alviry. Lord knows, I hope we’ll be
there before fall’s over. I’m tired gallopin’ round the world playin’ we are
dagoes, and givin’ snake shows. But that ain’t what I wanted to say. That there
biggest snake’s gone again. I’ve looked all over the car and can’t find him. He
must have been gone an hour. I remember hearin’ somethin’ rustlin’ along the
floor, but I thought it was you.”
“Oh, blame that old rascal!”
exclaimed the Queen, throwing down her paper. “This is the third time he’s got
away. George never will fasten down the lid to his box
properly. I do believe he’s afraid of Kuku. Now I’ve got to go
hunt him.”
“Better hurry; somebody
might hurt him.”
The Queen’s teeth showed in
a gleaming, contemptuous smile. “No danger. When they see Kuku outside they
simply scoot away and buy bromides. There’s a crick over between here and the
river. That old scamp’d swap his skin any time for a drink of running water. I
guess I’ll find him there, all right.”
A few minutes later Alvarita
stopped upon the forward platform, ready for her quest. Her handsome black
skirt was shaped to the most recent proclamation of fashion. Her spotless
shirt-waist gladdened the eye in that desert of sunshine, a swelling oasis,
cool and fresh. A man’s split-straw hat sat firmly on her coiled, abundant
hair. Beneath her serene, round, impudent chin a man’s four-in-hand tie was
jauntily knotted about a man’s high, stiff collar. A parasol she carried, of
white silk, and its fringe was lace, yellowly genuine.
I will grant Gallipolis as
to her costume, but firmly to Seville or Valladolid I am held by her eyes;
castanets, balconies, mantillas, serenades, ambuscades, escapades—all these
their dark depths guaranteed.
“Ain’t you afraid to go out
alone, Alviry?” queried the Queen-mother anxiously. “There’s so many rough
people about. Mebbe you’d better—”
“I never saw anything I was
afraid of yet, ma. ’Specially people. And men in particular. Don’t you fret.
I’ll trot along back as soon as I find that runaway scamp.”
The dust lay thick upon the
bare ground near the tracks. Alvarita’s eye soon discovered the serrated trail
of the escaped python. It led across the depot grounds and away down a smaller
street in the direction of the little cañon, as predicted by her. A stillness
and lack of excitement in the neighbourhood encouraged the hope that, as yet,
the inhabitants were unaware that so formidable a guest traversed their
highways. The heat had driven them indoors, whence outdrifted occasional shrill
laughs, or the depressing whine of a maltreated concertina. In the shade a few
Mexican children, like vivified stolid idols in clay, stared from their play,
vision-struck and silent, as Alvarita came and went. Here and there a woman
peeped from a door and stood dumb, reduced to silence by the aspect of the
white silk parasol.
A hundred yards and the
limits of the town were passed, scattered chaparral succeeding, and then a
noble grove, overflowing the bijou cañon. Through this a small bright stream
meandered. Park-like it was, with a kind of cockney ruralness further endorsed
by the waste papers and rifled tins of picnickers. Up this stream, and down it,
among its pseudo-sylvan glades and depressions, wandered the bright and
unruffled Alvarita. Once she saw evidence of the recreant reptile’s progress in
his distinctive trail across a spread of fine sand in the arroyo. The living
water was bound to lure him; he could not be far away.
So sure was she of his
immediate proximity that she perched herself to idle for a time in the curve of
a great creeper that looped down from a giant water-elm. To reach this she
climbed from the pathway a little distance up the side of a steep and rugged
incline. Around her chaparral grew thick and high. A late-blooming ratama tree
dispensed from its yellow petals a sweet and persistent odour. Adown the ravine
rustled a seductive wind, melancholy with the taste of sodden, fallen leaves.
Alvarita removed her hat,
and undoing the oppressive convolutions of her hair, began to slowly arrange it
in two long, dusky plaits.
From the obscure depths of a
thick clump of evergreen shrubs five feet away, two small jewel-bright eyes
were steadfastly regarding her. Coiled there lay Kuku, the great python; Kuku,
the magnificent, he of the plated muzzle, the grooved lips, the eleven-foot
stretch of elegantly and brilliantly mottled skin. The great python was viewing
his mistress without a sound or motion to disclose his presence. Perhaps the
splendid truant forefelt his capture, but, screened by the foliage, thought to
prolong the delight of his escapade. What pleasure it was, after the hot and
dusty car, to lie thus, smelling the running water, and feeling the agreeable
roughness of the earth and stones against his body! Soon, very soon the Queen
would find him, and he, powerless as a worm in her audacious hands, would be
returned to the dark chest in the narrow house that ran on wheels.
Alvarita heard a sudden
crunching of the gravel below her. Turning her head she saw a big, swarthy
Mexican, with a daring and evil expression, contemplating her with an ominous,
dull eye.
“What do you want?” she
asked as sharply as five hairpins between her lips would permit, continuing to
plait her hair, and looking him over with placid contempt. The Mexican
continued to gaze at her, and showed his teeth in a white, jagged smile.
“I no hurt-y you, Señorita,”
he said.
“You bet you won’t,”
answered the Queen, shaking back one finished, massive plait. “But don’t you
think you’d better move on?”
“Not hurt-y you—no. But
maybeso take one beso—one li’l kees, you call him.”
The man smiled again, and
set his foot to ascend the slope. Alvarita leaned swiftly and picked up a stone
the size of a cocoanut.
“Vamoose, quick,” she
ordered peremptorily, “you coon!”
The red of insult burned
through the Mexican’s dark skin.
“Hidalgo, Yo!” he
shot between his fangs. “I am not neg-r-ro! Diabla bonita, for that
you shall pay me.”
He made two quick upward
steps this time, but the stone, hurled by no weak arm, struck him square in the
chest. He staggered back to the footway, swerved half around, and met another
sight that drove all thoughts of the girl from his head. She turned her eyes to
see what had diverted his interest. A man with red-brown, curling hair and a
melancholy, sunburned, smooth-shaven face was coming up the path, twenty yards
away. Around the Mexican’s waist was buckled a pistol belt with two empty
holsters. He had laid aside his sixes—possibly in the jacal of
the fair Pancha—and had forgotten them when the passing of the fairer Alvarita
had enticed him to her trail. His hands now flew instinctively to the holsters,
but finding the weapons gone, he spread his fingers outward with the eloquent,
abjuring, deprecating Latin gesture, and stood like a rock. Seeing his plight,
the newcomer unbuckled his own belt containing two revolvers, threw it upon the
ground, and continued to advance.
“Splendid!” murmured
Alvarita, with flashing eyes.
As
Bob Buckley, according to the mad code of bravery that his sensitive conscience
imposed upon his cowardly nerves, abandoned his guns and closed in upon his
enemy, the old, inevitable nausea of abject fear wrung him. His breath whistled
through his constricted air passages. His feet seemed like lumps of lead. His
mouth was dry as dust. His heart, congested with blood, hurt his ribs as it
thumped against them. The hot June day turned to moist November. And still he
advanced, spurred by a mandatory pride that strained its uttermost against his
weakling flesh.
The distance between the two
men slowly lessened. The Mexican stood, immovable, waiting. When scarce five
yards separated them a little shower of loosened gravel rattled down from above
to the ranger’s feet. He glanced upward with instinctive caution. A pair of
dark eyes, brilliantly soft, and fierily tender, encountered and held his own.
The most fearful heart and the boldest one in all the Rio Bravo country
exchanged a silent and inscrutable communication. Alvarita, still seated within
her vine, leaned forward above the breast-high chaparral. One hand was laid
across her bosom. One great dark braid curved forward over her shoulder. Her lips
were parted; her face was lit with what seemed but wonder—great and absolute
wonder. Her eyes lingered upon Buckley’s. Let no one ask or presume to tell
through what subtle medium the miracle was performed. As by a lightning flash
two clouds will accomplish counterpoise and compensation of electric surcharge,
so on that eyeglance the man received his complement of manhood, and the maid
conceded what enriched her womanly grace by its loss.
The Mexican, suddenly
stirring, ventilated his attitude of apathetic waiting by conjuring swiftly
from his bootleg a long knife. Buckley cast aside his hat, and laughed once
aloud, like a happy school-boy at a frolic. Then, empty-handed, he sprang
nimbly, and Garcia met him without default.
So soon was the engagement
ended that disappointment imposed upon the ranger’s warlike ecstasy. Instead of
dealing the traditional downward stroke, the Mexican lunged straight with his
knife. Buckley took the precarious chance, and caught his wrist, fair and firm.
Then he delivered the good Saxon knock-out blow—always so pathetically
disastrous to the fistless Latin races—and Garcia was down and out, with his
head under a clump of prickly pears. The ranger looked up again to the Queen of
the Serpents.
Alvarita scrambled down to
the path.
“I’m mighty glad I happened
along when I did,” said the ranger.
“He—he frightened me so!”
cooed Alvarita.
They did not hear the long,
low hiss of the python under the shrubs. Wiliest of the beasts, no doubt he was
expressing the humiliation he felt at having so long dwelt in subjection to
this trembling and colouring mistress of his whom he had deemed so strong and
potent and fearsome.
Then came galloping to the
spot the civic authorities; and to them the ranger awarded the prostrate
disturber of the peace, whom they bore away limply across the saddle of one of
their mounts. But Buckley and Alvarita lingered.
Slowly, slowly they walked.
The ranger regained his belt of weapons. With a fine timidity she begged the
indulgence of fingering the great .45’s, with little “Ohs” and “Ahs” of
new-born, delicious shyness.
The cañoncito was
growing dusky. Beyond its terminus in the river bluff they could see the outer
world yet suffused with the waning glory of sunset.
A scream—a piercing scream
of fright from Alvarita. Back she cowered, and the ready, protecting arm of
Buckley formed her refuge. What terror so dire as to thus beset the close of
the reign of the never-before-daunted Queen?
Across the path there
crawled a caterpillar—a horrid, fuzzy, two-inch caterpillar! Truly,
Kuku, thou went avenged. Thus abdicated the Queen of the Serpent Tribe—viva
la reina!
IX
THE HIGHER ABDICATION
Curly the tramp sidled
toward the free-lunch counter. He caught a fleeting glance from the bartender’s
eye, and stood still, trying to look like a business man who had just dined at
the Menger and was waiting for a friend who had promised to pick him up in his
motor car. Curly’s histrionic powers were equal to the impersonation; but his
make-up was wanting.
The bartender rounded the
bar in a casual way, looking up at the ceiling as though he was pondering some
intricate problem of kalsomining, and then fell upon Curly so suddenly that the
roadster had no excuses ready. Irresistibly, but so composedly that it seemed
almost absendmindedness on his part, the dispenser of drinks pushed Curly to
the swinging doors and kicked him out, with a nonchalance that almost amounted
to sadness. That was the way of the Southwest.
Curly arose from the gutter
leisurely. He felt no anger or resentment toward his ejector. Fifteen years of
tramphood spent out of the twenty-two years of his life had hardened the fibres
of his spirit. The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune fell blunted from
the buckler of his armoured pride. With especial resignation did he suffer
contumely and injury at the hands of bartenders. Naturally, they were his
enemies; and unnaturally, they were often his friends. He had to take his
chances with them. But he had not yet learned to estimate these cool, languid,
Southwestern knights of the bungstarter, who had the manners of an Earl of
Pawtucket, and who, when they disapproved of your presence, moved you with the
silence and despatch of a chess automaton advancing a pawn.
Curly stood for a few
moments in the narrow, mesquite-paved street. San Antonio puzzled and disturbed
him. Three days he had been a non-paying guest of the town, having dropped off
there from a box car of an I. & G.N. freight, because Greaser Johnny had
told him in Des Moines that the Alamo City was manna fallen, gathered, cooked,
and served free with cream and sugar. Curly had found the tip partly a good
one. There was hospitality in plenty of a careless, liberal, irregular sort.
But the town itself was a weight upon his spirits after his experience with the
rushing, business-like, systematised cities of the North and East. Here he was
often flung a dollar, but too frequently a good-natured kick would follow it.
Once a band of hilarious cowboys had roped him on Military Plaza and dragged
him across the black soil until no respectable rag-bag would have stood sponsor
for his clothes. The winding, doubling streets, leading nowhere, bewildered
him. And then there was a little river, crooked as a pot-hook, that crawled
through the middle of the town, crossed by a hundred little bridges so nearly
alike that they got on Curly’s nerves. And the last bartender wore a number
nine shoe.
The saloon stood on a
corner. The hour was eight o’clock. Homefarers and outgoers jostled Curly on
the narrow stone sidewalk. Between the buildings to his left he looked down a
cleft that proclaimed itself another thoroughfare. The alley was dark except
for one patch of light. Where there was light there were sure to be human
beings. Where there were human beings after nightfall in San Antonio there might
be food, and there was sure to be drink. So Curly headed for the light.
The illumination came from
Schwegel’s Café. On the sidewalk in front of it Curly picked up an old
envelope. It might have contained a check for a million. It was empty; but the
wanderer read the address, “Mr. Otto Schwegel,” and the name of the town and
State. The postmark was Detroit.
Curly entered the saloon.
And now in the light it could be perceived that he bore the stamp of many years
of vagabondage. He had none of the tidiness of the calculating and shrewd
professional tramp. His wardrobe represented the cast-off specimens of half a
dozen fashions and eras. Two factories had combined their efforts in providing
shoes for his feet. As you gazed at him there passed through your mind vague
impressions of mummies, wax figures, Russian exiles, and men lost on desert
islands. His face was covered almost to his eyes with a curly brown beard that
he kept trimmed short with a pocket-knife, and that had furnished him with
his nom de route. Light-blue eyes, full of sullenness, fear,
cunning, impudence, and fawning, witnessed the stress that had been laid upon
his soul.
The saloon was small, and in
its atmosphere the odours of meat and drink struggled for the ascendancy. The
pig and the cabbage wrestled with hydrogen and oxygen. Behind the bar Schwegel
laboured with an assistant whose epidermal pores showed no signs of being
obstructed. Hot weinerwurst and sauerkraut were being served to purchasers of
beer. Curly shuffled to the end of the bar, coughed hollowly, and told Schwegel
that he was a Detroit cabinet-maker out of a job.
It followed as the night the
day that he got his schooner and lunch.
“Was you acquainted maybe
with Heinrich Strauss in Detroit?” asked Schwegel.
“Did I know Heinrich Strauss?”
repeated Curly, affectionately. “Why, say, ’Bo, I wish I had a dollar for every
game of pinochle me and Heine has played on Sunday afternoons.”
More beer and a second plate
of steaming food was set before the diplomat. And then Curly, knowing to a
fluid-drachm how far a “con” game would go, shuffled out into the unpromising
street.
And now he began to perceive
the inconveniences of this stony Southern town. There was none of the outdoor
gaiety and brilliancy and music that provided distraction even to the poorest
in the cities of the North. Here, even so early, the gloomy, rock-walled houses
were closed and barred against the murky dampness of the night. The streets
were mere fissures through which flowed grey wreaths of river mist. As he
walked he heard laughter and the chink of coin and chips behind darkened
windows, and music coming from every chink of wood and stone. But the
diversions were selfish; the day of popular pastimes had not yet come to San
Antonio.
But at length Curly, as he
strayed, turned the sharp angle of another lost street and came upon a
rollicking band of stockmen from the outlying ranches celebrating in the open
in front of an ancient wooden hotel. One great roisterer from the sheep country
who had just instigated a movement toward the bar, swept Curly in like a stray
goat with the rest of his flock. The princes of kine and wool hailed him as a
new zoological discovery, and uproariously strove to preserve him in the
diluted alcohol of their compliments and regards.
An hour afterward Curly
staggered from the hotel barroom dismissed by his fickle friends, whose
interest in him had subsided as quickly as it had risen. Full—stoked with
alcoholic fuel and cargoed with food, the only question remaining to disturb
him was that of shelter and bed.
A drizzling, cold Texas rain
had begun to fall—an endless, lazy, unintermittent downfall that lowered the
spirits of men and raised a reluctant steam from the warm stones of the streets
and houses. Thus comes the “norther” dousing gentle spring and amiable autumn
with the chilling salutes and adieux of coming and departing winter.
Curly followed his nose down
the first tortuous street into which his irresponsible feet conducted him. At
the lower end of it, on the bank of the serpentine stream, he perceived an open
gate in a cemented rock wall. Inside he saw camp fires and a row of low wooden
sheds built against three sides of the enclosing wall. He entered the
enclosure. Under the sheds many horses were champing at their oats and corn.
Many wagons and buckboards stood about with their teams’ harness thrown
carelessly upon the shafts and doubletrees. Curly recognised the place as a
wagon-yard, such as is provided by merchants for their out-of-town friends and
customers. No one was in sight. No doubt the drivers of those wagons were
scattered about the town “seeing the elephant and hearing the owl.” In their
haste to become patrons of the town’s dispensaries of mirth and good cheer the
last ones to depart must have left the great wooden gate swinging open.
Curly had satisfied the
hunger of an anaconda and the thirst of a camel, so he was neither in the mood
nor the condition of an explorer. He zigzagged his way to the first wagon that
his eyesight distinguished in the semi-darkness under the shed. It was a
two-horse wagon with a top of white canvas. The wagon was half filled with
loose piles of wool sacks, two or three great bundles of grey blankets, and a
number of bales, bundles, and boxes. A reasoning eye would have estimated the
load at once as ranch supplies, bound on the morrow for some outlying hacienda.
But to the drowsy intelligence of Curly they represented only warmth and
softness and protection against the cold humidity of the night. After several
unlucky efforts, at last he conquered gravity so far as to climb over a wheel
and pitch forward upon the best and warmest bed he had fallen upon in many a
day. Then he became instinctively a burrowing animal, and dug his way like a
prairie-dog down among the sacks and blankets, hiding himself from the cold air
as snug and safe as a bear in his den. For three nights sleep had visited Curly
only in broken and shivering doses. So now, when Morpheus condescended to pay
him a call, Curly got such a strangle hold on the mythological old gentleman
that it was a wonder that anyone else in the whole world got a wink of sleep
that night.
Six
cowpunchers of the Cibolo Ranch were waiting around the door of the ranch
store. Their ponies cropped grass near by, tied in the Texas fashion—which is
not tied at all. Their bridle reins had been dropped to the earth, which is a
more effectual way of securing them (such is the power of habit and
imagination) than you could devise out of a half-inch rope and a live-oak tree.
These guardians of the cow
lounged about, each with a brown cigarette paper in his hand, and gently but
unceasingly cursed Sam Revell, the storekeeper. Sam stood in the door, snapping
the red elastic bands on his pink madras shirtsleeves and looking down
affectionately at the only pair of tan shoes within a forty-mile radius. His
offence had been serious, and he was divided between humble apology and
admiration for the beauty of his raiment. He had allowed the ranch stock of
“smoking” to become exhausted.
“I thought sure there was
another case of it under the counter, boys,” he explained. “But it happened to
be catterdges.”
“You’ve sure got a case of
happenedicitis,” said Poky Rodgers, fence rider of the Largo Verde potrero.
“Somebody ought to happen to give you a knock on the head with the butt end of
a quirt. I’ve rode in nine miles for some tobacco; and it don’t appear natural
and seemly that you ought to be allowed to live.”
“The boys was smokin’ cut
plug and dried mesquite leaves mixed when I left,” sighed Mustang Taylor, horse
wrangler of the Three Elm camp. “They’ll be lookin’ for me back by nine.
They’ll be settin’ up, with their papers ready to roll a whiff of the real
thing before bedtime. And I’ve got to tell ’em that this pink-eyed,
sheep-headed, sulphur-footed, shirt-waisted son of a calico broncho, Sam
Revell, hasn’t got no tobacco on hand.”
Gregorio Falcon, Mexican
vaquero and best thrower of the rope on the Cibolo, pushed his heavy,
silver-embroidered straw sombrero back upon his thicket of jet black curls, and
scraped the bottoms of his pockets for a few crumbs of the precious weed.
“Ah, Don Samuel,” he said,
reproachfully, but with his touch of Castilian manners, “escuse me. Dthey say
dthe jackrabbeet and dthe sheep have dthe most leetle sesos—how you
call dthem—brain-es? Ah don’t believe dthat, Don Samuel—escuse me. Ah dthink
people w’at don’t keep esmokin’ tobacco, dthey—bot you weel escuse me, Don
Samuel.”
“Now, what’s the use of
chewin’ the rag, boys,” said the untroubled Sam, stooping over to rub the toes
of his shoes with a red-and-yellow handkerchief. “Ranse took the order for some
more smokin’ to San Antone with him Tuesday. Pancho rode Ranse’s hoss back
yesterday; and Ranse is goin’ to drive the wagon back himself. There wa’n’t
much of a load—just some woolsacks and blankets and nails and canned peaches
and a few things we was out of. I look for Ranse to roll in to-day sure. He’s
an early starter and a hell-to-split driver, and he ought to be here not far
from sundown.”
“What plugs is he drivin’?”
asked Mustang Taylor, with a smack of hope in his tones.
“The buckboard greys,” said
Sam.
“I’ll wait a spell, then,”
said the wrangler. “Them plugs eat up a trail like a road-runner swallowin’ a
whip snake. And you may bust me open a can of greengage plums, Sam, while I’m
waitin’ for somethin’ better.”
“Open me some yellow
clings,” ordered Poky Rodgers. “I’ll wait, too.”
The tobaccoless punchers
arranged themselves comfortably on the steps of the store. Inside Sam chopped
open with a hatchet the tops of the cans of fruit.
The store, a big, white wooden
building like a barn, stood fifty yards from the ranch-house. Beyond it were
the horse corrals; and still farther the wool sheds and the brush-topped
shearing pens—for the Rancho Cibolo raised both cattle and sheep. Behind the
store, at a little distance, were the grass-thatched jacals of
the Mexicans who bestowed their allegiance upon the Cibolo.
The ranch-house was composed
of four large rooms, with plastered adobe walls, and a two-room wooden ell. A
twenty-feet-wide “gallery” circumvented the structure. It was set in a grove of
immense live-oaks and water-elms near a lake—a long, not very wide, and
tremendously deep lake in which at nightfall, great gars leaped to the surface
and plunged with the noise of hippopotamuses frolicking at their bath. From the
trees hung garlands and massive pendants of the melancholy grey moss of the
South. Indeed, the Cibolo ranch-house seemed more of the South than of the
West. It looked as if old “Kiowa” Truesdell might have brought it with him from
the lowlands of Mississippi when he came to Texas with his rifle in the hollow
of his arm in ’55.
But, though he did not bring
the family mansion, Truesdell did bring something in the way of a family
inheritance that was more lasting than brick or stone. He brought one end of
the Truesdell-Curtis family feud. And when a Curtis bought the Rancho de los
Olmos, sixteen miles from the Cibolo, there were lively times on the pear flats
and in the chaparral thickets off the Southwest. In those days Truesdell
cleaned the brush of many a wolf and tiger cat and Mexican lion; and one or two
Curtises fell heirs to notches on his rifle stock. Also he buried a brother
with a Curtis bullet in him on the bank of the lake at Cibolo. And then the
Kiowa Indians made their last raid upon the ranches between the Frio and the
Rio Grande, and Truesdell at the head of his rangers rid the earth of them to
the last brave, earning his sobriquet. Then came prosperity in the form of
waxing herds and broadening lands. And then old age and bitterness, when he
sat, with his great mane of hair as white as the Spanish-dagger blossoms and
his fierce, pale-blue eyes, on the shaded gallery at Cibolo, growling like the
pumas that he had slain. He snapped his fingers at old age; the bitter taste to
life did not come from that. The cup that stuck at his lips was that his only
son Ransom wanted to marry a Curtis, the last youthful survivor of the other
end of the feud.
For
a while the only sounds to be heard at the store were the rattling of the tin
spoons and the gurgling intake of the juicy fruits by the cowpunchers, the
stamping of the grazing ponies, and the singing of a doleful song by Sam as he
contentedly brushed his stiff auburn hair for the twentieth time that day
before a crinkly mirror.
From the door of the store
could be seen the irregular, sloping stretch of prairie to the south, with its
reaches of light-green, billowy mesquite flats in the lower places, and its
rises crowned with nearly black masses of short chaparral. Through the mesquite
flat wound the ranch road that, five miles away, flowed into the old government
trail to San Antonio. The sun was so low that the gentlest elevation cast its
grey shadow miles into the green-gold sea of sunshine.
That evening ears were
quicker than eyes.
The Mexican held up a tawny
finger to still the scraping of tin against tin.
“One waggeen,” said he,
“cross dthe Arroyo Hondo. Ah hear dthe wheel. Verree rockee place, dthe Hondo.”
“You’ve got good ears,
Gregorio,” said Mustang Taylor. “I never heard nothin’ but the song-bird in the
bush and the zephyr skallyhootin’ across the peaceful dell.”
In ten minutes Taylor
remarked: “I see the dust of a wagon risin’ right above the fur end of the
flat.”
“You have verree good eyes,
señor,” said Gregorio, smiling.
Two miles away they saw a
faint cloud dimming the green ripples of the mesquites. In twenty minutes they
heard the clatter of the horses’ hoofs: in five minutes more the grey plugs
dashed out of the thicket, whickering for oats and drawing the light wagon
behind them like a toy.
From the jacals came
a cry of: “El Amo! El Amo!” Four Mexican youths raced to unharness the
greys. The cowpunchers gave a yell of greeting and delight.
Ranse Truesdell, driving,
threw the reins to the ground and laughed.
“It’s under the wagon sheet,
boys,” he said. “I know what you’re waiting for. If Sam lets it run out again
we’ll use those yellow shoes of his for a target. There’s two cases. Pull ’em
out and light up. I know you all want a smoke.”
After striking dry country
Ranse had removed the wagon sheet from the bows and thrown it over the goods in
the wagon. Six pair of hasty hands dragged it off and grabbled beneath the
sacks and blankets for the cases of tobacco.
Long Collins, tobacco
messenger from the San Gabriel outfit, who rode with the longest stirrups west
of the Mississippi, delved with an arm like the tongue of a wagon. He caught
something harder than a blanket and pulled out a fearful thing—a shapeless,
muddy bunch of leather tied together with wire and twine. From its ragged end,
like the head and claws of a disturbed turtle, protruded human toes.
“Who-ee!” yelled Long
Collins. “Ranse, are you a-packin’ around of corpuses? Here’s a—howlin’
grasshoppers!”
Up from his long slumber
popped Curly, like some vile worm from its burrow. He clawed his way out and
sat blinking like a disreputable, drunken owl. His face was as bluish-red and
puffed and seamed and cross-lined as the cheapest round steak of the butcher.
His eyes were swollen slits; his nose a pickled beet; his hair would have made
the wildest thatch of a Jack-in-the-box look like the satin poll of a Cléo de
Mérode. The rest of him was scarecrow done to the life.
Ranse jumped down from his
seat and looked at his strange cargo with wide-open eyes.
“Here, you maverick, what
are you doing in my wagon? How did you get in there?”
The punchers gathered around
in delight. For the time they had forgotten tobacco.
Curly looked around him
slowly in every direction. He snarled like a Scotch terrier through his ragged
beard.
“Where is this?” he rasped
through his parched throat. “It’s a damn farm in an old field. What’d you bring
me here for—say? Did I say I wanted to come here? What are you Reubs rubberin’
at—hey? G’wan or I’ll punch some of yer faces.”
“Drag him out, Collins,”
said Ranse.
Curly took a slide and felt
the ground rise up and collide with his shoulder blades. He got up and sat on
the steps of the store shivering from outraged nerves, hugging his knees and
sneering. Taylor lifted out a case of tobacco and wrenched off its top. Six
cigarettes began to glow, bringing peace and forgiveness to Sam.
“How’d you come in my
wagon?” repeated Ranse, this time in a voice that drew a reply.
Curly recognised the tone.
He had heard it used by freight brakemen and large persons in blue carrying
clubs.
“Me?” he growled. “Oh, was
you talkin’ to me? Why, I was on my way to the Menger, but my valet had forgot
to pack my pyjamas. So I crawled into that wagon in the wagon-yard—see? I never
told you to bring me out to this bloomin’ farm—see?”
“What is it, Mustang?” asked
Poky Rodgers, almost forgetting to smoke in his ecstasy. “What do it live on?”
“It’s a galliwampus, Poky,”
said Mustang. “It’s the thing that hollers ‘willi-walloo’ up in ellum trees in
the low grounds of nights. I don’t know if it bites.”
“No, it ain’t, Mustang,”
volunteered Long Collins. “Them galliwampuses has fins on their backs, and
eighteen toes. This here is a hicklesnifter. It lives under the ground and eats
cherries. Don’t stand so close to it. It wipes out villages with one stroke of
its prehensile tail.”
Sam, the cosmopolite, who
called bartenders in San Antone by their first name, stood in the door. He was
a better zoologist.
“Well, ain’t that a Willie
for your whiskers?” he commented. “Where’d you dig up the hobo, Ranse? Goin’ to
make an auditorium for inbreviates out of the ranch?”
“Say,” said Curly, from
whose panoplied breast all shafts of wit fell blunted. “Any of you kiddin’ guys
got a drink on you? Have your fun. Say, I’ve been hittin’ the stuff till I
don’t know straight up.”
He turned to Ranse. “Say,
you shanghaied me on your d—d old prairie schooner—did I tell you to drive me
to a farm? I want a drink. I’m goin’ all to little pieces. What’s doin’?”
Ranse saw that the tramp’s
nerves were racking him. He despatched one of the Mexican boys to the
ranch-house for a glass of whisky. Curly gulped it down; and into his eyes came
a brief, grateful glow—as human as the expression in the eye of a faithful
setter dog.
“Thanky, boss,” he said,
quietly.
“You’re thirty miles from a
railroad, and forty miles from a saloon,” said Ranse.
Curly fell back weakly
against the steps.
“Since you are here,”
continued the ranchman, “come along with me. We can’t turn you out on the
prairie. A rabbit might tear you to pieces.”
He conducted Curly to a
large shed where the ranch vehicles were kept. There he spread out a canvas cot
and brought blankets.
“I don’t suppose you can
sleep,” said Ranse, “since you’ve been pounding your ear for twenty-four hours.
But you can camp here till morning. I’ll have Pedro fetch you up some grub.”
“Sleep!” said Curly. “I can
sleep a week. Say, sport, have you got a coffin nail on you?”
Fifty
miles had Ransom Truesdell driven that day. And yet this is what he did.
Old “Kiowa” Truesdell sat in
his great wicker chair reading by the light of an immense oil lamp. Ranse laid
a bundle of newspapers fresh from town at his elbow.
“Back, Ranse?” said the old
man, looking up.
“Son,” old “Kiowa”
continued, “I’ve been thinking all day about a certain matter that we have
talked about. I want you to tell me again. I’ve lived for you. I’ve fought
wolves and Indians and worse white men to protect you. You never had any mother
that you can remember. I’ve taught you to shoot straight, ride hard, and live
clean. Later on I’ve worked to pile up dollars that’ll be yours. You’ll be a
rich man, Ranse, when my chunk goes out. I’ve made you. I’ve licked you into
shape like a leopard cat licks its cubs. You don’t belong to yourself —you’ve
got to be a Truesdell first. Now, is there to be any more nonsense about this
Curtis girl?”
“I’ll tell you once more,”
said Ranse, slowly. “As I am a Truesdell and as you are my father, I’ll never
marry a Curtis.”
“Good boy,” said old
“Kiowa.” “You’d better go get some supper.”
Ranse went to the kitchen at
the rear of the house. Pedro, the Mexican cook, sprang up to bring the food he
was keeping warm in the stove.
“Just a cup of coffee,
Pedro,” he said, and drank it standing. And then:
“There’s a tramp on a cot in
the wagon-shed. Take him something to eat. Better make it enough for two.”
Ranse walked out toward
the jacals. A boy came running.
“Manuel, can you catch
Vaminos, in the little pasture, for me?”
“Why not, señor? I saw him
near the puerta but two hours past. He bears a drag-rope.”
“Get him and saddle him as
quick as you can.”
“Prontito, señor.”
Soon, mounted on Vaminos,
Ranse leaned in the saddle, pressed with his knees, and galloped eastward past
the store, where sat Sam trying his guitar in the moonlight.
Vaminos shall have a
word—Vaminos the good dun horse. The Mexicans, who have a hundred names for the
colours of a horse, called him gruyo. He was a mouse-coloured,
slate-coloured, flea-bitten roan-dun, if you can conceive it. Down his back
from his mane to his tail went a line of black. He would live forever; and surveyors
have not laid off as many miles in the world as he could travel in a day.
Eight miles east of the
Cibolo ranch-house Ranse loosened the pressure of his knees, and Vaminos
stopped under a big ratama tree. The yellow ratama blossoms showered fragrance
that would have undone the roses of France. The moon made the earth a great
concave bowl with a crystal sky for a lid. In a glade five jack-rabbits leaped
and played together like kittens. Eight miles farther east shone a faint star
that appeared to have dropped below the horizon. Night riders, who often
steered their course by it, knew it to be the light in the Rancho de los Olmos.
In ten minutes Yenna Curtis
galloped to the tree on her sorrel pony Dancer. The two leaned and clasped
hands heartily.
“I ought to have ridden
nearer your home,” said Ranse. “But you never will let me.”
Yenna laughed. And in the
soft light you could see her strong white teeth and fearless eyes. No
sentimentality there, in spite of the moonlight, the odour of the ratamas, and
the admirable figure of Ranse Truesdell, the lover. But she was there, eight
miles from her home, to meet him.
“How often have I told you,
Ranse,” she said, “that I am your half-way girl? Always half-way.”
“Well?” said Ranse, with a
question in his tones.
“I did,” said Yenna, with
almost a sigh. “I told him after dinner when I thought he would be in a good
humour. Did you ever wake up a lion, Ranse, with the mistaken idea that he
would be a kitten? He almost tore the ranch to pieces. It’s all up. I love my daddy,
Ranse, and I’m afraid—I’m afraid of him too. He ordered me to promise that I’d
never marry a Truesdell. I promised. That’s all. What luck did you have?”
“The same,” said Ranse,
slowly. “I promised him that his son would never marry a Curtis. Somehow I
couldn’t go against him. He’s mighty old. I’m sorry, Yenna.”
The girl leaned in her
saddle and laid one hand on Ranse’s, on the horn of his saddle.
“I never thought I’d like
you better for giving me up,” she said ardently, “but I do. I must ride back
now, Ranse. I slipped out of the house and saddled Dancer myself. Good-night,
neighbour.”
“Good-night,” said Ranse.
“Ride carefully over them badger holes.”
They wheeled and rode away
in opposite directions. Yenna turned in her saddle and called clearly:
“Don’t forget I’m your
half-way girl, Ranse.”
“Damn all family feuds and
inherited scraps,” muttered Ranse vindictively to the breeze as he rode back to
the Cibolo.
Ranse turned his horse into
the small pasture and went to his own room. He opened the lowest drawer of an
old bureau to get out the packet of letters that Yenna had written him one
summer when she had gone to Mississippi for a visit. The drawer stuck, and he
yanked at it savagely—as a man will. It came out of the bureau, and bruised
both his shins—as a drawer will. An old, folded yellow letter without an
envelope fell from somewhere—probably from where it had lodged in one of the
upper drawers. Ranse took it to the lamp and read it curiously.
Then he took his hat and
walked to one of the Mexican jacals.
“Tia Juana,” he said, “I
would like to talk with you a while.”
An old, old Mexican woman,
white-haired and wonderfully wrinkled, rose from a stool.
“Sit down,” said Ranse,
removing his hat and taking the one chair in the jacal. “Who am I,
Tia Juana?” he asked, speaking Spanish.
“Don Ransom, our good friend
and employer. Why do you ask?” answered the old woman wonderingly.
“Tia Juana, who am I?” he
repeated, with his stern eyes looking into hers.
A frightened look came in
the old woman’s face. She fumbled with her black shawl.
“Who am I, Tia Juana?” said
Ranse once more.
“Thirty-two years I have
lived on the Rancho Cibolo,” said Tia Juana. “I thought to be buried under the
coma mott beyond the garden before these things should be known. Close the
door, Don Ransom, and I will speak. I see in your face that you know.”
An hour Ranse spent behind
Tia Juana’s closed door. As he was on his way back to the house Curly called to
him from the wagon-shed.
The tramp sat on his cot,
swinging his feet and smoking.
“Say, sport,” he grumbled.
“This is no way to treat a man after kidnappin’ him. I went up to the store and
borrowed a razor from that fresh guy and had a shave. But that ain’t all a man
needs. Say—can’t you loosen up for about three fingers more of that booze? I
never asked you to bring me to your d—d farm.”
“Stand up out here in the
light,” said Ranse, looking at him closely.
Curly got up sullenly and
took a step or two.
His face, now shaven smooth,
seemed transformed. His hair had been combed, and it fell back from the right
side of his forehead with a peculiar wave. The moonlight charitably softened
the ravages of drink; and his aquiline, well-shaped nose and small, square
cleft chin almost gave distinction to his looks.
Ranse sat on the foot of the
cot and looked at him curiously.
“Where did you come
from—have you got any home or folks anywhere?”
“Me? Why, I’m a dook,” said
Curly. “I’m Sir Reginald—oh, cheese it. No; I don’t know anything about my
ancestors. I’ve been a tramp ever since I can remember. Say, old pal, are you
going to set ’em up again to-night or not?”
“You answer my questions and
maybe I will. How did you come to be a tramp?”
“Me?” answered Curly. “Why,
I adopted that profession when I was an infant. Case of had to. First thing I
can remember, I belonged to a big, lazy hobo called Beefsteak Charley. He sent
me around to houses to beg. I wasn’t hardly big enough to reach the latch of a
gate.”
“Did he ever tell you how he
got you?” asked Ranse.
“Once when he was sober he
said he bought me for an old six-shooter and six bits from a band of drunken
Mexican sheep-shearers. But what’s the diff? That’s all I know.”
“All right,” said Ranse. “I
reckon you’re a maverick for certain. I’m going to put the Rancho Cibolo brand
on you. I’ll start you to work in one of the camps to-morrow.”
“Work!” sniffed Curly,
disdainfully. “What do you take me for? Do you think I’d chase cows, and
hop-skip-and-jump around after crazy sheep like that pink and yellow guy at the
store says these Reubs do? Forget it.”
“Oh, you’ll like it when you
get used to it,” said Ranse. “Yes, I’ll send you up one more drink by Pedro. I
think you’ll make a first-class cowpuncher before I get through with you.”
“Me?” said Curly. “I pity
the cows you set me to chaperon. They can go chase themselves. Don’t forget my
nightcap, please, boss.”
Ranse paid a visit to the
store before going to the house. Sam Rivell was taking off his tan shoes
regretting and preparing for bed.
“Any of the boys from the
San Gabriel camp riding in early in the morning?” asked Ranse.
“Long Collins,” said Sam
briefly. “For the mail.”
“Tell him,” said Ranse, “to
take that tramp out to camp with him and keep him till I get there.”
Curly was sitting on his
blankets in the San Gabriel camp cursing talentedly when Ranse Truesdell rode
up and dismounted on the next afternoon. The cowpunchers were ignoring the
stray. He was grimy with dust and black dirt. His clothes were making their
last stand in favour of the conventions.
Ranse went up to Buck Rabb,
the camp boss, and spoke briefly.
“He’s a plumb buzzard,” said
Buck. “He won’t work, and he’s the low-downest passel of inhumanity I ever see.
I didn’t know what you wanted done with him, Ranse, so I just let him set. That
seems to suit him. He’s been condemned to death by the boys a dozen times, but
I told ’em maybe you was savin’ him for the torture.”
Ranse took off his coat.
“I’ve got a hard job before
me, Buck, I reckon, but it has to be done. I’ve got to make a man out of that
thing. That’s what I’ve come to camp for.”
He went up to Curly.
“Brother,” he said, “don’t
you think if you had a bath it would allow you to take a seat in the company of
your fellow-man with less injustice to the atmosphere.”
“Run away, farmer,” said
Curly, sardonically. “Willie will send for nursey when he feels like having his
tub.”
The charco, or
water hole, was twelve yards away. Ranse took one of Curly’s ankles and dragged
him like a sack of potatoes to the brink. Then with the strength and sleight of
a hammer-throw he hurled the offending member of society far into the lake.
Curly crawled out and up the
bank spluttering like a porpoise.
Ranse met him with a piece
of soap and a coarse towel in his hands.
“Go to the other end of the
lake and use this,” he said. “Buck will give you some dry clothes at the wagon.”
The tramp obeyed without
protest. By the time supper was ready he had returned to camp. He was hardly to
be recognised in his new shirt and brown duck clothes. Ranse observed him out
of the corner of his eye.
“Lordy, I hope he ain’t a
coward,” he was saying to himself. “I hope he won’t turn out to be a coward.”
His doubts were soon
allayed. Curly walked straight to where he stood. His light-blue eyes were
blazing.
“Now I’m clean,” he said
meaningly, “maybe you’ll talk to me. Think you’ve got a picnic here, do you?
You clodhoppers think you can run over a man because you know he can’t get
away. All right. Now, what do you think of that?”
Curly planted a stinging
slap against Ranse’s left cheek. The print of his hand stood out a dull red
against the tan.
Ranse smiled happily.
The cowpunchers talk to this
day of the battle that followed.
Somewhere in his restless
tour of the cities Curly had acquired the art of self-defence. The ranchman was
equipped only with the splendid strength and equilibrium of perfect health and
the endurance conferred by decent living. The two attributes nearly matched.
There were no formal rounds. At last the fibre of the clean liver prevailed.
The last time Curly went down from one of the ranchman’s awkward but powerful
blows he remained on the grass, but looking up with an unquenched eye.
Ranse went to the water
barrel and washed the red from a cut on his chin in the stream from the faucet.
On his face was a grin of
satisfaction.
Much benefit might accrue to
educators and moralists if they could know the details of the curriculum of
reclamation through which Ranse put his waif during the month that he spent in
the San Gabriel camp. The ranchman had no fine theories to work out—perhaps his
whole stock of pedagogy embraced only a knowledge of horse-breaking and a
belief in heredity.
The cowpunchers saw that
their boss was trying to make a man out of the strange animal that he had sent
among them; and they tacitly organised themselves into a faculty of assistants.
But their system was their own.
Curly’s first lesson stuck.
He became on friendly and then on intimate terms with soap and water. And the
thing that pleased Ranse most was that his “subject” held his ground at each
successive higher step. But the steps were sometimes far apart.
Once he got at the quart
bottle of whisky kept sacredly in the grub tent for rattlesnake bites, and
spent sixteen hours on the grass, magnificently drunk. But when he staggered to
his feet his first move was to find his soap and towel and start for the charco.
And once, when a treat came from the ranch in the form of a basket of fresh
tomatoes and young onions, Curly devoured the entire consignment before the
punchers reached the camp at supper time.
And then the punchers
punished him in their own way. For three days they did not speak to him, except
to reply to his own questions or remarks. And they spoke with absolute and
unfailing politeness. They played tricks on one another; they pounded one
another hurtfully and affectionately; they heaped upon one another’s heads
friendly curses and obloquy; but they were polite to Curly. He saw it, and it
stung him as much as Ranse hoped it would.
Then came a night that
brought a cold, wet norther. Wilson, the youngest of the outfit, had lain in
camp two days, ill with fever. When Joe got up at daylight to begin breakfast
he found Curly sitting asleep against a wheel of the grub wagon with only a
saddle blanket around him, while Curly’s blankets were stretched over Wilson to
protect him from the rain and wind.
Three nights after that
Curly rolled himself in his blanket and went to sleep. Then the other punchers
rose up softly and began to make preparations. Ranse saw Long Collins tie a
rope to the horn of a saddle. Others were getting out their six-shooters.
“Boys,” said Ranse, “I’m
much obliged. I was hoping you would. But I didn’t like to ask.”
Half a dozen six-shooters
began to pop—awful yells rent the air—Long Collins galloped wildly across
Curly’s bed, dragging the saddle after him. That was merely their way of gently
awaking their victim. Then they hazed him for an hour, carefully and
ridiculously, after the code of cow camps. Whenever he uttered protest they
held him stretched over a roll of blankets and thrashed him woefully with a
pair of leather leggings.
And all this meant that
Curly had won his spurs, that he was receiving the puncher’s accolade.
Nevermore would they be polite to him. But he would be their “pardner” and
stirrup-brother, foot to foot.
When the fooling was ended
all hands made a raid on Joe’s big coffee-pot by the fire for a Java nightcap.
Ranse watched the new knight carefully to see if he understood and was worthy.
Curly limped with his cup of coffee to a log and sat upon it. Long Collins
followed and sat by his side. Buck Rabb went and sat at the other.
Curly—grinned.
And then Ranse furnished
Curly with mounts and saddle and equipment, and turned him over to Buck Rabb,
instructing him to finish the job.
Three weeks later Ranse rode
from the ranch into Rabb’s camp, which was then in Snake Valley. The boys were
saddling for the day’s ride. He sought out Long Collins among them.
“How about that bronco?” he
asked.
Long Collins grinned.
“Reach out your hand, Ranse
Truesdell,” he said, “and you’ll touch him. And you can shake his’n, too, if
you like, for he’s plumb white and there’s none better in no camp.”
Ranse looked again at the
clear-faced, bronzed, smiling cowpuncher who stood at Collins’s side. Could
that be Curly? He held out his hand, and Curly grasped it with the muscles of a
bronco-buster.
“I want you at the ranch,”
said Ranse.
“All right, sport,” said
Curly, heartily. “But I want to come back again. Say, pal, this is a dandy
farm. And I don’t want any better fun than hustlin’ cows with this bunch of
guys. They’re all to the merry-merry.”
At the Cibolo ranch-house
they dismounted. Ranse bade Curly wait at the door of the living room. He
walked inside. Old “Kiowa” Truesdell was reading at a table.
“Good-morning, Mr.
Truesdell,” said Ranse.
The old man turned his white
head quickly.
“How is this?” he began.
“Why do you call me ‘Mr.—’?”
When he looked at Ranse’s
face he stopped, and the hand that held his newspaper shook slightly.
“Boy,” he said slowly, “how
did you find it out?”
“It’s all right,” said
Ranse, with a smile. “I made Tia Juana tell me. It was kind of by accident, but
it’s all right.”
“You’ve been like a son to
me,” said old “Kiowa,” trembling.
“Tia Juana told me all about
it,” said Ranse. “She told me how you adopted me when I was knee-high to a
puddle duck out of a wagon train of prospectors that was bound West. And she
told me how the kid—your own kid, you know—got lost or was run away with. And
she said it was the same day that the sheep-shearers got on a bender and left
the ranch.”
“Our boy strayed from the
house when he was two years old,” said the old man. “And then along came those
emigrant wagons with a youngster they didn’t want; and we took you. I never
intended you to know, Ranse. We never heard of our boy again.”
“He’s right outside, unless
I’m mighty mistaken,” said Ranse, opening the door and beckoning.
Curly walked in.
No one could have doubted.
The old man and the young had the same sweep of hair, the same nose, chin, line
of face, and prominent light-blue eyes.
Old “Kiowa” rose eagerly.
Curly looked about the room
curiously. A puzzled expression came over his face. He pointed to the wall
opposite.
“Where’s the tick-tock?” he
asked, absent-mindedly.
“The clock,” cried old
“Kiowa” loudly. “The eight-day clock used to stand there. Why—”
He turned to Ranse, but
Ranse was not there.
Already a hundred yards
away, Vaminos, the good flea-bitten dun, was bearing him eastward like a racer
through dust and chaparral towards the Rancho de los Olmos.
X
CUPID À LA CARTE
“The dispositions of woman,”
said Jeff Peters, after various opinions on the subject had been advanced,
“run, regular, to diversions. What a woman wants is what you’re out of. She
wants more of a thing when it’s scarce. She likes to have souvenirs of things
that never happened. She likes to be reminded of things she never heard of. A
one-sided view of objects is disjointing to the female composition.
“’Tis a misfortune of mine,
begotten by nature and travel,” continued Jeff, looking thoughtfully between
his elevated feet at the grocery stove, “to look deeper into some subjects than
most people do. I’ve breathed gasoline smoke talking to street crowds in nearly
every town in the United States. I’ve held ’em spellbound with music, oratory,
sleight of hand, and prevarications, while I’ve sold ’em jewelry, medicine,
soap, hair tonic, and junk of other nominations. And during my travels, as a
matter of recreation and expiation, I’ve taken cognisance some of women. It
takes a man a lifetime to find out about one particular woman; but if he puts
in, say, ten years, industrious and curious, he can acquire the general
rudiments of the sex. One lesson I picked up was when I was working the West
with a line of Brazilian diamonds and a patent fire kindler just after my trip
from Savannah down through the cotton belt with Dalby’s Anti-explosive Lamp Oil
Powder. ’Twas when the Oklahoma country was in first bloom. Guthrie was rising
in the middle of it like a lump of self-raising dough. It was a boom town of
the regular kind—you stood in line to get a chance to wash your face; if you
ate over ten minutes you had a lodging bill added on; if you slept on a plank
at night they charged it to you as board the next morning.
“By nature and doctrines I
am addicted to the habit of discovering choice places wherein to feed. So I
looked around and found a proposition that exactly cut the mustard. I found a
restaurant tent just opened up by an outfit that had drifted in on the tail of
the boom. They had knocked together a box house, where they lived and did the
cooking, and served the meals in a tent pitched against the side. That tent was
joyful with placards on it calculated to redeem the world-worn pilgrim from the
sinfulness of boarding houses and pick-me-up hotels. ‘Try Mother’s Home-Made
Biscuits,’ ‘What’s the Matter with Our Apple Dumplings and Hard Sauce?’ ‘Hot
Cakes and Maple Syrup Like You Ate When a Boy,’ ‘Our Fried Chicken Never Was
Heard to Crow’— there was literature doomed to please the digestions of man! I
said to myself that mother’s wandering boy should munch there that night. And
so it came to pass. And there is where I contracted my case of Mame Dugan.
“Old Man Dugan was six feet
by one of Indiana loafer, and he spent his time sitting on his shoulder blades
in a rocking-chair in the shanty memorialising the great corn-crop failure of
’96. Ma Dugan did the cooking, and Mame waited on the table.
“As soon as I saw Mame I
knew there was a mistake in the census reports. There wasn’t but one girl in
the United States. When you come to specifications it isn’t easy. She was about
the size of an angel, and she had eyes, and ways about her. When you come to
the kind of a girl she was, you’ll find a belt of ’em reaching from the
Brooklyn Bridge west as far as the courthouse in Council Bluffs, Ia. They earn
their own living in stores, restaurants, factories, and offices. They’re chummy
and honest and free and tender and sassy, and they look life straight in the
eye. They’ve met man face to face, and discovered that he’s a poor creature.
They’ve dropped to it that the reports in the Seaside Library about his being a
fairy prince lack confirmation.
“Mame was that sort. She was
full of life and fun, and breezy; she passed the repartee with the boarders
quick as a wink; you’d have smothered laughing. I am disinclined to make
excavations into the insides of a personal affection. I am glued to the theory
that the diversions and discrepancies of the indisposition known as love should
be as private a sentiment as a toothbrush. ’Tis my opinion that the biographies
of the heart should be confined with the historical romances of the liver to
the advertising pages of the magazines. So, you’ll excuse the lack of an
itemised bill of my feelings toward Mame.
“Pretty soon I got a regular
habit of dropping into the tent to eat at irregular times when there wasn’t so
many around. Mame would sail in with a smile, in a black dress and white apron,
and say: ‘Hello, Jeff —why don’t you come at mealtime? Want to see how much
trouble you can be, of course.
Friedchickenbeefsteakporkchopshamandeggspotpie’—and so on. She called me Jeff,
but there was no significations attached. Designations was all she meant. The
front names of any of us she used as they came to hand. I’d eat about two meals
before I left, and string ’em out like a society spread where they changed
plates and wives, and josh one another festively between bites. Mame stood for
it, pleasant, for it wasn’t up to her to take any canvas off the tent by
declining dollars just because they were whipped in after meal times.
“It wasn’t long until there
was another fellow named Ed Collier got the between-meals affliction, and him
and me put in bridges between breakfast and dinner, and dinner and supper, that
made a three-ringed circus of that tent, and Mame’s turn as waiter a continuous
performance. That Collier man was saturated with designs and contrivings. He
was in well-boring or insurance or claim-jumping, or something—I’ve forgotten
which. He was a man well lubricated with gentility, and his words were such as
recommended you to his point of view. So, Collier and me infested the grub tent
with care and activity. Mame was level full of impartiality. ’Twas like a
casino hand the way she dealt out her favours—one to Collier and one to me and
one to the board, and not a card up her sleeve.
“Me and Collier naturally
got acquainted, and gravitated together some on the outside. Divested of his
stratagems, he seemed to be a pleasant chap, full of an amiable sort of
hostility.
“‘I notice you have an
affinity for grubbing in the banquet hall after the guests have fled,’ says I
to him one day, to draw his conclusions.
“‘Well, yes,’ says Collier,
reflecting; ‘the tumult of a crowded board seems to harass my sensitive
nerves.’
“‘It exasperates mine some,
too,’ says I. ‘Nice little girl, don’t you think?’
“‘I see,’ says Collier,
laughing. ‘Well, now that you mention it, I have noticed that she doesn’t seem
to displease the optic nerve.’
“‘She’s a joy to mine,’ says
I, ‘and I’m going after her. Notice is hereby served.’
“‘I’ll be as candid as you,’
admits Collier, ‘and if the drug stores don’t run out of pepsin I’ll give you a
run for your money that’ll leave you a dyspeptic at the wind-up.’
“So Collier and me begins
the race; the grub department lays in new supplies; Mame waits on us, jolly and
kind and agreeable, and it looks like an even break, with Cupid and the cook
working overtime in Dugan’s restaurant.
“’Twas one night in
September when I got Mame to take a walk after supper when the things were all
cleared away. We strolled out a distance and sat on a pile of lumber at the
edge of town. Such opportunities was seldom, so I spoke my piece, explaining
how the Brazilian diamonds and the fire kindler were laying up sufficient
treasure to guarantee the happiness of two, and that both of ’em together
couldn’t equal the light from somebody’s eyes, and that the name of Dugan
should be changed to Peters, or reasons why not would be in order.
“Mame didn’t say anything
right away. Directly she gave a kind of shudder, and I began to learn
something.
“‘Jeff,’ she says, ‘I’m
sorry you spoke. I like you as well as any of them, but there isn’t a man in
the world I’d ever marry, and there never will be. Do you know what a man is in
my eye? He’s a tomb. He’s a sarcophagus for the interment of
Beafsteakporkchopsliver’nbaconham-andeggs. He’s that and nothing more. For two
years I’ve watched men eat, eat, eat, until they represent nothing on earth to
me but ruminant bipeds. They’re absolutely nothing but something that goes in
front of a knife and fork and plate at the table. They’re fixed that way in my
mind and memory. I’ve tried to overcome it, but I can’t. I’ve heard girls rave
about their sweethearts, but I never could understand it. A man and a sausage
grinder and a pantry awake in me exactly the same sentiments. I went to a
matinée once to see an actor the girls were crazy about. I got interested
enough to wonder whether he liked his steak rare, medium, or well done, and his
eggs over or straight up. That was all. No, Jeff; I’ll marry no man and see him
sit at the breakfast table and eat, and come back to dinner and eat, and happen
in again at supper to eat, eat, eat.’
“‘But, Mame,’ says I, ‘it’ll
wear off. You’ve had too much of it. You’ll marry some time, of course. Men
don’t eat always.’
“‘As far as my observation
goes, they do. No, I’ll tell you what I’m going to do.’ Mame turns, sudden, to
animation and bright eyes. ‘There’s a girl named Susie Foster in Terre Haute, a
chum of mine. She waits in the railroad eating house there. I worked two years
in a restaurant in that town. Susie has it worse than I do, because the men who
eat at railroad stations gobble. They try to flirt and gobble at the same time.
Whew! Susie and I have it all planned out. We’re saving our money, and when we
get enough we’re going to buy a little cottage and five acres we know of, and
live together, and grow violets for the Eastern market. A man better not bring
his appetite within a mile of that ranch.’
“‘Don’t girls ever—’ I
commenced, but Mame heads me off, sharp.
“‘No, they don’t. They
nibble a little bit sometimes; that’s all.’
“‘I thought the confect—’
“‘For goodness’ sake, change
the subject,’ says Mame.
“As I said before, that
experience puts me wise that the feminine arrangement ever struggles after
deceptions and illusions. Take England—beef made her; wieners elevated Germany;
Uncle Sam owes his greatness to fried chicken and pie, but the young ladies of
the Shetalkyou schools, they’ll never believe it. Shakespeare, they allow, and
Rubinstein, and the Rough Riders is what did the trick.
“’Twas a situation
calculated to disturb. I couldn’t bear to give up Mame; and yet it pained me to
think of abandoning the practice of eating. I had acquired the habit too early.
For twenty-seven years I had been blindly rushing upon my fate, yielding to the
insidious lures of that deadly monster, food. It was too late. I was a ruminant
biped for keeps. It was lobster salad to a doughnut that my life was going to
be blighted by it.
“I continued to board at the
Dugan tent, hoping that Mame would relent. I had sufficient faith in true love
to believe that since it has often outlived the absence of a square meal it
might, in time, overcome the presence of one. I went on ministering to my fatal
vice, although I felt that each time I shoved a potato into my mouth in Mame’s
presence I might be burying my fondest hopes.
“I think Collier must have
spoken to Mame and got the same answer, for one day he orders a cup of coffee
and a cracker, and sits nibbling the corner of it like a girl in the parlour,
that’s filled up in the kitchen, previous, on cold roast and fried cabbage. I
caught on and did the same, and maybe we thought we’d made a hit! The next day
we tried it again, and out comes old man Dugan fetching in his hands the fairy
viands.
“‘Kinder off yer feed, ain’t
ye, gents?’ he asks, fatherly and some sardonic. ‘Thought I’d spell Mame a bit,
seein’ the work was light, and my rheumatiz can stand the strain.’
“So back me and Collier had
to drop to the heavy grub again. I noticed about that time that I was seized by
a most uncommon and devastating appetite. I ate until Mame must have hated to
see me darken the door. Afterward I found out that I had been made the victim
of the first dark and irreligious trick played on me by Ed Collier. Him and me
had been taking drinks together uptown regular, trying to drown our thirst for
food. That man had bribed about ten bartenders to always put a big slug of
Appletree’s Anaconda Appetite Bitters in every one of my drinks. But the last
trick he played me was hardest to forget.
“One day Collier failed to
show up at the tent. A man told me he left town that morning. My only rival now
was the bill of fare. A few days before he left Collier had presented me with a
two-gallon jug of fine whisky which he said a cousin had sent him from
Kentucky. I now have reason to believe that it contained Appletree’s Anaconda
Appetite Bitters almost exclusively. I continued to devour tons of provisions.
In Mame’s eyes I remained a mere biped, more ruminant than ever.
“About a week after Collier
pulled his freight there came a kind of side-show to town, and hoisted a tent
near the railroad. I judged it was a sort of fake museum and curiosity
business. I called to see Mame one night, and Ma Dugan said that she and
Thomas, her younger brother, had gone to the show. That same thing happened for
three nights that week. Saturday night I caught her on the way coming back, and
got to sit on the steps a while and talk to her. I noticed she looked
different. Her eyes were softer, and shiny like. Instead of a Mame Dugan to fly
from the voracity of man and raise violets, she seemed to be a Mame more in
line as God intended her, approachable, and suited to bask in the light of the
Brazilians and the Kindler.
“‘You seem to be right smart
inveigled,’ says I, ‘with the Unparalleled Exhibition of the World’s Living
Curiosities and Wonders.’
“‘It’s a change,’ says Mame.
“‘You’ll need another,’ says
I, ‘if you keep on going every night.’
“‘Don’t be cross, Jeff,’
says she; ‘it takes my mind off business.’
“‘Don’t the curiosities
eat?’ I ask.
“‘Not all of them. Some of
them are wax.’
“‘Look out, then, that you
don’t get stuck,’ says I, kind of flip and foolish.
“Mame blushed. I didn’t know
what to think about her. My hopes raised some that perhaps my attentions had
palliated man’s awful crime of visibly introducing nourishment into his system.
She talked some about the stars, referring to them with respect and politeness,
and I drivelled a quantity about united hearts, homes made bright by true
affection, and the Kindler. Mame listened without scorn, and I says to myself,
‘Jeff, old man, you’re removing the hoodoo that has clung to the consumer of
victuals; you’re setting your heel upon the serpent that lurks in the gravy
bowl.’
“Monday night I drop around.
Mame is at the Unparalleled Exhibition with Thomas.
“‘Now, may the curse of the
forty-one seven-sided sea cooks,’ says I, ‘and the bad luck of the nine
impenitent grasshoppers rest upon this self-same sideshow at once and forever
more. Amen. I’ll go to see it myself to-morrow night and investigate its
baleful charm. Shall man that was made to inherit the earth be bereft of his
sweetheart first by a knife and fork and then by a ten-cent circus?’
“The next night before
starting out for the exhibition tent I inquire and find out that Mame is not at
home. She is not at the circus with Thomas this time, for Thomas waylays me in
the grass outside of the grub tent with a scheme of his own before I had time
to eat supper.
“‘What’ll you give me,
Jeff,’ says he, ‘if I tell you something?’
“‘The value of it, son,’ I
says.
“‘Sis is stuck on a freak,’
says Thomas, ‘one of the side-show freaks. I don’t like him. She does. I
overheard ’em talking. Thought maybe you’d like to know. Say, Jeff, does it put
you wise two dollars’ worth? There’s a target rifle up town that—’
“I frisked my pockets and
commenced to dribble a stream of halves and quarters into Thomas’s hat. The
information was of the pile-driver system of news, and it telescoped my
intellects for a while. While I was leaking small change and smiling foolish on
the outside, and suffering disturbances internally, I was saying, idiotically
and pleasantly:
“‘Thank you, Thomas—thank
you—er—a freak, you said, Thomas. Now, could you make out the monstrosity’s
entitlements a little clearer, if you please, Thomas?’
“‘This is the fellow,’ says
Thomas, pulling out a yellow handbill from his pocket and shoving it under my
nose. ‘He’s the Champion Faster of the Universe. I guess that’s why Sis got
soft on him. He don’t eat nothing. He’s going to fast forty-nine days. This is
the sixth. That’s him.’
“I looked at the name Thomas
pointed out—‘Professor Eduardo Collieri.’ ‘Ah!’ says I, in admiration, ‘that’s
not so bad, Ed Collier. I give you credit for the trick. But I don’t give you
the girl until she’s Mrs. Freak.’
“I hit the sod in the direction
of the show. I came up to the rear of the tent, and, as I did so, a man wiggled
out like a snake from under the bottom of the canvas, scrambled to his feet,
and ran into me like a locoed bronco. I gathered him by the neck and
investigated him by the light of the stars. It is Professor Eduardo Collieri,
in human habiliments, with a desperate look in one eye and impatience in the
other.
“‘Hello, Curiosity,’ says I.
‘Get still a minute and let’s have a look at your freakship. How do you like
being the willopus-wallopus or the bim-bam from Borneo, or whatever name you
are denounced by in the side-show business?’
“‘Jeff Peters,’ says
Collier, in a weak voice. ‘Turn me loose, or I’ll slug you one. I’m in the
extremest kind of a large hurry. Hands off!’
“‘Tut, tut, Eddie,’ I
answers, holding him hard; ‘let an old friend gaze on the exhibition of your
curiousness. It’s an eminent graft you fell onto, my son. But don’t speak of
assaults and battery, because you’re not fit. The best you’ve got is a lot of
nerve and a mighty empty stomach.’ And so it was. The man was as weak as a
vegetarian cat.
“‘I’d argue this case with
you, Jeff,’ says he, regretful in his style, ‘for an unlimited number of rounds
if I had half an hour to train in and a slab of beefsteak two feet square to
train with. Curse the man, I say, that invented the art of going foodless. May
his soul in eternity be chained up within two feet of a bottomless pit of
red-hot hash. I’m abandoning the conflict, Jeff; I’m deserting to the enemy.
You’ll find Miss Dugan inside contemplating the only living mummy and the
informed hog. She’s a fine girl, Jeff. I’d have beat you out if I could have
kept up the grubless habit a little while longer. You’ll have to admit that the
fasting dodge was aces-up for a while. I figured it out that way. But say,
Jeff, it’s said that love makes the world go around. Let me tell you, the
announcement lacks verification. It’s the wind from the dinner horn that does
it. I love that Mame Dugan. I’ve gone six days without food in order to
coincide with her sentiments. Only one bite did I have. That was when I knocked
the tattooed man down with a war club and got a sandwich he was gobbling. The
manager fined me all my salary; but salary wasn’t what I was after. ’Twas that
girl. I’d give my life for her, but I’d endanger my immortal soul for a beef
stew. Hunger is a horrible thing, Jeff. Love and business and family and
religion and art and patriotism are nothing but shadows of words when a man’s
starving!’
“In such language Ed Collier
discoursed to me, pathetic. I gathered the diagnosis that his affections and
his digestions had been implicated in a scramble and the commissary had won
out. I never disliked Ed Collier. I searched my internal admonitions of
suitable etiquette to see if I could find a remark of a consoling nature, but
there was none convenient.
“‘I’d be glad, now,’ says
Ed, ‘if you’ll let me go. I’ve been hard hit, but I’ll hit the ration supply
harder. I’m going to clean out every restaurant in town. I’m going to wade
waist deep in sirloins and swim in ham and eggs. It’s an awful thing, Jeff
Peters, for a man to come to this pass—to give up his girl for something to
eat—it’s worse than that man Esau, that swapped his copyright for a partridge—
but then, hunger’s a fierce thing. You’ll excuse me, now, Jeff, for I smell a
pervasion of ham frying in the distance, and my legs are crying out to stampede
in that direction.’
“‘A hearty meal to you, Ed
Collier,’ I says to him, ‘and no hard feelings. For myself, I am projected to
be an unseldom eater, and I have condolence for your predicaments.’
“There was a sudden big
whiff of frying ham smell on the breeze; and the Champion Faster gives a snort
and gallops off in the dark toward fodder.
“I wish some of the cultured
outfit that are always advertising the extenuating circumstances of love and
romance had been there to see. There was Ed Collier, a fine man full of
contrivances and flirtations, abandoning the girl of his heart and ripping out
into the contiguous territory in the pursuit of sordid grub. ’Twas a rebuke to
the poets and a slap at the best-paying element of fiction. An empty stomach is
a sure antidote to an overfull heart.
“I was naturally anxious to
know how far Mame was infatuated with Collier and his stratagems. I went inside
the Unparalleled Exhibition, and there she was. She looked surprised to see me,
but unguilty.
“‘It’s an elegant evening
outside,’ says I. ‘The coolness is quite nice and gratifying, and the stars are
lined out, first class, up where they belong. Wouldn’t you shake these
by-products of the animal kingdom long enough to take a walk with a common
human who never was on a programme in his life?’
“Mame gave a sort of sly
glance around, and I knew what that meant.
“‘Oh,’ says I, ‘I hate to
tell you; but the curiosity that lives on wind has flew the coop. He just
crawled out under the tent. By this time he has amalgamated himself with half
the delicatessen truck in town.’
“‘You mean Ed Collier?’ says
Mame.
“‘I do,’ I answers; ‘and a
pity it is that he has gone back to crime again. I met him outside the tent,
and he exposed his intentions of devastating the food crop of the world. ’Tis
enormously sad when one’s ideal descends from his pedestal to make a
seventeen-year locust of himself.’
“Mame looked me straight in
the eye until she had corkscrewed my reflections.
“‘Jeff,’ says she, ‘it isn’t
quite like you to talk that way. I don’t care to hear Ed Collier ridiculed. A
man may do ridiculous things, but they don’t look ridiculous to the girl he
does ’em for. That was one man in a hundred. He stopped eating just to please
me. I’d be hard-hearted and ungrateful if I didn’t feel kindly toward him.
Could you do what he did?’
“‘I know,’ says I, seeing
the point, ‘I’m condemned. I can’t help it. The brand of the consumer is upon
my brow. Mrs. Eve settled that business for me when she made the dicker with
the snake. I fell from the fire into the frying-pan. I guess I’m the Champion
Feaster of the Universe.’ I spoke humble, and Mame mollified herself a little.
“‘Ed Collier and I are good
friends,’ she said, ‘the same as me and you. I gave him the same answer I did
you—no marrying for me. I liked to be with Ed and talk with him. There was
something mighty pleasant to me in the thought that here was a man who never
used a knife and fork, and all for my sake.’
“‘Wasn’t you in love with
him?’ I asks, all injudicious. ‘Wasn’t there a deal on for you to become Mrs.
Curiosity?’
“All of us do it sometimes.
All of us get jostled out of the line of profitable talk now and then. Mame put
on that little lemon glacé smile that runs between ice and
sugar, and says, much too pleasant: ‘You’re short on credentials for asking
that question, Mr. Peters. Suppose you do a forty-nine day fast, just to give
you ground to stand on, and then maybe I’ll answer it.’
“So, even after Collier was
kidnapped out of the way by the revolt of his appetite, my own prospects with
Mame didn’t seem to be improved. And then business played out in Guthrie.
“I had stayed too long
there. The Brazilians I had sold commenced to show signs of wear, and the
Kindler refused to light up right frequent on wet mornings. There is always a
time, in my business, when the star of success says, ‘Move on to the next
town.’ I was travelling by wagon at that time so as not to miss any of the
small towns; so I hitched up a few days later and went down to tell Mame
good-bye. I wasn’t abandoning the game; I intended running over to Oklahoma
City and work it for a week or two. Then I was coming back to institute fresh
proceedings against Mame.
“What do I find at the
Dugans’ but Mame all conspicuous in a blue travelling dress, with her little
trunk at the door. It seems that sister Lottie Bell, who is a typewriter in
Terre Haute, is going to be married next Thursday, and Mame is off for a week’s
visit to be an accomplice at the ceremony. Mame is waiting for a freight wagon
that is going to take her to Oklahoma, but I condemns the freight wagon with
promptness and scorn, and offers to deliver the goods myself. Ma Dugan sees no
reason why not, as Mr. Freighter wants pay for the job; so, thirty minutes
later Mame and I pull out in my light spring wagon with white canvas cover, and
head due south.
“That morning was of a
praiseworthy sort. The breeze was lively, and smelled excellent of flowers and
grass, and the little cottontail rabbits entertained themselves with skylarking
across the road. My two Kentucky bays went for the horizon until it come
sailing in so fast you wanted to dodge it like a clothesline. Mame was full of
talk and rattled on like a kid about her old home and her school pranks and the
things she liked and the hateful ways of those Johnson girls just across the
street, ‘way up in Indiana. Not a word was said about Ed Collier or victuals or
such solemn subjects. About noon Mame looks and finds that the lunch she had
put up in a basket had been left behind. I could have managed quite a
collation, but Mame didn’t seem to be grieving over nothing to eat, so I made
no lamentations. It was a sore subject with me, and I ruled provender in all its
branches out of my conversation.
“I am minded to touch light
on explanations how I came to lose the way. The road was dim and well grown
with grass; and there was Mame by my side confiscating my intellects and
attention. The excuses are good or they are not, as they may appear to you. But
I lost it, and at dusk that afternoon, when we should have been in Oklahoma
City, we were seesawing along the edge of nowhere in some undiscovered river
bottom, and the rain was falling in large, wet bunches. Down there in the
swamps we saw a little log house on a small knoll of high ground. The bottom
grass and the chaparral and the lonesome timber crowded all around it. It
seemed to be a melancholy little house, and you felt sorry for it. ’Twas that
house for the night, the way I reasoned it. I explained to Mame, and she leaves
it to me to decide. She doesn’t become galvanic and prosecuting, as most women
would, but she says it’s all right; she knows I didn’t mean to do it.
“We found the house was
deserted. It had two empty rooms. There was a little shed in the yard where
beasts had once been kept. In a loft of it was a lot of old hay. I put my
horses in there and gave them some of it, for which they looked at me
sorrowful, expecting apologies. The rest of the hay I carried into the house by
armfuls, with a view to accommodations. I also brought in the patent kindler
and the Brazilians, neither of which are guaranteed against the action of
water.
“Mame and I sat on the wagon
seats on the floor, and I lit a lot of the kindler on the hearth, for the night
was chilly. If I was any judge, that girl enjoyed it. It was a change for her.
It gave her a different point of view. She laughed and talked, and the kindler
made a dim light compared to her eyes. I had a pocketful of cigars, and as far
as I was concerned there had never been any fall of man. We were at the same
old stand in the Garden of Eden. Out there somewhere in the rain and the dark
was the river of Zion, and the angel with the flaming sword had not yet put up
the keep-off-the-grass sign. I opened up a gross or two of the Brazilians and
made Mame put them on—rings, brooches, necklaces, eardrops, bracelets, girdles,
and lockets. She flashed and sparkled like a million-dollar princess until she
had pink spots in her cheeks and almost cried for a looking-glass.
“When it got late I made a
fine bunk on the floor for Mame with the hay and my lap robes and blankets out
of the wagon, and persuaded her to lie down. I sat in the other room burning
tobacco and listening to the pouring rain and meditating on the many
vicissitudes that came to a man during the seventy years or so immediately
preceding his funeral.
“I must have dozed a little
while before morning, for my eyes were shut, and when I opened them it was
daylight, and there stood Mame with her hair all done up neat and correct, and
her eyes bright with admiration of existence.
“‘Gee whiz, Jeff!’ she
exclaims, ‘but I’m hungry. I could eat a—’
“I looked up and caught her
eye. Her smile went back in and she gave me a cold look of suspicion. Then I
laughed, and laid down on the floor to laugh easier. It seemed funny to me. By
nature and geniality I am a hearty laugher, and I went the limit. When I came
to, Mame was sitting with her back to me, all contaminated with dignity.
“‘Don’t be angry, Mame,’ I
says, ‘for I couldn’t help it. It’s the funny way you’ve done up your hair. If
you could only see it!’
“‘You needn’t tell stories,
sir,’ said Mame, cool and advised. ‘My hair is all right. I know what you were
laughing about. Why, Jeff, look outside,’ she winds up, peeping through a chink
between the logs. I opened the little wooden window and looked out. The entire
river bottom was flooded, and the knob of land on which the house stood was an
island in the middle of a rushing stream of yellow water a hundred yards wide.
And it was still raining hard. All we could do was to stay there till the doves
brought in the olive branch.
“I am bound to admit that
conversations and amusements languished during that day. I was aware that Mame
was getting a too prolonged one-sided view of things again, but I had no way to
change it. Personally, I was wrapped up in the desire to eat. I had
hallucinations of hash and visions of ham, and I kept saying to myself all the
time, ‘What’ll you have to eat, Jeff?—what’ll you order now, old man, when the
waiter comes?’ I picks out to myself all sorts of favourites from the bill of
fare, and imagines them coming. I guess it’s that way with all hungry men. They
can’t get their cogitations trained on anything but something to eat. It shows
that the little table with the broken-legged caster and the imitation Worcester
sauce and the napkin covering up the coffee stains is the paramount issue,
after all, instead of the question of immortality or peace between nations.
“I sat there, musing along,
arguing with myself quite heated as to how I’d have my steak—with mushrooms,
or à la créole. Mame was on the other seat, pensive, her head
leaning on her hand. ‘Let the potatoes come home-fried,’ I states in my mind,
‘and brown the hash in the pan, with nine poached eggs on the side.’ I felt,
careful, in my own pockets to see if I could find a peanut or a grain or two of
popcorn.
“Night came on again with
the river still rising and the rain still falling. I looked at Mame and I noticed
that desperate look on her face that a girl always wears when she passes an
ice-cream lair. I knew that poor girl was hungry—maybe for the first time in
her life. There was that anxious look in her eye that a woman has only when she
has missed a meal or feels her skirt coming unfastened in the back.
“It was about eleven o’clock
or so on the second night when we sat, gloomy, in our shipwrecked cabin. I kept
jerking my mind away from the subject of food, but it kept flopping back again
before I could fasten it. I thought of everything good to eat I had ever heard
of. I went away back to my kidhood and remembered the hot biscuit sopped in
sorghum and bacon gravy with partiality and respect. Then I trailed along up
the years, pausing at green apples and salt, flapjacks and maple, lye hominy,
fried chicken Old Virginia style, corn on the cob, spareribs and sweet potato
pie, and wound up with Georgia Brunswick stew, which is the top notch of good
things to eat, because it comprises ’em all.
“They say a drowning man
sees a panorama of his whole life pass before him. Well, when a man’s starving
he sees the ghost of every meal he ever ate set out before him, and he invents
new dishes that would make the fortune of a chef. If somebody would collect the
last words of men who starved to death, they’d have to sift ’em mighty fine to
discover the sentiment, but they’d compile into a cook book that would sell
into the millions.
“I guess I must have had my
conscience pretty well inflicted with culinary meditations, for, without
intending to do so, I says, out loud, to the imaginary waiter, ‘Cut it thick
and have it rare, with the French fried, and six, soft-scrambled, on toast.’
“Mame turned her head quick
as a wing. Her eyes were sparkling and she smiled sudden.
“‘Medium for me,’ she
rattles out, ‘with the Juliennes, and three, straight up. Draw one, and brown
the wheats, double order to come. Oh, Jeff, wouldn’t it be glorious! And then
I’d like to have a half fry, and a little chicken curried with rice, and a cup
custard with ice cream, and—’
“‘Go easy,’ I interrupts;
‘where’s the chicken liver pie, and the kidney sauté on toast,
and the roast lamb, and—’
“‘Oh,’ cuts in Mame, all
excited, ‘with mint sauce, and the turkey salad, and stuffed olives, and
raspberry tarts, and—’
“‘Keep it going,’ says I.
‘Hurry up with the fried squash, and the hot corn pone with sweet milk, and
don’t forget the apple dumpling with hard sauce, and the cross-barred dew-berry
pie—’
“Yes, for ten minutes we
kept up that kind of restaurant repartee. We ranges up and down and backward
and forward over the main trunk lines and the branches of the victual subject,
and Mame leads the game, for she is apprised in the ramifications of grub, and
the dishes she nominates aggravates my yearnings. It seems that there is a
feeling that Mame will line up friendly again with food. It seems that she
looks upon the obnoxious science of eating with less contempt than before.
“The next morning we find
that the flood has subsided. I geared up the bays, and we splashed out through
the mud, some precarious, until we found the road again. We were only a few
miles wrong, and in two hours we were in Oklahoma City. The first thing we saw
was a big restaurant sign, and we piled into there in a hurry. Here I finds
myself sitting with Mame at table, with knives and forks and plates between us,
and she not scornful, but smiling with starvation and sweetness.
“’Twas a new restaurant and
well stocked. I designated a list of quotations from the bill of fare that made
the waiter look out toward the wagon to see how many more might be coming.
“There we were, and there
was the order being served. ’Twas a banquet for a dozen, but we felt like a
dozen. I looked across the table at Mame and smiled, for I had recollections.
Mame was looking at the table like a boy looks at his first stem-winder. Then
she looked at me, straight in the face, and two big tears came in her eyes. The
waiter was gone after more grub.
“‘Jeff,’ she says, soft
like, ‘I’ve been a foolish girl. I’ve looked at things from the wrong side. I
never felt this way before. Men get hungry every day like this, don’t they?
They’re big and strong, and they do the hard work of the world, and they don’t
eat just to spite silly waiter girls in restaurants, do they, Jeff? You said once—that
is, you asked me—you wanted me to—well, Jeff, if you still care—I’d be glad and
willing to have you always sitting across the table from me. Now give me
something to eat, quick, please.’
“So, as I’ve said, a woman
needs to change her point of view now and then. They get tired of the same old
sights—the same old dinner table, washtub, and sewing machine. Give ’em a touch
of the various—a little travel and a little rest, a little tomfoolery along
with the tragedies of keeping house, a little petting after the blowing-up, a
little upsetting and a little jostling around—and everybody in the game will
have chips added to their stack by the play.”
XI
THE CABALLERO’S WAY
The Cisco Kid had killed six
men in more or less fair scrimmages, had murdered twice as many (mostly
Mexicans), and had winged a larger number whom he modestly forbore to count.
Therefore a woman loved him.
The Kid was twenty-five,
looked twenty; and a careful insurance company would have estimated the
probable time of his demise at, say, twenty-six. His habitat was anywhere
between the Frio and the Rio Grande. He killed for the love of it—because he
was quick-tempered— to avoid arrest—for his own amusement—any reason that came
to his mind would suffice. He had escaped capture because he could shoot
five-sixths of a second sooner than any sheriff or ranger in the service, and
because he rode a speckled roan horse that knew every cow-path in the mesquite
and pear thickets from San Antonio to Matamoras.
Tonia Perez, the girl who
loved the Cisco Kid, was half Carmen, half Madonna, and the rest—oh, yes, a
woman who is half Carmen and half Madonna can always be something more—the
rest, let us say, was humming-bird. She lived in a grass-roofed jacal near
a little Mexican settlement at the Lone Wolf Crossing of the Frio. With her
lived a father or grandfather, a lineal Aztec, somewhat less than a thousand
years old, who herded a hundred goats and lived in a continuous drunken dream
from drinking mescal. Back of the jacal a
tremendous forest of bristling pear, twenty feet high at its worst, crowded
almost to its door. It was along the bewildering maze of this spinous thicket
that the speckled roan would bring the Kid to see his girl. And once, clinging
like a lizard to the ridge-pole, high up under the peaked grass roof, he had
heard Tonia, with her Madonna face and Carmen beauty and humming-bird soul,
parley with the sheriff’s posse, denying knowledge of her man in her soft mélange of
Spanish and English.
One day the adjutant-general
of the State, who is, ex offico, commander of the ranger forces,
wrote some sarcastic lines to Captain Duval of Company X, stationed at Laredo,
relative to the serene and undisturbed existence led by murderers and
desperadoes in the said captain’s territory.
The captain turned the
colour of brick dust under his tan, and forwarded the letter, after adding a
few comments, per ranger Private Bill Adamson, to ranger Lieutenant Sandridge,
camped at a water hole on the Nueces with a squad of five men in preservation
of law and order.
Lieutenant Sandridge turned
a beautiful couleur de rose through his ordinary strawberry
complexion, tucked the letter in his hip pocket, and chewed off the ends of his
gamboge moustache.
The next morning he saddled
his horse and rode alone to the Mexican settlement at the Lone Wolf Crossing of
the Frio, twenty miles away.
Six feet two, blond as a
Viking, quiet as a deacon, dangerous as a machine gun, Sandridge moved among
the Jacales, patiently seeking news of the Cisco Kid.
Far more than the law, the
Mexicans dreaded the cold and certain vengeance of the lone rider that the
ranger sought. It had been one of the Kid’s pastimes to shoot Mexicans “to see
them kick”: if he demanded from them moribund Terpsichorean feats, simply that
he might be entertained, what terrible and extreme penalties would be certain
to follow should they anger him! One and all they lounged with upturned palms
and shrugging shoulders, filling the air with “quien sabes” and denials
of the Kid’s acquaintance.
But there was a man named Fink
who kept a store at the Crossing—a man of many nationalities, tongues,
interests, and ways of thinking.
“No use to ask them
Mexicans,” he said to Sandridge. “They’re afraid to tell. This hombre they
call the Kid—Goodall is his name, ain’t it?—he’s been in my store once or
twice. I have an idea you might run across him at—but I guess I don’t keer to
say, myself. I’m two seconds later in pulling a gun than I used to be, and the
difference is worth thinking about. But this Kid’s got a half-Mexican girl at the
Crossing that he comes to see. She lives in that jacal a
hundred yards down the arroyo at the edge of the pear. Maybe she—no, I don’t
suppose she would, but that jacal would be a good place to
watch, anyway.”
Sandridge rode down to
the jacal of Perez. The sun was low, and the broad shade of
the great pear thicket already covered the grass-thatched hut. The goats were
enclosed for the night in a brush corral near by. A few kids walked the top of
it, nibbling the chaparral leaves. The old Mexican lay upon a blanket on the
grass, already in a stupor from his mescal, and dreaming, perhaps, of the
nights when he and Pizarro touched glasses to their New World fortunes—so old
his wrinkled face seemed to proclaim him to be. And in the door of the jacal stood
Tonia. And Lieutenant Sandridge sat in his saddle staring at her like a gannet
agape at a sailorman.
The Cisco Kid was a vain
person, as all eminent and successful assassins are, and his bosom would have
been ruffled had he known that at a simple exchange of glances two persons, in
whose minds he had been looming large, suddenly abandoned (at least for the
time) all thought of him.
Never before had Tonia seen
such a man as this. He seemed to be made of sunshine and blood-red tissue and
clear weather. He seemed to illuminate the shadow of the pear when he smiled,
as though the sun were rising again. The men she had known had been small and
dark. Even the Kid, in spite of his achievements, was a stripling no larger
than herself, with black, straight hair and a cold, marble face that chilled
the noonday.
As for Tonia, though she
sends description to the poorhouse, let her make a millionaire of your fancy.
Her blue-black hair, smoothly divided in the middle and bound close to her
head, and her large eyes full of the Latin melancholy, gave her the Madonna
touch. Her motions and air spoke of the concealed fire and the desire to charm
that she had inherited from the gitanas of the Basque
province. As for the humming-bird part of her, that dwelt in her heart; you
could not perceive it unless her bright red skirt and dark blue blouse gave you
a symbolic hint of the vagarious bird.
The newly lighted sun-god
asked for a drink of water. Tonia brought it from the red jar hanging under the
brush shelter. Sandridge considered it necessary to dismount so as to lessen
the trouble of her ministrations.
I play no spy; nor do I
assume to master the thoughts of any human heart; but I assert, by the
chronicler’s right, that before a quarter of an hour had sped, Sandridge was
teaching her how to plaint a six-strand rawhide stake-rope, and Tonia had
explained to him that were it not for her little English book that the
peripatetic padre had given her and the little crippled chivo,
that she fed from a bottle, she would be very, very lonely indeed.
Which leads to a suspicion
that the Kid’s fences needed repairing, and that the adjutant-general’s sarcasm
had fallen upon unproductive soil.
In his camp by the water
hole Lieutenant Sandridge announced and reiterated his intention of either
causing the Cisco Kid to nibble the black loam of the Frio country prairies or
of haling him before a judge and jury. That sounded business-like. Twice a week
he rode over to the Lone Wolf Crossing of the Frio, and directed Tonia’s slim,
slightly lemon-tinted fingers among the intricacies of the slowly growing
lariata. A six-strand plait is hard to learn and easy to teach.
The ranger knew that he
might find the Kid there at any visit. He kept his armament ready, and had a
frequent eye for the pear thicket at the rear of the jacal. Thus he
might bring down the kite and the humming-bird with one stone.
While the sunny-haired
ornithologist was pursuing his studies the Cisco Kid was also attending to his
professional duties. He moodily shot up a saloon in a small cow village on
Quintana Creek, killed the town marshal (plugging him neatly in the centre of
his tin badge), and then rode away, morose and unsatisfied. No true artist is
uplifted by shooting an aged man carrying an old-style .38 bulldog.
On his way the Kid suddenly
experienced the yearning that all men feel when wrong-doing loses its keen edge
of delight. He yearned for the woman he loved to reassure him that she was his
in spite of it. He wanted her to call his bloodthirstiness bravery and his
cruelty devotion. He wanted Tonia to bring him water from the red jar under the
brush shelter, and tell him how the chivo was thriving on the
bottle.
The Kid turned the speckled
roan’s head up the ten-mile pear flat that stretches along the Arroyo Hondo
until it ends at the Lone Wolf Crossing of the Frio. The roan whickered; for he
had a sense of locality and direction equal to that of a belt-line street-car
horse; and he knew he would soon be nibbling the rich mesquite grass at the end
of a forty-foot stake-rope while Ulysses rested his head in Circe’s
straw-roofed hut.
More weird and lonesome than
the journey of an Amazonian explorer is the ride of one through a Texas pear
flat. With dismal monotony and startling variety the uncanny and multiform
shapes of the cacti lift their twisted trunks, and fat, bristly hands to
encumber the way. The demon plant, appearing to live without soil or rain,
seems to taunt the parched traveller with its lush grey greenness. It warps
itself a thousand times about what look to be open and inviting paths, only to
lure the rider into blind and impassable spine-defended “bottoms of the bag,”
leaving him to retreat, if he can, with the points of the compass whirling in
his head.
To be lost in the pear is to
die almost the death of the thief on the cross, pierced by nails and with
grotesque shapes of all the fiends hovering about.
But it was not so with the
Kid and his mount. Winding, twisting, circling, tracing the most fantastic and
bewildering trail ever picked out, the good roan lessened the distance to the
Lone Wolf Crossing with every coil and turn that he made.
While they fared the Kid
sang. He knew but one tune and sang it, as he knew but one code and lived it,
and but one girl and loved her. He was a single-minded man of conventional
ideas. He had a voice like a coyote with bronchitis, but whenever he chose to
sing his song he sang it. It was a conventional song of the camps and trail,
running at its beginning as near as may be to these words:
Don’t you monkey with my
Lulu girl
Or I’ll tell you what I’ll do—
and so on. The roan was
inured to it, and did not mind.
But even the poorest singer
will, after a certain time, gain his own consent to refrain from contributing
to the world’s noises. So the Kid, by the time he was within a mile or two of
Tonia’s jacal, had reluctantly allowed his song to die away—not
because his vocal performance had become less charming to his own ears, but
because his laryngeal muscles were aweary.
As though he were in a
circus ring the speckled roan wheeled and danced through the labyrinth of pear
until at length his rider knew by certain landmarks that the Lone Wolf Crossing
was close at hand. Then, where the pear was thinner, he caught sight of the
grass roof of the jacal and the hackberry tree on the edge of
the arroyo. A few yards farther the Kid stopped the roan and gazed intently
through the prickly openings. Then he dismounted, dropped the roan’s reins, and
proceeded on foot, stooping and silent, like an Indian. The roan, knowing his
part, stood still, making no sound.
The Kid crept noiselessly to
the very edge of the pear thicket and reconnoitred between the leaves of a
clump of cactus.
Ten yards from his
hiding-place, in the shade of the jacal, sat his Tonia calmly
plaiting a rawhide lariat. So far she might surely escape condemnation; women
have been known, from time to time, to engage in more mischievous occupations.
But if all must be told, there is to be added that her head reposed against the
broad and comfortable chest of a tall red-and-yellow man, and that his arm was
about her, guiding her nimble fingers that required so many lessons at the
intricate six-strand plait.
Sandridge glanced quickly at
the dark mass of pear when he heard a slight squeaking sound that was not
altogether unfamiliar. A gun-scabbard will make that sound when one grasps the
handle of a six-shooter suddenly. But the sound was not repeated; and Tonia’s
fingers needed close attention.
And then, in the shadow of
death, they began to talk of their love; and in the still July afternoon every
word they uttered reached the ears of the Kid.
“Remember, then,” said
Tonia, “you must not come again until I send for you. Soon he will be here.
A vaquero at the tienda said to-day he saw
him on the Guadalupe three days ago. When he is that near he always comes. If
he comes and finds you here he will kill you. So, for my sake, you must come no
more until I send you the word.”
“All right,” said the
stranger. “And then what?”
“And then,” said the girl,
“you must bring your men here and kill him. If not, he will kill you.”
“He ain’t a man to
surrender, that’s sure,” said Sandridge. “It’s kill or be killed for the
officer that goes up against Mr. Cisco Kid.”
“He must die,” said the
girl. “Otherwise there will not be any peace in the world for thee and me. He
has killed many. Let him so die. Bring your men, and give him no chance to
escape.”
“You used to think right
much of him,” said Sandridge.
Tonia dropped the lariat,
twisted herself around, and curved a lemon-tinted arm over the ranger’s
shoulder.
“But then,” she murmured in
liquid Spanish, “I had not beheld thee, thou great, red mountain of a man! And
thou art kind and good, as well as strong. Could one choose him, knowing thee?
Let him die; for then I will not be filled with fear by day and night lest he hurt
thee or me.”
“How can I know when he
comes?” asked Sandridge.
“When he comes,” said Tonia,
“he remains two days, sometimes three. Gregorio, the small son of old Luisa,
the lavendera, has a swift pony. I will write a letter to thee and
send it by him, saying how it will be best to come upon him. By Gregorio will
the letter come. And bring many men with thee, and have much care, oh, dear red
one, for the rattlesnake is not quicker to strike than is ‘El Chivato,’
as they call him, to send a ball from his pistola.”
“The Kid’s handy with his
gun, sure enough,” admitted Sandridge, “but when I come for him I shall come
alone. I’ll get him by myself or not at all. The Cap wrote one or two things to
me that make me want to do the trick without any help. You let me know when Mr.
Kid arrives, and I’ll do the rest.”
“I will send you the message
by the boy Gregorio,” said the girl. “I knew you were braver than that small
slayer of men who never smiles. How could I ever have thought I cared for him?”
It was time for the ranger
to ride back to his camp on the water hole. Before he mounted his horse he
raised the slight form of Tonia with one arm high from the earth for a parting
salute. The drowsy stillness of the torpid summer air still lay thick upon the
dreaming afternoon. The smoke from the fire in the jacal, where
the frijoles blubbered in the iron pot, rose straight as a
plumb-line above the clay-daubed chimney. No sound or movement disturbed the
serenity of the dense pear thicket ten yards away.
When the form of Sandridge
had disappeared, loping his big dun down the steep banks of the Frio crossing,
the Kid crept back to his own horse, mounted him, and rode back along the
tortuous trail he had come.
But not far. He stopped and
waited in the silent depths of the pear until half an hour had passed. And then
Tonia heard the high, untrue notes of his unmusical singing coming nearer and
nearer; and she ran to the edge of the pear to meet him.
The Kid seldom smiled; but
he smiled and waved his hat when he saw her. He dismounted, and his girl sprang
into his arms. The Kid looked at her fondly. His thick, black hair clung to his
head like a wrinkled mat. The meeting brought a slight ripple of some
undercurrent of feeling to his smooth, dark face that was usually as motionless
as a clay mask.
“How’s my girl?” he asked,
holding her close.
“Sick of waiting so long for
you, dear one,” she answered. “My eyes are dim with always gazing into that
devil’s pincushion through which you come. And I can see into it such a little
way, too. But you are here, beloved one, and I will not scold. Que mal
muchacho! not to come to see your alma more often. Go
in and rest, and let me water your horse and stake him with the long rope.
There is cool water in the jar for you.”
The Kid kissed her affectionately.
“Not if the court knows
itself do I let a lady stake my horse for me,” said he. “But if you’ll run
in, chica, and throw a pot of coffee together while I attend to
the caballo, I’ll be a good deal obliged.”
Besides his marksmanship the
Kid had another attribute for which he admired himself greatly. He was muy
caballero, as the Mexicans express it, where the ladies were concerned. For
them he had always gentle words and consideration. He could not have spoken a
harsh word to a woman. He might ruthlessly slay their husbands and brothers,
but he could not have laid the weight of a finger in anger upon a woman.
Wherefore many of that interesting division of humanity who had come under the
spell of his politeness declared their disbelief in the stories circulated
about Mr. Kid. One shouldn’t believe everything one heard, they said. When
confronted by their indignant men folk with proof of the caballero’s deeds
of infamy, they said maybe he had been driven to it, and that he knew how to
treat a lady, anyhow.
Considering this extremely
courteous idiosyncrasy of the Kid and the pride he took in it, one can perceive
that the solution of the problem that was presented to him by what he saw and
heard from his hiding-place in the pear that afternoon (at least as to one of
the actors) must have been obscured by difficulties. And yet one could not
think of the Kid overlooking little matters of that kind.
At the end of the short
twilight they gathered around a supper of frijoles, goat steaks,
canned peaches, and coffee, by the light of a lantern in the jacal.
Afterward, the ancestor, his flock corralled, smoked a cigarette and became a
mummy in a grey blanket. Tonia washed the few dishes while the Kid dried them
with the flour-sacking towel. Her eyes shone; she chatted volubly of the
inconsequent happenings of her small world since the Kid’s last visit; it was
as all his other home-comings had been.
Then outside Tonia swung in
a grass hammock with her guitar and sang sad canciones de amor.
“Do you love me just the same,
old girl?” asked the Kid, hunting for his cigarette papers.
“Always the same, little
one,” said Tonia, her dark eyes lingering upon him.
“I must go over to Fink’s,”
said the Kid, rising, “for some tobacco. I thought I had another sack in my
coat. I’ll be back in a quarter of an hour.”
“Hasten,” said Tonia, “and
tell me—how long shall I call you my own this time? Will you be gone again
to-morrow, leaving me to grieve, or will you be longer with your Tonia?”
“Oh, I might stay two or
three days this trip,” said the Kid, yawning. “I’ve been on the dodge for a
month, and I’d like to rest up.”
He was gone half an hour for
his tobacco. When he returned Tonia was still lying in the hammock.
“It’s funny,” said the Kid,
“how I feel. I feel like there was somebody lying behind every bush and tree
waiting to shoot me. I never had mullygrubs like them before. Maybe it’s one of
them presumptions. I’ve got half a notion to light out in the morning before
day. The Guadalupe country is burning up about that old Dutchman I plugged down
there.”
“You are not afraid—no one
could make my brave little one fear.”
“Well, I haven’t been
usually regarded as a jack-rabbit when it comes to scrapping; but I don’t want
a posse smoking me out when I’m in your jacal. Somebody might get
hurt that oughtn’t to.”
“Remain with your Tonia; no
one will find you here.”
The Kid looked keenly into
the shadows up and down the arroyo and toward the dim lights of the Mexican
village.
“I’ll see how it looks later
on,” was his decision.
At
midnight a horseman rode into the rangers’ camp, blazing his way by noisy
“halloes” to indicate a pacific mission. Sandridge and one or two others turned
out to investigate the row. The rider announced himself to be Domingo Sales,
from the Lone Wolf Crossing. he bore a letter for Señor Sandridge. Old Luisa,
the lavendera, had persuaded him to bring it, he said, her son
Gregorio being too ill of a fever to ride.
Sandridge lighted the camp
lantern and read the letter. These were its words:
Dear One: He has come. Hardly
had you ridden away when he came out of the pear. When he first talked he said
he would stay three days or more. Then as it grew later he was like a wolf or a
fox, and walked about without rest, looking and listening. Soon he said he must
leave before daylight when it is dark and stillest. And then he seemed to
suspect that I be not true to him. He looked at me so strange that I am
frightened. I swear to him that I love him, his own Tonia. Last of all he said
I must prove to him I am true. He thinks that even now men are waiting to kill
him as he rides from my house. To escape he says he will dress in my clothes,
my red skirt and the blue waist I wear and the brown mantilla over the head,
and thus ride away. But before that he says that I must put on his clothes,
his pantalones and camisa and hat, and ride
away on his horse from the jacal as far as the big road beyond
the crossing and back again. This before he goes, so he can tell if I am true
and if men are hidden to shoot him. It is a terrible thing. An hour before
daybreak this is to be. Come, my dear one, and kill this man and take me for
your Tonia. Do not try to take hold of him alive, but kill him quickly. Knowing
all, you should do that. You must come long before the time and hide yourself
in the little shed near the jacal where the wagon and saddles
are kept. It is dark in there. He will wear my red skirt and blue waist and
brown mantilla. I send you a hundred kisses. Come surely and shoot quickly and
straight.
THINE OWN TONIA.
Sandridge quickly explained
to his men the official part of the missive. The rangers protested against his
going alone.
“I’ll get him easy enough,”
said the lieutenant. “The girl’s got him trapped. And don’t even think he’ll
get the drop on me.”
Sandridge saddled his horse
and rode to the Lone Wolf Crossing. He tied his big dun in a clump of brush on
the arroyo, took his Winchester from its scabbard, and carefully approached the
Perez jacal. There was only the half of a high moon drifted over by
ragged, milk-white gulf clouds.
The wagon-shed was an
excellent place for ambush; and the ranger got inside it safely. In the black
shadow of the brush shelter in front of the jacal he could see
a horse tied and hear him impatiently pawing the hard-trodden earth.
He waited almost an hour
before two figures came out of the jacal. One, in man’s clothes,
quickly mounted the horse and galloped past the wagon-shed toward the crossing
and village. And then the other figure, in skirt, waist, and mantilla over its
head, stepped out into the faint moonlight, gazing after the rider. Sandridge
thought he would take his chance then before Tonia rode back. He fancied she
might not care to see it.
“Throw up your hands,” he
ordered loudly, stepping out of the wagon-shed with his Winchester at his
shoulder.
There was a quick turn of
the figure, but no movement to obey, so the ranger pumped in the
bullets—one—two—three—and then twice more; for you never could be too sure of
bringing down the Cisco Kid. There was no danger of missing at ten paces, even
in that half moonlight.
The old ancestor, asleep on
his blanket, was awakened by the shots. Listening further, he heard a great cry
from some man in mortal distress or anguish, and rose up grumbling at the
disturbing ways of moderns.
The tall, red ghost of a man
burst into the jacal, reaching one hand, shaking like a tule reed,
for the lantern hanging on its nail. The other spread a letter on the table.
“Look at this letter,
Perez,” cried the man. “Who wrote it?”
“Ah, Dios! it is
Señor Sandridge,” mumbled the old man, approaching. “Pues, señor, that
letter was written by ‘El Chivato,’ as he is called—by the man of Tonia.
They say he is a bad man; I do not know. While Tonia slept he wrote the letter
and sent it by this old hand of mine to Domingo Sales to be brought to you. Is
there anything wrong in the letter? I am very old; and I did not know. Valgame
Dios! it is a very foolish world; and there is nothing in the house to
drink— nothing to drink.”
Just then all that Sandridge
could think of to do was to go outside and throw himself face downward in the
dust by the side of his humming-bird, of whom not a feather fluttered. He was
not a caballero by instinct, and he could not understand the
niceties of revenge.
A mile away the rider who
had ridden past the wagon-shed struck up a harsh, untuneful song, the words of
which began:
Don’t you monkey with my
Lulu girl
Or I’ll tell you what I’ll do—
XII
THE SPHINX APPLE
Twenty miles out from
Paradise, and fifteen miles short of Sunrise City, Bildad Rose, the
stage-driver, stopped his team. A furious snow had been falling all day. Eight
inches it measured now, on a level. The remainder of the road was not without
peril in daylight, creeping along the ribs of a bijou range of ragged
mountains. Now, when both snow and night masked its dangers, further travel was
not to be thought of, said Bildad Rose. So he pulled up his four stout horses,
and delivered to his five passengers oral deductions of his wisdom.
Judge Menefee, to whom men
granted leadership and the initiatory as upon a silver salver, sprang from the
coach at once. Four of his fellow-passengers followed, inspired by his example,
ready to explore, to objurgate, to resist, to submit, to proceed, according as
their prime factor might be inclined to sway them. The fifth passenger, a young
woman, remained in the coach.
Bildad had halted upon the
shoulder of the first mountain spur. Two rail-fences, ragged-black, hemmed the
road. Fifty yards above the upper fence, showing a dark blot in the white
drifts, stood a small house. Upon this house descended—or rather ascended—Judge
Menefee and his cohorts with boyish whoops born of the snow and stress. They
called; they pounded at window and door. At the inhospitable silence they waxed
restive; they assaulted and forced the pregnable barriers, and invaded the
premises.
The watchers from the coach
heard stumblings and shoutings from the interior of the ravaged house. Before
long a light within flickered, glowed, flamed high and bright and cheerful.
Then came running back through the driving flakes the exuberant explorers. More
deeply pitched than the clarion—even orchestral in volume—the voice of Judge
Menefee proclaimed the succour that lay in apposition with their state of
travail. The one room of the house was uninhabited, he said, and bare of
furniture; but it contained a great fireplace, and they had discovered an ample
store of chopped wood in a lean-to at the rear. Housing and warmth against the
shivering night were thus assured. For the placation of Bildad Rose there was
news of a stable, not ruined beyond service, with hay in a loft, near the
house.
“Gentlemen,” cried Bildad
Rose from his seat, swathed in coats and robes, “tear me down two panels of
that fence, so I can drive in. That is old man Redruth’s shanty. I thought we
must be nigh it. They took him to the foolish house in August.”
Cheerfully the four
passengers sprang at the snow-capped rails. The exhorted team tugged the coach
up the slant to the door of the edifice from which a mid-summer madness had
ravished its proprietor. The driver and two of the passengers began to unhitch.
Judge Menefee opened the door of the coach, and removed his hat.
“I have to announce, Miss
Garland,” said he, “the enforced suspension of our journey. The driver asserts
that the risk in travelling the mountain road by night is too great even to
consider. It will be necessary to remain in the shelter of this house until
morning. I beg that you will feel that there is nothing to fear beyond a
temporary inconvenience. I have personally inspected the house, and find that
there are means to provide against the rigour of the weather, at least. You
shall be made as comfortable as possible. Permit me to assist you to alight.”
To the Judge’s side came the
passenger whose pursuit in life was the placing of the Little Goliath windmill.
His name was Dunwoody; but that matters not much. In travelling merely from
Paradise to Sunrise City one needs little or no name. Still, one who would seek
to divide honours with Judge Madison L. Menefee deserves a cognomenal peg upon which
Fame may hang a wreath. Thus spake, loudly and buoyantly, the aerial miller:
“Guess you’ll have to climb
out of the ark, Mrs. McFarland. This wigwam isn’t exactly the Palmer House, but
it turns snow, and they won’t search your grip for souvenir spoons when you
leave. We’ve got a fire going; and we’ll fix
you up with dry Tilbys and keep the mice away, anyhow, all right, all right.”
One of the two passengers
who were struggling in a melée of horses, harness, snow, and
the sarcastic injunctions of Bildad Rose, called loudly from the whirl of his
volunteer duties: “Say! some of you fellows get Miss Solomon into the house,
will you? Whoa, there! you confounded brute!”
Again must it be gently
urged that in travelling from Paradise to Sunrise City an accurate name is
prodigality. When Judge Menefee— sanctioned to the act by his grey hair and
widespread repute—had introduced himself to the lady passenger, she had,
herself, sweetly breathed a name, in response, that the hearing of the male
passengers had variously interpreted. In the not unjealous spirit of rivalry
that eventuated, each clung stubbornly to his own theory. For the lady
passenger to have reasseverated or corrected would have seemed didactic if not
unduly solicitous of a specific acquaintance. Therefore the lady passenger
permitted herself to be Garlanded and McFarlanded and Solomoned with equal and
discreet complacency. It is thirty-five miles from Paradise to Sunrise
City. Compagnon de voyage is name enough, by the gripsack of
the Wandering Jew! for so brief a journey.
Soon the little party of
wayfarers were happily seated in a cheerful arc before the roaring fire. The
robes, cushions, and removable portions of the coach had been brought in and
put to service. The lady passenger chose a place near the hearth at one end of
the arc. There she graced almost a throne that her subjects had prepared. She
sat upon cushions and leaned against an empty box and barrel, robe bespread,
which formed a defence from the invading draughts. She extended her feet, delectably
shod, to the cordial heat. She ungloved her hands, but retained about her neck
her long fur boa. The unstable flames half revealed, while the warding boa half
submerged, her face— a youthful face, altogether feminine, clearly moulded and
calm with beauty’s unchallenged confidence. Chivalry and manhood were here
vying to please and comfort her. She seemed to accept their devoirs—not
piquantly, as one courted and attended; nor preeningly, as many of her sex
unworthily reap their honours; not yet stolidly, as the ox receives his hay;
but concordantly with nature’s own plan—as the lily ingests the drop of dew
foreordained to its refreshment.
Outside the wind roared
mightily, the fine snow whizzed through the cracks, the cold besieged the backs
of the immolated six; but the elements did not lack a champion that night.
Judge Menefee was attorney for the storm. The weather was his client, and he
strove by special pleading to convince his companions in that frigid jury-box
that they sojourned in a bower of roses, beset only by benignant zephyrs. He
drew upon a fund of gaiety, wit, and anecdote, sophistical, but crowned with
success. His cheerfulness communicated itself irresistibly. Each one hastened
to contribute his own quota toward the general optimism. Even the lady
passenger was moved to expression.
“I think it is quite
charming,” she said, in her slow, crystal tones.
At intervals some one of the
passengers would rise and humorously explore the room. There was little
evidence to be collected of its habitation by old man Redruth.
Bildad Rose was called upon
vivaciously for the ex-hermit’s history. Now, since the stage-driver’s horses
were fairly comfortable and his passengers appeared to be so, peace and comity
returned to him.
“The old didapper,” began
Bildad, somewhat irreverently, “infested this here house about twenty year. He
never allowed nobody to come nigh him. He’d duck his head inside and slam the
door whenever a team drove along. There was spinning-wheels up in his loft, all
right. He used to buy his groceries and tobacco at Sam Tilly’s store, on the
Little Muddy. Last August he went up there dressed in a red bedquilt, and told
Sam he was King Solomon, and that the Queen of Sheba was coming to visit him.
He fetched along all the money he had—a little bag full of silver—and dropped
it in Sam’s well. ‘She won’t come,’ says old man Redruth to Sam, ‘if she knows
I’ve got any money.’
“As soon as folks heard he
had that sort of a theory about women and money they knowed he was crazy; so
they sent down and packed him to the foolish asylum.”
“Was there a romance in his
life that drove him to a solitary existence?” asked one of the passengers, a
young man who had an Agency.
“No,” said Bildad, “not that
I ever heard spoke of. Just ordinary trouble. They say he had had
unfortunateness in the way of love derangements with a young lady when he was
young; before he contracted red bed-quilts and had his financial conclusions
disqualified. I never heard of no romance.”
“Ah!” exclaimed Judge
Menefee, impressively; “a case of unrequited affection, no doubt.”
“No, sir,” returned Bildad,
“not at all. She never married him. Marmaduke Mulligan, down at Paradise, seen
a man once that come from old Redruth’s town. He said Redruth was a fine young
man, but when you kicked him on the pocket all you could hear jingle was a
cuff-fastener and a bunch of keys. He was engaged to this young lady—Miss
Alice— something was her name; I’ve forgot. This man said she was the kind of
girl you like to have reach across you in a car to pay the fare. Well, there
come to the town a young chap all affluent and easy, and fixed up with buggies
and mining stock and leisure time. Although she was a staked claim, Miss Alice
and the new entry seemed to strike a mutual kind of a clip. They had calls and
coincidences of going to the post office and such things as sometimes make a
girl send back the engagement ring and other presents—‘a rift within the loot,’
the poetry man calls it.
“One day folks seen Redruth
and Miss Alice standing talking at the gate. Then he lifts his hat and walks
away, and that was the last anybody in that town seen of him, as far as this
man knew.”
“What about the young lady?”
asked the young man who had an Agency.
“Never heard,” answered
Bildad. “Right there is where my lode of information turns to an old spavined
crowbait, and folds its wings, for I’ve pumped it dry.”
“A very sad—” began Judge
Menefee, but his remark was curtailed by a higher authority.
“What a charming story!”
said the lady passenger, in flute-like tones.
A little silence followed,
except for the wind and the crackling of the fire.
The men were seated upon the
floor, having slightly mitigated its inhospitable surface with wraps and stray
pieces of boards. The man who was placing Little Goliath windmills arose and
walked about to ease his cramped muscles.
Suddenly a triumphant shout
came from him. He hurried back from a dusky corner of the room, bearing aloft
something in his hand. It was an apple—a large, red-mottled, firm pippin,
pleasing to behold. In a paper bag on a high shelf in that corner he had found
it. It could have been no relic of the lovewrecked Redruth, for its glorious
soundness repudiated the theory that it had lain on that musty shelf since
August. No doubt some recent bivouackers, lunching in the deserted house, had
left it there.
Dunwoody—again his exploits
demand for him the honours of nomenclature—flaunted his apple in the faces of
his fellow-marooners. “See what I found, Mrs. McFarland!” he cried,
vaingloriously. He held the apple high up in the light of the fire, where it
glowed a still richer red. The lady passenger smiled calmly—always calmly.
“What a charming apple!” she
murmured, clearly.
For a brief space Judge
Menefee felt crushed, humiliated, relegated. Second place galled him. Why had
this blatant, obtrusive, unpolished man of windmills been selected by Fate
instead of himself to discover the sensational apple? He could have made of the
act a scene, a function, a setting for some impromptu, fanciful discourse or
piece of comedy—and have retained the role of cynosure. Actually, the lady
passenger was regarding this ridiculous Dunboddy or Woodbundy with an admiring
smile, as if the fellow had performed a feat! And the windmill man swelled and
gyrated like a sample of his own goods, puffed up with the wind that ever blows
from the chorus land toward the domain of the star.
While the transported
Dunwoody, with his Aladdin’s apple, was receiving the fickle attentions of all,
the resourceful jurist formed a plan to recover his own laurels.
With his courtliest smile
upon his heavy but classic features, Judge Menefee advanced, and took the
apple, as if to examine it, from the hand of Dunwoody. In his hand it became
Exhibit A.
“A fine apple,” he said,
approvingly. “Really, my dear Mr. Dudwindy, you have eclipsed all of us as a
forager. But I have an idea. This apple shall become an emblem, a token, a
symbol, a prize bestowed by the mind and heart of beauty upon the most
deserving.”
The audience, except one,
applauded. “Good on the stump, ain’t he?” commented the passenger who was
nobody in particular to the young man who had an Agency.
The unresponsive one was the
windmill man. He saw himself reduced to the ranks. Never would the thought have
occurred to him to declare his apple an emblem. He had intended, after it had
been divided and eaten, to create diversion by sticking the seeds against his
forehead and naming them for young ladies of his acquaintance. One he was going
to name Mrs. McFarland. The seed that fell off first would be—but ’twas too
late now.
“The apple,” continued Judge
Menefee, charging his jury, “in modern days occupies, though undeservedly, a
lowly place in our esteem. Indeed, it is so constantly associated with the
culinary and the commercial that it is hardly to be classed among the polite
fruits. But in ancient times this was not so. Biblical, historical, and
mythological lore abounds with evidences that the apple was the aristocrat of
fruits. We still say ‘the apple of the eye’ when we wish to describe something
superlatively precious. We find in Proverbs the comparison to ‘apples of
silver.’ No other product of tree or vine has been so utilised in figurative
speech. Who has not heard of and longed for the ‘apples of the Hesperides’? I
need not call your attention to the most tremendous and significant instance of
the apple’s ancient prestige when its consumption by our first parents
occasioned the fall of man from his state of goodness and perfection.”
“Apples like them,” said the
windmill man, lingering with the objective article, “are worth $3.50 a barrel
in the Chicago market.”
“Now, what I have to
propose,” said Judge Menefee, conceding an indulgent smile to his interrupter,
“is this: We must remain here, perforce, until morning. We have wood in plenty
to keep us warm. Our next need is to entertain ourselves as best we can, in
order that the time shall not pass too slowly. I propose that we place this
apple in the hands of Miss Garland. It is no longer a fruit, but, as I said, a
prize, in award, representing a great human idea. Miss Garland, herself, shall
cease to be an individual—but only temporarily, I am happy to add”—(a low bow,
full of the old-time grace). “She shall represent her sex; she shall be the
embodiment, the epitome of womankind—the heart and brain, I may say, of God’s
masterpiece of creation. In this guise she shall judge and decide the question
which follows:
“But a few minutes ago our
friend, Mr. Rose, favoured us with an entertaining but fragmentary sketch of
the romance in the life of the former professor of this habitation. The few
facts that we have learned seem to me to open up a fascinating field for
conjecture, for the study of human hearts, for the exercise of the
imagination—in short, for story-telling. Let us make use of the opportunity.
Let each one of us relate his own version of the story of Redruth, the hermit,
and his lady-love, beginning where Mr. Rose’s narrative ends—at the parting of
the lovers at the gate. This much should be assumed and conceded—that the young
lady was not necessarily to blame for Redruth’s becoming a crazed and
world-hating hermit. When we have done, Miss Garland shall render the JUDGEMENT
OF WOMAN. As the Spirit of her Sex she shall decide which version of the
story best and most truly depicts human and love interest, and most faithfully
estimates the character and acts of Redruth’s betrothed according to the
feminine view. The apple shall be bestowed upon him who is awarded the
decision. If you are all agreed, we shall be pleased to hear the first story
from Mr. Dinwiddie.”
The last sentence captured
the windmill man. He was not one to linger in the dumps.
“That’s a first-rate scheme,
Judge,” he said, heartily. “Be a regular short-story vaudeville, won’t it? I
used to be correspondent for a paper in Springfield, and when there wasn’t any
news I faked it. Guess I can do my turn all right.”
“I think the idea is
charming,” said the lady passenger, brightly. “It will be almost like a game.”
Judge Menefee stepped
forward and placed the apple in her hand impressively.
“In olden days,” he said,
orotundly, “Paris awarded the golden apple to the most beautiful.”
“I was at the Exposition,”
remarked the windmill man, now cheerful again, “but I never heard of it. And I
was on the Midway, too, all the time I wasn’t at the machinery exhibit.”
“But now,” continued the
Judge, “the fruit shall translate to us the mystery and wisdom of the feminine
heart. Take the apple, Miss Garland. Hear our modest tales of romance, and then
award the prize as you may deem it just.”
The lady passenger smiled
sweetly. The apple lay in her lap beneath her robes and wraps. She reclined
against her protecting bulwark, brightly and cosily at ease. But for the voices
and the wind one might have listened hopefully to hear her purr. Someone cast
fresh logs upon the fire. Judge Menefee nodded suavely. “Will you oblige us
with the initial story?” he asked.
The windmill man sat as sits
a Turk, with his hat well back on his head on account of the draughts.
“Well,” he began, without
any embarrassment, “this is about the way I size up the difficulty: Of course
Redruth was jostled a good deal by this duck who had money to play ball with
who tried to cut him out of his girl. So he goes around, naturally, and asks
her if the game is still square. Well, nobody wants a guy cutting in with
buggies and gold bonds when he’s got an option on a girl. Well, he goes around
to see her. Well, maybe he’s hot, and talks like the proprietor, and forgets
that an engagement ain’t always a lead-pipe cinch. Well, I guess that makes
Alice warm under the lacy yoke. Well, she answers back sharp. Well, he—”
“Say!” interrupted the
passenger who was nobody in particular, “if you could put up a windmill on
every one of them ‘wells’ you’re using, you’d be able to retire from business,
wouldn’t you?”
The windmill man grinned
good-naturedly.
“Oh, I ain’t no Guy
de Mopassong,” he said, cheerfully. “I’m giving it to you in straight
American. Well, she says something like this: ‘Mr. Gold Bonds is only a
friend,’ says she; ‘but he takes me riding and buys me theatre tickets, and
that’s what you never do. Ain’t I to never have any pleasure in life while I
can?’ ‘Pass this chatfield-chatfield thing along,’ says Redruth;—‘hand out the
mitt to the Willie with creases in it or you don’t put your slippers under my
wardrobe.’
“Now that kind of train
orders don’t go with a girl that’s got any spirit. I bet that girl loved her
honey all the time. Maybe she only wanted, as girls do, to work the good thing
for a little fun and caramels before she settled down to patch George’s other pair,
and be a good wife. But he is glued to the high horse, and won’t come down.
Well, she hands him back the ring, proper enough; and George goes away and hits
the booze. Yep. That’s what done it. I bet that girl fired the cornucopia with
the fancy vest two days after her steady left. George boards a freight and
checks his bag of crackers for parts unknown. He sticks to Old Booze for a
number of years; and then the aniline and aquafortis gets the decision. ‘Me for
the hermit’s hut,’ says George, ‘and the long whiskers, and the buried can of
money that isn’t there.’
“But that Alice, in my mind,
was on the level. She never married, but took up typewriting as soon as the
wrinkles began to show, and kept a cat that came when you said
‘weeny—weeny—weeny!’ I got too much faith in good women to believe they throw
down the fellow they’re stuck on every time for the dough.” The windmill man
ceased.
“I think,” said the lady
passenger, slightly moving upon her lowly throne, “that that is a char—”
“Oh, Miss Garland!” interposed
Judge Menefee, with uplifted hand, “I beg of you, no comments! It would not be
fair to the other contestants. Mr.—er—will you take the next turn?” The Judge
addressed the young man who had the Agency.
“My version of the romance,”
began the young man, diffidently clasping his hands, “would be this: They did
not quarrel when they parted. Mr. Redruth bade her good-by and went out into
the world to seek his fortune. He knew his love would remain true to him. He
scorned the thought that his rival could make an impression upon a heart so
fond and faithful. I would say that Mr. Redruth went out to the Rocky Mountains
in Wyoming to seek for gold. One day a crew of pirates landed and captured him
while at work, and—”
“Hey! what’s that?” sharply
called the passenger who was nobody in particular—“a crew of pirates landed in
the Rocky Mountains! Will you tell us how they sailed—”
“Landed from a train,” said
the narrator, quietly and not without some readiness. “They kept him prisoner
in a cave for months, and then they took him hundreds of miles away to the
forests of Alaska. There a beautiful Indian girl fell in love with him, but he
remained true to Alice. After another year of wandering in the woods, he set
out with the diamonds—”
“What diamonds?” asked the unimportant
passenger, almost with acerbity.
“The ones the saddlemaker
showed him in the Peruvian temple,” said the other, somewhat obscurely. “When
he reached home, Alice’s mother led him, weeping, to a green mound under a
willow tree. ‘Her heart was broken when you left,’ said her mother. ‘And what
of my rival—of Chester McIntosh?’ asked Mr. Redruth, as he knelt sadly by
Alice’s grave. ‘When he found out,’ she answered, ‘that her heart was yours, he
pined away day by day until, at length, he started a furniture store in Grand
Rapids. We heard lately that he was bitten to death by an infuriated moose near
South Bend, Ind., where he had gone to try to forget scenes of civilisation.’
With which, Mr. Redruth forsook the face of mankind and became a hermit, as we
have seen.
“My story,” concluded the
young man with an Agency, “may lack the literary quality; but what I wanted it
to show is that the young lady remained true. She cared nothing for wealth in
comparison with true affection. I admire and believe in the fair sex too much
to think otherwise.”
The narrator ceased, with a
sidelong glance at the corner where reclined the lady passenger.
Bildad Rose was next invited
by Judge Menefee to contribute his story in the contest for the apple of
judgment. The stage-driver’s essay was brief.
“I’m not one of them lobo
wolves,” he said, “who are always blaming on women the calamities of life. My
testimony in regards to the fiction story you ask for, Judge, will be about as
follows: What ailed Redruth was pure laziness. If he had up and slugged this
Percival De Lacey that tried to give him the outside of the road, and had kept
Alice in the grape-vine swing with the blind-bridle on, all would have been
well. The woman you want is sure worth taking pains for.
“‘Send for me if you want me
again,’ says Redruth, and hoists his Stetson, and walks off. He’d have called
it pride, but the nixycomlogical name for it is laziness. No woman don’t like
to run after a man. ‘Let him come back, hisself,’ says the girl; and I’ll be
bound she tells the boy with the pay ore to trot; and then spends her time
watching out the window for the man with the empty pocket-book and the tickly
moustache.
“I reckon Redruth waits
about nine year expecting her to send him a note by a nigger asking him to forgive
her. But she don’t. ‘This game won’t work,’ says Redruth; ‘then so won’t I.’
And he goes in the hermit business and raises whiskers. Yes; laziness and
whiskers was what done the trick. They travel together. You ever hear of a man
with long whiskers and hair striking a bonanza? No. Look at the Duke of
Marlborough and this Standard Oil snoozer. Have they got ’em?
“Now, this Alice didn’t
never marry, I’ll bet a hoss. If Redruth had married somebody else she might
have done so, too. But he never turns up. She has these here things they call
fond memories, and maybe a lock of hair and a corset steel that he broke,
treasured up. Them sort of articles is as good as a husband to some women. I’d
say she played out a lone hand. I don’t blame no woman for old man Redruth’s
abandonment of barber shops and clean shirts.”
Next in order came the
passenger who was nobody in particular. Nameless to us, he travels the road
from Paradise to Sunrise City.
But him you shall see, if
the firelight be not too dim, as he responds to the Judge’s call.
A lean form, in rusty-brown
clothing, sitting like a frog, his arms wrapped about his legs, his chin
resting upon his knees. Smooth, oakum-coloured hair; long nose; mouth like a
satyr’s, with upturned, tobacco-stained corners. An eye like a fish’s; a red
necktie with a horseshoe pin. He began with a rasping chuckle that gradually
formed itself into words.
“Everybody wrong so far.
What! a romance without any orange blossoms! Ho, ho! My money on the lad with
the butterfly tie and the certified checks in his trouserings.
“Take ’em as they parted at
the gate? All right. ‘You never loved me,’ says Redruth, wildly, ‘or you
wouldn’t speak to a man who can buy you the ice-cream.’ ‘I hate him,’ says she.
‘I loathe his side-bar buggy; I despise the elegant cream bonbons he sends me
in gilt boxes covered with real lace; I feel that I could stab him to the heart
when he presents me with a solid medallion locket with turquoises and pearls
running in a vine around the border. Away with him! ’Tis only you I love.’
‘Back to the cosy corner!’ says Redruth. ‘Was I bound and lettered in East
Aurora? Get platonic, if you please. No jack-pots for mine. Go and hate your
friend some more. For me the Nickerson girl on Avenue B, and gum, and a trolley
ride.’
“Around that night comes
John W. Croesus. ‘What! tears?’ says he, arranging his pearl pin. ‘You have
driven my lover away,’ says little Alice, sobbing: ‘I hate the sight of you.’
‘Marry me, then,’ says John W., lighting a Henry Clay. ‘What!’ she cries indignantly,
‘marry you! Never,’ she says, ‘until this blows over, and I can do some
shopping, and you see about the licence. There’s a telephone next door if you
want to call up the county clerk.’”
The narrator paused to give
vent to his cynical chuckle.
“Did they marry?” he
continued. “Did the duck swallow the June-bug? And then I take up the case of
Old Boy Redruth. There’s where you are all wrong again, according to my theory.
What turned him into a hermit? One says laziness; one says remorse; one says
booze. I say women did it. How old is the old man now?” asked the speaker,
turning to Bildad Rose.
“I should say about
sixty-five.”
“All right. He conducted his
hermit shop here for twenty years. Say he was twenty-five when he took off his
hat at the gate. That leaves twenty years for him to account for, or else be
docked. Where did he spend that ten and two fives? I’ll give you my idea. Up
for bigamy. Say there was the fat blonde in Saint Jo, and the panatela brunette
at Skillet Ridge, and the gold tooth down in the Kaw valley. Redruth gets his
cases mixed, and they send him up the road. He gets out after they are through
with him, and says: ‘Any line for me except the crinoline. The hermit trade is
not overdone, and the stenographers never apply to ’em for work. The jolly
hermit’s life for me. No more long hairs in the comb or dill pickles lying
around in the cigar tray.’ You tell me they pinched old Redruth for the noodle
villa just because he said he was King Solomon? Figs! He was Solomon.
That’s all of mine. I guess it don’t call for any apples. Enclosed find stamps.
It don’t sound much like a prize winner.”
Respecting the stricture
laid by Judge Menefee against comments upon the stories, all were silent when
the passenger who was nobody in particular had concluded. And then the
ingenious originator of the contest cleared his throat to begin the ultimate
entry for the prize. Though seated with small comfort upon the floor, you might
search in vain for any abatement of dignity in Judge Menefee. The now diminishing
firelight played softly upon his face, as clearly chiselled as a Roman
emperor’s on some old coin, and upon the thick waves of his honourable grey
hair.
“A woman’s heart!” he began,
in even but thrilling tones—“who can hope to fathom it? The ways and desires of
men are various. I think that the hearts of all women beat with the same
rhythm, and to the same old tune of love. Love, to a woman, means sacrifice. If
she be worthy of the name, no gold or rank will outweigh with her a genuine
devotion.
“Gentlemen of the—er—I
should say, my friends, the case of Redruth versus love and
affection has been called. Yet, who is on trial? Not Redruth, for he has been
punished. Not those immortal passions that clothe our lives with the joy of the
angels. Then who? Each man of us here to-night stands at the bar to answer if
chivalry or darkness inhabits his bosom. To judge us sits womankind in the form
of one of its fairest flowers. In her hand she holds the prize, intrinsically
insignificant, but worthy of our noblest efforts to win as a guerdon of
approval from so worthy a representative of feminine judgment and taste.
“In taking up the imaginary
history of Redruth and the fair being to whom he gave his heart, I must, in the
beginning, raise my voice against the unworthy insinuation that the selfishness
or perfidy or love of luxury of any woman drove him to renounce the world. I
have not found woman to be so unspiritual or venal. We must seek elsewhere,
among man’s baser nature and lower motives for the cause.
“There was, in all
probability, a lover’s quarrel as they stood at the gate on that memorable day.
Tormented by jealousy, young Redruth vanished from his native haunts. But had
he just cause to do so? There is no evidence for or against. But there is
something higher than evidence; there is the grand, eternal belief in woman’s
goodness, in her steadfastness against temptation, in her loyalty even in the
face of proffered riches.
“I picture to myself the
rash lover, wandering, self-tortured, about the world. I picture his gradual
descent, and, finally, his complete despair when he realises that he has lost
the most precious gift life had to offer him. Then his withdrawal from the
world of sorrow and the subsequent derangement of his faculties becomes
intelligible.
“But what do I see on the
other hand? A lonely woman fading away as the years roll by; still faithful,
still waiting, still watching for a form and listening for a step that will
come no more. She is old now. Her hair is white and smoothly banded. Each day
she sits at the door and gazes longingly down the dusty road. In spirit she is
waiting there at the gate, just as he left her—his forever, but not here below.
Yes; my belief in woman paints that picture in my mind. Parted forever on
earth, but waiting! She in anticipation of a meeting in Elysium; he in the
Slough of Despond.”
“I thought he was in the
bughouse,” said the passenger who was nobody in particular.
Judge Menefee stirred, a
little impatiently. The men sat, drooping, in grotesque attitudes. The wind had
abated its violence; coming now in fitful, virulent puffs. The fire had burned
to a mass of red coals which shed but a dim light within the room. The lady
passenger in her cosy nook looked to be but a formless dark bulk, crowned by a
mass of coiled, sleek hair and showing but a small space of snowy forehead
above her clinging boa.
Judge Menefee got stiffly to
his feet.
“And now, Miss Garland,” he
announced, “we have concluded. It is for you to award the prize to the one of
us whose argument—especially, I may say, in regard to his estimate of true
womanhood—approaches nearest to your own conception.”
No answer came from the lady
passenger. Judge Menefee bent over solicitously. The passenger who was nobody
in particular laughed low and harshly. The lady was sleeping sweetly. The Judge
essayed to take her hand to awaken her. In doing so he touched a small, cold,
round, irregular something in her lap.
“She has eaten the apple,”
announced Judge Menefee, in awed tones, as he held up the core for them to see.
XIII
THE MISSING CHORD
I stopped overnight at the
sheep-ranch of Rush Kinney, on the Sandy Fork of the Nueces. Mr. Kinney and I
had been strangers up to the time when I called “Hallo!” at his hitching-rack;
but from that moment until my departure on the next morning we were, according
to the Texas code, undeniable friends.
After supper the ranchman
and I lugged our chairs outside the two-room house, to its floorless gallery
roofed with chaparral and sacuista grass. With the rear legs of our chairs
sinking deep into the hardpacked loam, each of us reposed against an elm pillar
of the structure and smoked El Toro tobacco, while we wrangled amicably
concerning the affairs of the rest of the world.
As for conveying adequate
conception of the engaging charm of that prairie evening, despair waits upon
it. It is a bold chronicler who will undertake the description of a Texas night
in the early spring. An inventory must suffice.
The ranch rested upon the
summit of a lenient slope. The ambient prairie, diversified by arroyos and
murky patches of brush and pear, lay around us like a darkened bowl at the
bottom of which we reposed as dregs. Like a turquoise cover the sky pinned us
there. The miraculous air, heady with ozone and made memorably sweet by leagues
of wild flowerets, gave tang and savour to the breath. In the sky was a great,
round, mellow searchlight which we knew to be no moon, but the dark lantern of
summer, who came to hunt northward the cowering spring. In the nearest corral a
flock of sheep lay silent until a groundless panic would send a squad of them
huddling together with a drumming rush. For other sounds a shrill family of
coyotes yapped beyond the shearing-pen, and whippoorwills twittered in the long
grass. But even these dissonances hardly rippled the clear torrent of the
mocking-birds’ notes that fell from a dozen neighbouring shrubs and trees. It
would not have been preposterous for one to tiptoe and essay to touch the
stars, they hung so bright and imminent.
Mr. Kinney’s wife, a young
and capable woman, we had left in the house. She remained to busy herself with
the domestic round of duties, in which I had observed that she seemed to take a
buoyant and contented pride. In one room we had supped. Presently, from the
other, as Kinney and I sat without, there burst a volume of sudden and
brilliant music. If I could justly estimate the art of piano-playing, the
construer of that rollicking fantasia had creditably mastered the secrets of
the keyboard. A piano, and one so well played, seemed to me to be an unusual
thing to find in that small and unpromising ranch-house. I must have looked my
surprise at Rush Kinney, for he laughed in his soft, Southern way, and nodded
at me through the moonlit haze of our cigarettes.
“You don’t often hear as
agreeable a noise as that on a sheep-ranch,” he remarked; “but I never see any
reason for not playing up to the arts and graces just because we happen to live
out in the brush. It’s a lonesome life for a woman; and if a little music can
make it any better, why not have it? That’s the way I look at it.”
“A wise and generous
theory,” I assented. “And Mrs. Kinney plays well. I am not learned in the
science of music, but I should call her an uncommonly good performer. She has
technic and more than ordinary power.”
The moon was very bright,
you will understand, and I saw upon Kinney’s face a sort of amused and pregnant
expression, as though there were things behind it that might be expounded.
“You came up the trail from
the Double-Elm Fork,” he said promisingly. “As you crossed it you must have
seen an old deserted jacal to your left under a comma mott.”
“I did,” said I. “There was
a drove of javalis rooting around it. I could see by the
broken corrals that no one lived there.”
“That’s where this music
proposition started,” said Kinney. “I don’t mind telling you about it while we
smoke. That’s where old Cal Adams lived. He had about eight hundred graded
merinos and a daughter that was solid silk and as handsome as a new stake-rope
on a thirty-dollar pony. And I don’t mind telling you that I was guilty in the
second degree of hanging around old Cal’s ranch all the time I could spare away
from lambing and shearing. Miss Marilla was her name; and I had figured it out
by the rule of two that she was destined to become the chatelaine and lady
superior of Rancho Lomito, belonging to R. Kinney, Esq., where you are now a
welcome and honoured guest.
“I will say that old Cal
wasn’t distinguished as a sheepman. He was a little, old stoop-shouldered hombre about
as big as a gun scabbard, with scraggy white whiskers, and condemned to the
continuous use of language. Old Cal was so obscure in his chosen profession
that he wasn’t even hated by the cowmen. And when a sheepman don’t get eminent
enough to acquire the hostility of the cattlemen, he is mighty apt to die
unwept and considerably unsung.
“But that Marilla girl was a
benefit to the eye. And she was the most elegant kind of a housekeeper. I was
the nearest neighbour, and I used to ride over to the Double-Elm anywhere from
nine to sixteen times a week with fresh butter or a quarter of venison or a
sample of new sheep-dip just as a frivolous excuse to see Marilla. Marilla and
me got to be extensively inveigled with each other, and I was pretty sure I was
going to get my rope around her neck and lead her over to the Lomito. Only she
was so everlastingly permeated with filial sentiments toward old Cal that I
never could get her to talk about serious matters.
“You never saw anybody in
your life that was as full of knowledge and had less sense than old Cal. He was
advised about all the branches of information contained in learning, and he was
up to all the rudiments of doctrines and enlightenment. You couldn’t advance
him any ideas on any of the parts of speech or lines of thought. You would have
thought he was a professor of the weather and politics and chemistry and
natural history and the origin of derivations. Any subject you brought up old
Cal could give you an abundant synopsis of it from the Greek root up to the
time it was sacked and on the market.
“One day just after the fall
shearing I rides over to the Double-Elm with a lady’s magazine about fashions
for Marilla and a scientific paper for old Cal.
“While I was tying my pony
to a mesquite, out runs Marilla, ‘tickled to death’ with some news that couldn’t
wait.
“‘Oh, Rush,’ she says, all
flushed up with esteem and gratification, ‘what do you think! Dad’s going to
buy me a piano. Ain’t it grand? I never dreamed I’d ever have one.”
“‘It’s sure joyful,’ says I.
‘I always admired the agreeable uproar of a piano. It’ll be lots of company for
you. That’s mighty good of Uncle Cal to do that.’
“‘I’m all undecided,’ says
Marilla, ‘between a piano and an organ. A parlour organ is nice.’
“‘Either of ’em,’ says I,
‘is first-class for mitigating the lack of noise around a sheep-ranch. For my
part,’ I says, ‘I shouldn’t like anything better than to ride home of an
evening and listen to a few waltzes and jigs, with somebody about your size
sitting on the piano-stool and rounding up the notes.’
“‘Oh, hush about that,’ says
Marilla, ‘and go on in the house. Dad hasn’t rode out to-day. He’s not feeling
well.’
“Old Cal was inside, lying
on a cot. He had a pretty bad cold and cough. I stayed to supper.
“‘Going to get Marilla a
piano, I hear,’ says I to him.
“‘Why, yes, something of the
kind, Rush,’ says he. ‘She’s been hankering for music for a long spell; and I
allow to fix her up with something in that line right away. The sheep sheared
six pounds all round this fall; and I’m going to get Marilla an instrument if
it takes the price of the whole clip to do it.’
“‘Star wayno,’ says
I. ‘The little girl deserves it.’
“‘I’m going to San Antone on
the last load of wool,’ says Uncle Cal, ‘and select an instrument for her
myself.’
“‘Wouldn’t it be better,’ I
suggests, ‘to take Marilla along and let her pick out one that she likes?’
“I might have known that
would set Uncle Cal going. Of course, a man like him, that knew everything
about everything, would look at that as a reflection on his attainments.
“‘No, sir, it wouldn’t,’
says he, pulling at his white whiskers. ‘There ain’t a better judge of musical
instruments in the whole world than what I am. I had an uncle,’ says he, ‘that
was a partner in a piano-factory, and I’ve seen thousands of ’em put together.
I know all about musical instruments from a pipe-organ to a corn-stalk fiddle.
There ain’t a man lives, sir, that can tell me any news about any instrument
that has to be pounded, blowed, scraped, grinded, picked, or wound with a key.’
“‘You get me what you like,
dad,’ says Marilla, who couldn’t keep her feet on the floor from joy. ‘Of
course you know what to select. I’d just as lief it was a piano or a organ or
what.’
“‘I see in St. Louis once
what they call a orchestrion,’ says Uncle Cal, ‘that I judged was about the
finest thing in the way of music ever invented. But there ain’t room in this
house for one. Anyway, I imagine they’d cost a thousand dollars. I reckon
something in the piano line would suit Marilla the best. She took lessons in
that respect for two years over at Birdstail. I wouldn’t trust the buying of an
instrument to anybody else but myself. I reckon if I hadn’t took up
sheep-raising I’d have been one of the finest composers or piano-and-organ
manufacturers in the world.’
“That was Uncle Cal’s style.
But I never lost any patience with him, on account of his thinking so much of
Marilla. And she thought just as much of him. He sent her to the academy over
at Birdstail for two years when it took nearly every pound of wool to pay the
expenses.
“Along about Tuesday Uncle Cal
put out for San Antone on the last wagonload of wool. Marilla’s uncle Ben, who
lived in Birdstail, come over and stayed at the ranch while Uncle Cal was gone.
“It was ninety miles to San
Antone, and forty to the nearest railroad-station, so Uncle Cal was gone about
four days. I was over at the Double-Elm when he came rolling back one evening
about sundown. And up there in the wagon, sure enough, was a piano or a
organ—we couldn’t tell which—all wrapped up in woolsacks, with a wagon-sheet
tied over it in case of rain. And out skips Marilla, hollering, ‘Oh, oh!’ with
her eyes shining and her hair a-flying. ‘Dad—dad,’ she sings out, ‘have you
brought it—have you brought it?’—and it right there before her eyes, as women
will do.
“‘Finest piano in San
Antone,’ says Uncle Cal, waving his hand, proud. ‘Genuine rosewood, and the
finest, loudest tone you ever listened to. I heard the storekeeper play it, and
I took it on the spot and paid cash down.’
“Me and Ben and Uncle Cal
and a Mexican lifted it out of the wagon and carried it in the house and set it
in a corner. It was one of them upright instruments, and not very heavy or very
big.
“And then all of a sudden
Uncle Cal flops over and says he’s mighty sick. He’s got a high fever, and he
complains of his lungs. He gets into bed, while me and Ben goes out to unhitch
and put the horses in the pasture, and Marilla flies around to get Uncle Cal
something hot to drink. But first she puts both arms on that piano and hugs it
with a soft kind of a smile, like you see kids doing with their Christmas toys.
“When I came in from the
pasture, Marilla was in the room where the piano was. I could see by the
strings and woolsacks on the floor that she had had it unwrapped. But now she
was tying the wagon-sheet over it again, and there was a kind of solemn,
whitish look on her face.
“‘Ain’t wrapping up the
music again, are you, Marilla?’ I asks. ‘What’s the matter with just a couple
of tunes for to see how she goes under the saddle?’
“‘Not to-night, Rush,’ says
she. ‘I don’t want to play any to-night. Dad’s too sick. Just think, Rush, he
paid three hundred dollars for it —nearly a third of what the wool-clip
brought!’
“‘Well, it ain’t anyways in
the neighbourhood of a third of what you are worth,’ I told her. ‘And I don’t
think Uncle Cal is too sick to hear a little agitation of the piano-keys just
to christen the machine.
“‘Not to-night, Rush,’ says
Marilla, in a way that she had when she wanted to settle things.
“But it seems that Uncle Cal
was plenty sick, after all. He got so bad that Ben saddled up and rode over to
Birdstail for Doc Simpson. I stayed around to see if I’d be needed for
anything.
“When Uncle Cal’s pain let
up on him a little he called Marilla and says to her: ‘Did you look at your
instrument, honey? And do you like it?’
“‘It’s lovely, dad,’ says
she, leaning down by his pillow; ‘I never saw one so pretty. How dear and good
it was of you to buy it for me!’
“‘I haven’t heard you play
on it any yet,’ says Uncle Cal; ‘and I’ve been listening. My side don’t hurt
quite so bad now—won’t you play a piece, Marilla?’
“But no; she puts Uncle Cal
off and soothes him down like you’ve seen women do with a kid. It seems she’s
made up her mind not to touch that piano at present.
“When Doc Simpson comes over
he tells us that Uncle Cal has pneumonia the worst kind; and as the old man was
past sixty and nearly on the lift anyhow, the odds was against his walking on
grass any more.
“On the fourth day of his
sickness he calls for Marilla again and wants to talk piano. Doc Simpson was
there, and so was Ben and Mrs. Ben, trying to do all they could.
“‘I’d have made a wonderful
success in anything connected with music,’ says Uncle Cal. ‘I got the finest
instrument for the money in San Antone. Ain’t that piano all right in every
respect, Marilla?’
“‘It’s just perfect, dad,’
says she. ‘It’s got the finest tone I ever heard. But don’t you think you could
sleep a little while now, dad?’
“‘No, I don’t,’ says Uncle
Cal. ‘I want to hear that piano. I don’t believe you’ve even tried it yet. I
went all the way to San Antone and picked it out for you myself. It took a
third of the fall clip to buy it; but I don’t mind that if it makes my good
girl happier. Won’t you play a little bit for dad, Marilla?’
“Doc Simpson beckoned
Marilla to one side and recommended her to do what Uncle Cal wanted, so it
would get him quieted. And her uncle Ben and his wife asked her, too.
“‘Why not hit out a tune or
two with the soft pedal on?’ I asks Marilla. ‘Uncle Cal has begged you so
often. It would please him a good deal to hear you touch up the piano he’s
bought for you. Don’t you think you might?’
“But Marilla stands there
with big tears rolling down from her eyes and says nothing. And then she runs
over and slips her arm under Uncle Cal’s neck and hugs him tight.
“‘Why, last night, dad,’ we
heard her say, ‘I played it ever so much. Honest—I have been playing it. And
it’s such a splendid instrument, you don’t know how I love it. Last night I
played “Bonnie Dundee” and the “Anvil Polka” and the “Blue Danube”—and lots of
pieces. You must surely have heard me playing a little, didn’t you, dad? I
didn’t like to play loud when you was so sick.’
“‘Well, well,’ says Uncle
Cal, ‘maybe I did. Maybe I did and forgot about it. My head is a little cranky
at times. I heard the man in the store play it fine. I’m mighty glad you like
it, Marilla. Yes, I believe I could go to sleep a while if you’ll stay right
beside me till I do.’
“There was where Marilla had
me guessing. Much as she thought of that old man, she wouldn’t strike a note on
that piano that he’d bought her. I couldn’t imagine why she told him she’d been
playing it, for the wagon-sheet hadn’t ever been off of it since she put it
back on the same day it come. I knew she could play a little anyhow, for I’d
once heard her snatch some pretty fair dance-music out of an old piano at the
Charco Largo Ranch.
“Well, in about a week the
pneumonia got the best of Uncle Cal. They had the funeral over at Birdstail,
and all of us went over. I brought Marilla back home in my buckboard. Her uncle
Ben and his wife were going to stay there a few days with her.
“That night Marilla takes me
in the room where the piano was, while the others were out on the gallery.
“‘Come here, Rush,’ says
she; ‘I want you to see this now.’
“She unties the rope, and drags
off the wagon-sheet.
“If you ever rode a saddle
without a horse, or fired off a gun that wasn’t loaded, or took a drink out of
an empty bottle, why, then you might have been able to scare an opera or two
out of the instrument Uncle Cal had bought.
“Instead of a piano, it was
one of the machines they’ve invented to play the piano with. By itself it was
about as musical as the holes of a flute without the flute.
“And that was the piano that
Uncle Cal had selected; and standing by it was the good, fine, all-wool girl
that never let him know it.
“And what you heard playing
a while ago,” concluded Mr. Kinney, “was that same deputy-piano machine; only
just at present it’s shoved up against a six-hundred-dollar piano that I bought
for Marilla as soon as we was married.”
XIV
A CALL LOAN
In those days the cattlemen
were the anointed. They were the grandees of the grass, kings of the kine,
lords of the lea, barons of beef and bone. They might have ridden in golden
chariots had their tastes so inclined. The cattleman was caught in a stampede
of dollars. It seemed to him that he had more money than was decent. But when
he had bought a watch with precious stones set in the case so large that they
hurt his ribs, and a California saddle with silver nails and Angora skin suaderos,
and ordered everybody up to the bar for whisky—what else was there for him to
spend money for?
Not so circumscribed in
expedient for the reduction of surplus wealth were those lairds of the lariat
who had womenfolk to their name. In the breast of the rib-sprung sex the genius
of purse lightening may slumber through years of inopportunity, but never, my
brothers, does it become extinct.
So, out of the chaparral
came Long Bill Longley from the Bar Circle Branch on the Frio—a wife-driven
man—to taste the urban joys of success. Something like half a million dollars
he had, with an income steadily increasing.
Long Bill was a graduate of
the camp and trail. Luck and thrift, a cool head, and a telescopic eye for
mavericks had raised him from cowboy to be a cowman. Then came the boom in
cattle, and Fortune, stepping gingerly among the cactus thorns, came and
emptied her cornucopia at the doorstep of the ranch.
In the little frontier city
of Chaparosa, Longley built a costly residence. Here he became a captive, bound
to the chariot of social existence. He was doomed to become a leading citizen.
He struggled for a time like a mustang in his first corral, and then he hung up
his quirt and spurs. Time hung heavily on his hands. He organised the First
National Bank of Chaparosa, and was elected its president.
One day a dyspeptic man,
wearing double-magnifying glasses, inserted an official-looking card between
the bars of the cashier’s window of the First National Bank. Five minutes later
the bank force was dancing at the beck and call of a national bank examiner.
This examiner, Mr. J. Edgar
Todd, proved to be a thorough one.
At the end of it all the
examiner put on his hat, and called the president, Mr. William R. Longley, into
the private office.
“Well, how do you find
things?” asked Longley, in his slow, deep tones. “Any brands in the round-up
you didn’t like the looks of?”
“The bank checks up all
right, Mr. Longley,” said Todd; “and I find your loans in very good shape—with
one exception. You are carrying one very bad bit of paper—one that is so bad
that I have been thinking that you surely do not realise the serious position
it places you in. I refer to a call loan of $10,000 made to Thomas Merwin. Not
only is the amount in excess of the maximum sum the bank can loan any
individual legally, but it is absolutely without endorsement or security. Thus
you have doubly violated the national banking laws, and have laid yourself open
to criminal prosecution by the Government. A report of the matter to the
Comptroller of the Currency—which I am bound to make—would, I am sure, result
in the matter being turned over to the Department of Justice for action. You
see what a serious thing it is.”
Bill Longley was leaning his
lengthy, slowly moving frame back in his swivel chair. His hands were clasped
behind his head, and he turned a little to look the examiner in the face. The
examiner was surprised to see a smile creep about the rugged mouth of the
banker, and a kindly twinkle in his light-blue eyes. If he saw the seriousness of
the affair, it did not show in his countenance.
“Of course, you don’t know
Tom Merwin,” said Longley, almost genially. “Yes, I know about that loan. It
hasn’t any security except Tom Merwin’s word. Somehow, I’ve always found that
when a man’s word is good it’s the best security there is. Oh, yes, I know the
Government doesn’t think so. I guess I’ll see Tom about that note.”
Mr. Todd’s dyspepsia seemed
to grow suddenly worse. He looked at the chaparral banker through his
double-magnifying glasses in amazement.
“You see,” said Longley,
easily explaining the thing away, “Tom heard of 2000 head of two-year-olds down
near Rocky Ford on the Rio Grande that could be had for $8 a head. I reckon
’twas one of old Leandro Garcia’s outfits that he had smuggled over, and he
wanted to make a quick turn on ’em. Those cattle are worth $15 on the hoof in
Kansas City. Tom knew it and I knew it. He had $6,000, and I let him have the
$10,000 to make the deal with. His brother Ed took ’em on to market three weeks
ago. He ought to be back ’most any day now with the money. When he comes Tom’ll
pay that note.”
The bank examiner was
shocked. It was, perhaps, his duty to step out to the telegraph office and wire
the situation to the Comptroller. But he did not. He talked pointedly and
effectively to Longley for three minutes. He succeeded in making the banker
understand that he stood upon the border of a catastrophe. And then he offered
a tiny loophole of escape.
“I am going to Hilldale’s
to-night,” he told Longley, “to examine a bank there. I will pass through
Chaparosa on my way back. At twelve o’clock to-morrow I shall call at this
bank. If this loan has been cleared out of the way by that time it will not be
mentioned in my report. If not—I will have to do my duty.”
With that the examiner bowed
and departed.
The President of the First
National lounged in his chair half an hour longer, and then he lit a mild
cigar, and went over to Tom Merwin’s house. Merwin, a ranchman in brown duck,
with a contemplative eye, sat with his feet upon a table, plaiting a rawhide
quirt.
“Tom,” said Longley, leaning
against the table, “you heard anything from Ed yet?”
“Not yet,” said Merwin,
continuing his plaiting. “I guess Ed’ll be along back now in a few days.”
“There was a bank examiner,”
said Longley, “nosing around our place to-day, and he bucked a sight about that
note of yours. You know I know it’s all right, but the thing is against
the banking laws. I was pretty sure you’d have paid it off before the bank was
examined again, but the son-of-a-gun slipped in on us, Tom. Now, I’m short of
cash myself just now, or I’d let you have the money to take it up with. I’ve
got till twelve o’clock to-morrow, and then I’ve got to show the cash in place
of that note or—”
“Or what, Bill?” asked
Merwin, as Longley hesitated.
“Well, I suppose it means be
jumped on with both of Uncle Sam’s feet.”
“I’ll try to raise the money
for you on time,” said Merwin, interested in his plaiting.
“All right, Tom,” concluded
Longley, as he turned toward the door; “I knew you would if you could.”
Merwin threw down his whip
and went to the only other bank in town, a private one, run by Cooper &
Craig.
“Cooper,” he said, to the
partner by that name, “I’ve got to have $10,000 to-day or to-morrow. I’ve got a
house and lot there that’s worth about $6,000 and that’s all the actual
collateral. But I’ve got a cattle deal on that’s sure to bring me in more than
that much profit within a few days.”
Cooper began to cough.
“Now, for God’s sake don’t
say no,” said Merwin. “I owe that much money on a call loan. It’s been called,
and the man that called it is a man I’ve laid on the same blanket with in
cow-camps and ranger-camps for ten years. He can call anything I’ve got. He can
call the blood out of my veins and it’ll come. He’s got to have the money. He’s
in a devil of a—Well, he needs the money, and I’ve got to get it for him. You
know my word’s good, Cooper.”
“No doubt of it,” assented
Cooper, urbanely, “but I’ve a partner, you know. I’m not free in making loans.
And even if you had the best security in your hands, Merwin, we couldn’t
accommodate you in less than a week. We’re just making a shipment of $15,000 to
Myer Brothers in Rockdell, to buy cotton with. It goes down on the narrow-gauge
to-night. That leaves our cash quite short at present. Sorry we can’t arrange
it for you.”
Merwin went back to his
little bare office and plaited at his quirt again. About four o’clock in the
afternoon he went to the First National Bank and leaned over the railing of
Longley’s desk.
“I’ll try to get that money
for you to-night—I mean to-morrow, Bill.”
“All right, Tom,” said
Longley quietly.
At nine o’clock that night
Tom Merwin stepped cautiously out of the small frame house in which he lived.
It was near the edge of the little town, and few citizens were in the
neighbourhood at that hour. Merwin wore two six-shooters in a belt, and a
slouch hat. He moved swiftly down a lonely street, and then followed the sandy
road that ran parallel to the narrow-gauge track until he reached the
water-tank, two miles below the town. There Tom Merwin stopped, tied a black
silk handkerchief about the lower part of his face, and pulled his hat down
low.
In ten minutes the night
train for Rockdell pulled up at the tank, having come from Chaparosa.
With a gun in each hand
Merwin raised himself from behind a clump of chaparral and started for the
engine. But before he had taken three steps, two long, strong arms clasped him
from behind, and he was lifted from his feet and thrown, face downward upon the
grass. There was a heavy knee pressing against his back, and an iron hand
grasping each of his wrists. He was held thus, like a child, until the engine
had taken water, and until the train had moved, with accelerating speed, out of
sight. Then he was released, and rose to his feet to face Bill Longley.
“The case never needed to be
fixed up this way, Tom,” said Longley. “I saw Cooper this evening, and he told
me what you and him talked about. Then I went down to your house to-night and
saw you come out with your guns on, and I followed you. Let’s go back, Tom.”
They walked away together,
side by side.
“’Twas the only chance I
saw,” said Merwin presently. “You called your loan, and I tried to answer you.
Now, what’ll you do, Bill, if they sock it to you?”
“What would you have done if
they’d socked it to you?” was the answer Longley made.
“I never thought I’d lay in
a bush to stick up a train,” remarked Merwin; “but a call loan’s different. A
call’s a call with me. We’ve got twelve hours yet, Bill, before this spy jumps
onto you. We’ve got to raise them spondulicks somehow. Maybe we can—Great Sam
Houston! do you hear that?”
Merwin broke into a run, and
Longley kept with him, hearing only a rather pleasing whistle somewhere in the
night rendering the lugubrious air of “The Cowboy’s Lament.”
“It’s the only tune he
knows,” shouted Merwin, as he ran. “I’ll bet—”
They were at the door of
Merwin’s house. He kicked it open and fell over an old valise lying in the
middle of the floor. A sunburned, firm-jawed youth, stained by travel, lay upon
the bed puffing at a brown cigarette.
“What’s the word, Ed?”
gasped Merwin.
“So, so,” drawled that
capable youngster. “Just got in on the 9:30. Sold the bunch for fifteen,
straight. Now, buddy, you want to quit kickin’ a valise around that’s got
$29,000 in greenbacks in its in’ards.”
XV
THE PRINCESS AND THE PUMA
There had to be a king and
queen, of course. The king was a terrible old man who wore six-shooters and
spurs, and shouted in such a tremendous voice that the rattlers on the prairie
would run into their holes under the prickly pear. Before there was a royal
family they called the man “Whispering Ben.” When he came to own 50,000 acres
of land and more cattle than he could count, they called him O’Donnell “the
Cattle King.”
The queen had been a Mexican
girl from Laredo. She made a good, mild, Colorado-claro wife, and even
succeeded in teaching Ben to modify his voice sufficiently while in the house
to keep the dishes from being broken. When Ben got to be king she would sit on
the gallery of Espinosa Ranch and weave rush mats. When wealth became so
irresistible and oppressive that upholstered chairs and a centre table were
brought down from San Antone in the wagons, she bowed her smooth, dark head,
and shared the fate of the Danae.
To avoid lèse-majesté you
have been presented first to the king and queen. They do not enter the story,
which might be called “The Chronicle of the Princess, the Happy Thought, and
the Lion that Bungled his Job.”
Josefa O’Donnell was the
surviving daughter, the princess. From her mother she inherited warmth of
nature and a dusky, semi-tropic beauty. From Ben O’Donnell the royal she
acquired a store of intrepidity, common sense, and the faculty of ruling. The
combination was one worth going miles to see. Josefa while riding her pony at a
gallop could put five out of six bullets through a tomato-can swinging at the
end of a string. She could play for hours with a white kitten she owned,
dressing it in all manner of absurd clothes. Scorning a pencil, she could tell
you out of her head what 1545 two-year-olds would bring on the hoof, at $8.50
per head. Roughly speaking, the Espinosa Ranch is forty miles long and thirty
broad—but mostly leased land. Josefa, on her pony, had prospected over every
mile of it. Every cow-puncher on the range knew her by sight and was a loyal
vassal. Ripley Givens, foreman of one of the Espinosa outfits, saw her one day,
and made up his mind to form a royal matrimonial alliance. Presumptuous? No. In
those days in the Nueces country a man was a man. And, after all, the title of
cattle king does not presuppose blood royalty. Often it only signifies that its
owner wears the crown in token of his magnificent qualities in the art of
cattle stealing.
One day Ripley Givens rode
over to the Double Elm Ranch to inquire about a bunch of strayed yearlings. He
was late in setting out on his return trip, and it was sundown when he struck
the White Horse Crossing of the Nueces. From there to his own camp it was
sixteen miles. To the Espinosa ranch it was twelve. Givens was tired. He decided
to pass the night at the Crossing.
There was a fine water hole
in the river-bed. The banks were thickly covered with great trees, undergrown
with brush. Back from the water hole fifty yards was a stretch of curly
mesquite grass—supper for his horse and bed for himself. Givens staked his
horse, and spread out his saddle blankets to dry. He sat down with his back
against a tree and rolled a cigarette. From somewhere in the dense timber along
the river came a sudden, rageful, shivering wail. The pony danced at the end of
his rope and blew a whistling snort of comprehending fear. Givens puffed at his
cigarette, but he reached leisurely for his pistol-belt, which lay on the
grass, and twirled the cylinder of his weapon tentatively. A great gar plunged
with a loud splash into the water hole. A little brown rabbit skipped around a
bunch of catclaw and sat twitching his whiskers and looking humorously at
Givens. The pony went on eating grass.
It is well to be reasonably
watchful when a Mexican lion sings soprano along the arroyos at sundown. The
burden of his song may be that young calves and fat lambs are scarce, and that
he has a carnivorous desire for your acquaintance.
In the grass lay an empty
fruit can, cast there by some former sojourner. Givens caught sight of it with
a grunt of satisfaction. In his coat pocket tied behind his saddle was a
handful or two of ground coffee. Black coffee and cigarettes! What ranchero
could desire more?
In two minutes he had a
little fire going clearly. He started, with his can, for the water hole. When
within fifteen yards of its edge he saw, between the bushes, a side-saddled
pony with down-dropped reins cropping grass a little distance to his left. Just
rising from her hands and knees on the brink of the water hole was Josefa
O’Donnell. She had been drinking water, and she brushed the sand from the palms
of her hands. Ten yards away, to her right, half concealed by a clump of
sacuista, Givens saw the crouching form of the Mexican lion. His amber eyeballs
glared hungrily; six feet from them was the tip of the tail stretched straight,
like a pointer’s. His hind-quarters rocked with the motion of the cat tribe
preliminary to leaping.
Givens did what he could.
His six-shooter was thirty-five yards away lying on the grass. He gave a loud
yell, and dashed between the lion and the princess.
The “rucus,” as Givens
called it afterward, was brief and somewhat confused. When he arrived on the
line of attack he saw a dim streak in the air, and heard a couple of faint
cracks. Then a hundred pounds of Mexican lion plumped down upon his head and
flattened him, with a heavy jar, to the ground. He remembered calling out: “Let
up, now—no fair gouging!” and then he crawled from under the lion like a worm,
with his mouth full of grass and dirt, and a big lump on the back of his head
where it had struck the root of a water-elm. The lion lay motionless. Givens,
feeling aggrieved, and suspicious of fouls, shook his fist at the lion, and
shouted: “I’ll rastle you again for twenty—” and then he got back to himself.
Josefa was standing in her
tracks, quietly reloading her silver-mounted .38. It had not been a difficult
shot. The lion’s head made an easier mark than a tomato-can swinging at the end
of a string. There was a provoking, teasing, maddening smile upon her mouth and
in her dark eyes. The would-be-rescuing knight felt the fire of his fiasco burn
down to his soul. Here had been his chance, the chance that he had dreamed of;
and Momus, and not Cupid, had presided over it. The satyrs in the wood were, no
doubt, holding their sides in hilarious, silent laughter. There had been
something like vaudeville—say Signor Givens and his funny knockabout act with
the stuffed lion.
“Is that you, Mr. Givens?”
said Josefa, in her deliberate, saccharine contralto. “You nearly spoilt my
shot when you yelled. Did you hurt your head when you fell?”
“Oh, no,” said Givens,
quietly; “that didn’t hurt.” He stooped ignominiously and dragged his best
Stetson hat from under the beast. It was crushed and wrinkled to a fine comedy
effect. Then he knelt down and softly stroked the fierce, open-jawed head of
the dead lion.
“Poor old Bill!” he
exclaimed mournfully.
“What’s that?” asked Josefa,
sharply.
“Of course you didn’t know,
Miss Josefa,” said Givens, with an air of one allowing magnanimity to triumph
over grief. “Nobody can blame you. I tried to save him, but I couldn’t let you
know in time.”
“Save who?”
“Why, Bill. I’ve been
looking for him all day. You see, he’s been our camp pet for two years. Poor
old fellow, he wouldn’t have hurt a cottontail rabbit. It’ll break the boys all
up when they hear about it. But you couldn’t tell, of course, that Bill was
just trying to play with you.”
Josefa’s black eyes burned
steadily upon him. Ripley Givens met the test successfully. He stood rumpling
the yellow-brown curls on his head pensively. In his eye was regret, not
unmingled with a gentle reproach. His smooth features were set to a pattern of
indisputable sorrow. Josefa wavered.
“What was your pet doing
here?” she asked, making a last stand. “There’s no camp near the White Horse
Crossing.”
“The old rascal ran away
from camp yesterday,” answered Givens readily. “It’s a wonder the coyotes
didn’t scare him to death. You see, Jim Webster, our horse wrangler, brought a
little terrier pup into camp last week. The pup made life miserable for Bill—he
used to chase him around and chew his hind legs for hours at a time. Every
night when bedtime came Bill would sneak under one of the boy’s blankets and
sleep to keep the pup from finding him. I reckon he must have been worried
pretty desperate or he wouldn’t have run away. He was always afraid to get out
of sight of camp.”
Josefa looked at the body of
the fierce animal. Givens gently patted one of the formidable paws that could
have killed a yearling calf with one blow. Slowly a red flush widened upon the
dark olive face of the girl. Was it the signal of shame of the true sportsman
who has brought down ignoble quarry? Her eyes grew softer, and the lowered lids
drove away all their bright mockery.
“I’m very sorry,” she said
humbly; “but he looked so big, and jumped so high that—”
“Poor old Bill was hungry,”
interrupted Givens, in quick defence of the deceased. “We always made him jump
for his supper in camp. He would lie down and roll over for a piece of meat.
When he saw you he thought he was going to get something to eat from you.”
Suddenly Josefa’s eyes
opened wide.
“I might have shot you!” she
exclaimed. “You ran right in between. You risked your life to save your pet!
That was fine, Mr. Givens. I like a man who is kind to animals.”
Yes; there was even
admiration in her gaze now. After all, there was a hero rising out of the ruins
of the anti-climax. The look on Givens’s face would have secured him a high
position in the S.P.C.A.
“I always loved ’em,” said
he; “horses, dogs, Mexican lions, cows, alligators—”
“I hate alligators,”
instantly demurred Josefa; “crawly, muddy things!”
“Did I say alligators?” said
Givens. “I meant antelopes, of course.”
Josefa’s conscience drove
her to make further amends. She held out her hand penitently. There was a
bright, unshed drop in each of her eyes.
“Please forgive me, Mr.
Givens, won’t you? I’m only a girl, you know, and I was frightened at first.
I’m very, very sorry I shot Bill. You don’t know how ashamed I feel. I wouldn’t
have done it for anything.”
Givens took the proffered
hand. He held it for a time while he allowed the generosity of his nature to
overcome his grief at the loss of Bill. At last it was clear that he had
forgiven her.
“Please don’t speak of it any
more, Miss Josefa. ’Twas enough to frighten any young lady the way Bill looked.
I’ll explain it all right to the boys.”
“Are you really sure you
don’t hate me?” Josefa came closer to him impulsively. Her eyes were sweet—oh,
sweet and pleading with gracious penitence. “I would hate anyone who would kill
my kitten. And how daring and kind of you to risk being shot when you tried to
save him! How very few men would have done that!” Victory wrested from defeat!
Vaudeville turned into drama! Bravo, Ripley Givens!
It was now twilight. Of
course Miss Josefa could not be allowed to ride on to the ranch-house alone.
Givens resaddled his pony in spite of that animal’s reproachful glances, and
rode with her. Side by side they galloped across the smooth grass, the princess
and the man who was kind to animals. The prairie odours of fruitful earth and
delicate bloom were thick and sweet around them. Coyotes yelping over there on
the hill! No fear. And yet—
Josefa rode closer. A little
hand seemed to grope. Givens found it with his own. The ponies kept an even
gait. The hands lingered together, and the owner of one explained:
“I never was frightened
before, but just think! How terrible it would be to meet a really wild lion!
Poor Bill! I’m so glad you came with me!”
O’Donnell was sitting on the
ranch gallery.
“Hello, Rip!” he
shouted—“that you?”
“He rode in with me,” said
Josefa. “I lost my way and was late.”
“Much obliged,” called the
cattle king. “Stop over, Rip, and ride to camp in the morning.”
But Givens would not. He
would push on to camp. There was a bunch of steers to start off on the trail at
daybreak. He said good-night, and trotted away.
An hour later, when the
lights were out, Josefa, in her night-robe, came to her door and called to the
king in his own room across the brick-paved hallway:
“Say, pop, you know that old
Mexican lion they call the ‘Gotch-eared Devil’—the one that killed Gonzales,
Mr. Martin’s sheep herder, and about fifty calves on the Salado range? Well, I
settled his hash this afternoon over at the White Horse Crossing. Put two balls
in his head with my .38 while he was on the jump. I knew him by the slice gone
from his left ear that old Gonzales cut off with his machete. You couldn’t have
made a better shot yourself, daddy.”
“Bully for you!” thundered
Whispering Ben from the darkness of the royal chamber.
XVI
THE INDIAN SUMMER OF DRY VALLEY JOHNSON
Dry Valley Johnson shook the
bottle. You have to shake the bottle before using; for sulphur will not
dissolve. Then Dry Valley saturated a small sponge with the liquid and rubbed
it carefully into the roots of his hair. Besides sulphur there was sugar of
lead in it and tincture of nux vomica and bay rum. Dry Valley found the recipe
in a Sunday newspaper. You must next be told why a strong man came to fall a
victim to a Beauty Hint.
Dry Valley had been a
sheepman. His real name was Hector, but he had been rechristened after his
range to distinguish him from “Elm Creek” Johnson, who ran sheep further down
the Frio.
Many years of living face to
face with sheep on their own terms wearied Dry Valley Johnson. So, he sold his
ranch for eighteen thousand dollars and moved to Santa Rosa to live a life of
gentlemanly ease. Being a silent and melancholy person of thirty-five—or
perhaps thirty-eight—he soon became that cursed and earth-cumbering thing—an
elderlyish bachelor with a hobby. Some one gave him his first strawberry to
eat, and he was done for.
Dry Valley bought a
four-room cottage in the village, and a library on strawberry culture. Behind
the cottage was a garden of which he made a strawberry patch. In his old grey
woolen shirt, his brown duck trousers, and high-heeled boots he sprawled all
day on a canvas cot under a live-oak tree at his back door studying the history
of the seductive, scarlet berry.
The school teacher, Miss De
Witt, spoke of him as “a fine, presentable man, for all his middle age.” But,
the focus of Dry Valley’s eyes embraced no women. They were merely beings who
flew skirts as a signal for him to lift awkwardly his heavy, round-crowned, broad-brimmed
felt Stetson whenever he met them, and then hurry past to get back to his
beloved berries.
And all this recitative by
the chorus is only to bring us to the point where you may be told why Dry
Valley shook up the insoluble sulphur in the bottle. So long-drawn and
inconsequential a thing is history—the anamorphous shadow of a milestone
reaching down the road between us and the setting sun.
When his strawberries were
beginning to ripen Dry Valley bought the heaviest buggy whip in the Santa Rosa
store. He sat for many hours under the live oak tree plaiting and weaving in an
extension to its lash. When it was done he could snip a leaf from a bush twenty
feet away with the cracker. For the bright, predatory eyes of Santa Rosa youth
were watching the ripening berries, and Dry Valley was arming himself against
their expected raids. No greater care had he taken of his tender lambs during
his ranching days than he did of his cherished fruit, warding it from the
hungry wolves that whistled and howled and shot their marbles and peered
through the fence that surrounded his property.
In the house next to Dry
Valley’s lived a widow with a pack of children that gave the husbandman
frequent anxious misgivings. In the woman there was a strain of the Spanish.
She had wedded one of the name of O’Brien. Dry Valley was a connoisseur in
cross strains; and he foresaw trouble in the offspring of this union.
Between the two homesteads
ran a crazy picket fence overgrown with morning glory and wild gourd vines.
Often he could see little heads with mops of black hair and flashing dark eyes
dodging in and out between the pickets, keeping tabs on the reddening berries.
Late one afternoon Dry
Valley went to the post office. When he came back, like Mother Hubbard he found
the deuce to pay. The descendants of Iberian bandits and Hibernian cattle
raiders had swooped down upon his strawberry patch. To the outraged vision of
Dry Valley there seemed to be a sheep corral full of them; perhaps they
numbered five or six. Between the rows of green plants they were stooped,
hopping about like toads, gobbling silently and voraciously his finest fruit.
Dry Valley slipped into the
house, got his whip, and charged the marauders. The lash curled about the legs
of the nearest—a greedy ten-year-old—before they knew they were discovered. His
screech gave warning; and the flock scampered for the fence like a drove
of javelis flushed in the chaparral. Dry Valley’s whip drew a
toll of two more elfin shrieks before they dived through the vine-clad fence
and disappeared.
Dry Valley, less fleet,
followed them nearly to the pickets. Checking his useless pursuit, he rounded a
bush, dropped his whip and stood, voiceless, motionless, the capacity of his
powers consumed by the act of breathing and preserving the perpendicular.
Behind the bush stood
Panchita O’Brien, scorning to fly. She was nineteen, the oldest of the raiders.
Her night-black hair was gathered back in a wild mass and tied with a scarlet
ribbon. She stood, with reluctant feet, yet nearer the brook than to the river;
for childhood had environed and detained her.
She looked at Dry Valley
Johnson for a moment with magnificent insolence, and before his eyes slowly
crunched a luscious berry between her white teeth. Then she turned and walked
slowly to the fence with a swaying, conscious motion, such as a duchess might
make use of in leading a promenade. There she turned again and grilled Dry
Valley Johnson once more in the dark flame of her audacious eyes, laughed a
trifle school-girlishly, and twisted herself with pantherish quickness between
the pickets to the O’Brien side of the wild gourd vine.
Dry Valley picked up his
whip and went into his house. He stumbled as he went up the two wooden steps.
The old Mexican woman who cooked his meals and swept his house called him to
supper as he went through the rooms. Dry Valley went on, stumbled down the
front steps, out the gate and down the road into a mesquite thicket at the edge
of town. He sat down in the grass and laboriously plucked the spines from a
prickly pear, one by one. This was his attitude of thought, acquired in the
days when his problems were only those of wind and wool and water.
A thing had happened to the
man—a thing that, if you are eligible, you must pray may pass you by. He had
become enveloped in the Indian Summer of the Soul.
Dry Valley had had no youth.
Even his childhood had been one of dignity and seriousness. At six he had
viewed the frivolous gambols of the lambs on his father’s ranch with silent
disapproval. His life as a young man had been wasted. The divine fires and
impulses, the glorious exaltations and despairs, the glow and enchantment of
youth had passed above his head. Never a thrill of Romeo had he known; he was
but a melancholy Jaques of the forest with a ruder philosophy, lacking the
bitter-sweet flavour of experience that tempered the veteran years of the
rugged ranger of Arden. And now in his sere and yellow leaf one scornful look
from the eyes of Panchita O’Brien had flooded the autumnal landscape with a
tardy and delusive summer heat.
But a sheepman is a hardy
animal. Dry Valley Johnson had weathered too many northers to turn his back on
a late summer, spiritual or real. Old? He would show them.
By the next mail went an
order to San Antonio for an outfit of the latest clothes, colours and styles
and prices no object. The next day went the recipe for the hair restorer
clipped from a newspaper; for Dry Valley’s sunburned auburn hair was beginning
to turn silvery above his ears.
Dry Valley kept indoors
closely for a week except for frequent sallies after youthful strawberry
snatchers. Then, a few days later, he suddenly emerged brilliantly radiant in
the hectic glow of his belated midsummer madness.
A jay-bird-blue tennis suit
covered him outwardly, almost as far as his wrists and ankles. His shirt was
ox-blood; his collar winged and tall; his necktie a floating oriflamme; his
shoes a venomous bright tan, pointed and shaped on penitential lasts. A little
flat straw hat with a striped band desecrated his weather-beaten head. Lemon-coloured
kid gloves protected his oak-tough hands from the benignant May sunshine. This
sad and optic-smiting creature teetered out of its den, smiling foolishly and
smoothing its gloves for men and angels to see. To such a pass had Dry Valley
Johnson been brought by Cupid, who always shoots game that is out of season
with an arrow from the quiver of Momus. Reconstructing mythology, he had risen,
a prismatic macaw, from the ashes of the grey-brown phoenix that had folded its
tired wings to roost under the trees of Santa Rosa.
Dry Valley paused in the
street to allow Santa Rosans within sight of him to be stunned; and then
deliberately and slowly, as his shoes required, entered Mrs. O’Brien’s gate.
Not until the eleven months’
drought did Santa Rosa cease talking about Dry Valley Johnson’s courtship of
Panchita O’Brien. It was an unclassifiable procedure; something like a
combination of cake-walking, deaf-and-dumb oratory, postage stamp flirtation
and parlour charades. It lasted two weeks and then came to a sudden end.
Of course Mrs. O’Brien
favoured the match as soon as Dry Valley’s intentions were disclosed. Being the
mother of a woman child, and therefore a charter member of the Ancient Order of
the Rat-trap, she joyfully decked out Panchita for the sacrifice. The girl was
temporarily dazzled by having her dresses lengthened and her hair piled up on
her head, and came near forgetting that she was only a slice of cheese. It was
nice, too, to have as good a match as Mr. Johnson paying you attentions and to
see the other girls fluttering the curtains at their windows to see you go by
with him.
Dry Valley bought a buggy
with yellow wheels and a fine trotter in San Antonio. Every day he drove out
with Panchita. He was never seen to speak to her when they were walking or
driving. The consciousness of his clothes kept his mind busy; the knowledge
that he could say nothing of interest kept him dumb; the feeling that Panchita
was there kept him happy.
He took her to parties and
dances, and to church. He tried—oh, no man ever tried so hard to be young as
Dry Valley did. He could not dance; but he invented a smile which he wore on
these joyous occasions, a smile that, in him, was as great a concession to
mirth and gaiety as turning hand-springs would be in another. He began to seek
the company of the young men in the town—even of the boys. They accepted him as
a decided damper, for his attempts at sportiveness were so forced that they
might as well have essayed their games in a cathedral. Neither he nor any other
could estimate what progress he had made with Panchita.
The end came suddenly in one
day, as often disappears the false afterglow before a November sky and wind.
Dry Valley was to call for
the girl one afternoon at six for a walk. An afternoon walk in Santa Rosa was a
feature of social life that called for the pink of one’s wardrobe. So Dry
Valley began gorgeously to array himself; and so early that he finished early,
and went over to the O’Brien cottage. As he neared the porch on the crooked
walk from the gate he heard sounds of revelry within. He stopped and looked
through the honeysuckle vines in the open door.
Panchita was amusing her
younger brothers and sisters. She wore a man’s clothes—no doubt those of the
late Mr. O’Brien. On her head was the smallest brother’s straw hat decorated
with an ink-striped paper band. On her hands were flapping yellow cloth gloves,
roughly cut out and sewn for the masquerade. The same material covered her
shoes, giving them the semblance of tan leather. High collar and flowing necktie
were not omitted.
Panchita was an actress. Dry
Valley saw his affectedly youthful gait, his limp where the right shoe hurt
him, his forced smile, his awkward simulation of a gallant air, all reproduced
with startling fidelity. For the first time a mirror had been held up to him.
The corroboration of one of the youngsters calling, “Mamma, come and see Pancha
do like Mr. Johnson,” was not needed.
As softly as the caricatured
tans would permit, Dry Valley tiptoed back to the gate and home again.
Twenty minutes after the
time appointed for the walk Panchita tripped demurely out of her gate in a
thin, trim white lawn and sailor hat. She strolled up the sidewalk and slowed
her steps at Dry Valley’s gate, her manner expressing wonder at his unusual
delinquency.
Then out of his door and
down the walk strode—not the polychromatic victim of a lost summertime, but the
sheepman, rehabilitated. He wore his old grey woolen shirt, open at the throat,
his brown duck trousers stuffed into his run-over boots, and his white felt
sombrero on the back of his head. Twenty years or fifty he might look; Dry
Valley cared not. His light blue eyes met Panchita’s dark ones with a cold
flash in them. He came as far as the gate. He pointed with his long arm to her
house.
“Go home,” said Dry Valley.
“Go home to your mother. I wonder lightnin’ don’t strike a fool like me. Go
home and play in the sand. What business have you got cavortin’ around with
grown men? I reckon I was locoed to be makin’ a he poll-parrot out of myself
for a kid like you. Go home and don’t let me see you no more. Why I done it,
will somebody tell me? Go home, and let me try and forget it.”
Panchita obeyed and walked
slowly toward her home, saying nothing. For some distance she kept her head
turned and her large eyes fixed intrepidly upon Dry Valley’s. At her gate she
stood for a moment looking back at him, then ran suddenly and swiftly into the
house.
Old Antonia was building a
fire in the kitchen stove. Dry Valley stopped at the door and laughed harshly.
“I’m a pretty looking old
rhinoceros to be gettin’ stuck on a kid, ain’t I, ’Tonia?” said he.
“Not verree good thing,”
agreed Antonia, sagely, “for too much old man to likee muchacha.”
“You bet it ain’t,” said Dry
Valley, grimly. “It’s dum foolishness; and, besides, it hurts.”
He brought at one armful the
regalia of his aberration—the blue tennis suit, shoes, hat, gloves and all, and
threw them in a pile at Antonia’s feet.
“Give them to your old man,”
said he, “to hunt antelope in.”
Just as the first star
presided palely over the twilight Dry Valley got his biggest strawberry book
and sat on the back steps to catch the last of the reading light. He thought he
saw the figure of someone in his strawberry patch. He laid aside the book, got
his whip and hurried forth to see.
It was Panchita. She had
slipped through the picket fence and was half-way across the patch. She stopped
when she saw him and looked at him without wavering.
A sudden rage—a humiliating
flush of unreasoning wrath—came over Dry Valley. For this child he had made
himself a motley to the view. He had tried to bribe Time to turn backward for
himself; he had—been made a fool of. At last he had seen his folly. There was a
gulf between him and youth over which he could not build a bridge even with
yellow gloves to protect his hands. And the sight of his torment coming to
pester him with her elfin pranks—coming to plunder his strawberry vines like a
mischievous schoolboy—roused all his anger.
“I told you to keep away
from here,” said Dry Valley. “Go back to your home.”
Panchita moved slowly toward
him.
Dry Valley cracked his whip.
“Go back home,” said Dry
Valley, savagely, “and play theatricals some more. You’d make a fine man.
You’ve made a fine one of me.”
She came a step nearer,
silent, and with that strange, defiant, steady shine in her eyes that had
always puzzled him. Now it stirred his wrath.
His whiplash whistled
through the air. He saw a red streak suddenly come out through her white dress
above her knee where it had struck.
Without flinching and with
the same unchanging dark glow in her eyes, Panchita came steadily toward him
through the strawberry vines. Dry Valley’s trembling hand released his whip
handle. When within a yard of him Panchita stretched out her arms.
“God, kid!” stammered Dry
Valley, “do you mean—?”
But the seasons are
versatile; and it may have been Springtime, after all, instead of Indian
Summer, that struck Dry Valley Johnson.
XVII
CHRISTMAS BY INJUNCTION
Cherokee was the civic
father of Yellowhammer. Yellowhammer was a new mining town constructed mainly
of canvas and undressed pine. Cherokee was a prospector. One day while his
burro was eating quartz and pine burrs Cherokee turned up with his pick a
nugget, weighing thirty ounces. He staked his claim and then, being a man of
breadth and hospitality, sent out invitations to his friends in three States to
drop in and share his luck.
Not one of the invited
guests sent regrets. They rolled in from the Gila country, from Salt River,
from the Pecos, from Albuquerque and Phoenix and Santa Fe, and from the camps
intervening.
When a thousand citizens had
arrived and taken up claims they named the town Yellowhammer, appointed a
vigilance committee, and presented Cherokee with a watch-chain made of nuggets.
Three hours after the
presentation ceremonies Cherokee’s claim played out. He had located a pocket
instead of a vein. He abandoned it and staked others one by one. Luck had
kissed her hand to him. Never afterward did he turn up enough dust in
Yellowhammer to pay his bar bill. But his thousand invited guests were mostly
prospering, and Cherokee smiled and congratulated them.
Yellowhammer was made up of
men who took off their hats to a smiling loser; so they invited Cherokee to say
what he wanted.
“Me?” said Cherokee, “oh,
grubstakes will be about the thing. I reckon I’ll prospect along up in the
Mariposas. If I strike it up there I will most certainly let you all know about
the facts. I never was any hand to hold out cards on my friends.”
In May Cherokee packed his
burro and turned its thoughtful, mouse-coloured forehead to the north. Many
citizens escorted him to the undefined limits of Yellowhammer and bestowed upon
him shouts of commendation and farewells. Five pocket flasks without an air
bubble between contents and cork were forced upon him; and he was bidden to
consider Yellowhammer in perpetual commission for his bed, bacon and eggs, and
hot water for shaving in the event that luck did not see fit to warm her hands
by his campfire in the Mariposas.
The name of the father of
Yellowhammer was given him by the gold hunters in accordance with their popular
system of nomenclature. It was not necessary for a citizen to exhibit his
baptismal certificate in order to acquire a cognomen. A man’s name was his
personal property. For convenience in calling him up to the bar and in
designating him among other blue-shirted bipeds, a temporary appellation,
title, or epithet was conferred upon him by the public. Personal peculiarities
formed the source of the majority of such informal baptisms. Many were easily
dubbed geographically from the regions from which they confessed to have
hailed. Some announced themselves to be “Thompsons,” and “Adamses,” and the
like, with a brazenness and loudness that cast a cloud upon their titles. A few
vaingloriously and shamelessly uncovered their proper and indisputable names.
This was held to be unduly arrogant, and did not win popularity. One man who
said he was Chesterton L. C. Belmont, and proved it by letters, was given till
sundown to leave the town. Such names as “Shorty,” “Bow-legs,” “Texas,” “Lazy
Bill,” “Thirsty Rogers,” “Limping Riley,” “The Judge,” and “California Ed” were
in favour. Cherokee derived his title from the fact that he claimed to have
lived for a time with that tribe in the Indian Nation.
On the twentieth day of
December Baldy, the mail rider, brought Yellowhammer a piece of news.
“What do I see in
Albuquerque,” said Baldy, to the patrons of the bar, “but Cherokee all
embellished and festooned up like the Czar of Turkey, and lavishin’ money in
bulk. Him and me seen the elephant and the owl, and we had specimens of this
seidlitz powder wine; and Cherokee he audits all the bills, C.O.D. His pockets
looked like a pool table’s after a fifteen-ball run.
“Cherokee must have struck
pay ore,” remarked California Ed. “Well, he’s white. I’m much obliged to him
for his success.”
“Seems like Cherokee would
ramble down to Yellowhammer and see his friends,” said another, slightly
aggrieved. “But that’s the way. Prosperity is the finest cure there is for lost
forgetfulness.”
“You wait,” said Baldy; “I’m
comin’ to that. Cherokee strikes a three-foot vein up in the Mariposas that
assays a trip to Europe to the ton, and he closes it out to a syndicate outfit
for a hundred thousand hasty dollars in cash. Then he buys himself a baby sealskin
overcoat and a red sleigh, and what do you think he takes it in his head to do
next?”
“Chuck-a-luck,” said Texas,
whose ideas of recreation were the gamester’s.
“Come and Kiss Me, Ma
Honey,” sang Shorty, who carried tintypes in his pocket and wore a red necktie
while working on his claim.
“Bought a saloon?” suggested
Thirsty Rogers.
“Cherokee took me to a
room,” continued Baldy, “and showed me. He’s got that room full of drums and
dolls and skates and bags of candy and jumping-jacks and toy lambs and whistles
and such infantile truck. And what do you think he’s goin’ to do with them
inefficacious knick-knacks? Don’t surmise none—Cherokee told me. He’s goin’ to
lead ’em up in his red sleigh and—wait a minute, don’t order no drinks yet—
he’s goin’ to drive down here to Yellowhammer and give the kids—the kids of
this here town—the biggest Christmas tree and the biggest cryin’ doll and
Little Giant Boys’ Tool Chest blowout that was ever seen west of the Cape
Hatteras.”
Two minutes of absolute
silence ticked away in the wake of Baldy’s words. It was broken by the House,
who, happily conceiving the moment to be ripe for extending hospitality, sent a
dozen whisky glasses spinning down the bar, with the slower travelling bottle
bringing up the rear.
“Didn’t you tell him?” asked
the miner called Trinidad.
“Well, no,” answered Baldy,
pensively; “I never exactly seen my way to.
“You see, Cherokee had this
Christmas mess already bought and paid for; and he was all flattered up with
self-esteem over his idea; and we had in a way flew the flume with that fizzy
wine I speak of; so I never let on.”
“I cannot refrain from a
certain amount of surprise,” said the Judge, as he hung his ivory-handled cane
on the bar, “that our friend Cherokee should possess such an erroneous
conception of—ah—his, as it were, own town.”
“Oh, it ain’t the eighth
wonder of the terrestrial world,” said Baldy. “Cherokee’s been gone from
Yellowhammer over seven months. Lots of things could happen in that time. How’s
he to know that there ain’t a single kid in this town, and so far as emigration
is concerned, none expected?”
“Come to think of it,”
remarked California Ed, “it’s funny some ain’t drifted in. Town ain’t settled
enough yet for to bring in the rubber-ring brigade, I reckon.”
“To top off this
Christmas-tree splurge of Cherokee’s,” went on Baldy, “he’s goin’ to give an
imitation of Santa Claus. He’s got a white wig and whiskers that disfigure him
up exactly like the pictures of this William Cullen Longfellow in the books,
and a red suit of fur-trimmed outside underwear, and eight-ounce gloves, and a
stand-up, lay-down croshayed red cap. Ain’t it a shame that a outfit like that
can’t get a chance to connect with a Annie and Willie’s prayer layout?”
“When does Cherokee allow to
come over with his truck?” inquired Trinidad.
“Mornin’ before Christmas,”
said Baldy. “And he wants you folks to have a room fixed up and a tree hauled
and ready. And such ladies to assist as can stop breathin’ long enough to let
it be a surprise for the kids.”
The unblessed condition of
Yellowhammer had been truly described. The voice of childhood had never
gladdened its flimsy structures; the patter of restless little feet had never
consecrated the one rugged highway between the two rows of tents and rough
buildings. Later they would come. But now Yellowhammer was but a mountain camp,
and nowhere in it were the roguish, expectant eyes, opening wide at dawn of the
enchanting day; the eager, small hands to reach for Santa’s bewildering hoard;
the elated, childish voicings of the season’s joy, such as the coming good
things of the warm-hearted Cherokee deserved.
Of women there were five in
Yellowhammer. The assayer’s wife, the proprietress of the Lucky Strike Hotel,
and a laundress whose washtub panned out an ounce of dust a day. These were the
permanent feminines; the remaining two were the Spangler Sisters, Misses
Fanchon and Erma, of the Transcontinental Comedy Company, then playing in
repertoire at the (improvised) Empire Theatre. But of children there were none.
Sometimes Miss Fanchon enacted with spirit and address the part of robustious
childhood; but between her delineation and the visions of adolescence that the
fancy offered as eligible recipients of Cherokee’s holiday stores there seemed
to be fixed a gulf.
Christmas would come on
Thursday. On Tuesday morning Trinidad, instead of going to work, sought the
Judge at the Lucky Strike Hotel.
“It’ll be a disgrace to
Yellowhammer,” said Trinidad, “if it throws Cherokee down on his Christmas tree
blowout. You might say that that man made this town. For one, I’m goin’ to see
what can be done to give Santa Claus a square deal.”
“My co-operation,” said the
Judge, “would be gladly forthcoming. I am indebted to Cherokee for past
favours. But, I do not see—I have heretofore regarded the absence of children
rather as a luxury—but in this instance—still, I do not see—”
“Look at me,” said Trinidad,
“and you’ll see old Ways and Means with the fur on. I’m goin’ to hitch up a
team and rustle a load of kids for Cherokee’s Santa Claus act, if I have to rob
an orphan asylum.”
“Eureka!” cried the Judge,
enthusiastically.
“No, you didn’t,” said
Trinidad, decidedly. “I found it myself. I learned about that Latin word at
school.”
“I will accompany you,”
declared the Judge, waving his cane. “Perhaps such eloquence and gift of
language as I possess will be of benefit in persuading our young friends to
lend themselves to our project.”
Within an hour Yellowhammer
was acquainted with the scheme of Trinidad and the Judge, and approved it.
Citizens who knew of families with offspring within a forty-mile radius of
Yellowhammer came forward and contributed their information. Trinidad made
careful notes of all such, and then hastened to secure a vehicle and team.
The first stop scheduled was
at a double log-house fifteen miles out from Yellowhammer. A man opened the
door at Trinidad’s hail, and then came down and leaned upon the rickety gate.
The doorway was filled with a close mass of youngsters, some ragged, all full
of curiosity and health.
“It’s this way,” explained
Trinidad. “We’re from Yellowhammer, and we come kidnappin’ in a gentle kind of
a way. One of our leading citizens is stung with the Santa Claus affliction,
and he’s due in town to-morrow with half the folderols that’s painted red and
made in Germany. The youngest kid we got in Yellowhammer packs a forty-five and
a safety razor. Consequently we’re mighty shy on anybody to say ‘Oh’ and ‘Ah’
when we light the candles on the Christmas tree. Now, partner, if you’ll loan
us a few kids we guarantee to return ’em safe and sound on Christmas Day. And
they’ll come back loaded down with a good time and Swiss Family Robinsons and
cornucopias and red drums and similar testimonials. What do you say?”
“In other words,” said the
Judge, “we have discovered for the first time in our embryonic but progressive
little city the inconveniences of the absence of adolescence. The season of the
year having approximately arrived during which it is a custom to bestow
frivolous but often appreciated gifts upon the young and tender—”
“I understand,” said the
parent, packing his pipe with a forefinger. “I guess I needn’t detain you
gentlemen. Me and the old woman have got seven kids, so to speak; and, runnin’
my mind over the bunch, I don’t appear to hit upon none that we could spare for
you to take over to your doin’s. The old woman has got some popcorn candy and
rag dolls hid in the clothes chest, and we allow to give Christmas a little
whirl of our own in a insignificant sort of style. No, I couldn’t, with any
degree of avidity, seem to fall in with the idea of lettin’ none of ’em go.
Thank you kindly, gentlemen.”
Down the slope they drove
and up another foothill to the ranch-house of Wiley Wilson. Trinidad recited
his appeal and the Judge boomed out his ponderous antiphony. Mrs. Wiley
gathered her two rosy-cheeked youngsters close to her skirts and did not smile
until she had seen Wiley laugh and shake his head. Again a refusal.
Trinidad and the Judge
vainly exhausted more than half their list before twilight set in among the hills.
They spent the night at a stage road hostelry, and set out again early the next
morning. The wagon had not acquired a single passenger.
“It’s creepin’ upon my
faculties,” remarked Trinidad, “that borrowin’ kids at Christmas is somethin’
like tryin’ to steal butter from a man that’s got hot pancakes a-comin’.”
“It is undoubtedly an
indisputable fact,” said the Judge, “that the— ah—family ties seem to be more
coherent and assertive at that period of the year.”
On the day before Christmas
they drove thirty miles, making four fruitless halts and appeals. Everywhere
they found “kids” at a premium.
The sun was low when the
wife of a section boss on a lonely railroad huddled her unavailable progeny
behind her and said:
“There’s a woman that’s just
took charge of the railroad eatin’ house down at Granite Junction. I hear she’s
got a little boy. Maybe she might let him go.”
Trinidad pulled up his mules
at Granite Junction at five o’clock in the afternoon. The train had just
departed with its load of fed and appeased passengers.
On the steps of the eating
house they found a thin and glowering boy of ten smoking a cigarette. The
dining-room had been left in chaos by the peripatetic appetites. A youngish
woman reclined, exhausted, in a chair. Her face wore sharp lines of worry. She
had once possessed a certain style of beauty that would never wholly leave her
and would never wholly return. Trinidad set forth his mission.
“I’d count it a mercy if
you’d take Bobby for a while,” she said, wearily. “I’m on the go from morning
till night, and I don’t have time to ’tend to him. He’s learning bad habits
from the men. It’ll be the only chance he’ll have to get any Christmas.”
The men went outside and
conferred with Bobby. Trinidad pictured the glories of the Christmas tree and
presents in lively colours.
“And, moreover, my young
friend,” added the Judge, “Santa Claus himself will personally distribute the
offerings that will typify the gifts conveyed by the shepherds of Bethlehem
to—”
“Aw, come off,” said the
boy, squinting his small eyes. “I ain’t no kid. There ain’t any Santa Claus.
It’s your folks that buys toys and sneaks ’em in when you’re asleep. And they
make marks in the soot in the chimney with the tongs to look like Santa’s
sleigh tracks.”
“That might be so,” argued
Trinidad, “but Christmas trees ain’t no fairy tale. This one’s goin’ to look
like the ten-cent store in Albuquerque, all strung up in a redwood. There’s
tops and drums and Noah’s arks and—”
“Oh, rats!” said Bobby,
wearily. “I cut them out long ago. I’d like to have a rifle—not a target one—a
real one, to shoot wildcats with; but I guess you won’t have any of them on
your old tree.”
“Well, I can’t say for
sure,” said Trinidad diplomatically; “it might be. You go along with us and
see.”
The hope thus held out, though
faint, won the boy’s hesitating consent to go. With this solitary beneficiary
for Cherokee’s holiday bounty, the canvassers spun along the homeward road.
In Yellowhammer the empty
storeroom had been transformed into what might have passed as the bower of an
Arizona fairy. The ladies had done their work well. A tall Christmas tree,
covered to the topmost branch with candles, spangles, and toys sufficient for
more than a score of children, stood in the centre of the floor. Near sunset
anxious eyes had begun to scan the street for the returning team of the
child-providers. At noon that day Cherokee had dashed into town with his new
sleigh piled high with bundles and boxes and bales of all sizes and shapes. So
intent was he upon the arrangements for his altruistic plans that the dearth of
children did not receive his notice. No one gave away the humiliating state of
Yellowhammer, for the efforts of Trinidad and the Judge were expected to supply
the deficiency.
When the sun went down
Cherokee, with many wings and arch grins on his seasoned face, went into
retirement with the bundle containing the Santa Claus raiment and a pack
containing special and undisclosed gifts.
“When the kids are rounded
up,” he instructed the volunteer arrangement committee, “light up the candles
on the tree and set ’em to playin’ ‘Pussy Wants a Corner’ and ‘King William.’
When they get good and at it, why—old Santa’ll slide in the door. I reckon
there’ll be plenty of gifts to go ’round.”
The ladies were flitting
about the tree, giving it final touches that were never final. The Spangled
Sisters were there in costume as Lady Violet de Vere and Marie, the maid, in
their new drama, “The Miner’s Bride.” The theatre did not open until nine, and
they were welcome assistants of the Christmas tree committee. Every minute
heads would pop out the door to look and listen for the approach of Trinidad’s
team. And now this became an anxious function, for night had fallen and it
would soon be necessary to light the candles on the tree, and Cherokee was apt
to make an irruption at any time in his Kriss Kringle garb.
At length the wagon of the
child “rustlers” rattled down the street to the door. The ladies, with little
screams of excitement, flew to the lighting of the candles. The men of
Yellowhammer passed in and out restlessly or stood about the room in
embarrassed groups.
Trinidad and the Judge,
bearing the marks of protracted travel, entered, conducting between them a
single impish boy, who stared with sullen, pessimistic eyes at the gaudy tree.
“Where are the other
children?” asked the assayer’s wife, the acknowledged leader of all social
functions.
“Ma’am,” said Trinidad with
a sigh, “prospectin’ for kids at Christmas time is like huntin’ in a limestone
for silver. This parental business is one that I haven’t no chance to
comprehend. It seems that fathers and mothers are willin’ for their offsprings
to be drownded, stole, fed on poison oak, and et by catamounts 364 days in the
year; but on Christmas Day they insists on enjoyin’ the exclusive mortification
of their company. This here young biped, ma’am, is all that washes out of our
two days’ manoeuvres.”
“Oh, the sweet little boy!”
cooed Miss Erma, trailing her De Vere robes to centre of stage.
“Aw, shut up,” said Bobby,
with a scowl. “Who’s a kid? You ain’t, you bet.”
“Fresh brat!” breathed Miss
Erma, beneath her enamelled smile.
“We done the best we could,”
said Trinidad. “It’s tough on Cherokee, but it can’t be helped.”
Then the door opened and
Cherokee entered in the conventional dress of Saint Nick. A white rippling
beard and flowing hair covered his face almost to his dark and shining eyes.
Over his shoulder he carried a pack.
No one stirred as he came
in. Even the Spangler Sisters ceased their coquettish poses and stared
curiously at the tall figure. Bobby stood with his hands in his pockets gazing
gloomily at the effeminate and childish tree. Cherokee put down his pack and
looked wonderingly about the room. Perhaps he fancied that a bevy of eager
children were being herded somewhere, to be loosed upon his entrance. He went
up to Bobby and extended his red-mittened hand.
“Merry Christmas, little
boy,” said Cherokee. “Anything on the tree you want they’ll get it down for
you. Won’t you shake hands with Santa Claus?”
“There ain’t any Santa
Claus,” whined the boy. “You’ve got old false billy goat’s whiskers on your
face. I ain’t no kid. What do I want with dolls and tin horses? The driver said
you’d have a rifle, and you haven’t. I want to go home.”
Trinidad stepped into the
breach. He shook Cherokee’s hand in warm greeting.
“I’m sorry, Cherokee,” he
explained. “There never was a kid in Yellowhammer. We tried to rustle a bunch
of ’em for your swaree, but this sardine was all we could catch. He’s a
atheist, and he don’t believe in Santa Claus. It’s a shame for you to be out
all this truck. But me and the Judge was sure we could round up a wagonful of
candidates for your gimcracks.”
“That’s all right,” said
Cherokee gravely. “The expense don’t amount to nothin’ worth mentionin’. We can
dump the stuff down a shaft or throw it away. I don’t know what I was thinkin’
about; but it never occurred to my cogitations that there wasn’t any kids in
Yellowhammer.”
Meanwhile the company had
relaxed into a hollow but praiseworthy imitation of a pleasure gathering.
Bobby had retreated to a
distant chair, and was coldly regarding the scene with ennui plastered thick
upon him. Cherokee, lingering with his original idea, went over and sat beside
him.
“Where do you live, little
boy?” he asked respectfully.
“Granite Junction,” said
Bobby without emphasis.
The room was warm. Cherokee
took off his cap, and then removed his beard and wig.
“Say!” exclaimed Bobby, with
a show of interest, “I know your mug, all right.”
“Did you ever see me
before?” asked Cherokee.
“I don’t know; but I’ve seen
your picture lots of times.”
“Where?”
The boy hesitated. “On the
bureau at home,” he answered.
“Let’s have your name, if
you please, buddy.”
“Robert Lumsden. The picture
belongs to my mother. She puts it under her pillow of nights. And once I saw
her kiss it. I wouldn’t. But women are that way.”
Cherokee rose and beckoned
to Trinidad.
“Keep this boy by you till I
come back,” he said. “I’m goin’ to shed these Christmas duds, and hitch up my
sleigh. I’m goin’ to take this kid home.”
“Well, infidel,” said
Trinidad, taking Cherokee’s vacant chair, “and so you are too superannuated and
effete to yearn for such mockeries as candy and toys, it seems.”
“I don’t like you,” said
Bobby, with acrimony. “You said there would be a rifle. A fellow can’t even smoke.
I wish I was at home.”
Cherokee drove his sleigh to
the door, and they lifted Bobby in beside him. The team of fine horses sprang
away prancingly over the hard snow. Cherokee had on his $500 overcoat of baby
sealskin. The laprobe that he drew about them was as warm as velvet.
Bobby slipped a cigarette
from his pocket and was trying to snap a match.
“Throw that cigarette away,”
said Cherokee, in a quiet but new voice.
Bobby hesitated, and then
dropped the cylinder overboard.
“Throw the box, too,” commanded
the new voice.
More reluctantly the boy
obeyed.
“Say,” said Bobby,
presently, “I like you. I don’t know why. Nobody never made me do anything I
didn’t want to do before.”
“Tell me, kid,” said
Cherokee, not using his new voice, “are you sure your mother kissed that
picture that looks like me?”
“Dead sure. I seen her do
it.”
“Didn’t you remark somethin’
a while ago about wanting a rifle?”
“You bet I did. Will you get
me one?”
“To-morrow—silver-mounted.”
Cherokee took out his watch.
“Half-past nine. We’ll hit
the Junction plumb on time with Christmas Day. Are you cold? Sit closer, son.”
XVIII
A CHAPARRAL PRINCE
Nine o’clock at last, and
the drudging toil of the day was ended. Lena climbed to her room in the third
half-story of the Quarrymen’s Hotel. Since daylight she had slaved, doing the
work of a full-grown woman, scrubbing the floors, washing the heavy ironstone
plates and cups, making the beds, and supplying the insatiate demands for wood
and water in that turbulent and depressing hostelry.
The din of the day’s
quarrying was over—the blasting and drilling, the creaking of the great cranes,
the shouts of the foremen, the backing and shifting of the flat-cars hauling
the heavy blocks of limestone. Down in the hotel office three or four of the
labourers were growling and swearing over a belated game of checkers. Heavy
odours of stewed meat, hot grease, and cheap coffee hung like a depressing fog
about the house.
Lena lit the stump of a
candle and sat limply upon her wooden chair. She was eleven years old, thin and
ill-nourished. Her back and limbs were sore and aching. But the ache in her
heart made the biggest trouble. The last straw had been added to the burden
upon her small shoulders. They had taken away Grimm. Always at night, however
tired she might be, she had turned to Grimm for comfort and hope. Each time had
Grimm whispered to her that the prince or the fairy would come and deliver her
out of the wicked enchantment. Every night she had taken fresh courage and
strength from Grimm.
To whatever tale she read
she found an analogy in her own condition. The woodcutter’s lost child, the
unhappy goose girl, the persecuted stepdaughter, the little maiden imprisoned
in the witch’s hut—all these were but transparent disguises for Lena, the
overworked kitchenmaid in the Quarrymen’s Hotel. And always when the extremity
was direst came the good fairy or the gallant prince to the rescue.
So, here in the ogre’s
castle, enslaved by a wicked spell, Lena had leaned upon Grimm and waited,
longing for the powers of goodness to prevail. But on the day before Mrs.
Maloney had found the book in her room and had carried it away, declaring
sharply that it would not do for servants to read at night; they lost sleep and
did not work briskly the next day. Can one only eleven years old, living away
from one’s mamma, and never having any time to play, live entirely deprived of
Grimm? Just try it once and you will see what a difficult thing it is.
Lena’s home was in Texas,
away up among the little mountains on the Pedernales River, in a little town
called Fredericksburg. They are all German people who live in Fredericksburg.
Of evenings they sit at little tables along the sidewalk and drink beer and
play pinochle and scat. They are very thrifty people.
Thriftiest among them was
Peter Hildesmuller, Lena’s father. And that is why Lena was sent to work in the
hotel at the quarries, thirty miles away. She earned three dollars every week
there, and Peter added her wages to his well-guarded store. Peter had an
ambition to become as rich as his neighbour, Hugo Heffelbauer, who smoked a
meerschaum pipe three feet long and had wiener schnitzel and hassenpfeffer for
dinner every day in the week. And now Lena was quite old enough to work and
assist in the accumulation of riches. But conjecture, if you can, what it means
to be sentenced at eleven years of age from a home in the pleasant little Rhine
village to hard labour in the ogre’s castle, where you must fly to serve the
ogres, while they devour cattle and sheep, growling fiercely as they stamp white
limestone dust from their great shoes for you to sweep and scour with your
weak, aching fingers. And then—to have Grimm taken away from you!
Lena raised the lid of an
old empty case that had once contained canned corn and got out a sheet of paper
and a piece of pencil. She was going to write a letter to her mamma. Tommy Ryan
was going to post it for her at Ballinger’s. Tommy was seventeen, worked in the
quarries, went home to Ballinger’s every night, and was now waiting in the
shadows under Lena’s window for her to throw the letter out to him. That was
the only way she could send a letter to Fredericksburg. Mrs. Maloney did not
like for her to write letters.
The stump of the candle was
burning low, so Lena hastily bit the wood from around the lead of her pencil
and began. This is the letter she wrote:
DEAREST MAMMA:—I want
so much to see you. And Gretel and Claus and Heinrich and little Adolf. I am so
tired. I want to see you. To-day I was slapped by Mrs. Maloney and had no
supper. I could not bring in enough wood, for my hand hurt. She took my book
yesterday. I mean “Grimm’s Fairy Tales,” which Uncle Leo gave me. It did not
hurt any one for me to read the book. I try to work as well as I can, but there
is so much to do. I read only a little bit every night. Dear mamma, I shall
tell you what I am going to do. Unless you send for me to-morrow to bring me
home I shall go to a deep place I know in the river and drown. It is wicked to
drown, I suppose, but I wanted to see you, and there is no one else. I am very
tired, and Tommy is waiting for the letter. You will excuse me, mamma, if I do
it.
Your
respectful and loving daughter,
LENA.
Tommy was still waiting
faithfully when the letter was concluded, and when Lena dropped it out she saw
him pick it up and start up the steep hillside. Without undressing she blew out
the candle and curled herself upon the mattress on the floor.
At 10:30 o’clock old man
Ballinger came out of his house in his stocking feet and leaned over the gate,
smoking his pipe. He looked down the big road, white in the moonshine, and
rubbed one ankle with the toe of his other foot. It was time for the
Fredericksburg mail to come pattering up the road.
Old man Ballinger had waited
only a few minutes when he heard the lively hoofbeats of Fritz’s team of little
black mules, and very soon afterward his covered spring wagon stood in front of
the gate. Fritz’s big spectacles flashed in the moonlight and his tremendous
voice shouted a greeting to the postmaster of Ballinger’s. The mail-carrier
jumped out and took the bridles from the mules, for he always fed them oats at
Ballinger’s.
While the mules were eating
from their feed bags old man Ballinger brought out the mail sack and threw it
into the wagon.
Fritz Bergmann was a man of
three sentiments—or to be more accurate— four, the pair of mules deserving to
be reckoned individually. Those mules were the chief interest and joy of his
existence. Next came the Emperor of Germany and Lena Hildesmuller.
“Tell me,” said Fritz, when
he was ready to start, “contains the sack a letter to Frau Hildesmuller from
the little Lena at the quarries? One came in the last mail to say that she is a
little sick, already. Her mamma is very anxious to hear again.”
“Yes,” said old man
Ballinger, “thar’s a letter for Mrs. Helterskelter, or some sich name. Tommy
Ryan brung it over when he come. Her little gal workin’ over thar, you say?”
“In the hotel,” shouted
Fritz, as he gathered up the lines; “eleven years old and not bigger as a
frankfurter. The close-fist of a Peter Hildesmuller!—some day I shall with a
big club pound that man’s dummkopf—all in and out the town. Perhaps in this
letter Lena will say that she is yet feeling better. So, her mamma will be
glad. Auf wiedersehen, Herr Ballinger—your feets will take cold out
in the night air.”
“So long, Fritzy,” said old
man Ballinger. “You got a nice cool night for your drive.”
Up the road went the little
black mules at their steady trot, while Fritz thundered at them occasional
words of endearment and cheer.
These fancies occupied the
mind of the mail-carrier until he reached the big post oak forest, eight miles
from Ballinger’s. Here his ruminations were scattered by the sudden flash and
report of pistols and a whooping as if from a whole tribe of Indians. A band of
galloping centaurs closed in around the mail wagon. One of them leaned over the
front wheel, covered the driver with his revolver, and ordered him to stop.
Others caught at the bridles of Donder and Blitzen.
“Donnerwetter!” shouted
Fritz, with all his tremendous voice—“wass ist? Release your hands from dose
mules. Ve vas der United States mail!”
“Hurry up, Dutch!” drawled a
melancholy voice. “Don’t you know when you’re in a stick-up? Reverse your mules
and climb out of the cart.”
It is due to the breadth of
Hondo Bill’s demerit and the largeness of his achievements to state that the
holding up of the Fredericksburg mail was not perpetrated by way of an exploit.
As the lion while in the pursuit of prey commensurate to his prowess might set
a frivolous foot upon a casual rabbit in his path, so Hondo Bill and his gang
had swooped sportively upon the pacific transport of Meinherr Fritz.
The real work of their
sinister night ride was over. Fritz and his mail bag and his mules came as
gentle relaxation, grateful after the arduous duties of their profession.
Twenty miles to the southeast stood a train with a killed engine, hysterical
passengers and a looted express and mail car. That represented the serious
occupation of Hondo Bill and his gang. With a fairly rich prize of currency and
silver the robbers were making a wide detour to the west through the less
populous country, intending to seek safety in Mexico by means of some fordable
spot on the Rio Grande. The booty from the train had melted the desperate
bushrangers to jovial and happy skylarkers.
Trembling with outraged
dignity and no little personal apprehension, Fritz climbed out to the road
after replacing his suddenly removed spectacles. The band had dismounted and
were singing, capering, and whooping, thus expressing their satisfied delight
in the life of a jolly outlaw. Rattlesnake Rogers, who stood at the heads of
the mules, jerked a little too vigorously at the rein of the tender-mouthed
Donder, who reared and emitted a loud, protesting snort of pain. Instantly
Fritz, with a scream of anger, flew at the bulky Rogers and began to
assiduously pummel that surprised freebooter with his fists.
“Villain!” shouted Fritz,
“dog, bigstiff! Dot mule he has a soreness by his mouth. I vill knock off your
shoulders mit your head— robbermans!”
“Yi-yi!” howled Rattlesnake,
roaring with laughter and ducking his head, “somebody git this here sour-krout
off’n me!”
One of the band yanked Fritz
back by the coat-tail, and the woods rang with Rattlesnake’s vociferous
comments.
“The dog-goned little
wienerwurst,” he yelled, amiably. “He’s not so much of a skunk, for a Dutchman.
Took up for his animile plum quick, didn’t he? I like to see a man like his
hoss, even if it is a mule. The dad-blamed little Limburger he went for me,
didn’t he! Whoa, now, muley—I ain’t a-goin’ to hurt your mouth agin any more.”
Perhaps the mail would not
have been tampered with had not Ben Moody, the lieutenant, possessed certain
wisdom that seemed to promise more spoils.
“Say, Cap,” he said,
addressing Hondo Bill, “there’s likely to be good pickings in these mail sacks.
I’ve done some hoss tradin’ with these Dutchmen around Fredericksburg, and I
know the style of the varmints. There’s big money goes through the mails to
that town. Them Dutch risk a thousand dollars sent wrapped in a piece of paper
before they’d pay the banks to handle the money.”
Hondo Bill, six feet two,
gentle of voice and impulsive in action, was dragging the sacks from the rear
of the wagon before Moody had finished his speech. A knife shone in his hand, and
they heard the ripping sound as it bit through the tough canvas. The outlaws
crowded around and began tearing open letters and packages, enlivening their
labours by swearing affably at the writers, who seemed to have conspired to
confute the prediction of Ben Moody. Not a dollar was found in the
Fredericksburg mail.
“You ought to be ashamed of
yourself,” said Hondo Bill to the mail-carrier in solemn tones, “to be packing
around such a lot of old, trashy paper as this. What d’you mean by it, anyhow?
Where do you Dutchers keep your money at?”
The Ballinger mail sack
opened like a cocoon under Hondo’s knife. It contained but a handful of mail.
Fritz had been fuming with terror and excitement until this sack was reached.
He now remembered Lena’s letter. He addressed the leader of the band, asking
that that particular missive be spared.
“Much obliged, Dutch,” he
said to the disturbed carrier. “I guess that’s the letter we want. Got
spondulicks in it, ain’t it? Here she is. Make a light, boys.”
Hondo found and tore open
the letter to Mrs. Hildesmuller. The others stood about, lighting twisted up
letters one from another. Hondo gazed with mute disapproval at the single sheet
of paper covered with the angular German script.
“Whatever is this you’ve
humbugged us with, Dutchy? You call this here a valuable letter? That’s a
mighty low-down trick to play on your friends what come along to help you
distribute your mail.”
“That’s Chiny writin’,” said
Sandy Grundy, peering over Hondo’s shoulder.
“You’re off your kazip,” declared
another of the gang, an effective youth, covered with silk handkerchiefs and
nickel plating. “That’s shorthand. I see ’em do it once in court.”
“Ach, no, no, no—dot is
German,” said Fritz. “It is no more as a little girl writing a letter to her
mamma. One poor little girl, sick and vorking hard avay from home. Ach! it is a
shame. Good Mr. Robberman, you vill please let me have dot letter?”
“What the devil do you take
us for, old Pretzels?” said Hondo with sudden and surprising severity. “You
ain’t presumin’ to insinuate that we gents ain’t possessed of sufficient
politeness for to take an interest in the miss’s health, are you? Now, you go
on, and you read that scratchin’ out loud and in plain United States language
to this here company of educated society.”
Hondo twirled his
six-shooter by its trigger guard and stood towering above the little German,
who at once began to read the letter, translating the simple words into
English. The gang of rovers stood in absolute silence, listening intently.
“How old is that kid?” asked
Hondo when the letter was done.
“Eleven,” said Fritz.
“And where is she at?”
“At dose rock
quarries—working. Ach, mein Gott—little Lena, she speak of drowning. I do not
know if she vill do it, but if she shall I schwear I vill dot Peter
Hildesmuller shoot mit a gun.”
“You Dutchers,” said Hondo
Bill, his voice swelling with fine contempt, “make me plenty tired. Hirin’ out
your kids to work when they ought to be playin’ dolls in the sand. You’re a
hell of a sect of people. I reckon we’ll fix your clock for a while just to
show what we think of your old cheesy nation. Here, boys!”
Hondo Bill parleyed aside
briefly with his band, and then they seized Fritz and conveyed him off the road
to one side. Here they bound him fast to a tree with a couple of lariats. His
team they tied to another tree near by.
“We ain’t going to hurt you
bad,” said Hondo reassuringly. “’Twon’t hurt you to be tied up for a while. We
will now pass you the time of day, as it is up to us to depart.
Ausgespielt—nixcumrous, Dutchy. Don’t get any more impatience.”
Fritz heard a great
squeaking of saddles as the men mounted their horses. Then a loud yell and a
great clatter of hoofs as they galloped pell-mell back along the Fredericksburg
road.
For more than two hours
Fritz sat against his tree, tightly but not painfully bound. Then from the
reaction after his exciting adventure he sank into slumber. How long he slept
he knew not, but he was at last awakened by a rough shake. Hands were untying
his ropes. He was lifted to his feet, dazed, confused in mind, and weary of
body. Rubbing his eyes, he looked and saw that he was again in the midst of the
same band of terrible bandits. They shoved him up to the seat of his wagon and
placed the lines in his hands.
“Hit it out for home,
Dutch,” said Hondo Bill’s voice commandingly. “You’ve given us lots of trouble
and we’re pleased to see the back of your neck. Spiel! Zwei bier! Vamoose!”
Hondo reached out and gave
Blitzen a smart cut with his quirt.
The little mules sprang
ahead, glad to be moving again. Fritz urged them along, himself dizzy and
muddled over his fearful adventure.
According to schedule time,
he should have reached Fredericksburg at daylight. As it was, he drove down the
long street of the town at eleven o’clock A.M. He had to pass Peter
Hildesmuller’s house on his way to the post-office. He stopped his team at the
gate and called. But Frau Hildesmuller was watching for him. Out rushed the
whole family of Hildesmullers.
Frau Hildesmuller, fat and
flushed, inquired if he had a letter from Lena, and then Fritz raised his voice
and told the tale of his adventure. He told the contents of that letter that
the robber had made him read, and then Frau Hildesmuller broke into wild
weeping. Her little Lena drown herself! Why had they sent her from home? What
could be done? Perhaps it would be too late by the time they could send for her
now. Peter Hildesmuller dropped his meerschaum on the walk and it shivered into
pieces.
“Woman!” he roared at his
wife, “why did you let that child go away? It is your fault if she comes home
to us no more.”
Every one knew that it was
Peter Hildesmuller’s fault, so they paid no attention to his words.
A moment afterward a
strange, faint voice was heard to call: “Mamma!” Frau Hildesmuller at first
thought it was Lena’s spirit calling, and then she rushed to the rear of
Fritz’s covered wagon, and, with a loud shriek of joy, caught up Lena herself,
covering her pale little face with kisses and smothering her with hugs. Lena’s
eyes were heavy with the deep slumber of exhaustion, but she smiled and lay
close to the one she had longed to see. There among the mail sacks, covered in
a nest of strange blankets and comforters, she had lain asleep until wakened by
the voices around her.
Fritz stared at her with eyes
that bulged behind his spectacles.
“Gott in Himmel!” he
shouted. “How did you get in that wagon? Am I going crazy as well as to be
murdered and hanged by robbers this day?”
“You brought her to us,
Fritz,” cried Frau Hildesmuller. “How can we ever thank you enough?”
“Tell mamma how you came in
Fritz’s wagon,” said Frau Hildesmuller.
“I don’t know,” said Lena.
“But I know how I got away from the hotel. The Prince brought me.”
“By the Emperor’s crown!”
shouted Fritz, “we are all going crazy.”
“I always knew he would
come,” said Lena, sitting down on her bundle of bedclothes on the sidewalk.
“Last night he came with his armed knights and captured the ogre’s castle. They
broke the dishes and kicked down the doors. They pitched Mr. Maloney into a
barrel of rain water and threw flour all over Mrs. Maloney. The workmen in the
hotel jumped out of the windows and ran into the woods when the knights began
firing their guns. They wakened me up and I peeped down the stair. And then the
Prince came up and wrapped me in the bedclothes and carried me out. He was so
tall and strong and fine. His face was as rough as a scrubbing brush, and he
talked soft and kind and smelled of schnapps. He took me on his horse before
him and we rode away among the knights. He held me close and I went to sleep
that way, and didn’t wake up till I got home.”
“Rubbish!” cried Fritz
Bergmann. “Fairy tales! How did you come from the quarries to my wagon?”
“The Prince brought me,”
said Lena, confidently.
And to this day the good
people of Fredericksburg haven’t been able to make her give any other
explanation.
XIX
THE REFORMATION OF CALLIOPE
Calliope Catesby was in his
humours again. Ennui was upon him. This goodly promontory, the
earth—particularly that portion of it known as Quicksand—was to him no more
than a pestilent congregation of vapours. Overtaken by the megrims, the
philosopher may seek relief in soliloquy; my lady find solace in tears; the
flaccid Easterner scold at the millinery bills of his women folk. Such recourse
was insufficient to the denizens of Quicksand. Calliope, especially, was wont
to express his ennui according to his lights.
Over night Calliope had hung
out signals of approaching low spirits. He had kicked his own dog on the porch
of the Occidental Hotel, and refused to apologise. He had become capricious and
fault-finding in conversation. While strolling about he reached often for twigs
of mesquite and chewed the leaves fiercely. That was always an ominous act.
Another symptom alarming to those who were familiar with the different stages
of his doldrums was his increasing politeness and a tendency to use formal
phrases. A husky softness succeeded the usual penetrating drawl in his tones. A
dangerous courtesy marked his manners. Later, his smile became crooked, the
left side of his mouth slanting upward, and Quicksand got ready to stand from
under.
At this stage Calliope
generally began to drink. Finally, about midnight, he was seen going homeward,
saluting those whom he met with exaggerated but inoffensive courtesy. Not yet
was Calliope’s melancholy at the danger point. He would seat himself at the
window of the room he occupied over Silvester’s tonsorial parlours and there
chant lugubrious and tuneless ballads until morning, accompanying the noises by
appropriate maltreatment of a jangling guitar. More magnanimous than Nero, he
would thus give musical warning of the forthcoming municipal upheaval that
Quicksand was scheduled to endure.
A quiet, amiable man was
Calliope Catesby at other times—quiet to indolence, and amiable to worthlessness.
At best he was a loafer and a nuisance; at worst he was the Terror of
Quicksand. His ostensible occupation was something subordinate in the real
estate line; he drove the beguiled Easterner in buckboards out to look over
lots and ranch property. Originally he came from one of the Gulf States, his
lank six feet, slurring rhythm of speech, and sectional idioms giving evidence
of his birthplace.
And yet, after taking on
Western adjustments, this languid pine-box whittler, cracker barrel hugger, shady
corner lounger of the cotton fields and sumac hills of the South became famed
as a bad man among men who had made a life-long study of the art of truculence.
At nine the next morning
Calliope was fit. Inspired by his own barbarous melodies and the contents of
his jug, he was ready primed to gather fresh laurels from the diffident brow of
Quicksand. Encircled and criss-crossed with cartridge belts, abundantly
garnished with revolvers, and copiously drunk, he poured forth into Quicksand’s
main street. Too chivalrous to surprise and capture a town by silent sortie, he
paused at the nearest corner and emitted his slogan—that fearful, brassy yell,
so reminiscent of the steam piano, that had gained for him the classic
appellation that had superseded his own baptismal name. Following close upon
his vociferation came three shots from his forty-five by way of limbering up
the guns and testing his aim. A yellow dog, the personal property of Colonel
Swazey, the proprietor of the Occidental, fell feet upward in the dust with one
farewell yelp. A Mexican who was crossing the street from the Blue Front
grocery carrying in his hand a bottle of kerosene, was stimulated to a sudden
and admirable burst of speed, still grasping the neck of the shattered bottle.
The new gilt weather-cock on Judge Riley’s lemon and ultramarine two-story
residence shivered, flapped, and hung by a splinter, the sport of the wanton
breezes.
The artillery was in trim.
Calliope’s hand was steady. The high, calm ecstasy of habitual battle was upon
him, though slightly embittered by the sadness of Alexander in that his
conquests were limited to the small world of Quicksand.
Down the street went
Calliope, shooting right and left. Glass fell like hail; dogs vamosed; chickens
flew, squawking; feminine voices shrieked concernedly to youngsters at large.
The din was perforated at intervals by the staccato of the
Terror’s guns, and was drowned periodically by the brazen screech that
Quicksand knew so well. The occasions of Calliope’s low spirits were legal holidays
in Quicksand. All along the main street in advance of his coming clerks were
putting up shutters and closing doors. Business would languish for a space. The
right of way was Calliope’s, and as he advanced, observing the dearth of
opposition and the few opportunities for distraction, his ennui perceptibly
increased.
But some four squares
farther down lively preparations were being made to minister to Mr. Catesby’s
love for interchange of compliments and repartee. On the previous night
numerous messengers had hastened to advise Buck Patterson, the city marshal, of
Calliope’s impending eruption. The patience of that official, often strained in
extending leniency toward the disturber’s misdeeds, had been overtaxed. In
Quicksand some indulgence was accorded the natural ebullition of human nature.
Providing that the lives of the more useful citizens were not recklessly
squandered, or too much property needlessly laid waste, the community sentiment
was against a too strict enforcement of the law. But Calliope had raised the
limit. His outbursts had been too frequent and too violent to come within the
classification of a normal and sanitary relaxation of spirit.
Buck Patterson had been
expecting and awaiting in his little ten-by-twelve frame office that preliminary
yell announcing that Calliope was feeling blue. When the signal came the city
marshal rose to his feet and buckled on his guns. Two deputy sheriffs and three
citizens who had proven the edible qualities of fire also stood up, ready to
bandy with Calliope’s leaden jocularities.
“Gather that fellow in,”
said Buck Patterson, setting forth the lines of the campaign. “Don’t have no
talk, but shoot as soon as you can get a show. Keep behind cover and bring him
down. He’s a nogood ’un. It’s up to Calliope to turn up his toes this time, I
reckon. Go to him all spraddled out, boys. And don’t git too reckless, for what
Calliope shoots at he hits.”
Buck Patterson, tall,
muscular, and solemn-faced, with his bright “City Marshal” badge shining on the
breast of his blue flannel shirt, gave his posse directions for the onslaught
upon Calliope. The plan was to accomplish the downfall of the Quicksand Terror
without loss to the attacking party, if possible.
The splenetic Calliope,
unconscious of retributive plots, was steaming down the channel, cannonading on
either side, when he suddenly became aware of breakers ahead. The city marshal
and one of the deputies rose up behind some dry-goods boxes half a square to
the front and opened fire. At the same time the rest of the posse, divided,
shelled him from two side streets up which they were cautiously manoeuvring
from a well-executed detour.
The first volley broke the
lock of one of Calliope’s guns, cut a neat underbit in his right ear, and
exploded a cartridge in his crossbelt, scorching his ribs as it burst. Feeling
braced up by this unexpected tonic to his spiritual depression, Calliope
executed a fortissimo note from his upper register, and returned the fire like
an echo. The upholders of the law dodged at his flash, but a trifle too late to
save one of the deputies a bullet just above the elbow, and the marshal a
bleeding cheek from a splinter that a ball tore from the box he had ducked
behind.
And now Calliope met the
enemy’s tactics in kind. Choosing with a rapid eye the street from which the
weakest and least accurate fire had come, he invaded it at a double-quick,
abandoning the unprotected middle of the street. With rare cunning the opposing
force in that direction—one of the deputies and two of the valorous volunteers—
waited, concealed by beer barrels, until Calliope had passed their retreat, and
then peppered him from the rear. In another moment they were reinforced by the
marshal and his other men, and then Calliope felt that in order to successfully
prolong the delights of the controversy he must find some means of reducing the
great odds against him. His eye fell upon a structure that seemed to hold out
this promise, providing he could reach it.
Not far away was the little
railroad station, its building a strong box house, ten by twenty feet, resting
upon a platform four feet above ground. Windows were in each of its walls.
Something like a fort it might become to a man thus sorely pressed by superior
numbers.
Calliope made a bold and
rapid spurt for it, the marshal’s crowd “smoking” him as he ran. He reached the
haven in safety, the station agent leaving the building by a window, like a
flying squirrel, as the garrison entered the door.
Patterson and his supporters
halted under protection of a pile of lumber and held consultations. In the
station was an unterrified desperado who was an excellent shot and carried an
abundance of ammunition. For thirty yards on either side of the besieged was a
stretch of bare, open ground. It was a sure thing that the man who attempted to
enter that unprotected area would be stopped by one of Calliope’s bullets.
The city marshal was
resolved. He had decided that Calliope Catesby should no more wake the echoes
of Quicksand with his strident whoop. He had so announced. Officially and personally
he felt imperatively bound to put the soft pedal on that instrument of discord.
It played bad tunes.
Standing near was a hand
truck used in the manipulation of small freight. It stood by a shed full of
sacked wool, a consignment from one of the sheep ranches. On this truck the
marshal and his men piled three heavy sacks of wool. Stooping low, Buck
Patterson started for Calliope’s fort, slowly pushing this loaded truck before
him for protection. The posse, scattering broadly, stood ready to nip the besieged
in case he should show himself in an effort to repel the juggernaut of justice
that was creeping upon him. Only once did Calliope make demonstration. He fired
from a window, and some tufts of wool spurted from the marshal’s trustworthy
bulwark. The return shots from the posse pattered against the window frame of
the fort. No loss resulted on either side.
The marshal was too deeply
engrossed in steering his protected battleship to be aware of the approach of
the morning train until he was within a few feet of the platform. The train was
coming up on the other side of it. It stopped only one minute at Quicksand.
What an opportunity it would offer to Calliope! He had only to step out the
other door, mount the train, and away.
Abandoning his breastwork, Buck,
with his gun ready, dashed up the steps and into the room, driving upon the
closed door with one heave of his weighty shoulder. The members of the posse
heard one shot fired inside, and then there was silence.
At
length the wounded man opened his eyes. After a blank space he again could see
and hear and feel and think. Turning his eyes about, he found himself lying on
a wooden bench. A tall man with a perplexed countenance, wearing a big badge
with “City Marshal” engraved upon it, stood over him. A little old woman in
black, with a wrinkled face and sparkling black eyes, was holding a wet
handkerchief against one of his temples. He was trying to get these facts fixed
in his mind and connected with past events, when the old woman began to talk.
“There now, great, big,
strong man! That bullet never tetched ye! Jest skeeted along the side of your
head and sort of paralysed ye for a spell. I’ve heerd of sech things afore;
cun-cussion is what they names it. Abel Wadkins used to kill squirrels that
way—barkin’ ’em, Abe called it. You jest been barked, sir, and you’ll be all
right in a little bit. Feel lots better already, don’t ye! You just lay still a
while longer and let me bathe your head. You don’t know me, I reckon, and
’tain’t surprisin’ that you shouldn’t. I come in on that train from Alabama to
see my son. Big son, ain’t he? Lands! you wouldn’t hardly think he’d ever been
a baby, would ye? This is my son, sir.”
Half turning, the old woman
looked up at the standing man, her worn face lighting with a proud and
wonderful smile. She reached out one veined and calloused hand and took one of
her son’s. Then smiling cheerily down at the prostrate man, she continued to
dip the handkerchief, in the waiting-room tin washbasin and gently apply it to
his temple. She had the benevolent garrulity of old age.
“I ain’t seen my son
before,” she continued, “in eight years. One of my nephews, Elkanah Price, he’s
a conductor on one of them railroads and he got me a pass to come out here. I
can stay a whole week on it, and then it’ll take me back again. Jest think,
now, that little boy of mine has got to be a officer—a city marshal of a whole
town! That’s somethin’ like a constable, ain’t it? I never knowed he was a
officer; he didn’t say nothin’ about it in his letters. I reckon he thought his
old mother’d be skeered about the danger he was in. But, laws! I never was much
of a hand to git skeered. ’Tain’t no use. I heard them guns a-shootin’ while I
was gettin’ off them cars, and I see smoke a-comin’ out of the depot, but I jest
walked right along. Then I see son’s face lookin’ out through the window. I
knowed him at oncet. He met me at the door, and squeezes me ’most to death. And
there you was, sir, a-lyin’ there jest like you was dead, and I ’lowed we’d see
what might be done to help sot you up.”
“I think I’ll sit up now,”
said the concussion patient. “I’m feeling pretty fair by this time.”
He sat, somewhat weakly yet,
leaning against the wall. He was a rugged man, big-boned and straight. His
eyes, steady and keen, seemed to linger upon the face of the man standing so
still above him. His look wandered often from the face he studied to the
marshal’s badge upon the other’s breast.
“Yes, yes, you’ll be all
right,” said the old woman, patting his arm, “if you don’t get to cuttin’ up
agin, and havin’ folks shooting at you. Son told me about you, sir, while you
was layin’ senseless on the floor. Don’t you take it as meddlesome fer an old
woman with a son as big as you to talk about it. And you mustn’t hold no grudge
ag’in’ my son for havin’ to shoot at ye. A officer has got to take up for the
law—it’s his duty—and them that acts bad and lives wrong has to suffer. Don’t
blame my son any, sir—’tain’t his fault. He’s always been a good boy—good when
he was growin’ up, and kind and ’bedient and well-behaved. Won’t you let me
advise you, sir, not to do so no more? Be a good man, and leave liquor alone
and live peaceably and goodly. Keep away from bad company and work honest and
sleep sweet.”
The black-mitted hand of the
old pleader gently touched the breast of the man she addressed. Very earnest
and candid her old, worn face looked. In her rusty black dress and antique
bonnet she sat, near the close of a long life, and epitomised the experience of
the world. Still the man to whom she spoke gazed above her head, contemplating
the silent son of the old mother.
“What does the marshal say?”
he asked. “Does he believe the advice is good? Suppose the marshal speaks up
and says if the talk’s all right?”
The tall man moved uneasily.
He fingered the badge on his breast for a moment, and then he put an arm around
the old woman and drew her close to him. She smiled the unchanging mother smile
of three-score years, and patted his big brown hand with her crooked, mittened
fingers while her son spake.
“I says this,” he said,
looking squarely into the eyes of the other man, “that if I was in your place
I’d follow it. If I was a drunken, desp’rate character, without shame or hope,
I’d follow it. If I was in your place and you was in mine I’d say: ‘Marshal, I’m
willin’ to swear if you’ll give me the chance I’ll quit the racket. I’ll drop
the tanglefoot and the gun play, and won’t play hoss no more. I’ll be a good
citizen and go to work and quit my foolishness. So help me God!’ That’s what
I’d say to you if you was marshal and I was in your place.”
“Hear my son talkin’,” said
the old woman softly. “Hear him, sir. You promise to be good and he won’t do
you no harm. Forty-one year ago his heart first beat ag’in’ mine, and it’s beat
true ever since.”
The other man rose to his
feet, trying his limbs and stretching his muscles.
“Then,” said he, “if you was
in my place and said that, and I was marshal, I’d say: ‘Go free, and do your
best to keep your promise.’”
“Lawsy!” exclaimed the old
woman, in a sudden flutter, “ef I didn’t clear forget that trunk of mine! I see
a man settin’ it on the platform jest as I seen son’s face in the window, and
it went plum out of my head. There’s eight jars of home-made quince jam in that
trunk that I made myself. I wouldn’t have nothin’ happen to them jars for a red
apple.”
Away to the door she
trotted, spry and anxious, and then Calliope Catesby spoke out to Buck
Patterson:
“I just couldn’t help it,
Buck. I seen her through the window a-comin’ in. She never had heard a word
’bout my tough ways. I didn’t have the nerve to let her know I was a worthless
cuss bein’ hunted down by the community. There you was lyin’ where my shot laid
you, like you was dead. The idea struck me sudden, and I just took your badge
off and fastened it onto myself, and I fastened my reputation onto you. I told
her I was the marshal and you was a holy terror. You can take your badge back
now, Buck.”
With shaking fingers
Calliope began to unfasten the disc of metal from his shirt.
“Easy there!” said Buck
Patterson. “You keep that badge right where it is, Calliope Catesby. Don’t you
dare to take it off till the day your mother leaves this town. You’ll be city
marshal of Quicksand as long as she’s here to know it. After I stir around town
a bit and put ’em on I’ll guarantee that nobody won’t give the thing away to
her. And say, you leather-headed, rip-roarin’, low-down son of a locoed
cyclone, you follow that advice she give me! I’m goin’ to take some of it
myself, too.”
“Buck,” said Calliope
feelingly, “ef I don’t I hope I may—”
“Shut up,” said Buck. “She’s a-comin’ back.”
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