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Tim pulled his lower lip with thumb and forefinger.
"And yet they'd laugh all the louder if I was to go away without speaking, Father. What kind is Buck Malone to look at and where does he hang out?"
The priest poked the end of his cane at Tim's chest.
"Is it fighting you'd be at, Mr. Riley?"
"It is not. I'm not for fighting--unless, of course, I have to. Isn't it only natural to want to know what kind your opponent is?"
"So it is--so it is. Well, then, about this time o' day you'll find him in that cigar-store with the sign out--below there. He's a contractor himself, who furnishes labor for the quarries. A man about your height and breadth he'll be, but a trifle fuller in the waist. A stout, strong man, and not many able to look him down. An eye in his head, has Buck! I wouldn't want to see the pair of ye at it."
"Thank you, Father. And look--d'y'see that old woman coming out of the hotel? What's her story, Father?"
"The widow Nolan. A sad history, Mr. Riley, if you could get it out of her; but it's few she'll talk to."
"Poor woman! Would you give her this--a couple of dollars--Father, after I'm gone?"
"I will. And it's good of you. And you're bound to speak to-night?"
"I'll speak. And I'd like you to come, Father."
"Not I, Mr. Riley. Priests are better out of politics. Good day and G.o.d speed you!"
Tim strolled toward the cigar-store; and drawing near he picked out, standing near the gla.s.s case, a tall, powerfully built man, with intelligently heavy features and the unwavering eyes of a fighting man.
As Tim entered this man was speaking. Before ten words had been said, Tim knew that his entrance had been forecasted and that this was Buck Malone.
"And he'll be up there on that platform all alone--not a soul with him, because these two dubs that ought to be standing by him, they've got cold feet already. And he'll be up there all alone, except for a pitcher of cold water and a gla.s.s, and a table and a chair; and he'll begin to spout. I dunno whether he c'n talk or not; but we'll let him run on for maybe ten minutes, and about the time he thinks he's making a hit I'll start up and I'll raise my forefinger like that--see? And that'll mean everybody get up and go out. No hurry, mind you--nor no hustlin'; but everybody just stand up and walk out and leave him talkin' to that picture o' that dago, or whoever he is, discoverin' the Mississippi on the back wall.
"And now you"--Malone turned leisurely to a stocky-looking young fellow in seedy clothes standing wistfully off to one side--"you go on and pa.s.s the word to 'em as they come out o' the quarries."
"All right," answered the stocky one in a hoa.r.s.e voice, but without moving.
A meagre-looking man stood behind the cigar-case.
"Will you let me have," said Tim to him, "three good cigars?"
The man behind the cigar-case looked slyly at Malone.
"How good?" he asked.
"Oh, pretty fair--three for a dollar or so."
"Three for a--I got nothing like that here. Fifteen cents straight's the best I got."
"All right; they'll do."
The boss had not been smoking when Tim entered; but now he turned to look better at Tim, and he pulled a cigar from his vest-pocket, bit off the end, scratched a match, and leisurely lit it--all without taking his eyes off Tim.
Tim also leisurely bit the end off a cigar. The proprietor pushed three or four matches across the case. Tim, ignoring them, stepped close to the boss.
"Would you let me have a light?" he inquired politely.
"H-ff! h-ff!" The boss swallowed quite a little smoke, but recovered and pa.s.sed over his cigar. Tim took his light from it, said "Thanks!"
briefly, and--puff-puff--contemplated the boss's stout henchman in the rusty clothes, who was still standing irresolutely at one side.
"Smoke?" inquired Tim suddenly, and thrust a cigar at him.
"Wh-h--" stuttered the henchman, and then almost s.n.a.t.c.hed it from Tim's hand.
"You gettin' hard o' hearin'? Thought I told you to get along!" snapped Malone.
"I am goin' along," returned the husky voice, "soon's I light up." In the curling of the smoke from the corner of his mouth, in the whoofing of it toward the ceiling, in the squaring of the thick shoulders as he pa.s.sed out--there was a hint of rebellion.
"You may be the boss," thought Tim, "but your grip isn't too sure." And turning squarely on Malone he observed genially: "Fine day."
"H-p-p--" Malone stared fixedly at Tim. Tim stared back. Tim was rapidly developing a feeling of respect for the man. Tim knew the kind. A few years back he had been such an uncompromising one himself, who would have whipped off his coat, as no doubt Malone would now, and battled on the spot in preference to verbal argument.
"It is a fine day," responded Malone slowly; "but accordin' to my dope it ain't goin' to be half so fine a night."
From behind the cigar-case came a giggle, and from the boss himself came an after-chuckle and a pleased little smile.
"Why, it's not going to rain, is it?" asked Tim, and with an appropriately innocent manner he stepped to the door to look at the sky; and in looking he saw not the sky, but the widow Nolan, with some odds and ends of firewood, making her halting way against the wind.
"The poor creature!" murmured Tim; and while pitying her the plan came to him. "Gentlemen," he said over his shoulder, "I have to be off; but before going I cordially invite you and all your friends to the town hall to-night, to discuss the issues of the campaign. Good day, gentlemen."
And through the door, before it closed after him, he could hear the cackle of the man behind the cigar-case: "Is it going to rain! Say, Buck, you won't do a thing to him to-night, will yuh?"
III
With his greeting of "Good afternoon to you, Mrs. Nolan!" Tim stowed the widow's little bundle under his left arm.
"And good afternoon to you, sir; but you'll be sp'iling your fine clothes, sir!"
"And if I do it's small loss." He gripped her right elbow. "It's the hard walking it is, Mrs. Nolan--what with the wind and the steep hill and an old lady of your age."
"Oh, yeh, it is--coming on to seventy-five."
"Seventy-five? And you still hopping about active as a gra.s.shopper! A great age that. 'Tis little, I'm afraid, many of us young ones will be thinking of climbing steep hillsides when we're coming on to seventy-five. 'Tis you was the active one in your young days, I'll wager."
"'Tis me that was, sir; but oh, I'm not that now."
"It's sad it must be to be looking back on the bright dancin' days o'
youth, Mrs. Nolan."
"Sure and it is, sir; but why--the fine bouncin' lad ye are--why should you be sayin' it?"
"Ah, sure, youth has its trials and tribulations too, ma'am, sometimes.
And is this your little place?"