Once to Every Man - Part 23
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Part 23

"Why, it--it don't mean nothin'," he stated mildly. "That newspaper trash ain't no account, anyway you look at it."

"Then why do they print it?" she stormed. "How do they dare to print it? They've been doing it for days--weeks!"

He felt more equal to that question. The answer fairly popped into his brain.

"They hev to, I reckon," he said with a fine semblance of cheerfulness.

"If they didn't maybe everybody'd be so sure he'd win that they wouldn't even bother to go to see it." And then, very carelessly, as though it was of little importance: "Don't know's I would hev thought of goin' myself if it hadn't been for that. It's advertisin' I reckon--just advertisin'!"

Her fists came down from her chin; her whole body relaxed. It was that bewildering change of mood which he could never hope to follow. She even started toward him.

"Wouldn't have thought of it!" she repeated. "Why--why, you don't mean that you _aren't_ going?"

It was quite as though she had never considered the possibility of such a contingency. Old Jerry's mouth dropped open while he stared at her.

"Go," he stammered, "me go! Why, it's goin' to happen tomorrow night!"

She nodded her head in apparent unconsciousness of his astonishment.

"You'll have to leave on the early train," she agreed, "and--and so I won't see you again."

She turned her back upon him for a moment. He realized that she was fumbling inside the throat of the little, too-tight blouse. When she faced him again there was something in the palm of her outstretched hand.

"I've been waiting for you to come tonight," she went on, "and it was hard waiting. That's why I tore the paper up, I think. And now, will you--will you give him this for me--give it to him when he has won?

You won't have to say anything." She hesitated. "I--I think he'll understand!"

Old Jerry reached out and took it from her--a bit of a red silk bow, dotted with silver spangles. He gazed at it a moment before he tucked it away in an inside pocket, and in that moment of respite his brain raced madly.

"Of course I figured on goin'," he said, when his breath returned, "but I been a little undecided--jest a trifle! But I ought to be there; he might be a mite anxious if they wasn't somebody from home.

And I'll give it to him then--I'll give it to him when he's won!"

He went a bit unsteadily back to his waiting buggy.

"She had that all ready to give me," he said to himself as he climbed up to the high seat. Tentatively his fingers touched the little lump that the spangly bow of red made inside his coat. "She's had it all ready for me--mebby for days! But how'd she know I was a-goin'?" he asked himself. "How'd _she_ know, when I didn't know myself?"

He gave it up as a feminine whimsicality too deep for mere male wisdom. Once on the way back he thought of the route that would go mailless the next day.

"'Twon't hurt 'em none to wait a day or so," he stated, and his voice was just a little tinged with importance. "Maybe it'll do 'em good.

And there ain't no way out of it, anyhow--for I surely got to be there!"

CHAPTER XVIII

Morehouse did not hear the door in the opaque gla.s.s part.i.tion that walled his desk off from the outer editorial offices open and close, for all that it was very quiet. Ever since the hour which followed the going to press of the afternoon edition of the paper the huge room, with its littered floor and flat-topped tables, had been deserted, so still that the buzzing of a blue-bottle fly against the window pane at Morehouse's side seemed irritatingly loud by contrast.

The plump newspaperman in brown was too deeply preoccupied to hear anything so timidly un.o.btrusive as was that interruption, and only after the intruder had plucked nervously at the elbow that supported his chin did he realize that he was not alone. His head came up then, slowly, until he was gazing back into the eyes of the little, attenuated old man who, head tilted birdlike to one side, was standing beside him in uncomfortable, apologetic silence.

It surprised Morehouse more than a little. For the life of him he couldn't have told just whom he had expected to see when he looked up, but nothing could have startled him more than the presence of that white-haired wisp of a man with the beady eyes who fitted almost uncannily into the perplexing puzzle which had held him there at his desk until dusk. He forgot to greet the newcomer. Instead he sat gazing at him, wide-mouthed, and after Old Jerry had borne the scrutiny as long as he could he took the initiative himself.

"Well, I got here," he quavered. "I been a-tryin' to get upstairs to see you ever since about three o'clock, and they wouldn't let me in.

Said you was too busy to be bothered, even when I told 'em I belonged to the Gov'mint service. But I managed to slip by 'em at last!"

He paused and waited for some word of commendation. Morehouse merely nodded. He was thinking--thinking hard! The voice was almost as familiar to him as was his own, and yet it persisted in tantalizing his memory. He couldn't quite place it. Old Jerry sensed something of his difficulty.

"I'm from Boltonwood," he introduced himself, not quite so uncertainly.

"I'm Old Jerry. Maybe you remember me--I sat just next the stove that night you was in town a-huntin' news."

Then Morehouse remembered. Old Jerry had not had much to say that night, but his face and his shrill eagerness to s.n.a.t.c.h a little of the spotlight was unforgettable. And it was of that very night Morehouse had been thinking--that and the face of the big boy silent there on the threshold--when the interruption came. But still he uttered no welcome; instead there was something close akin to distinct aversion in his manner as he drew up a chair for the old man.

Old Jerry felt the chill lack of cordiality, but he sat down. And after a long period of silence, in which Morehouse made no move to put him more at ease, he swallowed hard and went on with his explanation.

"I come down to--to see Denny fight," he stated. "It kinda seemed to us--to me--that he'd think it strange if somebody from his home town wa'n't there. So I come along. And I wouldn't a bothered you at all today--it's gettin' late and I ain't got my ticket to get in yet--only--only I was worried a mite--jest a trifle--and I thought I'd better see you if I could."

Morehouse tilted his head again.

Old Jerry gave up any attempt of further excusing his intrusion and went straight to the heart of the matter. He unfolded a paper that bulged from the side pocket of his coat and spread it out on the desk.

"It's this," he said, indicating the column that had scoffed so openly at Young Denny's chances. "You--you wrote it, I suppose, didn't you?"

Again that impersonal nod.

"Well, I just wanted to ask you if--if you really thought it was--if you think he ain't got no chance at all?"

The eagerness of that trembling old voice was not to be ignored any longer. But Morehouse couldn't help but recollect the eager circle of "Ayes" which had flanked the Judge that other night.

"What of it?" he inquired coolly. "What if he hasn't? I though Jed Conway was the particular pride of your locality!"

Old Jerry's beady eyes widened. There was no mistaking the positive dislike in that round face, any more than one could misunderstand the antagonism of that round-faced man's words.

For weeks Morehouse had been puzzling over a question which he could not answer--something which, for all the intimacy that had sprung up between himself and Denny Bolton, he had never felt able to ask of the boy with the grave eyes and graver lips. Even since the conference in Hogarty's little office, when he had agreed to the ex-lightweight's plan, it had been vexing him, no nearer solution than it had been that day when he a.s.sured Hogarty that there was more behind young Denny's eagerness to meet Jed Conway than the prize-money could account for.

Now, that afternoon, on the very eve of that battle, he sat there in the thickening dusk, unconscious of the pa.s.sage of time, and listened to the explanation that came pouring from Old Jerry's lips, haltingly at first, and then in a steady falsetto stream, and learned the answer to it.

The old mail carrier didn't know what he was doing. His one desire was to vindicate himself in the cold eyes of the man before him. But he told it well and he did not spare himself.

Once he though he caught a glimpse of thawing mirth in that face when he had finished relating how Denny had led him, reluctant and fearful, from the kitchen of the farmhouse to the spot of blood on the stable wall, and from there to the jug in a heap of fragments against the tree-b.u.t.t. And that fleeting mirth became a warm, all-enveloping grin when he had detailed the climax of the Judge's prearranged sensation that same night.

He knew then that he had set himself right, and he did not mean to go into it any more fully. It was the changed att.i.tude of Morehouse that led him on and on. So he told, too, of Dryad Anderson's purchase of the bleak old place on the hill and her reason. But when it came to her wild fury against the paper that had dared to scoff at the boy he paused. For a second he calculated the wisdom of exhibiting the bit of a red bow that had been entrusted him. It, without a doubt, would be the only pa.s.sport he could hope for to a share of the glory, when it was all over. For the time being he jealously decided to let it wait, and he turned back to the rumpled sheet upon the desk.

"She--she'd be mighty disappointed," he finished a little lamely.

"She's so sure, somehow, it kinda worries me. You--you do think he's got a little chance, don't you--jest a trifle?"

It took a long time--Old Jerry's confession. It was dark before he finished, but Morehouse did not interrupt him by so much as the lifting of a finger. And he sat silent, gazing straight ahead of him, after the old man had finished. Old Jerry, watching him, wondered vaguely what made his eyes so bright now.

"So that's it, is it?" the plump man murmured at last. "So that's it.

And I never dreamed of it once. I must be going stale."