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"What?" said Dennis faintly.
"I can't," said d.i.n.k, bristling; "I'm in training."
XIII
The Tennessee Shad, reclining in an armchair softened by sofa cus.h.i.+ons, gave critical directions to d.i.n.k Stover and Dennis de Brian de Boru Finnegan, to whom, with great unselfishness, he had surrendered all the privileges of the hanging committee.
"Suppose _you_ agitate yourself a little," said d.i.n.k, descending from a rickety chair which, placed on a table, had allowed him to suspend a sporting print from the dusty moulding.
"The sight of you at hard labor," said Finnegan, from a bureau on the other side of the room, "would fill me with cheer, delectation and comfort."
The Tennessee Shad, by four convulsive processes, reached his feet.
"Oh, very well," he said carelessly. "Thought you preferred to run this show yourselves."
Picking up a poster, he selected with malicious intent the most unsuitable spot in the room and started to climb the bureau, remarking:
"This is about it, I should say."
The artistic souls of d.i.n.k and Dennis protested.
"Murder, no!"
"You chump!"
"Too big for it."
"Well, if you know so much," said the Tennessee Shad, halting before the last upward struggle and holding out the poster, "where would you put it?"
Stover and Dennis indignantly bore the poster away and with much effort and straining tacked it in an appropriate place.
"Why, that is better," said the Tennessee Shad admiringly, regaining his chair, not too openly. "Much better. Looks fine! Great! Say, I've got an idea. Stick the ballet girl under it."
"What?"
"You're crazy!"
"Well, where would you put it?"
"Here, you chump."
"Why, that's not half bad, either," said the Tennessee Shad, once more back among the cus.h.i.+ons. "A trifle more to the left, down--now up--good--make fast. First rate; guess you have the best eye. Now where are you going to put this?"
By this process of self-debas.e.m.e.nt and generous exterior admiration the Tennessee Shad successfully perceived the heavy hanging and arranging brought to a satisfactory conclusion.
The vital touches were given, the transom was hung with heavy black canvas; a curtain of the same was so arranged as to permit its being drawn over the telltale cracks of the door. Dennis and Stover, sent to reconnoiter from the hall, waited while the Tennessee Shad pa.s.sed a lighted candle back and forth over the sealed entrance. One traitor crack was discovered and promptly obliterated.
"Now we're secure," said the Tennessee Shad. "Cave of Silence and all that sort of thing. The Old Roman would have to smell us to get on."
"How about the windows?" said d.i.n.k.
"They're a cinch," said the Shad. "When you get the shade down and the shutters closed a blanket will fix them snug as a bug in a rug. Now, at nine o'clock we can go to bed without suffering from drafts. Ha, ha--joke."
"Burn the midnight oil, etceteray--etcetera."
"To-morrow," said the Tennessee Shad, "Volts Mashon is going to install a safety light for us."
"Elucidate," said d.i.n.k.
"A safety light is a light that has a connection with the door. Shut door, light; open door, where is Moses? Midnight reading made a pleasure."
"Marvelous!"
"Oh, I've heard of that before," said Finnegan.
The Tennessee Shad, meanwhile, had been busy stretching a string from his bed to the hot-air register and from a stick at the foot of his bed to a pulley at the top.
Stover and Finnegan waited respectfully until the Shad, having finished his operations, deigned to give a practical exhibition.
"This thing is simple," said he, stretching out on his bed and pulling a string at one side. "Opens hot-air register. No applause necessary.
But this is a little, comforting idea of my own. Protection from sudden change of temperature without bodily exposure." Extending his hand he pulled the other rope, which, running through the pulley over his head, brought the counterpane quickly over him. "How's that? No sitting up, reaching down, fumbling about in zero weather."
"That's good as far as it goes," said Dennis, whose natural state was not one of reverence; "but how about the window? Some one has to get up and shut the window."
"Simple as eggs," said the Shad, yawning disdainfully. "A string and a pulley do the trick, see? Down comes the window. All worked at the same exchange. Well, d.i.n.k, you may lead the cheer."
Now, Stover suddenly remembered a device he had been told of, and, remembering it, to give it the appearance of improvisation he pretended to deliberate.
"Well," said the Tennessee Shad, surprised, "my humble little inventions don't seem to impress you."
"Naw."
"They don't, eh! Why not?"
"Oh, it's the right principle," said Stover, a.s.suming a deliberate look; "but crude, very crude, backwoods, primitive, and all that sort of thing."
The Tennessee Shad, amazed, looked at Finnegan, who spoke:
"Crude, d.i.n.k?"
"Why, yes. All depends on whether the Shad wakes up or not. And then, why hand labor?"
"I suppose you have something more recherche to offer," said the Tennessee Shad cuttingly, having recovered.
"Why, yes, I might," said Stover coolly. "A real inventor would run the whole thing by machinery. Who's got an alarm clock?"