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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69373 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69373)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The ragged edge, by John T. McIntyre
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The ragged edge
- A tale of ward life & politics
-
-Author: John T. McIntyre
-
-Release Date: November 17, 2022 [eBook #69373]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by
- University of California libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RAGGED EDGE ***
-
-
-
-
-
-THE RAGGED EDGE
-
-
-
-
- The Ragged Edge
-
- A Tale of Ward Life & Politics
-
- By
- John T. M^cIntyre
-
- First Novel
-
- [Illustration]
-
- Series
-
- [Illustration]
-
- New York
-
- McClure, Phillips & Co.
- Mcmii
-
-
-
-
- _Copyright, 1902, by_
- McCLURE, PHILLIPS & CO
-
- Published, September, 1902, R
-
-
-
-
- _To_
- Wayne, Andy, George & Lew
-
-
-
-
-THE RAGGED EDGE
-
-
-
-
-Chapter I
-
- “_Arrah, me jewel, sure, Larry’s the boy!_”
-
- OLD SONG.
-
-
-WEARY horses dragged ponderous trucks homeward; the drivers drooped
-upon their high seats and thought of cans of beer; a red sun threw
-shafts of light along the cross-town streets and between the rows of
-black warehouses.
-
-The porters had all gone for the night from Mason & Sons, and young
-Mason stood upon the office step, about to lock the door, when Kerrigan
-jumped from a passing car and hailed him.
-
-“I just happened to notice you as I was going by,” Kerrigan said; “and
-that reminded me that I wanted to speak to you.”
-
-“Come in and sit down,” said Mason, leading the way into the office.
-
-“I drew up a will the other day in which you were named as executor,”
-said Kerrigan, mounting a stool at the bookkeeper’s desk.
-
-Mason looked at him questioningly.
-
-“It’s old Miss Cassidy who kept house for your father, years ago. She
-said that she had not spoken to you about the matter, but that she felt
-sure that you would consent to act.”
-
-“She’s a queer old soul,” smiled Mason.
-
-“No queerer than the will she had me make for her. Quite a tidy sum of
-money, too.”
-
-“She was very saving; and then father thought well of her and advised
-her about small investments which were successful. But what induced her
-to make a will? Is she ill?”
-
-“She says she is getting old, and thought that the matter should be
-settled. By the way, Mason, there are rumours going about the City
-Hall that must interest a reformer like you,” and Kerrigan smiled at
-his friend. “The Motor Traction Company is endeavouring to secure
-possession of Center and Line streets.”
-
-“Do they contemplate purchasing the rights of the new company?”
-
-“Not while there’s a chance to steal them; and from what I’ve heard
-during the last few days that has been their object since the time the
-injunction was granted against the rival concern.”
-
-The young attorney planted his back against the desk and braced himself
-with his elbows. “Let me give you a sketch of the thing,” said he. “The
-City Railway Company was duly chartered, secured the franchise from
-councils for these two streets and spent thousands of good dollars in
-putting down road-bed, rails and all that sort of thing. At this stage
-the Motor Company suddenly discovered that Center and Line streets were
-arteries that would tap the thickly populated sections, and that the
-new company would reduce their earnings.
-
-“Under cover of a protest from citizens living along the line of the
-new road, an injunction was gotten out staying all work; the matter was
-carried into the courts, where it has been hanging fire ever since.”
-
-“But,” put in Mason, “a decision was rendered in favour of the City
-Company less than a week ago.”
-
-“I know that; and in that decision the new move of the Motor people
-had its birth. The long delay, the cost of fighting the case and all
-that, pretty well drained the resources of the City people, who were
-none too rich to begin with. And a time limit was put upon the building
-of the line at the time the franchise was granted. The time specified
-will shortly expire and the road is but half built. The Motor Company
-intends to put unlimited money into the next local election in order to
-elect a majority in both branches of councils favourable to revoking
-the franchise on the ground of failure to live up to their contract.”
-
-“Why, this is infamous!” exclaimed Mason. “How could the road be built
-in the time specified when the courts prevented their working upon it?”
-
-Kerrigan shrugged his shoulders. “The Motor Company want that franchise
-and it is not at all particular about how it is gotten.”
-
-The two young men rose and made their way to the sidewalk.
-
-“I understand,” said Mason, as he sprang the catch of the office door,
-“when the new company was organized that the stock was mostly taken
-up in small lots by small store-keepers and people with accounts in
-saving banks.”
-
-“That’s true,” answered Kerrigan; “and that’s what makes the company
-easy game.”
-
-A heavy team swung up to the curb and a square-jawed young fellow
-climbed down from his seat. A battered, drink-sodden man tremulously
-clutched him by the arm and began mumbling incoherently. The teamster
-slipped him a nickel and gave him a helpful shove down the street; then
-he approached and said to Mason:
-
-“There’s a lot o’ stuff up at Shed B for youse people. Shannon wants t’
-know when ye want it hauled.”
-
-“Ah, yes,” replied Mason. “We received the notice late this afternoon.
-Tell Shannon to have it here the first thing in the morning.”
-
-“Good enough!” The driver was about to turn away when Kerrigan
-exclaimed:
-
-“Hello, Larry! What’s doing?”
-
-“Hello, Johnnie,” greeted the other. “I didn’t know youse.”
-
-“Who’s your friend?” questioned Kerrigan, nodding toward the receding
-form of the tramp.
-
-“Oh, just a guy what braced me for a nickel so’s he could hang up his
-hat on the inside of a wall. He said it’s been so long since he covered
-his stilts wit’ a sheet that he forgets what it feels like.”
-
-“What did you say?”
-
-“I told him that I was workin’ this side o’ the street meself. Say,
-it’s a big t’ing when a guy kin dig down in his pants an’ produce a
-roll that would stop a window; but the minute I run up against a bundle
-o’ rags me vest buttons is in danger. Say, Johnnie, was youse ever
-strapped?”
-
-Kerrigan confessed that he had been.
-
-“I guess every geezer along the line has done the stunt at some stage
-o’ the game. Why, I’ve been so tight on the hooks that I couldn’t tell
-the difference between a coon blowin’ a cake walk an’ a gutter band
-handin’ out the ‘Dead March in Saul’; an’ if Queen Anne cottages was
-sellin’ for a quarter a bunch I couldn’t buy in a cellar window. I tell
-youse what it is, Kerrigan, when a guy’s room rent’s six weeks on the
-wrong side o’ the ledger an’ his meal ticket wont stan’ for another
-hole in it, it’s time for him to start somethin’ doin’, an’ try an’ git
-his eyes on a graft what’s got ‘In God we trust’ chalked on its back.
-Ain’t that right?”
-
-“A man entirely without money,” said Mason, “is certainly an object for
-sympathy.”
-
-Larry gestured his contempt.
-
-“I’d like to deal in that,” said he. “If I could sell it at two bits a
-crate I’d make money till youse couldn’t rest. The lobsters what runs
-the beanery’s got sympathy to give away; but youse couldn’t coax a beef
-stew out o’ the kitchen if ye had a smile like Maude Adams. And the
-gent that runs the hock shop keeps it in stock too, but the same guy
-wouldn’t lend youse a half a plunk on a pair o’ bags wit’ a hole in ’em
-if ye was spittin’ blood.
-
-“Sympathy,” continued the square-jawed young man, “is the cheapest
-graft that ever looked over the hill; it’s got every other con game
-skinned to death and a guy in a tight pull takes chances o’ breakin’
-his neck over it every time he opens his mouth. But, say, on the level,
-when a man’s single, an’ on’y got one end to watch he kin pipe up a
-breeze if he ain’t dead leary on action; but when he’s got a full hand
-o’ kids like me friend Chip Nolan, an’ has to keep leather on their
-tootseys an’ their first teeth busy three times a day, he’s got to keep
-his t’ink-tank stirrin’ to beat the band, or he’ll look like a last
-year’s poster on a broken-down fence.”
-
-He climbed up to his high seat and gathered up the reins.
-
-“Don’t t’ink from this song an’ dance,” said he, “that I’ve ever stood
-in line wit’ a yellow ticket an’ a tin can. But, say, as Chip Nolan ’ed
-say: ‘Yer on the turf, mate, but youse ain’t under it yet.’ See? Git
-’ep, Pete!”
-
-
-
-
-Chapter II
-
- “_Ding, dong, ding-el, ding-el, dong,
- Listen to the echo in the dell,
- Hurry, little children, Sunday morn,
- There goes the old Church bell._”
-
- HARRIGAN.
-
-
-IT was Sunday morning. The iron heart of the bell that hung in the
-tower of St. Michael’s beat against its brazen ribs, and the clangour
-went rioting over the housetops. Streams of people, dressed in their
-Sunday best, picked their way across the railroad toward the sound;
-heavy faces peered through bedroom windows and sleep-dry lips murmured
-curses at the noise; a shifting engine panted heavily as it dragged a
-milk train over the rails, and spat cinders into the face of day.
-
-In the kitchen of a squat, shabby building fronting on the railroad, a
-lean, yellow-faced old woman sat beside the range, nursing her knees
-and drawing at a black clay pipe. Another, almost her counterpart, was
-sweeping the floor with the worn stump of a broom.
-
-“God be good till uz, Ellen!” suddenly exclaimed the first. “What are
-yez about?”
-
-“What talk have ye, Bridget?”
-
-“Sure ye wur as near as a hair till swapin’ the bit av dust out av the
-dure!”
-
-“Divil a fear av me. Is it swape the luck from the house I’d be doin’?”
-
-Ellen scraped up the sweepings. “There do be bad luck enough about the
-place,” she continued, as she slid the dust into the fire and watched
-it burn, the flame lighting up her old, faded face, her dirty white
-cap, her bony, large-veined hands. “Malachi tells me that the biz’ness
-do be poorly.”
-
-“Little wonder,” declared Bridget, knocking the ashes from her pipe
-and laying it carefully on the top of a tin at the back of the stove.
-“I know’d what ’ud come av havin’ the son av a Know-nothin’ glosterin’
-about the place! Sure the curse av God is on the loike!”
-
-“True for yez,” assented her sister. “Owld Larkin wur the spit av the
-owld felly himself; he wur a Derry man an’ as black a Presbyterian as
-iver cried ‘To h--l wid the Pope!’”
-
-Ellen took up the hot pipe and charged it from the tin, shaking her
-head ominously.
-
-“Ah, the Orange thafe!” piped the other. “Well do I raymember him,
-years ago, at the riots at the Nanny-Goat Market, that stood beyant
-there where the railroad is. Sure it wur him that put the divil in
-their heads till burn down St. Michael’s; an’ wid me own two eyes I see
-him shoutin’ an’ laffin’ as the cross tumbled intill the street!”
-
-Ellen made a hurried sign of the cross and muttered some words in
-Gaelic.
-
-“An’ they say,” whispered she, awed, “that he barked loike a dog iver
-after!”
-
-“Sorra the lie’s in it, avic. Owld Mrs. Flannagan, that lived nixt dure
-till him, towld me, wid her own two lips, that it wur so. Bud he always
-said it wur asthma he wur after havin’.”
-
-“Oh, the robber! It wur himself that cud twist t’ings till serve his
-turn. More like it wur the divil in him, cryin’ till be let out.”
-
-“An’ d’yez raymember at the toime av the riots, Ellen, whin he stood be
-the fince, overight our back yard, wid Foley’s musket, waitin’ for any
-av uz till pop out our heads?”
-
-Ellen, through some mischance, had swallowed some of the rank pipe
-smoke, and she gasped and strangled, with waving hands and protruding
-eyes.
-
-“Well do I, asthore,” she panted between her fits of coughing. “Oh, the
-Crom’ell!”
-
-“Bridget,” cried a voice from the storeroom in front, “have ye not me
-bit av breakfast ready? It’s late for Mass I’ll be iv yez don’t stir
-yezself, woman.”
-
-Malachi O’Hara stood in his shop among his stock in trade. About him
-were heaped the rakings of low auction rooms and pawnbrokers’ sales;
-stacks of half-worn clothing lay upon the counter; the shelves were
-loaded with crockery, oil lamps, plaster of paris images, table
-cutlery, clocks, fly-specked pictures and a heterogeneous mass of
-battered, greasy and utterly useless articles for which it would be
-impossible to find names. In the window hung a banjo with two broken
-strings; a family Bible, its pages held open by a set of steel “knuckle
-dusters” lay just below, and it was garnished on all sides with
-old-fashioned silver watches, seal rings, black jacks and so on down
-the list of articles that clutter such establishments.
-
-O’Hara, a pot-bellied man, bald, broad-faced and with hard little eyes,
-walked back to the kitchen.
-
-“We wur talkin’ av owld Jimmie Larkin,” said Bridget putting the
-crockery upon the table. “Look till the sup av coffee, Ellen,” she
-whispered, hurriedly, “d’ye not see that it’s b’ilin’ over!”
-
-O’Hara glowered at them, angrily.
-
-“An’ it’s only startin’ yez are!” he cried. “D’ye si’ here like a pair
-av owld cacklin’ hens, an’ the bell just rung for Mass!”
-
-The bell had just ceased and people were still hurrying on; the red sun
-peeped at them from behind the church tower; the hands of the big clock
-reproachfully pointed out the fact that they were late. Bridget glanced
-through the side window.
-
-“There goes Clancy’s wife in her new silk,” said she. “It’s proud
-enough she’s gettin’ till be, since her husband opened the grocery.”
-
-“May the divil fly away wid Clancy’s wife an’ her silks as well! Faix
-an’ there do be other things that Clancy could do wid his money!”
-O’Hara was in a stormy mood.
-
-“Sit down till yez bit av breakfast,” soothed Ellen. “Clancy do be
-doin’ well an’ will pay the money he borried av ye, Malachi. It’s drink
-yez coffee black yez’ll have till,” she added, “for young McGonagle
-have not come wid the milk yet.”
-
-He sat down with a crabbed laugh.
-
-“McGonagle is it!” exclaimed he. “Faith an’ there’s another wan. The
-toime is drawin’ on, so it is, but divil the dollar richer is he. It’s
-wait for me bit av money he’ll be wantin’ me till, but scure till the
-day will I. I’ll sell him out, the spalpeen! He do not trate me wid
-rayspect.”
-
-A rattling of wheels ceased at the door, and it shook under a
-thundering hand.
-
-“Spake av the divil!” remarked Ellen. She took a pitcher from the table
-and opened the door. “A pint,” she said.
-
-The youth with the milk-pail dexterously dipped out the required
-quantity.
-
-“Heard the news?” inquired he.
-
-“We’ve heerd nothin’,” returned Ellen, “barrin’ that Hogan as he passed
-on his bate this mornin’, towld uz that his b’y Tom wur near kilt las’
-noight at yez bla’gard club.”
-
-“Ah, Hogan’s daffy! I meant did ye hear about old man Murphy a-dyin’?”
-
-“What!” exclaimed O’Hara, his mouth full, “is owld Larry cold, thin?”
-
-“Not yet; but he’ll die before the day’s over.” And with this the
-milkman threw himself and can into the wagon at the curb, and rolled
-down the street. Ellen closed the door and put the pitcher upon the
-table.
-
-“So he’ll be goin’ at las’,” said she.
-
-“Small wonder,” put in the sister; “sure he’s been poorly this long
-time.”
-
-“The owld man made a tidy bit av money in his day,” said the brother,
-admiringly. “Bud,” with a sigh, “it’s lavin’ it all he’ll be.”
-
-“An’ tell me, Malachi,” said Bridget, “d’yez think the gran’son’ll git
-any av it?”
-
-O’Hara spilled some of the milk into his coffee.
-
-“Divil a cint,” answered he, positively. “Sure, the owld man have
-niver noticed him since the day he wur born. An’ small blame till him,”
-rapping upon the table with his spoon, “for what call had his son till
-take up wid a Jewess?”
-
-“But,” reasoned Ellen, “now that he do be dyin’ he might call him in
-an’--”
-
-“Sorra the fear av that! Faix an’ whin Mike lay dead at O’Connor’s, the
-undertaker, he wint naythur nixt nor near him. Some say Kelly wur the
-cause av that, but owld Larry had timper enough av his own, God knows.”
-
-“An’ do ye t’ink he’ll lave the property till the Church?”
-
-“Ayther that or till Mary Carroll. Kelly t’inks there do be a chance
-for his boy, Martin; but Martin’s a hard drinker an’ the owld man niver
-liked a bone in his body.”
-
-The gong over the store door rattled sharply. A plump little woman with
-a rosy, chubby face had entered; she wore a bright scarlet shawl shot
-with green and saffron, and upon her head was perched a tiny black
-bonnet with blue strings.
-
-“Good mornin’ all,” greeted this lady with a sweeping flourish of a
-big brass-clasped prayer book. “An’ Bridget, acushla, have ye heard
-about poor owld Larry Murphy?”
-
-“God luk down on uz, I have,” answered Bridget, wagging her head from
-side to side. “Ah bud death’s a sad t’ing, Mrs. McGonagle.”
-
-“True for ye, asthore, true for ye!” And Mrs. McGonagle wagged her head
-also. “But,” she continued, “what will become av the houses in the
-alley, an’ the power av money they say he have in bank?”
-
-“We wur this minit spakin’ av that same,” said Ellen; “an’ Malachi
-t’inks the gran’son’ll git sorra the cint av it.”
-
-“God be good till uz, Malachi! An’ d’ye t’ink so?”
-
-Mrs. McGonagle caught her breath and stared at O’Hara in horror. “Till
-t’ink,” she added, in an awed tone, “av him holdin’ the grudge an’ him
-a-dyin’.”
-
-O’Hara had finished his breakfast and was putting on his coat.
-
-“I can see nothin’ ilce for it,” remarked he, sagely.
-
-“Young Larry is a study, sober, hard workin’ boy!” exclaimed Mrs.
-McGonagle, “an’ its a sin an’ a shame for him till be treated so. He
-have lodged in me third story for a long time, now, an’ I have the
-first time till see him wid a sup av drink in him; an’ I’d say that iv
-it wur me last breath, so I wud!”
-
-The gong rattled; the door slammed; and a girl, flushed and breathless,
-darted through the store and into the kitchen.
-
-“Aunt Ellen,” cried she, “give me the candles we had from last
-Candlemas Day; an’ I want the ivory crucifix, too, for they’ve sent for
-Father Dawson.”
-
-Ellen began a hurried rummaging for the articles named; the girl caught
-sight of Mrs. McGonagle and grasped her by the arm.
-
-“Oh,” she exclaimed, “is it you, Mrs. McGonagle? I’m glad you’re here;
-I was just a-goin’ to run around to your house.”
-
-“For why?”
-
-“Here!” cried Ellen pushing a parcel into the girl’s hand. “Here’s what
-yez want; away wid ye, now, an’ don’t be stan’in’.”
-
-“You’ll hurry home, won’t you, Mrs. McGonagle,” the girl was now at the
-door, her hand on the latch, “an’ tell Larry Murphy his gran’father
-wants to see him before he dies.”
-
-And with that the side door closed behind her and she went by the
-window like a flash.
-
-“Be the powers av Moll Kelly!” exclaimed O’Hara, his broad face blank
-with wonder, “but that bates the Owld Nick.”
-
-He stood staring at his sisters, who had their withered hands in the
-air in gestures of amazement. Mrs. McGonagle’s face shone with glee and
-she cackled rapturously.
-
-“I must hurry home,” said she, “an’ waken Larry.”
-
-“Is he still in bed?” cried Ellen.
-
-“Do he not go till Mass?” cried Bridget.
-
-“Why, not very often,” admitted Mrs. McGonagle, reluctantly. “He
-an’ Jimmie Larkin slapes till a’most dinner toime ivery Sunday. But
-Larry’s a daysint b’y for all that. Good day till yez.” And with that
-the good little woman bolted into the street and went sailing toward
-McGarragles’ Alley, her bright shawl fluttering in the breeze.
-
-The two old crones clawed mystic signs in the air over the spot where
-their visitor had lately stood and began muttering in Gaelic. O’Hara
-was brushing his Sunday high hat with the sleeve of his coat and paused
-as he caught the words.
-
-“What humbuggin’ are yez at now?” demanded he.
-
-“Would yez be after lettin’ the curse stay in the house?” cried Bridget.
-
-“Sure, she hav the evil eye!” asserted Ellen.
-
-O’Hara regarded them fixedly for a moment; then with a snort he put on
-his hat, took his black-thorn stick from behind the door, and started
-off for church.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter III
-
- “_My grandfather, he, at the age of eighty-three,
- One day in May was taken ill and died,
- And after he was dead, the will, of course, was read,
- By a lawyer, as we all stood by his side._”
-
- POPULAR SONG.
-
-
-LARRY MURPHY awoke and sat up in bed; the sun was streaming in through
-the one small window of Mrs. McGonagle’s third story room, and the peal
-of the bell sounded solemnly in his ears. Through the window could be
-seen the church tower, pointing like a gigantic finger heavenward; the
-hands of the clock were slowly lifting as though to screen its face
-from the glare of the sun. Larry stretched himself lazily.
-
-“Solemn High Mass,” yawned he.
-
-A second young man lay upon a cot opposite, propped up with a pillow
-and reading a pink sporting paper. He glanced up.
-
-“That’s the one,” remarked he, “that the property holders come together
-at, ain’t it? Ye kin see every plug hat in the parish on Second Street
-at half past ten on Sunday morning; but I’ll bet five cases to one
-that the collection ain’t no heavier than it is at the one what the
-dump-cart drivers goes to.”
-
-Young Murphy grinned. “Ye’d better not say too much about that when yer
-on the street,” advised he. “Some o’ the Turks around here’s dead sore
-on youse since youse led the march at the ‘Sons o’ Derry’s Ball,’ an’
-they’ll cop youse a sly one when yer not next.”
-
-“Don’t lose any sleep over that,” said the other. “Somebody’ll get hurt
-if they run up against me, and that’s no dream. I don’t have to ask no
-gang o’ Mocaraws if I kin go to a ball; ain’t that right?”
-
-Murphy nodded the subject aside.
-
-“Anything new?” he inquired, looking at the paper which his friend had
-thrown upon the bare floor.
-
-“Nothin’ much, ’cept that Jack Slattery got the life lammed out o’ him
-in his twenty round job with McCook’s ‘Pidgeon.’ There’s a good t’ing
-gone wrong! I know the time when Slattery went right down the line and
-give ’em all a go; but drink got the best o’ him, and now he’s willin’
-to take dimes for a hard job agin a big man, where he used to stan’ pat
-for dollars to put out a dub.”
-
-“Rum’s a tough game to go up against,” commented Larry. “Say,” after a
-pause, “how’s yer trip South comin’ up?”
-
-“Big. Me manager’s got me go’s at New Orleans, Galveston an’ half a
-dozen other burgs; an’ if I holds up me end, he’ll stack me against
-the champion fer as many plunks as youse kin hold in yer hat. That’ll
-be a great graft; eh, Larry? I’ll be a main squeeze meself then, and
-sportin’ guys’ll come out from under their hats as soon as they gits
-their eyes on me!” And Jimmie Larkin twisted himself around on his
-elbow and waved one thick, hairy arm delightedly.
-
-“But, talkin’ about fight,” resumed he, “puts me in mind o’ the mix up
-at the club last night. Mart Kelly didn’t do a t’ing but open up Hogan
-wit’ a jack.”
-
-Murphy sneered. “Kelly’s gittin’ to be a reg’lar slugger,” said he.
-“What was the matter?”
-
-“Oh, he was a-shootin’ off his mouth like he always does. He said his
-old man was the best councilman the ward ever had; Hogan was about half
-drunk, and he said he was a stiff, and had trun down the party. Then
-they clinched and Kelly started to hammer him.”
-
-All was now quiet in the street except for the rattle of an occasional
-wagon, and the faint wheeze of a broken accordion being played down
-the alley. A barb of yellow sunlight shot through the window and fell
-upon a bright lithograph of the Virgin which was tacked upon the wall
-near Larry’s bed. He had bought this years before and he had always
-kept it because he thought it looked like his dead mother. Across
-the room was a large photograph of Larkin in ring costume, as he had
-appeared just previous to his desperate battle with the champion of the
-sixth ward; and under this again was pasted a policy slip with three
-numbers underscored, commemorative of the day that same gentleman had
-struck the “Hard Luck Row,” at Levitsky’s policy shop, and gotten his
-name down upon the books of the tenth police district as a “drunk and
-disorderly.”
-
-“I wonder,” said Larry, his eyes dwelling soberly upon the Jewish face
-of the Virgin, “how the old one is?”
-
-“I saw Rosie O’Hara stan’in’ in the door last night,” returned Jimmie,
-“an’ she said that he was as good as gone.”
-
-“I’m sorry,” said Larry. Then catching the look which Larkin threw him,
-he added: “He never done nothin’ to me, sure; but when I was a kid an’
-me father was a-livin’, he told me never to knock.”
-
-The plaster ceiling was seamed with cracks, discolored by the soaking
-through of rain. Larkin, lying on his back, thoughtfully followed the
-longest of these with his eye; and when he had reached its termination,
-he said:
-
-“If youse was in with yer gran’dad just now, Larry, ye’d come in for
-some o’ the gilt.”
-
-Murphy turned about with a jerk that threatened to end the cot’s unity.
-
-“I don’t want his coin; I wouldn’t make a play for it if I was flat on
-me uppers! I said that I was sorry for the old man, not that I would
-scoop his money after he was planted!”
-
-“Keep yer shirt on,” said Larkin; “I was on’y sayin’, ye know.”
-
-Mrs. McGonagle’s son, Goose, was seated upon an empty cracker box in
-front of Clancy’s grocery; his wagon was drawn up at the curb, and a
-small Italian was shining his russet leather shoes. His mother came up,
-panting and wheezing from her haste.
-
-“Run intill the house!” she exclaimed breathlessly.
-
-“All right; I’m gittin’ me leathers shined,” said her son.
-
-“Faith yez shine kin wait, an’ somethin’ ilce can’t.” Mrs. McGonagle
-dropped upon a salt-fish barrel, regardless, in her excitement, of what
-effect the brine would have upon her church-going skirt. “Run” she
-continued, “an’ tell Larry Murphy that his poor owld gran’father’s at
-death’s door an’ wants till spake till him.”
-
-Goose stared at her incredulously.
-
-“G’way,” said he.
-
-“Don’t sit there starin’ at me, all as wan as a County Down peat
-cutter, but go at wanst! Divil another step cud I stir iv the gates av
-Heaven wur stan’in’ open till me!”
-
-Within a minute after hearing the above tidings McGonagle came charging
-up the crooked steps leading to their lodger’s room, like a drove of
-mavericks.
-
-“Git into yer rags, Murphy,” cried he, “yer wanted.”
-
-“Is it about Kelly an’ Hogan?” asked Larry. “I ain’t no witness. I
-didn’t see the scrap.”
-
-“No, it’s yer gran’father; he’s a cashin’ in, an’ wants to see youse.
-Me mother jist told me.”
-
-Larry was out on the floor like a shot, pulling on his clothes and
-talking incoherently.
-
-“I kin hear the song they’ll sing,” said he. “They’ll pull me into
-rags; ain’t that right, Larkin? Where’s me collar buttons?”
-
-“Look in yer other shirt,” Jimmie was also up, and dressing rapidly.
-Murphy found the missing articles and resumed:
-
-“They’ll say I wus on’y waitin’ fer a chance to get next to the gilt.”
-The thought seemed to anger him and he glared at his friends. “But it
-ain’t so,” he cried, “so help me God, it ain’t! I don’t want the coin;
-I’ve got a job, ain’t I? And I’ve went up against it this far, alone,
-an’ I kin go the rest o’ the distance, too.” He turned to the others,
-an appeal in his voice. “Did I ever make a play? Speak out, did I?”
-
-“Sure not,” said McGonagle.
-
-“Yer raw there, Murphy,” said Larkin. “If youse hadn’t been afeared o’
-what people’d say the old man’d shook yer hand long ago.”
-
-Larry drew in the slack of his suspenders and closed the catch with
-a snap. He looked at Larkin in surprise; this was a thought that had
-never struck him.
-
-“D’ye t’ink so?” was all he said.
-
-“I cert’ny do. I often seen youse brush elbows with him on the street,
-and him turn and look after ye. He’d a-spoke to ye if youse had give
-him on’y half a chance, see?”
-
-“Didn’t he have a chance when I was a kid? Didn’t he have a chance
-when me father died and the neighbours in the alley had to take up a
-collection to bury him? Did he do anyt’ing for me then? Not on yer
-life, he didn’t! He let ’em put me in a Home.”
-
-“But, say, that wuz a dead long time ago, ain’t that right? If youse
-put a stick o’ wood in the stove it’ll burn hard at first, won’t
-it--but it’ll burn out at last, eh? The old one was leary on yer father
-then; but, say, take it from me, the blaze went down long ago, and
-it’s bin a kid game ever since; neither one o’ youse’d speak first.”
-
-Larry buttoned up his square-cut sack coat and looked at his tie in the
-little glass near the stairway.
-
-“That might be all right,” said he; “but look at the time he--” here he
-stopped short and then added: “I don’t want to knock. I promised that I
-wouldn’t and it’s too late to begin now.”
-
-
-
-
-Chapter IV
-
- “_When yer flat on yer back, wit’ a doctor as referee an a train’d
- nurse holdin’ the towel, why it’s up t’ youse, Cull, it’s up t’
- youse!_”
-
- CHIP NOLAN’S REMARKS.
-
-
-A RED-FACED, bare-armed woman opened a door in Murphy’s court and threw
-a pan of garbage into the gutter. Her next door neighbour was walking
-up and down the narrow strip of sidewalk, hushing the cry of a weazened
-baby.
-
-“Is Jamsie not well, Mrs. Burns?” inquired the red-faced woman.
-
-“Sorry the bit, Mrs. Nolan; he’s as cross as two sticks. It’s walk up
-an’ down the floor wid him I’ve been doin’ all the God’s blessed night.
-Scure till the wink av slape I’ve had since I opened me two eyes at
-half after foive yisterday mornin’.”
-
-“Poor sowl! Yez shud git him a rubber ring till cut his teeth on; it’s
-an illigant t’ing for childer’, I’m towld.”
-
-Contractor McGlory’s stables and cart sheds stood on the opposite side
-of the court. A young man sat on a feed-box in the doorway polishing
-a set of light harness; a group of dirty children were playing under
-an up-tilted cart, and a brace of starving curs fought savagely up the
-alley over a mouldy bone. Mrs. Nolan called to the young man:
-
-“An’ sure, is it out drivin’ yez’ed be goin’ so arly on Sunday mornin’,
-Jerry?”
-
-“On’y a little spin,” said the youth. “I want to try out a new skate
-what the old gent bought at the bazar.” He rubbed away in industrious
-silence for a moment and then, nodding toward a clean-looking brick
-house at the end of the court, inquired:
-
-“Did youse see Johnnie Kerrigan go in?”
-
-“Is it young Kerrigan go intill Murphy’s!” Mrs. Nolan seemed
-dumbfounded.
-
-“Not the saloon-keeper’s son that do be at the ’torneyin’!” cried Mrs.
-Burns.
-
-“That’s the guy,” said Jerry. “He went in a couple o’ minutes ago.”
-
-Mrs. Nolan looked at her neighbour, and the latter lady returned the
-look with interest.
-
-“I declare till God!” said the former, “Iv that don’t bate all I iver
-heerd since the day I wur born. Sure an’ his father an’ owld Larry have
-been bitter at wan another for years.”
-
-“It’s forgivin’ his enemies he’ll be doin’ now that the breath do be
-lavin’ him,” said Mrs. Burns. “Divil the fear av him forgivin’ me the
-bit av rint I owes him, though,” she added bitterly.
-
-“There’s worse than old Murphy,” said Jerry. “Kelly’s got his net out
-after the court, an’ if he lands it, it won’t be long before youse find
-it out, either.”
-
-But Mrs. Burns could only think of the crusty old harpy who went from
-door to door down the court on the first day of the month, the skinny
-old claw that reached out so graspingly for the rent, the leathery old
-face frowning blackly upon delay, of the bitter tongue that spat venom
-into the faces of all not ready to pay. And for the life of her, the
-good woman could think of none worse than old Larry Murphy to deal
-with.
-
-“Faix an’ he’d take the bit av bread out av the children’s mouths,”
-declared she.
-
-A flock of grimy sparrows suddenly lit upon the roof of the stable,
-chattering, fluttering and fighting madly; one of the quarrelling dogs
-had been defeated and licked his wounds and howled dolefully; a drunken
-man, passing the end of the court, pitched into the gutter and lay
-there.
-
-“Mother av Heaven!” exclaimed Mrs. Nolan with a suddenness that caused
-her neighbour to jump. She was pointing toward the house spoken of as
-Murphy’s. “Look there!”
-
-Young Larry Murphy was standing upon the white stone step; he had just
-pulled the door bell softly; and catching the astonished stare of the
-two women, he swore at them under his breath.
-
-“They’re next already,” he muttered. “They’ll chew me up, an’ spit me
-out, an’ laugh about it! Why don’t the fagots stay in the house!”
-
-The door opened and he went in, leaving them staring at the house over
-which death was hovering.
-
-Clean and fresh-looking the house stood among its squalid surroundings
-of dirty stables, frowsy, ill-smelling drains and pestilential manure
-pits. Its stone steps were spotless, the brass bell knob was as bright
-as burnished gold, the pretty curtains at the windows like snow. And
-this was the home of the landlord of the court--the clean, bright,
-comfortable home he had dreamed of years before, when he stepped from
-the emigrant ship to begin life in a new land.
-
-He was dying now, and the money for which he had slaved and demeaned
-himself--the money which he had hoarded and loved--was about to pass
-from him. Once more he was going to begin in a new land, and a land
-where hard craft was as nothing beside clean hands. Not that old Larry
-had ever exacted more than his due; but he had stood flat-footed for
-that, in spite of prayers and tears; and the reckoning was now at hand.
-
-The door had been opened for young Larry by a stout, heavy-browed man,
-dressed in decent black; and as he stood aside for the youth to pass
-him in the narrow entry, he showed his discoloured teeth in a sneer.
-
-“So ye have hurried here at wanst, eh?” said he. “Divil the foot have
-yez iver put in the house afore, Larry?”
-
-“It’s manners to wait till yer asked,” returned Larry gruffly.
-
-The stout man closed the door. The house was soundless, and there was
-a heavy smell of sickness; the door of the sitting room stood partly
-open, and Larry caught the rustle of skirts.
-
-“I knowed yez’ed come,” continued the man who had admitted him. “Ah,
-but it’s the sharp wan yez are, Larry.”
-
-The youth turned and grasped the door knob. “I knowed how it’d be,”
-snarled he, looking savagely over his shoulder at the stout man. “I’ll
-lick youse for this, Kelly!”
-
-He jerked open the door and was about to depart when a woman’s voice
-called:
-
-“Mr. Murphy!” A girl had come into the entry from the sitting room; she
-was tall and slim; a bright spot burned in each cheek and she coughed
-slightly as the draft from the open door struck her. She held out her
-hand.
-
-“I’m glad that you’ve come,” said she. “Your grandfather has been
-asking for you again. Were you going away?”
-
-“Yes,” said Larry. He closed the door and took the proffered hand,
-ashamed of the anger which Kelly had awakened. She looked into his face
-with quiet, candid eyes.
-
-“That was wrong,” she said. “He is very low; will you come up?”
-
-He silently followed her up stairs. Kelly entered the sitting room
-and stood by the window; his heavy brows were bent and his lips were
-muttering. The people were streaming back from the church, across the
-railroad; the sooty shifting engine was still making up its train,
-panting and whistling like some asthmatic animal; a priestly-looking
-young man paused at the door of the house and looked up at the number.
-
-“Father Dawson,” muttered Kelly hurrying to open the door. “He tuk his
-toime comin’, faith.”
-
-The sick man, parchment-faced and wasted by disease, lay upon his bed;
-his lips were moving, and his gaunt hands clutched the ivory crucifix.
-The wax candles burned upon a table; beside them stood a glass bowl of
-water blessed at Easter time; a bisque image of the Virgin stood upon a
-shelf, and Rosie O’Hara knelt before it, her head bent, her eyes fixed
-upon the floor. Young Kerrigan sat beside the bed, reading a newly
-written paper; the sun slanted in between the partly closed blinds and
-lay like a bar of gold upon the floor.
-
-“You have stated your wishes very clearly, Mr. Murphy,” said the
-attorney, “and I see nothing that should be changed.”
-
-The old man opened his eyes and tried to sit up. “Mary!” said he.
-“Where’s Mary?”
-
-“Here, Uncle Larry.” The girl knelt beside him and smoothed his pillow.
-“You must lie still,” said she, gently.
-
-“Ye will be a witness till me mark,” said he, faintly, “an’ so must
-Rosie. Is she here?”
-
-“Yes Uncle, she’s here.”
-
-“The sight do be lavin’ me. An’ the b’y? Did he say he’d come, Mary?”
-
-“He’s here, Uncle Larry.” She took the young man’s hand and placed it
-within that of his grandfather: and once more the old man strove to
-lift himself, peering at the other with dim eyes.
-
-“An’ this is Mike’s son?” he muttered.
-
-“Yes, sir.” Larry would have liked to have said “Grandfather,” but
-somehow it stuck in his throat. He looked upon the old man with awed,
-wondering eyes; it was the first person he had ever seen upon the
-threshold of death; and the drawn face, wet with the death damp, sent a
-chill through him.
-
-“I didn’t do right by yez father, Larry,” said the sick man, “I t’ought
-a curse lay upon him for marryin’ yez mother!”
-
-Larry stepped back from the bedside, and Mary Carroll’s quiet eyes
-alone kept back the angry words that leaped to his lips in his mother’s
-defence. His mother--that oriental-eyed mother--bring a curse upon
-anyone! The words still sounded in his ears as he looked down at the
-shrunken form, pity contending with anger in his heart.
-
-His mother had died a Christian; she had deserted, in fear and
-trembling, the faith of her fathers; she had knelt before the altar
-raised to the Nazarene Carpenter, and strove with all the power of her
-tortured soul to believe that He was the same God who had spoken to the
-Law-Giver of her tribe upon the heights of Sinai. And she had done all
-this through love for his father, the father whom this hard old man had
-disowned.
-
-“I wud niver knowed better iv it hadn’t a-been for Mary; she made me
-see it; it wur her that towld me av the black wrong I done yez, both.
-I’ll make up for it, Larry, I’ll make it up, never fear!” The old man
-paused for a moment, his face twitching. “D’ye t’ink it’s too late?” he
-added eagerly.
-
-“It’s never too late.” And thinking to soothe the fears that gripped at
-the darkening brain, Larry added. “It wasn’t much, ye know.”
-
-“But it wur, lad, it wur. Ye don’t know the gredge I wanst held in me
-heart agin yez both. Didn’t I walk the flure, when he lay dead beyant
-there at O’Connor’s, half mad wid the thinkin’? I t’ought till give him
-a daysint berryin’ an’ bring yezself home here; but the divil got the
-better av me, lad, so he did! Yez don’t know the black bitterness I’ve
-held against yez; yez don’t know!”
-
-The agitation seemed to exhaust him; he sank back, a thin streak of
-blood showing on his purple lips.
-
-“Don’t excite yourself, Uncle Larry,” said Mary. “That is all past and
-gone now; Larry has forgiven you, and his father has, too.”
-
-A smile of hope flickered over the face of the sick man, and the girl
-kissed the withered cheek. The youth with the screed leaned forward.
-
-“Hadn’t he better attend to this,” whispered he; “he may die at any
-moment, now. This meeting, or rather the prospect of it, was all that
-kept him up.”
-
-The old man caught the words.
-
-“Is that young Kerrigan?” breathed he; “yez are r’ght, Johnnie; soign
-me name, lad, an’ I’ll make me mark.”
-
-The name was attached to the paper, the mark was made and the two girls
-witnessed it. Kerrigan folded the paper and put it into his pocket;
-the old man lay back upon his pillow and seemed scarce to breathe; his
-chest was sunken, his eyes stared vacantly. A dog yelped dolefully
-below in the court; from the railroad came the hiss of escaping steam
-and the grind of wheels. Kelly opened the door softly, and said:
-
-“Father Dawson’s comin’ up.” He returned into the passage and looked
-over the stair rail. “This way, Father,” said he.
-
-The pure-faced young priest came into the room. Mary’s lips trembled
-and her voice broke slightly as she greeted him.
-
-“Bear up,” said he gently; “death is the common lot; and then he is
-very old.” He bent over the bed; the bar of light had shifted and
-old Larry’s hair shone like silver under its warm touch. “He should
-have the last rites of the Church,” said the priest. Then turning to
-Kelly and Larry he added: “I will ask you to leave the room for a few
-moments, please. You may stay,” to Kerrigan, who had moved toward the
-door with the others. “I may need you.”
-
-The two men stood in the passage for a time in silence; Rosie could be
-heard sobbing heavily, and the priest’s voice murmured holy words. At
-length Kelly spoke:
-
-“What wur Kerrigan called in for?” asked he.
-
-“I didn’t know he was called in,” answered Larry.
-
-Kelly regarded him for a moment, disbelief written upon his face. Then
-he resumed, anxiously:
-
-“Did the owld man put his mark till anything?”
-
-“Yes!”
-
-“Ah!” and Kelly bent his heavy brows. “Wur there anything mention av
-Martin an’ meself?”
-
-“I didn’t hear nobody mentioned.”
-
-“Humph!” Kelly bit the nail of his thumb viciously and spat over the
-stair rail. Then, after a pause, longer than the first, he said: “How
-is the toide?”
-
-“I don’t know.”
-
-“Tim Burns says it’s on the stan’,” said Kelly. “An’ whin it goes down,
-he’ll go out wid it.”
-
-They waited in silence after this; Rosie’s sobs had ceased, the
-clergyman was reciting the litany for the dying, and the others were
-giving the responses. And then their voices were hushed; there was a
-stir in the room; the door opened and Mary came out.
-
-“Mr. Murphy,” said she, “will you hurry over to O’Connor’s and tell him
-to come, at once?”
-
-
-
-
-Chapter V
-
- “_He’d strop up his razor, graceful an’ nice,
- An’ then from your face he’d carve off a slice.
- Your life from the gallows! Ye couldn’t be vexed,
- When Tecumsha O’Riley’s calling out ‘next.’_”
-
- COMIC SONG.
-
-
-SCHWARTZ’S barber shop stood almost within the shadow of the church
-tower. The gas light streamed through his plate window and across the
-sidewalk; a row of customers lined up along the wall, waiting their
-turn in the chair; the fat proprietor stropped a razor and conversed
-with a short man who stood at the stove rubbing a freshly reaped chin.
-A large aired man, with a dyed moustache, was pulling a pair of kid
-gloves over hands too large for them. He wore a light overcoat, a silk
-hat, a flower in his buttonhole and seemed to sweat importance. This
-was Squire Moran, thrice elected to the minor judiciary and a power in
-the ward.
-
-“Ach!” exclaimed Schwartz, “dot vas too pad, Misder Purns.”
-
-“It’s gittin’ a bit wurried I am,” said the little man; “for what kin a
-body be doin’ wit’out a bit av wurk.”
-
-“Sure I t’ought, Squire,” said Clancy, the grocer, who lay back in the
-barber’s chair, tucked about with towels, “that yez wur goin’ till give
-Tim a job in the water daypartment.”
-
-“There’s many a slip, Clancy,” quoth his honour, struggling with the
-gloves. “I’m not the only duck in the pond, ye know; and it’s Tim’s own
-fault that he ain’t in the department long ago.”
-
-“How’s that?” queried the grocer.
-
-“McQuirk’s against him,” answered Moran.
-
-Mr. Burns looked downhearted; the others nodded sagaciously as though
-the reason given was all sufficient.
-
-“I almost got down on my knees to him,” went on the magistrate, “but he
-said no; so what can I do?”
-
-“What’s he sore on Tim for?” asked Goose McGonagle who, in a bright
-scarlet tie, sat near the wash-stand.
-
-“I wouldn’t vote for O’Connor,” Burns hastened to say. “Sure Gartenheim
-did me a favour wanst; an’ wud yez have me go back on a friend?”
-
-A murmur went around the room.
-
-“But O’Connor was the reg’lar nominee,” argued Moran, “an’ if it hadn’t
-been for the push that turned in for Gartenheim, O’Connor ’ud be
-holdin’ down the office instead of Kelly. McQuirk’s dead leary on split
-tickets--unless he gives the order--an’ he told ye at the time that
-he’d remember ye for it.”
-
-“He had little till do,” mumbled Clancy.
-
-Moran laughed. “What the boss don’t know about practical politics ain’t
-worth knowin’,” said he. “An’ it’s the little things what holds the
-party in line. So stick to McQuirk an’ McQuirk’ll stick to you.” He had
-succeeded with his gloves by this time and was about to depart. “If I
-can do anything for you, Tim,” he added, “I’ll do it. But when Mac says
-no, why he generally means it. Good night, everybody.”
-
-“Niver talk till me av politicians,” said Clancy; “be dad they’re all
-tarred wid wan stick. An’ divil a better are they across the say; sure,
-I wur radin’ in the _Irish World_ that Redmond do be at his tricks
-wanst more.”
-
-“D’yez say so,” exclaimed Burns; “ah, but the owld dart is in a bad way
-betune thim all.”
-
-“Redmond do be after firin’ off some illigant spaches,” put in Malachi
-O’Hara, from behind a newspaper, “an’ he’s an able lad, so he is.
-Didn’t he take up for Parnell whin--”
-
-“Parnell!” Clancy snorted his disgust so violently as to endanger his
-safety from the barber’s razor. “Don’t talk till me av that felly.”
-
-“Yez wur a Parnell man yezself wanst, Clancy,” said Burns, with an
-elaborate wink at the others. “Sure, I see the chromo av him that came
-with the _Freeman’s Journal_ nailed up on yez wall overight the kitchen
-dure.”
-
-“An’ divil a long it stayed out av the stove after he wur found out,”
-said the grocer stoutly.
-
-“Filled up, Schwartz?” cried Jerry McGlory, poking his head in at the
-doorway.
-
-“Gome in, Mr. McGlory; dere’s nod many aheat of you.”
-
-Jerry entered, greeted his acquaintances, and hung up his coat.
-
-“Goin’ to the wake?” asked he of O’Hara.
-
-“’Twuld be but daysint fer me till pay my rayspects till the family.
-Are yez goin’ yezself?”
-
-“Sure! There’ll be a mob there, though.” Then turning to the youth in
-the scarlet tie he inquired: “Well, what d’ye know, McGonagle?”
-
-Mr. McGonagle had just finished a graphic description, for the benefit
-of his right-hand neighbour, of the last performance of a “brass back”
-cock, the victorious veteran of a score of mains, and answered affably:
-
-“Nothin’ much. On’y the selectman’s the sorest mug ye ever put yer
-lamps on. If ye’d touch him wit’ a wet finger, he’d sizzle.”
-
-“Arrah, yer right, Goose,” confirmed Burns. “I stopped intill his place
-for a sup av drink as I wur comin’ by, an’ from the talk av him yez’d
-t’ink young Murphy had put his hand intill his money drawer.”
-
-“Divil mend him!” said Clancy.
-
-“I heard,” said McGlory, “that Mary Carroll wasn’t left a cent.”
-
-“D’ye tell me so?” O’Hara was greatly interested.
-
-“Glory be!” ejaculated Burns; “an’ the nace so good till him.”
-
-“Sure, Mary wurn’t his nace,” said Clancy.
-
-“Wur she not! Faix an’ that’s news till me, so it is.”
-
-“I heard me father say,” said Jerry, “that Mary’s grandfather put up
-the coin to bring old man Murphy over here, and start him in the tea
-biz. That was a good many moons ago; and when her folks lost all their
-gilt and she was left alone, old Larry sent to Dublin for her, and he’s
-took care o’ her ever since.”
-
-“Begorra, the owld fox had a heart in his body for all! Bud scure
-till the wan av me iver give him credit for it. God save uz,” resumed
-Mr. Burns, after a pause, “what a power av money he made at the tay
-peddlin’.”
-
-“He uster be a great old geezer, didn’t he?” remarked McGonagle. “I kin
-remember him as plain as day in his old plug hat, an’ he wuz hot after
-the needful, too.”
-
-“There do be a good profit in tay,” put in the grocer, who was now
-sitting up, having his hair brushed; “but how he iver made all av the
-property he’s left, be peddlin’ it from dure till dure, gits the better
-av me.”
-
-“He had a head for commerce, sure,” put in O’Hara. “It wur himself
-that cud lay out a dollar till advantage; an’ divil the bate av him did
-iver I see for buyin’ chape an’ sellin’ dear.”
-
-“He was a winner if he cud beat youse at that game, O’Hara,” laughed
-McGlory.
-
-“Nexd!” cried Schwartz, as Clancy got out of his chair. Malachi took
-the vacated place, a frown wrinkling his brow. The grocer, thinking of
-the hard bargain which O’Hara had driven when he had gone to him for
-money, some time before, winked at Jerry, delighting in the cut; and
-Schwartz, as he drew some hot water from the copper tank upon the stove
-into O’Hara’s shaving mug, grinned widely.
-
-“Dod vas a good von, Cherry,” muttered he. “You hid him hardt, ain’t
-id?”
-
-Burns, who was gazing through the window, suddenly uttered an
-exclamation, rushed into the street and buttonholed a young man who was
-passing.
-
-“Is that not Dick Nolan, Jerry?” asked Clancy tieing his four-in-hand
-before the mirror over the wash-stand.
-
-“Yes,” answered Jerry. “I guess Tim’s hittin’ him for a job.”
-
-“Be the powers! the crayture nades the bit av wurk. The good woife an’
-two childer’ mus’ find it hard; an’ Tim’s a study, sober felly.”
-
-In a few minutes Tim returned; his face had a brighter look and he was
-lilting an old country air.
-
-“I go till wurk in the mornin’,” said he with a rapturous smile. “Young
-Nolan is a man av his wurd; he promised me a job at the first chance,
-an’ now he have give me wan. McQuirk an’ his political bums kin go till
-the devil, for me!”
-
-“Good luck, lad,” wished the grocer. “Gartenheim is the man for yez
-till stick till.”
-
-“He have the contract for layin’ the sewer above, at Frankford,” went
-on Burns; “an’ he’ll start till open the strate t’morry.”
-
-“Nolan’s a good guy,” commented Jerry.
-
-“That’s no joke,” agreed McGonagle. “He’s a real good t’ing.”
-
-“It’s a pity,” commented Clancy, “that his mother is so tuck up wid the
-sup av drink.”
-
-“Ay!” said Tim, shaking his head dismally.
-
-“She hocks everyt’ing she kin carry,” said McGonagle. “Dick can’t trust
-her wit’ a cent.”
-
-“Small blame till him,” said Clancy; “she’d git drink wid it. He comes
-in an’ pays me bill every Saturday noight himself, poor b’y.”
-
-“Makes big money, too,” remarked McGonagle; “and she cud live like a
-lady if she’d cut the bottle. It’s hard lines for Dick, le’me tell
-youse; for he’s a hard worker, an’ he’s got mighty big notions ’bout
-gittin’ to the top o’ the heap.”
-
-“That sister o’ his is a nice-lookin’ fairy,” said McGonagle.
-
-“Poody as a bicture,” agreed Schwartz. O’Hara gave a grunt; the barber
-snatched away his blade and inquired, “Does der razor hurd?”
-
-“Yez damned near cut me chin!” growled the dealer in second-hand goods.
-“Shut up, an’ tind till yez wurk.”
-
-“She’s a nice girl enough,” said Jerry, “but, say, she’s cert’ny
-playin’ Roddy Ferguson for a dead one.”
-
-“An’ is Roddy shparkin’ her, sure?” inquired Clancy.
-
-“Sure! I never seen anybody so broke up on a bundle o’ skirts in me
-life. Say, he’s dead twisted about her; he talks about her every time
-he opens his mouth.”
-
-“Roddy’s a study b’y,” said Burns. “I heerd that O’Connor’ll be takin’
-him intill the bizness wan av these days. It’s a good man he’d make
-her.”
-
-“Dick’s leary on him,” said McGonagle, “he won’t let her even look at
-him.”
-
-“D’yez say so!” And Clancy regarded the speaker with great surprise.
-“Faith an’ I t’ought they wur great buddies. They wint till the
-Brothers’ School together, an’ in thim days, divil a long they wur iver
-apart.”
-
-“Why it’s a chestnut!” exclaimed McGonagle. “I t’ought everybody in the
-ward was next to that. They’ve bin given each other the stony smile
-ever since las’ election, when O’Connor and Gartenheim run against each
-other for select council.”
-
-“Ach!” cried Schwartz, “dot vas a hod dime!”
-
-“The warmest ever,” agreed McGonagle. “It was a reg’lar drag out or I
-never seen one.”
-
-“Wur they not both Dimmycrats?” asked Tim. “What call had they till
-foight, I dunno? I wur in the division at the toime, sure, bud I niver
-got the roight av the t’ing.”
-
-“Why, when the gang went to the convention they was split an’ primed
-for trouble, see? One crowd wanted O’Connor, an’ the other was
-a-fracturin’ their suspenders whoopin’ t’ings up for Gartenheim. And
-when the O’Connor push got the bulge, the Dutchman’s people broke
-for the door, and started a convention o’ their own upstairs o’
-Swinghammer’s saloon. Both o’ ’em was in the fight from that on, and
-the way they shovelled out the long green ’ed make youse t’ink they was
-rank suckers. Why a mug couldn’t turn aroun’ wit’out runnin’ into a
-bunch o’ money.”
-
-“Glory be!”
-
-“Nolan worked for Gartenheim, of course; he couldn’t turn down his
-own boss, ye know. An’ Ferguson ’lectioneered for O’Connor for the
-same reason, see? An’ he chased aroun’ the ward waggin’ his face for
-votes an’ givin’ Gartenheim the knife every chance he got. On election
-night,” continued McGonagle, proudly, “we had the returns at the club
-by private wire, ye know, and when Roddy was dead sure that Kelly had
-flim-flammed the push, he opened up on Nolan an’ said that Gartenheim
-had been workin’ wit’ the other side, all along. In a minute they was
-clinched an’ the crowd had to pull ’em apart. That’s how it is.”
-
-“But, Goose,” complained Tim, “I don’t see how Kelly, who calls himself
-a Dimmycrat, got on the Raypublican ticket.”
-
-“He was foxy,” returned Goose; “I ain’t stuck on him, but I’ll say that
-for him--he’s dead foxy. As soon as he seen his own party split he made
-a play for a place on the other ticket; the other side knowed that he
-cud lift a lot o’ votes from us, and that they cud win wit’ him, see?
-McQuirk got onto the game an’ tried to make a deal. But they gave him
-the laugh, and wiped up the ward wit’ him on ’lection day, wit’ Kelly
-at the head o’ their column. The boss was red hot, le’me tell youse: I
-heerd him in Kerrigan’s back room the next afternoon, and he said he’d
-be at Kelly’s finish if it took every cent he had in his clothes.”
-
-“Next chendt!” called Schwartz. O’Hara got out of the chair, and
-McGonagle took his place.
-
-“It was all blow, though,” added Goose as Schwartz swathed him in
-clean towels and began to apply the lather. “He’s got over his spasm,
-an’ they’re both as t’ick as t’ives. Say,” to the barber, “keep that
-soap on the outside o’ me face, will youse!”
-
-“Den keep your face shud, aind’t it,” smiled Schwartz.
-
-Clancy and Burns were about to leave.
-
-“We’ll see yez at the wake, Jerry,” said the former. “Will ye go along
-wid us, Malachi?”
-
-“I have till go to the length av Coogan’s till see a stove that they do
-be waitin’ me till buy,” answered O’Hara, “but I’ll folly right after
-yez.”
-
-“Good night, gentlemen.” And the door closed behind Mr. Burns and Mr.
-Clancy, who headed in the direction of Murphy’s Court.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter VI
-
- “_That’s how they showed their respects for Paddy Murphy,
- That’s how they showed their honour and their pride,
- They said it was a shame for Pat, and winked at one another,
- Everything in the wake-house went, on the night that Murphy died._”
-
- MURPHY’S WAKE.
-
-
-O’CONNOR’S wagon had come and gone several times; a black streamer hung
-from the bell knob; the shutters were bowed with a ribbon of the same
-sombre hue. Groups of children sat upon cellar doors and talked in
-whispers; slatternly women stood on doorsteps, morbidly watching all
-who came or went at the house where old Larry lay dead. Mrs. Nolan, her
-head muffled in a woollen shawl, was leaning out at her kitchen window,
-likewise engaged, when Hogan the policeman came through the court upon
-his evening round.
-
-“Are yez goin’ in?” asked he, pausing.
-
-“Not the noight,” replied Mrs. Nolan, “all me bits av rags is in the
-wash, an’ sorra’ a t’ing have I till put on me back. Bella an’ Dick
-will, though, an’ mesilf will t’morry noight, plaze God.”
-
-Hogan drummed lightly upon a fireplug with his club. “It’s a Solemn
-High Mass they’ll be havin’,” said he.
-
-“Divil doubt it! An’ there’ll be a power av hacks at the funeral; Dick
-wint for wan till McGrath’s, bud they wur all spoken.”
-
-“Yez’ll not be at the Holy Cross, thin?”
-
-“Faith, yiz. We have a hack av O’Connor’s, an’ it’s go in stoyle
-we will.” Mrs. Nolan was looking toward Murphy’s as she spoke, and
-suddenly exclaimed, in a startled voice:
-
-“Who is that, Micky, that young McGonagle have be the scruff av the
-neck? Glory be! Is it foightin’ he’d be in front av the house where the
-corpse is?”
-
-A thick-set young man had staggered drunkenly up the steps of Murphy’s
-house, just as Goose McGonagle halted before the door.
-
-“Say Kelly,” Goose had remarked, “don’t youse t’ink ye’d better sober
-up a little before youse go in there?”
-
-The man on the steps swayed to and fro and regarded him with
-drink-reddened eyes.
-
-“Wha’s it your bizh’ness?” demanded he. “Don’t ye put yer beak in
-thish, McGonagle. D’ye hear?”
-
-“Put yer head to work,” advised Goose, “an’ have some sense, Murphy’s
-got enough trouble now wit’out youse botherin’ him, Mart.”
-
-“I’m goin’ in,” declared Martin Kelly, his thick voice raising angrily,
-“an’ what’s more I’m a-goin’ to lick Larry Murphy! He’s done me dirt;
-an’ I’m a-goin’ to do him up.”
-
-He tried to open the door, but McGonagle whirled him off the steps.
-
-“Ye ain’t a-goin’ to kick up no muss here, and that goes,” said Goose,
-decisively; “youse must be daffy, ain’t ye?”
-
-Kelly had just aimed a wild blow at McGonagle when Hogan pounced upon
-him.
-
-“So it’s yezsilf, Martin,” sneered the policeman; “it’s a great
-foighter yez are gittin’ to be!”
-
-“Take yer paws off a-me, Hogan,” growled the drunken youth, struggling.
-“Me old man’ll have youse broke for this.”
-
-“If ye don’t quit makin’ a monkey av yezsilf it’s a ride in the wagon
-yez’ll git.”
-
-“Take the lush away,” begged McGonagle; “he’ll have the whole bloomin’
-neighbourhood up.”
-
-The expostulating Martin was hustled down the street just as Mary
-Carroll opened the door.
-
-“It’s on’y Mart Kelly,” Goose informed her, lifting his hat.
-
-“I’m glad he’s gone away,” said Mary; “for he was here this afternoon
-when Mr. Murphy was out, and his talk was shameful. Are you coming in?”
-
-“For a little while. Don’t stand in the draf’; it makes youse cough.”
-McGonagle followed her into the sitting room where the black box rested
-upon a pair of low trestles. A number of wax lights burned at its
-head and an aged woman knelt at the foot, her withered lips muttering
-prayers for the repose of the departed soul. A dozen more women
-neighbours sat around the room talking lowly.
-
-“The men are all in the kitchen,” said Mary to the young man, “and I
-suppose you will want to go there, too.”
-
-“Arrah, then, Mary,” spoke his mother who sat among the group of women,
-“it’s himself that ’ud stay here till the cows come home iv Annie
-Clancy were on’y here.”
-
-A titter ran about and Goose looked embarrassed. “Don’t mind her,” said
-he.
-
-“Annie’s a nice girl,” said Mary, smiling at him with her kind eyes.
-
-“Do Goose still droive the milk wagon, Mrs. McGonagle?” asked Mrs.
-Burns after the young man had gone into the kitchen.
-
-“He do that same,” proudly, “an’ arns a good profit ivery wake.”
-
-The street door had opened and voices were heard in the entry.
-
-“It sounds like the O’Hara’s,” said Mrs. McGlory, wife of the
-contractor, who sat in a corner fanning herself, with all the dignity
-of her social position. Mrs. Burns elevated her hands in dismay.
-
-“They’ll be keenin’, jewel!” she cried to Mary.
-
-“I wouldn’t have it!” declared Mrs. Clancy, the grocer’s wife. “What’ll
-people t’ink?”
-
-The O’Hara sisters came bobbing into the room in queer-looking
-quilted bonnets that hid their faces, and triangularly folded shawls
-pulled tightly about their narrow shoulders. Espying Mary, they threw
-themselves upon her with lamentations.
-
-“Mary, darlin’,” cried Bridget, “it’s a heart full av trouble yez have
-this noight!”
-
-“God be good till yez, allanna!” exclaimed Ellen, “an’ kape death from
-uz all for many a day!”
-
-Then they crouched down beside the ice box, betraying every symptom of
-great grief.
-
-“Divil a tear did I see in her eyes,” muttered Ellen.
-
-“She’s vexed at not gittin’ the bit av money,” said her sister in the
-same low tone.
-
-Then they began muttering prayers in the Irish tongue; the others
-watched them, silently, from time to time exchanging intelligent nods.
-Then the sisters began swaying their bodies back and forth in unison,
-and the other old woman rose to her feet.
-
-“It’s comin’,” said she, “divil choke thim!”
-
-A long, low wail burst from them that immediately filled the kitchen
-doorway with the grinning faces of the men. It was the weird death cry
-of the Irish race, with which they lamented the passage of a soul, in
-their island home. Mary quickly approached the women and spoke a few
-determined words; they bounced upon their feet angrily.
-
-“Shame on yez, Mary Carroll,” cried Ellen.
-
-“Is it prevint our showin’ our rayspects till the dead ye’d be doin?”
-demanded Bridget.
-
-“The custom is not understood in this country,” said Mary quietly; and
-they flounced indignantly down upon the sofa and glowered about them.
-
-“Luk at that stuck-up shtrap, McGlory’s wife, makin’ game av uz,”
-muttered Bridget. “Sure an’ iv she’d git her drunken brother out av the
-House av Correction ’t wud be fitter for her!”
-
-“Ah, the big, fat hussy!” exclaimed Ellen, “it’s well I raymimber the
-toime whin her owld man drove an ash cart, an’ hersilf tuk in washin’.”
-
-All unknowing, Mrs. McGlory was smoothing out her silk dress and hoping
-that the others noticed the sparkle of her chip diamond ring.
-
-“Mary,” inquired she, leaning forward as far as her tight waist would
-permit, “is it owld Kate Sweeney yez’ll have till lay him out?”
-
-“I hadn’t thought of that,” answered Mary, “but I suppose so.”
-
-“Kate do have illigant taste,” affirmed Mrs. Clancy.
-
-“Troth she do that!” spoke Mrs. McGonagle, “an’ sorra a few have doide
-in the parish in the last thirty years that she haven’t put the shroud
-on. Ye’ll have till have some wan, Mary, an’ yez moight as well put the
-troifle av money in the poor owld crayture’s way.”
-
-The door bell rang softly, and Mary went to answer it.
-
-“Is Rosie not here the noight Ellen?” asked Mrs. Burns.
-
-“She do be in her bed, the crayter,” answered Ellen rather stiffly.
-“It’s up t’ree nights han’ runnin’ she’s bin wid him,” with a nod
-toward the box, “as he lay sick; an’ a bit av slape’ll do her no hurt.”
-
-“Rosie have a good heart,” said Mrs. Clancy.
-
-“True for yez,” put in Mrs. McGonagle, “sure an’ iv it hadn’t been for
-her, what ’ud Mary done at all, at all!”
-
-“Spakin’ av Mary,” said Mrs. McGlory; “where did she get her
-eddycation? It’s carry herself very ladyloike, she do.”
-
-“She wur taught in a convent in Dublin,” said Mrs. Clancy.
-
-“I t’ought it wur somethin’ av the koind,” said the contractor’s wife,
-“seein’ that she goes till the altar ivery second Sunday. It’s a good
-livin’ girl she is.”
-
-“None better. But, God betune us an’ all harm, it’s delicate she is.
-She have a bad cough.”
-
-Mary re-entered, accompanied by a pretty girl, very showily dressed,
-and a young man.
-
-“How do yez do, Bella?” greeted Mrs. McGonagle. “An’ is it yezsilf
-Dick?”
-
-“I’m very well, thanks,” answered the girl, stealing a side glance at
-the looking-glass and arranging her fluffy bang. “How have you been?”
-
-“I have me health, thanks be till God.”
-
-“Tim wur tellin’ me, Dick,” said Mrs. Burns, “that yez have got him a
-job av wurk. It’s pray for yez this noight, I will.”
-
-“I need it,” laughed young Nolan, “so fire ahead, Mrs. Burns.”
-
-He walked back toward the kitchen, his sister following him.
-
-“Bella!” called Mary, “won’t you sit here? The men are all in there,
-you know.”
-
-“I’ll be back in a second,” said Bella, over her shoulder. “I on’y want
-t’ take a peep.” And she disappeared into the kitchen.
-
-“Hark till that!” exclaimed Bridget O’Hara, looking about, grimly.
-“It’s young Kelly she do be lookin’ after.”
-
-“She’s a bowld wan, that t’ing,” chimed in her sister.
-
-“Yez shud be ashamed av yezselves, both av yez!” cried Mrs. McGlory,
-reddening with indignation. “Wud yez take away the girl’s ker-act-er!”
-
-“We’re sayin’ nawthin’ bud the truth, sure.”
-
-“Raymimber, yez hav a nace av yer own!”
-
-“An’ I wud have yez till know, Mary Ann McGlory, that she do be a
-daysint girl!”
-
-“Wud ye say that Bella Nolan is not?”
-
-“Oh, hush!” said Mary, pained beyond expression at this outbreak.
-“Please do hush!”
-
-When Bella came back into the room she sat down beside Mary, and began
-twisting a ring about her finger, and giggling.
-
-“I just wanted to see if Mart Kelly was in there,” she said.
-
-The sisters threw glances of triumph at the contractor’s wife, and the
-other women looked slyly at each other and shook their heads.
-
-Two dishes stood upon the kitchen table, one filled with loose tobacco,
-and the other with clay pipes; the air was heavy with smoke; the elder
-men leaned back and talked of times past; the younger grouped together
-and discussed current events of a sporting character. Larry sat upon
-the edge of the table, swinging his feet slowly and stirring up the
-tobacco with the yellow tipped stem of a pipe, a thoughtful look upon
-his face.
-
-“It’s a foine lot ye hav for him at the Holy Cross,” said Clancy,
-“marble at the head an’ feet, an’ iron rails all about it.”
-
-“That so? I never seen it,” Larry had answered.
-
-But he had seen another grave, away near the fence, in the same
-cemetery--a narrow, neglected grave, flat and bare, with a wooden
-cross above it--a grave that lay at the end of a long row of others,
-the cramped resting places of poor wretches whose lives had been as
-cramped, and as bare, and as flat.
-
-“Wid his side face to’ard ye, he luks like the gran’father,” said
-O’Hara, lowly.
-
-“Is it loike old Larry?” said Tim Burns.
-
-“No; the other.”
-
-“Old Cohen, thin. Sure, now that I t’ink av it, he do. But thin he hav
-the blood in him, an’ why not?”
-
-“D’yez raymember owld Aaron, Clancy?”
-
-“Well do I. Faix an’ I got me clothes av him up till the toime he died.
-Divil a-far from crazy he wur whin his girl ran off wid Mike Murphy!
-An’ iv owld Larry wur mad at his b’y’s marryin’ a Jewess, the other wur
-worse at his dawther for takin’ up wid a Christian. By dad, he cursed
-her up hill an’ down dale; he frothed at the mouth, an’ groun’ his
-stumps av teeth together loike a madman; an’ nothin’ ud do him bud he’d
-hav her taken be the police. But Moran towld him he cud do nawthin’.
-He’d a tramped her under his feet wan day beyant on Second Street whin
-he met her, iv it hadn’t bin for Peter Nolan, Dick’s father, God rist
-his sowl in glory! Peter jumped out av his cart an’ dragged him away.
-Put Aaron an’ owld Larry in a bag together, an’ scure till the wan cud
-tell which ’ud jump out the first, for timper.”
-
-The clock ticked and struck through the hours; the people came and went
-as is the custom. When the hands approached the hour of one, Tim Burns
-arose.
-
-“I wur goin’ till offer till sit up wid ye, Larry,” said he, “but as I
-have me job till go till in the mornin’ I mus’ git a bit av slape.”
-
-“Much obliged, all the same,” said Larry. “Larkin an’ McGonagle are
-goin’ to stay with me.”
-
-“I’ll be goin’ mesilf,” said Clancy, reaching for his hat. “I mus’ have
-me grocery open be four, be the day.”
-
-There was a general arising, putting on of hats and shaking of hands
-with Larry; the women had gone long before; and when the clock struck
-again the three watchers were nodding together beside the kitchen
-range.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter VII
-
- “_Oh they laid him away,
- On one bleak Winter day,
- An’ the sun he’ll never see more._”
-
- BALLADS OF BACK STREETS.
-
-
-THURSDAY morning broke clear, and before the factory whistles had done
-blowing, O’Connor and Roddy Ferguson had carried in the coffin, the
-great brass candelabra, and all the other things that went to make
-up O’Connor’s first-class funeral. O’Connor’s arrival was followed
-promptly by that of old Mrs. Sweeney, and under their practised hands
-things progressed rapidly; for when the clock of St. Michael’s struck
-the hour of nine, and then began tolling sadly, all was ready and the
-doors thrown open.
-
-Hacks from neighbouring livery stables began arriving and lined up at
-the curb, and the friends of the departed began to gather. The women
-went in, but the men, for the most part, collected upon the sidewalk.
-Frowsy-haired women stood in groups at the mouth of each alley in the
-block, blue faced and shivering, but anxious to miss nothing. A crowd
-of young men were smoking and laughing near Clancy’s coal box; the
-drivers of the hacks, in shabby livery coats and grotesque high hats,
-called to each other from their high seats.
-
-It wanted but a half hour of the time when the cortège was to move when
-Goose McGonagle pushed his way through the people who were crowding
-in at the front door; he had a band of crape about his arm and was
-hatless. Approaching the group at Clancy’s, he said hurriedly:
-
-“I’m goin’ to be a pall bearer, fellas, and Larry wants five o’ youse
-to help. Talk quick!”
-
-Nolan and McGlory promptly volunteered.
-
-“That makes three,” said Goose. “Won’t youse help to carry him, Larkin?”
-
-“Try to get somebody else,” begged Jimmie. And with a nod of his head
-toward the smoky grey tower from which came the doleful strokes of the
-bell, he added: “I don’t go there, ye know; an’ it might make talk
-about Larry, see? Here’s Casey an’ Mike McCarty comin’ up; give ’em a
-brace.”
-
-Danny Casey who worked for Contractor McGlory, and Mike McCarty,
-who drove a truck for Shannon, the teamster, and was considered the
-best-dressed young man in the ward, were promptly “braced” and gave
-consent.
-
-“I’ll git another one and give Ferguson yer names,” said Goose, “an’
-he’ll fix youse up with gloves and crape for yer skypieces.”
-
-And McGonagle plunged into the house with the crowd. The prospective
-pall-bearers resumed their comments upon the passing throng; a pastime
-at which they had been interrupted.
-
-“Here comes Kelly and his wife,” remarked McGlory.
-
-“With Mart pluggin’ along behind. And he’s half lit up, too.”
-
-“Good mornin’, Mr. McGlory,” saluted Casey to his employer.
-
-“How are yez, Danny?” answered the contractor as he went by with his
-wife. “Good mornin’ gintlemen.”
-
-“Gee!” whispered Casey, “ain’t the old lady a swell!”
-
-“Git onto Clancy’s stove-pipe lid! Ain’t it a bird!”
-
-“It was made during the siege o’ Limerick,” said McCarty, “an’ Clancy’s
-wore it at every funeral an’ at every A. O. H. procession since then.”
-
-“Hello, Schwartz; goin’ to the funeral?”
-
-“Say,” said McGlory, “don’t Rosie O’Hara look nice in black? Look at
-the two old ones givin’ their wipes a shower bath! Say, Larkin, there’s
-Rosie wavin’ her hand, on the quiet; she wants youse.”
-
-Her aunts had gone in, but Rosie paused upon the step, and Jimmie was
-at her side in a moment.
-
-“Who are ye goin’ to walk with?” said she.
-
-“With youse, if ye’ll let me!” eagerly.
-
-Rosie looked pleased. “Git our names down,” said she, “so’s we’ll be
-called out.”
-
-She entered the house just as Roddy Ferguson came out, his hands full
-of black cotton gloves and streamers of crape.
-
-“Hold out yer fin, McCarty,” commanded Roddy. “Say, Casey, youse kin
-tie a bow knot, so gimme a lift with these. I’d ask youse to come
-inside, gents,” went on O’Connor’s aid, “but the house is packed with
-women, and I know youse ain’t proud.”
-
-“Who’s got the list, Furgy?” asked Larkin.
-
-“O’Connor. Him and Larry’s makin’ it up in the kitchen.”
-
-Jimmie Larkin took off his hat in the entry and pushed into the room
-where the body lay exposed to view. Mary sat at the head of the casket;
-beside her were the Kellys, the mother with her handkerchief to her
-eyes, the father talking across the corpse to a friend, the son half
-asleep in his chair. Tall candles shed their light about the room; the
-walls were draped in dead black; the polished lid of the casket stood
-awesomely in a corner; the flowers sent by friends and the potted
-plants furnished by the undertaker smelt sickeningly sweet and heavy in
-the close, crowded room.
-
-The old man looked very peaceful; death had removed the hard, crabbed
-lines from his face, and the pale hands, twined about with a rosary,
-and holding a small crucifix, seemed, to the tenants, very different
-from the grasping old claws that he had been accustomed to thrust out
-for the rent. Some of the people sat, some stood, others again knelt,
-hurrying over the set prayers for the dead.
-
-“What a beautiful corpse!” ejaculated Ellen O’Hara, in a loud whisper.
-
-“Loike a child gone till slape,” said her sister.
-
-“He have fallen away a good bit,” commented Mrs. McGonagle.
-
-“Yis,” said Mrs. Clancy; “but not so much as I expected.”
-
-“He vas der hardest corbse to shafe I ever dackled,” Schwartz informed
-the latter lady’s husband.
-
-“What an illigant ‘Gates Ajar’!” exclaimed Mrs. McGlory. “Is that the
-piece that the A. O. H. sent, Mary?”
-
-“It takes Kate Sweeney till make thim look daysint in the coffin,”
-remarked Mrs. Nolan. “What splindid flowers she have put under his
-head!”
-
-“Tell me, Mrs. Clancy,” whispered Bridget O’Hara; “who will walk wid
-Larry?”
-
-“Why, Mary, av corse.”
-
-“Divil a fear av her!”
-
-“Is she settin’ her cap for him, I dunno?” said Ellen.
-
-Mrs. Clancy turned to Mrs. McGonagle. “D’yez harken till the talk av
-thim two?” asked she.
-
-“God save uz,” answered Mrs. McGonagle, “they’ed talk about any wan.
-But, whist; is that not Mrs. Noonen’s black skirt, Casey’s wife have
-on?”
-
-“Av coorse. She borryed it yisterday; for scure till the stitch av
-black she have av her own.”
-
-“Is the Father Matt’oo comin’?” inquired Mrs. Nolan.
-
-“Is it the T. A. B. yez mean?” questioned Mrs. Contractor McGlory.
-
-“What ilce?”
-
-“Sure Larry wur not a mimber.”
-
-“D’yez tell me so! An’ did he take the sup av drink, thin? Begorry I’d
-niver a-t’ought it.”
-
-Mrs. Nolan blinked at the corpse with renewed interest. O’Connor came
-into the room with Larry and handed Mary a slip of paper.
-
-“Iv there’s any other names ye want down,” said he, “just say the word.”
-
-But Mary shook her head and returned it. Roddy Ferguson pushed his way
-into the room and drew his employer aside.
-
-“Callahan’s outside with the hearse,” said he in a whisper, “and if we
-want to catch the Solemn High Mass we’d better push t’ings.”
-
-The undertaker drew himself up to his full height and looked gravely
-about him; then in his deepest and most professional voice, he said:
-
-“The relatives an’ friends of the family will take a last farewell look
-at the departed before proceedin’ till the church.”
-
-Veils were dropped, gloves were put on, and a subdued sobbing and
-whispering began. All pushed forward anxious to see everything at this
-critical and interesting moment. Larry was moved but silent; Mary
-sobbed, quietly; Mrs. Kelly’s grief was stormy; but her husband and son
-regarded the body stolidly, then gave way to those behind. In a few
-moments the casket lid was screwed down and the six young men had borne
-it through the door to the waiting hearse. Young Ferguson took the list
-of names and stationed himself by the door.
-
-“Mr. Lawrence Murphy and Miss Mary Carroll,” called he.
-
-“Do she go afore me?” demanded Mrs. Kelly. “Mr. O’Connor is a black
-stranger till walk ahead av a sister av the corpse?”
-
-Kelly sneered. “Sure they have it all their own way, Honora,” said he.
-
-“Mr. James Kelly and wife,” called Ferguson.
-
-“Thanks be!” cried the angry lady. “I wur expectin’ till be left till
-the last!” and out she went on the arm of her husband, to treat the
-watching crowd to an energetic exhibition of sisterly grief.
-
-“Mr. Martin Kelly!” cried Roddy. He hesitated a moment, then added:
-“and Miss Bella Nolan.”
-
-Bella came forward, smiling, and took the young man’s arm. The sisters
-O’Hara threw looks of malice toward Mrs. McGlory; but the good woman
-disdained to notice them.
-
-“Go on, Roddy!” directed O’Connor. “Is it aslape ye are?”
-
-His assistant had followed Bella and her partner with moody eyes,
-and now stood gazing at the empty doorway. But he roused himself at
-O’Connor’s voice and before his abstraction was noticed by anyone else
-he continued:
-
-“James Larkin, and Miss Rosie O’Hara.”
-
-“Divil the bit will she,” broke in the latter’s father. “Rosie walks
-wid me, an’ not wid the son av an’ Orangeman!”
-
-Rosie grew red, and the tears sprang into her eyes; Jimmie hesitated,
-uncertain how to act, but at a glance from Rosie, he drew back and
-allowed her father to lead her out.
-
-“What a shame!” said good-natured Mrs. McGonagle.
-
-“Will nothin’ do the cub but Rosie?” sneered Bridget.
-
-“I don’t like his trade,” said Mrs. Clancy, “but he’s a foine young
-felly.”
-
-“He’s his father’s son,” said Ellen, bitingly.
-
-The list of names was gone quickly through; those intending to walk in
-the cortège as far as the church fell in, and all moved slowly down the
-street, O’Connor at their head.
-
-Larry Murphy’s recollections of what followed were but dim; through
-a sort of haze he heard the chanting priests, and saw the swinging
-censers, and his mind retained but little of what the pastor said in
-regard to the old man’s life and acts. He had been but a child when
-his father lay at the same altar rail, but his remembrance of that was
-vivid. The organ was silent then; the church was deserted save for a
-few friends, and a single priest performed the hurried service. It
-came back to him that he had cried bitterly; not that he had much idea
-of what was happening, but the dull light that crept in through the
-stained windows seemed to add to the gloom that filled the church, and
-a vague sense of loss had clutched at his childish heart. He did not
-begrudge the pomp that marked his grandfather’s burial services, but
-he thought that the old man could have spared a little from his store,
-that his dead son might have gone to the grave in a fitting manner, and
-not wait until death’s hand was upon him before giving a sign.
-
-But it was all over now; the pall-bearers had drunk their glasses of
-red wine, crumbled their pieces of sweet cake, shaken hands with Larry
-and departed. The Kellys had remained until Johnnie Kerrigan had
-informed them that the entire property had gone to Larry, and then left
-in a gust of anger.
-
-The young man and Mary were alone. She sat by the window, crying
-softly; he stood with his back to the stove, his hands clasped behind
-him, staring at the bright pattern in the carpet.
-
-He was trying to think of something to say that would ease her grief;
-but all that came to his mind seemed vapid and without much meaning. He
-had been thinking of her a great deal during the last few days and it
-hurt him to see her cry. He had never spoken to her before the day of
-his grandfather’s death; but he had seen her often on the street and at
-the church--when he went there--and he had often marvelled at the calm
-purity of her face. He had heard much of her in different ways; of her
-goodness of heart, of her gentle ways, of her deep love and veneration
-for the faith in which she had been reared. He had lived rough, a young
-man in his place could hardly help it; and he had seen, and said, and
-done things which would have made him hang his head had she known; but,
-for all, he liked, as most men do, reverence for holy things in a
-woman. It was Mary that broke the silence.
-
-“Mrs. McGonagle will take care of the house for you until you have
-time to get settled,” she said. And he looked at her blankly, not
-understanding. “I will stay with a friend for a while,” she continued,
-“for I haven’t had time to think of anything yet.”
-
-“You’re goin’ away, then?”
-
-“To be sure!” wonderingly. “This is your home now, and I can’t stay
-here, you know.”
-
-“That’s so,” said he. He hadn’t thought of it before; and now that he
-did his heart sank a little at her helplessness. She fumbled at the
-catch of her mourning glove; he looked at her for a long time, thinking
-of another--of the tall, splendid girl whom he had known best as a
-child and playmate. But _she_ seemed far away now; her people were his
-people no longer. Ah, yes that was it: Education had done much for this
-girl of whom he had dreamed since boyhood; but association had done
-more; and she seemed as far away as though she had dwelt upon a star.
-He could never reach her plane; and of late years he had only thought
-of her as one thinks of the dream-built hopes of youth. At last he said
-to Mary:
-
-“This house’s been your home for a good while, now; and it’ed look like
-drivin’ youse away, wouldn’t it?--I mean if ye went.”
-
-“I don’t know,” answered she doubtfully.
-
-“Anyway, I don’t want ye to go,” said he, with sudden courage. “Stay
-here--and marry me!”
-
-He looked into the pure, candid eyes and saw sweeping into them a quiet
-happiness that caused him to stoop and kiss her cheek.
-
-“Uncle Larry spoke of that just before he died,” she said; “and if you
-are sure you want me, I’ll stay.”
-
-
-
-
-Chapter VIII
-
- “_There’s an organ in the parlour,
- Just to give the house a tone,
- And you’re welcome every evening,
- At Maggie Murphy’s home._”
-
- HARRIGAN.
-
-
-NOT many steps from St. Michael’s is the Academy of the Sacred Heart,
-where the girls of the parish are taught by the gentle-mannered
-sisters; and not far from that again, was the home of Maggie Dwyer.
-Time was, and not so many years before, when Owen Dwyer mixed the
-mortar for McMullen the builder and lived in one of the little houses
-in McGarragles’ Alley. But Owen made good wages and was a saving man
-and a sober one. All his neighbours knew that he had an account in
-the savings bank; but when he sent his daughter to the Normal School
-and thereby showed that he had sufficient to educate and support her
-it excited much comment; and when he bought the Second Street house,
-and Fitzmaurice, the real estate man, caused it to be known that four
-thousand dollars was the price paid, a cry of wonder went up, and the
-old country tale of the finding of “a crock of gold,” began to be
-whispered from one to the other.
-
-And, although he shortly afterward gave up his job with McMullen, Owen
-was still the same quiet, good-natured man, passing the collection
-plate in the church on Sunday morning and acting as president of the T.
-A. B. society, as he had been accustomed to do for years.
-
-His daughter was his darling. Splendid, capable Maggie! whose fine eyes
-and handsome form were the talk of all who knew her. Owen had some
-influence in a political way, and after her graduation, Maggie was made
-a teacher at the Harrison School; her strong young voice was soon heard
-in the church choir; she sketched, embroidered, composed, and adorned
-their pretty home with pictures, dainty bric-a-brac and other things
-that a refined taste delights in, until Owen walked about the rooms in
-awe, and admired with all his soul.
-
-One evening about a week after the funeral at Murphy’s, Maggie, in a
-close-fitting gown that displayed the splendid lines of her figure,
-sat at her piano softly playing over some music which she was to use
-at a concert of the teachers’ society; Owen read the evening paper and
-smoked his brier pipe by the shaded lamp.
-
-“I’m afeered, Maggie,” said he, in a troubled tone, laying down the
-paper, “that these goings on av the Motor Traction Company’ll bring
-sorra’ till many a body yet.”
-
-“What is it, Daddy?” asked Maggie, pausing in her playing.
-
-“They do be after the franchise av the new company,” answered Owen.
-“An’ the politicians are sidin’ wid ’em in their rascality. I have
-put more money in this than I shud,” added he, soberly, “an’ iv the
-franchise is revoked be the next set av councilmen, it’s in a bad way
-we’ll be, Maggie.”
-
-She leaned over and kissed him on the cheek, in the motherly fashion
-that Owen loved.
-
-“Don’t worry, Daddy, you’ll see that all will come right in the end.
-And what matter, even if the stocks you own are made worthless; we
-still have our home.”
-
-“Bud we can’t ate bricks an’ mortar, sure,” complained he. “An’ I’m too
-owld till go till work, now, Maggie.”
-
-“But I am not,” said Maggie, with a laugh. “Why you have said yourself,
-Daddy, that I earn more in a month than you ever did with Mr. McMullen.”
-
-“Is it have me sponge on yez bit av wages ye’d have me do?” exclaimed
-the old man. “God forgimme, Maggie, I couldn’t do that.”
-
-The door bell rang at this moment.
-
-“It’s Mr. Mason, I suppose,” said Maggie. “He told me that he would
-drop in during the evening, and said that he wanted to speak to you.”
-
-But it was Annie Clancy, the grocer’s daughter, a quiet, pretty girl,
-and a great favourite of Maggie’s.
-
-“I only came in to say that Mary Carroll is coming around to see you,”
-announced Annie. “She said that she was afraid you’d be goin’ out, so
-she asked me to run around and tell you to wait.”
-
-“An’ how is young McGonagle, Annie?” asked Owen, banteringly.
-
-“Now, Daddy!” warned Maggie, with uplifted finger.
-
-“What harm?” persisted Owen, who delighted to twit the girl about her
-sweetheart. “Sure, they tell me, Annie, that he do sarve yez father wid
-better milk than any av his other customers.”
-
-Annie tossed her head.
-
-“He don’t,” denied she. “And even if he did,” regretfully, “Pop
-wouldn’t like him any better.”
-
-“An’ does not take till Goose?” inquired Owen.
-
-“You know he don’t. And it’s all because Goose is in debt to Mr.
-O’Hara. Pop says he’ll never be able to keep a wife; and that he’ll be
-sold out.”
-
-Owen saw the tears in the girl’s eyes, and said gently.
-
-“Don’t mind, Annie. You’ll have him, never fear. Goose is a good b’y
-till his mother an’ that kind do have luck.”
-
-“I’ll have to go now, Maggie,” said the grocer’s daughter. “Pop’s going
-to the Clan-na-Gael meeting to-night and I have to tend store.”
-
-Annie had hardly left when Mason came, and he had barely been welcomed
-when Mary Carroll followed. The two men were left in the parlour to
-discuss the matter of Mason’s visit, while the girls withdrew to the
-sitting room upstairs.
-
-“I could not delay telling you any longer, Maggie dear,” said Mary. “It
-came so sudden after poor Uncle Larry’s death that we have been keeping
-it a secret.”
-
-“A secret?” exclaimed Maggie. “Tell me, quick.”
-
-“Larry Murphy has asked me to be his wife.”
-
-A quick change came over Maggie’s face; she paled, then flushed, and
-faltered when she tried to speak.
-
-“Why, Maggie,” said Mary, anxiously. “What’s the matter?”
-
-But Maggie had recovered quickly and replied:
-
-“I am only glad, Mary--glad for your sake; you will be very happy; for
-Larry has a good heart.”
-
-“It came so strangely, too,” said Mary, a happy light in her quiet
-eyes. “We barely knew each other, I mean in the conventional sense,
-but I must have loved him and he must have loved me for ever so long
-without either of us knowing it. And, oh, he thinks so much of you,
-Maggie; why, you and he were boy and girl together, and yet I don’t
-remember ever hearing you speak of him.”
-
-“We have not seen much of each other for a long time,” said Maggie
-quietly.
-
-When they finally came down into the parlour, Mason was ready to take
-his leave; he had his hat and stick in his hand and was exchanging some
-last words with Owen.
-
-“Every man,” he was saying, “who has the good of the city at heart,
-and who has the slightest sense of justice, will do everything in his
-power to prevent this proposed steal. I have made up my mind that the
-only way to prevent its consummation is to canvass persons who have
-influence in their own neighbourhood, acquaint them with the facts and
-endeavour to organize an opposition at the primaries.”
-
-“There yez have it,” said Owen, approvingly. “The primaries is
-the place till make the fight; lave thim wanst git control av the
-convintions in the different wards, an’ they’ll put their own bla’gards
-on the regular ticket an’ thin the divil himself couldn’t bate thim.”
-
-“And this young man whom you advised me to see; where can he be found?”
-
-“Oh, Larry Murphy? Yis, yez could do worse thin have Larry wid yez.
-Sure, he’s so solid in his own division that McQuirk himself has till
-take second place, there.
-
-“Mary,” and Owen turned to the girl, “Is Larry at home?”
-
-“Yes,” answered Mary.
-
-“If you want to find Mr. Murphy,” laughed Maggie, “we will provide a
-way for you. Mr. Mason, this is Miss Carroll.” The introduction being
-acknowledged, Maggie continued: “You can be of mutual service to each
-other, Mr. Mason--you as escort, and Miss Carroll as guide.”
-
-But, after their visitor had gone, and Maggie had sought her own room,
-the laugh vanished and she threw herself upon the bed and burst into a
-storm of tears.
-
-Her thoughts went back to the time of her childhood, to the little home
-in McGarragles’ Alley. She once more saw the dark-eyed boy who had been
-her very slave, who was always ready to fight for her, and who was
-happiest when by her side. But as they grew up the years had separated
-them; she lived in her present home, went to the Normal School and
-found new friends very different from the old, though her heart was
-still true to them. And Larry only saw the change from the outside.
-When she came tripping along on Sunday morning, prayer book in hand, on
-her way to church, he, standing on the corner in front of Regan’s cigar
-store, rigged out in a cream-coloured overcoat with pearl buttons,
-saluted her with a nod of assumed indifference and she would return it
-in kind and continue on her way, wondering: “What in the world Larry
-Murphy saw in standing on Regan’s corner all day of a Sunday.”
-
-An incident had occurred later that should have ended this
-misunderstanding; and it would have done so had not the sense of
-distance between them been magnified, in Larry’s mind, by the very
-nature of the happening.
-
-Shannon, the teamster by whom he was employed, had one day called Larry
-into the little office down by the river.
-
-“Larry,” said he, “I’m after havin’ great call from the mills above in
-Kensington, as ye know. Sure the bell av me telyphone’s jingling all
-the God’s blessed day, an’ I have the divil’s own job gittin’ me teams
-up there in time. Yesterday I bought six pair av the foinest jacks yez
-iver laid eyes on, an’ five trucks as good as new; I have rinted the
-back room av Kavanaugh’s on the Frankford road as an up-town branch;
-an’ it’s yezsilf I want till take charge av it. The work will be asey
-an’ genteel an’ I’ll pay yez twinty dollars a week.”
-
-After a moment’s sober thought Larry had replied:
-
-“The job’s a cinch, an’ the money’s good; but, say, Pat, how do youse
-t’ink I’ll size up to the work? I can’t write a’tall an’ on’y kin read
-a little.”
-
-“Now God forgi’mine for an ijit!” exclaimed Shannon. “Sure an I niver
-wanst thought av that. That puts an end till it, Larry; the work is
-beyant yez, b’y.”
-
-Larry understood this and felt it keenly. He endeavoured to convey an
-impression of carelessness; but Shannon was not deceived.
-
-“Common since’ll tell yez, Larry,” said he, kindly, “that the man that
-takes howld av me up-town branch must have a bit av larnin’. Give up
-runnin’ wid the gang, lad, an’ go till the night school.”
-
-Larry paid very little attention to what the boss was saying; he was
-wrestling with the bitterness within him. But that night, as he was
-crossing the railroad on his way to the club, he noticed that a broad
-shaft of light flowed from each window of the old Harrison School, and
-then Shannon’s words came back to him. A group of boys were skylarking
-in the entry where a single gas light flared redly in the gloom.
-
-“Night school?” inquired he of one of these.
-
-“Sure,” answered the boy. “Started last week.”
-
-His mind was made up in an instant, and he started up the stairs toward
-the principal’s room. But with his hand upon the door knob, he paused.
-What would the gang say when they heard? He pictured himself standing
-in the midst of them, an object of derision; he saw two of them meet
-upon the street and heard the laugh that greeted the words, “Larry
-Murphy’s goin’ to school, like a kid.” But he drove these visions from
-him, muttering:
-
-“If they kid me, there’ll be somethin’ broke, that’s all!”
-
-He half expected the principal to laugh when he stated his business;
-but, on the contrary, that gentleman seemed to regard the matter
-approvingly; this made Larry feel better, and he entered the schoolroom
-indicated with scarcely a tremor. A number of young men of his own age
-sat at the little desks, handling the spelling books with pathetic
-care. There were two teachers in the room, flitting helpfully from
-desk to desk; no one noticed Larry and he slid into a vacant seat, and
-awaited developments.
-
-One of the teachers was working from pupil to pupil up the aisle toward
-him. His back was turned to her, but he knew, from the sound of her
-voice, that she was young. In a few moments she was, as Larry afterward
-expressed it, “givin’ points to the guy right back o’ me.”
-
-It was not until then that he recognized the voice; and a panic
-immediately possessed him.
-
-“Gee!” he mentally exclaimed, “what did I drift into this joint for,
-anyhow; I might a-knowed she’d be here.” He looked longingly toward the
-door. “If I t’ought nobody was next, I’d take a chance, and fly the
-coop!”
-
-But he delayed until too late; in another moment Maggie had sat down
-beside him, inquiring:
-
-“How are you getting on with--?” then in great astonishment. “Why,
-Larry Murphy!”
-
-He began to stammer a confused explanation; but she knew of his
-shortcomings and realized the situation like a flash.
-
-“I didn’t t’ink I’d see youse here,” he finished awkwardly.
-
-Maggie knew this; she also knew that if he had dreamed of her presence
-wild horses could not have dragged him there. Her tact soon put him
-more at his ease, and, finally her manner of putting things, awoke an
-interest in the lessons that almost made him forget his situation.
-
-When the class was dismissed she had called him aside.
-
-“You will return to-morrow night?” she asked.
-
-“Yes,” he answered hesitatingly; “I guess so.”
-
-“Will you promise?”
-
-“Yes; I promise.”
-
-He kept his word, finished the term and mastered the studies in hand.
-But after that it was the same as before; she could only feel sorry
-for him, he thought; and when he chanced to meet her on the street
-his manner was formal, and for her pride’s sake her own could not be
-otherwise.
-
-And this, perhaps, is why Maggie wept so bitterly.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter IX
-
- “_Reform: A t’ing what the wise guys gits busy at--when the other
- push is holdin’ the jobs._”
-
- CHIP NOLAN’S DEFINITION.
-
-
-OLD Mrs. Coogan, who was distantly related to Mary, opened the door for
-her and Mason. Mrs. Coogan had been there since the old man’s death, as
-a sort of chaperon and housekeeper, and vastly pleased was she with the
-arrangement. Larry in his shirt sleeves came out of the sitting room as
-they entered:
-
-“Hello, back so soon!” exclaimed he. Then, seeing Mason, he added
-surprisedly: “Mr. Mason, how are youse?”
-
-“Mr. Dwyer advised me to come to see you,” said Mason, shaking
-hands; “but I had not the slightest notion that I should meet an old
-acquaintance.”
-
-Mary left them to themselves; and Mason plunged at once into the matter
-in hand. He explained in detail the nature of the scheme on foot
-and then continued: “Now the local reform organization has resolved
-to fight this thing, and wants to enlist as many men acquainted with
-practical politics as possible.”
-
-“Sure,” said Larry. “That’s the first crack out o’ the box every time
-youse hear from ’em. Say, I’ll give it to youse straight: reform’s all
-to the good, but the reformers give me a pain.”
-
-Mason grew a little red, and looked nettled.
-
-“Don’t take that to yerself,” said Larry, noticing this; “I ain’t
-a-backheelin’ you or any other man; it’s the reformers as a bunch
-that I’m hittin’. When they hear of a crooked job they start to kick
-up the dust, hold meetin’s at the Academy of Music and do other
-red-hot stunts; then the first t’ing youse know they’re backin’ up
-the worst kind of a gang of tin horn pipes who are on’y fightin’ the
-administration because they ain’t in on the rake-off. If they win out,
-the pipes git the plums and work ranker jobs than the other bunch ever
-thought of, and then the reformers flop over into the other camp and
-trot the race all over again. Ain’t I right?”
-
-“There is some truth in this,” said Mason, “but then fusion is our
-only hope; we have not the strength to name and elect a man of our own.”
-
-“As long as youse t’ink that ye’ll be easy game. Say, the people who
-wants the cards dealt square in the city’s got the bulge, but they’re
-dead leary on gettin’ their hands dirty; a man with aces in his fist is
-beat if he don’t use ’em at the show down.”
-
-“I take it that you would support a reform delegation providing you
-were satisfied it was controlled by reformers.”
-
-“Not on yer life! Le’me tell youse somethin’. Some o’ the fiercest guys
-what ever broke into politics, started their turn as reformers, and I
-don’t take no chances on havin’ a confidence game worked on me, see?
-The man what goes to the convention from this division stands to do a
-certain t’ing; he’s sent there to do it by the voters and he does it.
-Nobody outside’s got anyt’ing to say.”
-
-“That’s as it should be,” said Mason. “But in how many divisions or
-wards is that the case? The ring controls the primaries in nine out of
-ten of them; the voice of the man with the ballot is seldom or never
-heard. Slavery was a liberal institution compared with the electoral
-serfdom that exists in some of our municipalities.”
-
-Mason’s warmth led him into exaggeration; but Larry had views upon this
-particular subject himself and proceeded to unburden himself.
-
-“Youse’re dead right!” declared he. “I was talkin’ to the old coon what
-peddles calamus root to the avenoo, the other day, an’ he said that he
-wished he was a slave again, pickin’ cotton an’ dancin’ the buck. He
-says that he got a skin full o’ corn pone then, but that it keeps him
-scratchin’ with both hands these days to git next to anything with more
-stick in it than water. Say, the Uncle Tom racket wasn’t a bad graft
-when ye look at it right, and maybe it’ed been a good t’ing for the
-wool growers if Uncle Abe had changed his mind.”
-
-Mason smiled at Larry’s literal interpretation of his words and made a
-vague remark regarding the blessings of liberty. But the other received
-it with contempt.
-
-“That’s got moss on it,” said he. “Liberty’s all right, but it don’t
-put beef and beans into a man. There ain’t a mug in this ward that
-ain’t got it to lose; but they don’t lay in bed in the mornin’
-thinkin’ about it, either, when the whistles are a blowin’; they have
-to climb down the street, eatin’ their breakfast out o’ one hand and
-buttonin’ their overalls with the other.”
-
-“But the slave,” protested Mason, “before the Civil War also had to
-work.”
-
-“Sure!” exclaimed Murphy. “I didn’t t’ink that the main squeeze took
-off his coat and drove mules, while they sat on the porch an’ spit at
-their boots. A young Willie, what had the Sunday-school class what I
-went to onct, told us that the slave owner’d open up a hand with a
-black snake whip, if he looked cross-eyed, and that it was the reg’lar
-t’ing to hang the cook up by the t’umbs if she broke a plate. But,
-say, that sassy t’ing was a-stringin’ me cold; because when a guy put
-up a thousand plunks for a bogie he wasn’t goin’ to lam the life out
-o’ him like they do in the show. I don’t say that he was stuck on him,
-mind youse, but I do say that the price worried him some, and that the
-worsted motto what his wife worked, and hung up in the parlor read:
-‘T’ink twice before youse slug a nigger onct.’
-
-“The gang down in Washin’ton,” proceeded Larry, “riffled the deck in
-’62 an’ made a new deal; the coons looked at their hands and t’ought
-they had the pot cinched; they stood pat on the Fourteenth Amendment
-and waited for the guys with the dough to buck up. But they’re waitin’
-yet. They never git their eyes on any o’ the blessin’s o’ liberty cept
-at ’lection time--and then they must deliver the goods. Liberty ain’t
-a bad game; but youse want to size up the dealer from start to finish,
-so’s he don’t stack the cards. There’s lots o’ people in the liberty
-line what used to carry a lead pipe in their pockets, but made the
-change because the gilt grew thicker and there wasn’t so much chance
-for doin’ time.”
-
-“Some one, long ago,” remarked Mason, “said something about the ‘crimes
-committed in the name of liberty,’ and, unfortunately, it holds good
-to-day.”
-
-“That’s no pipe dream! Now look here; there’s lots o’ guys right in
-this division, what’s swingin’ a pick for a dollar an’ a half a day,
-an’ hangin’ up their hats in a third story back where they have to
-stand on the stove and hold the kid while their wives make the bed. If
-a slave got sick his owner hustled in a doctor, for if the coon went
-up the flue it was good money goin’ to the bad. But if the pick swinger
-gits down on his back, the main guy cashes his time ticket, hires a
-Polack, an’ don’t care a picayune if his friends are invited to meet at
-two an’ go at t’ree, an’ he has a plain black box and an undertaker’s
-wagon, with a drunken carriage washer to drive it.”
-
-“But all employers are not so unfeeling; some are heard of, now and
-then, who help their people out of the hard places.”
-
-“That might be right,” agreed Larry; “but I never piked off one that
-was out o’ breath through handin’ out money. His daughter belongs to
-a flower mission, maybe, and if she t’ought of it she might send the
-sick man a bunch of hyacinths done up in a waxed paper; but she’d stop
-the kids from cryin’ quicker if she trotted out a beef stew done up in
-a tin kettle, an’ that’s no joke. Say, as Chip Nolan ’ed say: It’s no
-wonder the coons are all whistlin’ ‘Lemme take me clothes back home.’”
-
-Mason managed to head him off at this point and began an earnest plea
-for his support; but Larry would not bind himself to the support of
-anyone at that time.
-
-“I’m leary on makin’ promises,” said the latter, as Mason, at length,
-arose to depart; “t’ings’ll be dead ripe by the night o’ the primaries;
-so after that I kin talk to youse.”
-
-The bell had rung a few moments before, without their noticing it; and
-now Mrs. Coogan opened the sitting room door, saying: “Sure, here is
-Mr. McQuirk, as large as life.”
-
-“Murphy,” said the visitor, as he stepped into the room, “I hope I
-didn’t interrupt ye? I can wait if you’re busy.”
-
-It was Tom McQuirk, the boss of the ward, a big-bodied, pleasant-faced
-man, well-dressed and of assured manner.
-
-“Hello,” said Larry, “glad to see ye, Tom. Sit down.”
-
-McQuirk glanced toward Mason and a smile of recognition crossed his
-face.
-
-“Mr. Mason, how d’ye do!” exclaimed he, reaching out his hand.
-
-Mason shook hands with him without enthusiasm. He had sat too long at
-the feet of the sages of the Civic Club not to believe that this man
-and his kind were the very bacillus of corruption. He had met him a
-year or two before at a conference held with a view to allying the
-Democrats and the reformers in favour of an independent candidate for
-city treasurer. But McQuirk had been against the fusion--and it had
-failed.
-
-And Mason, after he had taken his departure and walked homeward,
-admitted to himself, with some bitterness, that McQuirk’s voice, in
-this ward at least, would very likely be the deciding one in the matter
-in hand.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter X
-
- “_Oh! The room was decorated,
- With the flags of every land,
- The gents were elevated,
- Malone he couldn’t stand;
- Canaries in their cages,
- With flowers in a tub,
- Stood on the piano,
- At Casey’s Social Club._”
-
- POPULAR SONG.
-
-
-BELLA NOLAN looked through the half glass door of Riley’s Oyster Café
-and tapped softly upon the pane. Goose McGonagle stood before Riley’s
-bar, fork in hand, while Riley, with amazing dexterity, wrenched open
-oysters and placed them before him on the shell. At the sound of the
-tapping, McGonagle looked up and Bella beckoned him.
-
-“A mash?” smiled Riley.
-
-“Ye’ve got another guess,” answered Goose. He laid down his fork and
-stepped out upon the sidewalk.
-
-“Goose,” asked the girl, “have you seen Mart Kelly to-night?”
-
-“No; ain’t he up in the club?”
-
-“I don’t know. Will you go up and see, please?”
-
-“All right,” consented McGonagle. He opened the door, “Say Riley,” said
-he, “just open the rest and have ’em on the bar. I’ll be back in a
-second.”
-
-“Don’t let on to nobody,” cautioned Bella. “Because I wouldn’t be
-talked about for the world.”
-
-The rooms of the Aurora Borealis Club were over Riley’s place of
-business; the entrance was by a side door and a flight of steps led
-directly into the parlour. The members were present in force, dressed
-in their best and, as it was Saturday night, chinking their money in
-their trousers’ pockets.
-
-Larry Murphy and Roddy Ferguson in their shirt sleeves, were engaged in
-a game of pool, discussing, between shots, the merits of the various
-candidates for nomination at the coming ward convention. Mr. McCarty
-sat at the piano endeavouring to pick out a ragtime melody which he
-had heard at some “free and easy”; and Johnnie Kerrigan was critically
-examining a portrait of McQuirk, the boss of the ward, a work of
-art which the boss had lately presented to the club. Other and less
-distinguished members lounged about the room, indulging in gossip of a
-sporting character and strong cigars.
-
-“I tell ye,” said Ferguson, slipping a ball into the rack, “O’Connor’s
-got the t’ing cinched if he gets the delegates. He’ll win in a walk!”
-
-Murphy chalked the tip of his cue and looked doubtful. “Gartenheim’s
-dead agin him,” said he, “an’ Gartenheim kin scare up some votes, youse
-know that. McQuirk’s pullin’ with Kelly this hitch, and he’ll wheel the
-machine in line. I don’t t’ink O’Connor’ll do; if we want to have a say
-we must ring in a man what kin hold the push together, see?”
-
-“Dum-had, dah; doodle-day!” hummed McCarty, banging away at the
-keyboard. “How’s that, Kerrigan?”
-
-“Nothing like it,” answered Johnnie, “you’re getting worse every
-minute.”
-
-Tom Hogan, son of the policeman, came from an adjoining room.
-
-“They’re makin’ up a game,” said he. “Any o’ youse gents want t’ sit
-in?”
-
-Murphy paused with his cue poised. “Not me,” remarked he. “Last
-Saturday night was my finish; I don’t play no more poker with people
-what deals from the bottom o’ the deck.”
-
-McCarty stopped his piano practice and whirled about on the stool.
-“This joint’s gittin’ to be a reg’lar hang-out for sharks,” complained
-he. “We hold a meetin’ to-night, and if Kelly don’t git the razoo why I
-git out o’ the club, that’s all.”
-
-Young Kelly, unnoticed, had followed Hogan into the room.
-
-“What’s that!” demanded he. “Speak yer piece, McCarty, don’t talk
-behind me back.”
-
-“Don’t worry; I’ll talk in front o’ yer face when the time comes.”
-
-Martin struck the cushion of the pool table with his fist. “I want to
-hear it right now; what are youse goin’ to put me before the meetin’
-for?”
-
-“Ah, yer crooked,” said McCarty.
-
-“Me crooked! I can lick the guy that says it.”
-
-Murphy leaned his cue against the wall. “Ye done me out o’ a five spot
-by stackin’ the papers,” said he.
-
-Kelly hesitated. Larry was one of the quietest men in the district;
-but then he was also the man that the club had entered in the
-tournament for amateurs a few years before and he had carried off the
-light weight cup by beating three men in the finals.
-
-“I ain’t scrappin’ with no professionals,” growled Martin at length.
-
-“I ain’t no professional,” insinuated McCarty.
-
-“Let it drop, gents!” advised Jerry McGlory who had just come in.
-McGlory was the club’s president and he felt that in his office it
-behoved him to act the part of a peacemaker. He took the wrathful Kelly
-aside and was trying to soothe him when McGonagle entered upon his
-errand.
-
-“Somebody wants ye outside, Kelly,” announced Goose.
-
-“Go ahead out an’ see ’em,” begged McGlory, delighted. “Ye’ll feel
-better after ye come back.”
-
-Muttering under his breath, Kelly followed McGonagle down the steps,
-and after he had gone McGlory observed:
-
-“That lobster’s too gay! He’s got a notion he runs this outfit.”
-
-“Well, he’s got another t’ink,” said Murphy. “Say, us people made a
-foxy play when we turned down the fifty dollars his old man wanted to
-chip in toward gittin’ the pool table.”
-
-“’Lection’s comin’,” remarked Ferguson. “He t’ought he’d cop our
-support be that move.”
-
-“He don’t git no support o’ mine,” Murphy informed them. “I ain’t for
-no gent that pulls on both ends o’ the string. Le’me tell youse this,”
-rapping with his knuckles upon the piano top; “if Kelly scoops the
-nomination we’re a push o’ dead ones.”
-
-“He’s puttin’ his net out though,” affirmed Roddy Ferguson. “O’Connor
-told me that he’s got the ward committee fixed, an’ that the heelers’ll
-pull for him at the primaries.”
-
-“He’s got all the bums in the ward on his staff,” said McGlory. “He
-gits ’em out o’ jail when they’re pinched, an’ he’s loadin’ rum into
-them all day, over his bar.”
-
-“The Mozart Sangerbund give him an invitation to their last meetin’,”
-put in McCarty, “and he wanted Kerrigan to write him a speech. He’s
-makin’ a play for the German vote.”
-
-“I heard in City Hall, yesterday,” said Kerrigan, “that the Mayor
-offered him the indorsement of the other side again, if he could split
-our ticket. McQuirk was at the pow-wow and somebody slipped him a bunch
-of money. But say! if that’s right he’ll have a warm time delivering
-the goods.”
-
-“When is the delegate election, Murphy?” inquired McGlory.
-
-“About a month after our ball,” answered Larry.
-
-“Talkin’ about the ball,” remarked McCarty: “we won’t have Larkin to
-lead the march for us this time, eh?”
-
-“There’s a guy what knows the figures,” commented McGlory. “How’s he
-doin’ now?”
-
-“He’s doin’ ’em all; an’ right off the reel too,” said Murphy, who was
-a pupil of Jimmie’s in the manly art, and had watched his progress,
-through the newspapers, with interest. “He’s done stunts wit’ the best
-o’ them, since he left town, and they kin hardly put a glove on him.
-He knocked the Pohoket Cyclone dead to the world in the second minute
-o’ the fifth round last Monday night at New Orleans. Larkin’s a comer,
-le’me tell youse.”
-
-McGlory had pulled aside one of the window blinds and was gazing down
-into the street.
-
-“Say!” exclaimed he suddenly, “it’s a bundle o’ skirts what sent
-McGonagle up after Kelly.” He regarded the two figures standing near
-the curb below under the glare of the gas light, intently. “It looks,”
-said he, “like Nolan’s sister.”
-
-“Cheese it!” whispered Murphy. But Roddy Ferguson had caught the words;
-and he stood with his elbow resting on the piano top, chewing at the
-end of his cigar, and looking with clouded brow into the fire. It was
-an open secret that Bella had thrown him over for Martin Kelly; Roddy
-was too quiet and steady to suit her light temperament, he lacked
-Martin’s swagger and bluster, qualities which Bella liked, for she
-was one of those women who mistake excess for a proof of spirit and
-dissolute living for a mark of manhood.
-
-Martin had found Bella waiting for him in front of Riley’s. His anger
-had not had time to cool, and he demanded roughly:
-
-“Well, what d’youse want?”
-
-“I’d like to speak to you Martin,” timidly.
-
-“Say, don’t youse begin to dog me up, d’ye hear! I won’t have it!”
-
-“You didn’t meet me last night at Whalen’s dance like ye said ye would,
-and I thought somethin’ might be the matter.”
-
-“Nothin’s the matter only I’m ’lectioneering for the old man, an’ I
-ain’t got no time to meet women.”
-
-“S-h-h! Mart Kelly, I don’t thank you one bit for talkin’ to me like
-that! Anybody to hear ye would think I was common.”
-
-He looked at her for a moment, and then laughed:
-
-“Oh, I guess not,” said he.
-
-“Well, don’t do it no more! I don’t want people talkin’ about me and
-giving me a shamed face. Ye know, yourself, they’d on’y be too ready.
-Oh, my Gawd,” suddenly, “here comes Mom!”
-
-Mrs. Nolan, a market basket upon her arm, came down the street with
-staggering step. Dick had entrusted her with money enough to go
-marketing and it had gone for drink; she was muttering to herself and
-gesticulating drunkenly, and as she caught sight of the pair by the
-curb, she halted:
-
-“Ah!” cried she. “Is it spharkin’ be the gutter yez’ed be doin’,
-jewels? Have ye no home till go till, Bella, that yez must stan’ on the
-strate!”
-
-“Oh, go home!” cried Bella, scarlet with shame, “everybody’s lookin’ at
-you!”
-
-“Divil a hair do I care. Sure, an’ haven’t I the roight till take a
-sup av drink iv I have the price? It’s not long yez father ’ud be in
-biz’ness,” she added to Martin, “iv it wurn’t for the loikes av me.”
-
-The young man growled out an oath. He saw McGonagle looking at him
-through Riley’s window, and Riley, himself, with a grin upon his face.
-A Saturday night crowd filled Second Street; many that knew him stopped
-and looked and laughed; on the opposite corner, in front of Kerrigan’s
-saloon and under the glare of an arc lamp, a crowd of loungers were
-enjoying the sight; Officer Hogan was slyly pointing at him with his
-club, and saying something to the bartender who stood in the doorway.
-
-“And is me poor home not good enough for yez,” went on Mrs. Nolan with
-increased pitch, “that yez do be kapin’ me daughter stan’in’ in the
-strate till be talked about. Divil a better had yez father till he
-tuk to sellin’ the drop. Lave go av me arm Bella; I’ll go home whin I
-plaze!”
-
-“Ye’ll go home now!” said her son, pushing his way through the crowd
-which had collected. “For God’s sake,” as she began struggling, “don’t
-make a show of yourself! T’ink of the neighbours!”
-
-“May the divil fly away wid the neighbours! What call have I till be
-afeerd av thim?”
-
-“Come on, Mom,” urged Bella, almost in tears, “if ye go on this way,
-I’ll never show me face outside the door again!”
-
-“Ye promised to do right,” said Dick, with white face, “and ye’ll never
-get another cent o’ my money in yer hands as long as ye live!”
-
-Kelly had darted into Riley’s; and the tittering, thoughtless crowd was
-growing greater.
-
-“Is this the way yez talks till yez owld mother!” cried Mrs. Nolan.
-“May the cross av Christ darken the day yez wur born.”
-
-A man laughed loudly: Dick turned with a snarl, caught him by the
-throat with one hand, the other drawn back for a blow. Bella screamed
-and Hogan ran across the street.
-
-“Don’t hit him,” shouted the policeman; “don’t hit him, Dick!” He
-dragged the angry, shame-maddened youth away from his victim. “I don’t
-want to pull yez,” said he, “for I know just how it is. Go along home,
-now and take yez mother wid ye.”
-
-The mother, frightened by her son’s sudden exhibition of fury submitted
-to being led away. And an hour afterward she was deep in a drunken
-sleep on a narrow settee in her kitchen. Bella sat upon the steps
-leading to the room above, and her brother was walking the floor, his
-head throbbing and a sickening feeling at his heart.
-
-“It’s a bad t’ing to say,” said he suddenly, “but sometimes I wisht she
-was in her grave.”
-
-“Dick!” cried his sister, frightened.
-
-“I know! I know!” waving his hand impatiently, “yer goin’ to say that
-it ain’t right; an’ I know that as well as you.” He paced up and down
-in silence for a moment. “Look at what I could do for her,” he resumed,
-“if she’d on’y do what was right. I make big money, and I’d a-bought a
-house out o’ the Building Association long ago if it hadn’t been for
-that”--with a gesture toward the sleeping form. “She could live like a
-lady--like a lady! And I’d only ask her to do right.”
-
-He took a clay pipe from the shelf over the door and struck a match
-upon the stove.
-
-“How often has she promised to break it off?” demanded he staring at
-the flickering flame. “A hundred times if she’s done it once.” Here
-the match sputtered and went out, and he threw the pipe angrily from
-him, smashing it to fragments upon the floor. “It was jist like that,
-though,” he said. “She broke ’em all! She’ll do anyt’ing to get rum.
-Look at last week when I was invited to Gartenheim’s sister’s weddin’!
-When I got home from work I hadn’t a rag to put on me back; she’d
-lifted ’em, and soaked ’em all at Rosenbaum’s hock shop.”
-
-And bitterly he went over the long list of drink-inspired acts that had
-made his life so hard to live, and with a sense of despair he looked
-at the poor bare room, and contrasted it with the comfortable home
-that he could have supported had all been right. The thought came,
-too, of Gartenheim’s bright snug home, of the gas-lit parlour on the
-Sunday night when last he had been there, of the boss’s flaxen-haired
-niece, and of how she had sung the “Holy City” for him in deep, rich,
-contralto voice. Then came darker thoughts, and he sat down staring
-vacantly into the fire. Bella watched him in silence, listening to the
-tick of the little nickel clock, and petulantly frowning at the bother
-of it all.
-
-“I think I’ll go to bed,” she said, at last. She opened the stair door
-and was about to ascend when she felt her brother’s hand upon her
-shoulder.
-
-“I oughtn’t to say this maybe,” said he, slowly, “but if yer mother
-can’t tell ye--why I must. I hope yer a good girl Bella; but I see
-youse with Mart Kelly often, and a girl can’t hold her head up long if
-she sticks to sich people as him. Break it off! Break it off, I tell
-ye, for he’s no good.”
-
-He looked steadily into her frightened face for a moment and then
-turned away.
-
-“Good night,” said he.
-
-He heard the clock strike every hour through the long night, but still
-he sat there struggling under the weight of his cross.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XI
-
- “_Oh! There was a social party,
- Of Repubs and Democrats;
- Met at Michael Casey’s,
- And put away their hats,
- One ticket gave a lady,
- Admittance and her grub,
- Invited by the committee,
- Of the Casey Social Club._”
-
- POPULAR SONG.
-
-
-THE entrance to the hall was a-glitter with gas lights; freshly
-barbered young men in high collars and sack coats stood about the
-doorway, smoking cigarettes and spitting on the steps. A wagon was
-unloading kegs of beer at a side door; people flocked into the smoky
-entry; now and then a hired hack would pull up at the curb and a member
-of the club would hand his sweetheart out and up the steps. Four
-policemen, engaged at three dollars a head to keep order, stood on the
-sidewalk counting the ingoing kegs.
-
-“Forty quarters, all told,” said a pock-marked officer, lifting his
-huge shoulders.
-
-“Whew! The club’ll have a neat wad to put away if they sell all that!
-An’ just look at the people goin’ in!”
-
-“Say, there’s one fight in every two kegs o’ beer,” said a third
-policeman. “That makes twenty turns before the janitor turns off the
-lights. We ain’t a-goin’ to have no cinch.”
-
-The others laughed.
-
-At the far end of the entry stood a pair of half doors so arranged that
-only one person could pass them at a time. Behind these, bathed in a
-glare of yellow light from a cluster of gas jets which hung directly
-overhead, stood Danny Casey, attired in a dress suit rented from
-Goldstine the costumer, a huge crimson badge edged with gold braid
-hanging from his lapel. He was taking tickets and deftly slipping
-them into a slot in a tin box which stood beside him on a chair; on
-the stairs leading to the ballroom, a man with a mass of brass checks
-hanging by strings from his fingers was keeping up a continuous fire
-of patter. Murphy and McGonagle, feeling rather queer behind their
-glittering expanses of shirt front, walked stiffly down the steps to
-where Casey was standing.
-
-“A mob!” said McGonagle. “The floor’s blocked with ’em already.”
-
-“And they’ve on’y started to come,” said Casey. “Who ordered the extree
-beer?”
-
-“McGlory: an’ we’ll need it, too; for the guys what’s a-comin’ in looks
-dead t’irsty.”
-
-“Say,” put in Murphy, in an injured tone, “I don’t know how youse
-people take it but I feel like a sign for a clothin’ store. I can’t
-bend wit’out breakin’ me shirt and the pants ain’t got no pockets in.”
-
-“You look,” commented McGonagle, “like a dressed up prize-fighter.
-Somebody ought to slam McGlory in the jaw for makin’ that motion that
-we all must wear dress suits. I know I look a mess in mine.”
-
-“Thirty-eight dress suits at a dollar a throw,” figured Casey, as he
-politely plucked ticket after ticket from hands extending them to him;
-“that’s thirty-eight plunks. Goldstine’s makin’ money and McGlory will
-be holdin’ him up for a comish.”
-
-There was a stir among the sack-coated and high-collared coterie at
-the entrance. A tall, well-built girl, tastefully dressed and carrying
-herself with a dashing air, had come in, escorted by a blushing youth
-who looked very uncomfortable under the notice they created.
-
-“It’s Nelly Fogarty,” said someone. “She don’t look like a poverty
-knocker when she’s dressed up, eh?”
-
-“‘Oh Nelly was a lady,’” sang another. “Say, Brennen, here’s yer girl!”
-
-“Gee!” exclaimed the person addressed. “And I told her I wasn’t comin’;
-she’s got me dead!”
-
-The congregated youths grinned over their high collars and bowed after
-the fashion approved by Professor Whalen, teacher of the “Glide Waltz.”
-The girl flashed them a smile as she went by, a bunch of La France
-roses in her hand. But a cloud crossed her face, and she bit her lips
-at sight of young Brennen.
-
-“Go on, please, Mr. Shimph,” requested she, of her escort. “I’ll folly
-you in a minute.”
-
-“But, say Nell!” exclaimed Shimph, who had also caught sight of
-Brennen, “yous’re with me, ain’t ye?”
-
-“Cert’n’y!” with a lofty air, “I don’t shake me friends that way.”
-
-Re-assured, Shimph walked down the entry; Miss Fogarty beckoned with
-the roses, and Brennen, a little abashed, came to her.
-
-“I thought,” said she, “that you couldn’t come to-night. What’s the
-matter?--didn’t ye want to take me?”
-
-“Ah, say, Nell! What’s the use--”
-
-“Who did ye come with? Was it Mary Haley?”
-
-“I came alone Nell; ’pon me soul, I did!”
-
-“Eddy Brennen, if I thought you was double-faced enough to--”
-
-“Will ye cheese it! If the gang git next they’ll give me the laugh. I
-didn’t bring no lady, Nell. I’m dead broke and couldn’t, see! That’s
-the reason I give youse the song and dance about not comin’. When I
-take youse out, I want to do the right t’ing.”
-
-Nell’s face grew brighter at this explanation and she said:
-
-“I knowed you wasn’t workin’, didn’t I; and I didn’t expect ye’d blow
-your money when ye hadn’t much. You ain’t acquainted with me, I can
-see that right here. I ain’t no leg-puller. Got a ticket?”
-
-“No,” answered the youth awkwardly; “I’m waitin’ for a slow. Casey told
-me there’d be some goin’ aroun’ after the push got in.”
-
-“For Heaven’s sake!” cried Miss Fogarty: “Don’t hang around the door
-waitin’ for a captain; ye’ll git a hard name!” She looked down the
-entry where Casey was riffling a packet of tickets his shirt front and
-rhinestone studs gleaming under the slanting rays of light. “After I go
-in,” continued she, “ask Danny for one; I’ll fix it with him as I pass.”
-
-“But, say Nell! I don’t like--”
-
-“Oh bother!” She started to rejoin her escort, but stopped suddenly.
-
-“Look here,” she cautioned, “don’t you ask me for a single dance; for
-if ye do ye’ll get flagged! Rox Shimph sent me these flowers and put up
-money for a hack, and he’s me partner for all the dances.”
-
-“Say, are youse goin’ to t’row me down for that--”
-
-“Don’t call him names! He’s run the pair o’ looms next to mine for
-three years now, and he’s always acted like a perfect gentleman. You
-come to see me steady, Mr. Brennen, but I won’t play Rox for a lobster
-even for you.” And with this she once more started away fumbling in her
-purse and saying over her shoulder: “Don’t forget to ask Danny for the
-ticket.”
-
-Murphy had gone to the street door to speak to a friend while the above
-scene was enacting; now he came hurrying back to the “gate” excitedly.
-
-“McGonagle,” exclaimed he, “here comes Nobby Foley and Tim Daily wit’ a
-couple o’ skirts. I’ll bet we’ll have the ‘chain gang’ here!”
-
-“Gee,” murmured Goose. “If they cut loose this won’t be a ball, it’ll
-be a scrappin’ match. Say d’youse t’ink four cops is enough? Hadn’t we
-better git the loot to send two more?”
-
-Murphy looked at him, disdainfully.
-
-“We ain’t a lot o’ kids, are we?” inquired he. “I might be dead wrong
-but I t’ink the push kin hold their own with any of ’em. There’s only
-one t’ing to do; as soon as they git gay, go in an’ slam ’em; ain’t
-that right?”
-
-Foley was short and square-jawed; Daily was big and brawny; and both
-carried themselves with much aggressiveness, swaggering into the hall,
-their convoys on their arms, with the air of men whose deeds were epic
-in the ward.
-
-“That’s a swell one wit’ Foley,” whispered a voice. “Who is she,
-Brennen?”
-
-“An old party rammer,” answered Brennen; “an’ she’s the star pivoter of
-Whalen’s Academy. Her an’ Bat Mahoney won the prize waltz at the Emmet
-Band’s picnic, Decoration Day.”
-
-“Her hair’s bleached,” remarked the other; “an’ that rouge on her face
-is the reddest t’ing that ever come down the pike.”
-
-The girl was taller than her escort; she was remarkably handsome,
-dressed richly, and held herself in a way that made the women whisper
-and the men stare. As they neared the gate, she laughing and showing
-her beautiful teeth and flashing her splendid eyes here and there,
-McGonagle leaned forward and whispered a few quick words in Murphy’s
-ear.
-
-“No!” exclaimed the latter, incredulously.
-
-“Sure t’ing! What are youse goin’ to do?”
-
-“Why, put out the flag!”
-
-Brennen suddenly craned his neck out of its circle of stiff linen,
-excitedly.
-
-“Murphy won’t take their tickets!” he breathed, “there’s goin’ to be a
-run in at the start!”
-
-All surged toward the gate; McGonagle whistled through his thumb and
-fore-finger; a policeman came looming along through the cigar smoke.
-
-“Stand back, gents,” requested he. He flourished his club airily, and
-measured Daily with his eye. “On’y three couple allowed at the gate at
-a time.”
-
-The crowd fell back disappointedly. The group at the gate were engaged
-in excited debate; Foley was describing aerial hieroglyphics with his
-clenched fist; the girl had let go his arm and was staring Murphy
-boldly in the eye.
-
-“You’ve insulted this lady!” declared Foley in a sharp high-pitched
-voice.
-
-“I didn’t insult nobody,” said Murphy. “Didn’t I flag her on the quiet?
-Nobody knowed it until youse made a holler.”
-
-“This is the rankest snap I ever stacked up against,” remarked the
-girl, tossing her head and rubbing the wrinkles out of her long
-gloves. “If I’d a-knowed it was a nasty-nice affair, I wouldn’t a-come!”
-
-“This ain’t the first time youse gave me the wrong end of it, Murphy,”
-said Foley, drawing back in such a way as to cause McGonagle to brace
-himself for the expected rush. “For the last time; does she go in, or
-is she barred?”
-
-“She’s barred!” said Murphy.
-
-“This ain’t no flash shine,” broke in McGonagle, “we’ve got our girls
-here to-night, and I, for one, won’t let mine dance on the same floor
-with her, and that goes!”
-
-“Push along, gents,” hinted the policeman, “inside or out; yer blockin’
-the passage.”
-
-Daily jogged his companion’s elbow and whispered:
-
-“Don’t git leary; ye’ll queer Kelly if ye kick up a row, now. Give him
-a chance to work the gang what’s runnin’ the show. We can come back, ye
-know, when he’s done; and if youse wants to do business, then, with the
-guy on the door, why you kin go ahead.”
-
-The crush was growing; Levi and his orchestra had just gone in, and the
-tuning of the harp and violins came floating down the stairway. Belated
-Jerry McGlory came striding in, in a light top coat and a glossy silk
-hat, bowing like a duke to his acquaintances, with Veronica McTurpin,
-the little widow who kept the millinery store; she was half hidden in
-her bouquet, and also bowing and smiling, dazzlingly. Mike McCarty
-followed, more than ever earning his right to the title of Brummel
-of the ward. He carried his stick and one glove in his right hand;
-with the other he was barely touching the elbow of Mazie Driscoll,
-who sold ribbons in a down-town store. Then there was Shaffer the
-collector for the brewery, and Carrie Lentze, whose father carried on
-the “Delicatessen” store on the avenue; while behind them came Koskee
-McGurk and a daughter of O’Mally, who kept the junk shop back of the
-railroad.
-
-“Checks!” cried the man on the stairs jingling his bunch of brass tags.
-“Put yer wardrobe away, gents; youse can’t go on the floor with yer
-overcoat or sky-piece.”
-
-“Hully gee!” gasped a youth in soiled white kid gloves and a scarlet
-Ascot tie; “they sticks youse a quarter for wardrobe!”
-
-“It’s a t’row down,” echoed a neighbour. “Mame,” to the girl at his
-side, “it’ll cost two bits to put away yer hat.”
-
-“G’way,” said Mame, shocked. “It’s not the right thing, when you’re
-asked a dollar admission.”
-
-The man with the checks was growing impatient.
-
-“Don’t hold a meetin’ and make speeches about it,” requested he. “If
-yer goin’ to cough up, do it.”
-
-The bar was on the second floor and had a door leading into the
-ballroom; groups of men and women were gathered about the tables;
-waiters were rushing about, the fingers of each hand twisted, in some
-miraculous fashion, about the handles of a dozen beer glasses; a young
-man was seated at a piano, singing a popular ballad in a high, throaty
-voice; some members of the club, their coats stripped off, their
-sleeves rolled up, were drawing beer, popping corks and passing out
-dry-looking cigars to a long line of thirsty patrons who stood along
-the bar.
-
-It was ten o’clock. The floor of the ballroom shone with wax;
-the rows of chairs upon three sides were filled with chattering
-couples; Levi and his musicians stood ready. All were waiting for
-Master-of-Ceremonies Murphy, to give the word.
-
-“The floor looks great,” remarked that gentleman. He was surrounded
-by the “floor committee” at the far end of the room, and was running
-his eye over everything like a general before going into battle. There
-would be no hitch if he could help it. He hummed a tune and went
-through a few steps of a “glide waltz” by way of a test.
-
-“Like old cheese,” commented he, “jist as slippy as ice.” He looked
-about him, again. “Where’s McGonagle?” he inquired. “Oh, there youse
-are,” seeing that gentleman. “All ready?”
-
-“Sure,” responded Goose, “it’s up to youse to say when.”
-
-Larry took some half dozen steps out upon the floor; then he paused,
-rapped sharply with his heel, and drew himself up with a dignity
-that Professor Whalen could not have excelled. All eyes were upon
-him; he extended both arms, palms held downward, waving them up and
-down. Silence fell. The palms came together with a sharp report; Levi
-described a wild flourish with his bow; the cornet blared brassily;
-McGonagle and Annie Clancy stepped out upon the floor to lead the
-march. The ball was on.
-
-At midnight the affair was in full blast; quadrille, schottische and
-waltz succeeded each other with hardly a pause, the dancers whirled,
-stamped and pirouetted with exhaustless energy; the musicians blew and
-scraped, the perspiration dropping from their faces. A sergeant of
-police, on his round of inspection, had just dropped in; he stood in
-the doorway leading to the staircase looking wet and chilled, for it
-had begun to rain, and talked to the men on duty in the hall.
-
-“Anything doing?” asked he, shaking the drops of water from the brim of
-his hat, his eyes taking in the heaving mass on the floor, swaying in
-rhythm with the music.
-
-“On’y a couple o’ drunks,” answered the pock-marked officer; “an’ we
-just fired ’em out, not botherin’ to pull up for the wagon.”
-
-“I seen Daily and some o’ that crowd, in the barroom,” said another.
-“From the way things look he’s cappin’ for Kelly, and Kelly’s dealin’
-out the dough for further orders.”
-
-“For drinks, eh?” The sergeant frowned. “Say Laughlin, go in there and
-tell Kelly I want to see him, right away. The damn fool oughtn’t make
-work for me!”
-
-Kelly had a roll of notes in his hand and was flourishing them
-animatedly over his head; a crowd of half drunken youths surged about
-him, approvingly; he was their idol, having usurped the post held an
-hour before by Shaffer, the collector for the brewery.
-
-“This is the stuff that makes the world move!” declared the
-saloonkeeper. “We’re all after it, me bucko’s, ivery wan av us an’
-small blame till him that puts the fattest wad in the bank, eh?”
-
-“Yer dead right, Kel,” agreed a supporter.
-
-“Barkeeper,” remarked Kelly after a glance about, “me friends here are
-doin’ nawthin’.” He stripped a note from the bundle and threw it upon
-the sloppy bar. “Work that out,” requested he, “an’ tell me when it’s
-done. There’s more to folly, for I’m out for a good toime the noight.”
-
-“There’s a good t’ing!” exclaimed Nobby Foley. “He’s a blood, d’ye
-hear--a blood! He treats youse right, see?”
-
-“Gintlemen,” affirmed the object of these remarks, “I haven’t a mane
-bone in me body, an’ the man that do be after callin’ James Kelly
-a friend, is welcome till share his last dollar. Iv any av yez gits
-pinched does yez friends have till ax me twice till go yez bail? Be
-hivens!” excitedly, “there ain’t a magistrate in the city, Raypublican
-or Dimmycrat, that’ed kape yez in the jug a minyute after I wint
-forninst him and told him till lave ye go.”
-
-The enthusiasm that greeted this statement shook the walls. Daily,
-Foley, and a select circle of kindred spirits added no little volume to
-it. They rapturously patted the speaker on the back and beat the bar
-with their glasses, for each had a five dollar note tucked snugly away
-in his pocket and felt in duty bound to stir up the promised amount of
-enthusiasm. The outburst elated the selectman; his voice was husky with
-drink, but he climbed upon a chair and plunged into a speech.
-
-“The fellys that are again’ me,” declared he, “say that I am not
-a Dimmycrat, an’ would have yez vote to bate me. But whin the day
-comes I’ll show thim what the people of the ward t’ink, because the
-dillygates’ll be there that’ll name me in spoite av thim!”
-
-He forgot his protestation of a few minutes before that he was out for
-a good time, and proceeded to make a bid for his hearers’ support at
-the primaries; Daily and his henchmen were punctuating his remarks by
-salvos of applause, when Laughlin summoned the orator into the entry.
-
-“Hello, Phil,” Kelly greeted the sergeant, “sure an’ it’s glad till see
-yez I am; but divil take ye, cud yez not wait till I got through! I had
-’em jist where I wanted thim; I wur makin’ votes by the dozen.”
-
-“It’s a slashin’ good game for you,” grumbled the sergeant; “but look
-at my end of it! You load ’em up with booze--they’ll fight--my men’ll
-pull ’em, an’ I’ll have to hold ’em till Moran kin give’m a hearin’ in
-the mornin’. Then what? There’s lots of fellows from my division here,
-an’ I must carry that division, Kelly, I must carry it, or lose me job;
-that’s just how I stand. An’ if I put me people away in the cooler how
-am I goin’ to do any carryin’, eh?”
-
-“Tut, tut, man dear, I must make meself solid wid the gang av young
-fellys. Sure a drop av drink’ll do thim no harm, Phil; it’ll make thim
-feel good, that’s all.”
-
-The uproar raised by Daily and his friends and Kelly’s display of
-ready money had captured both the rowdy and the frothy elements. But
-the popular young men--the members of the club for example--held aloof;
-and it was these that Kelly was working for.
-
-“The stiff!” exclaimed Jerry McGlory, as Kelly came back into the
-barroom; “he t’inks if he blows his coin over the bar we’ll fall in
-line.”
-
-“Look at Mart, over there,” said McCarty, “he’s looking black about
-something.”
-
-“He was backcappin’ Murphy a while ago. He’s half lit up, and he’ll say
-somethin’ to Larry afore the night’s over, and Larry’ll slam him.”
-
-It was McGonagle that spoke, and a moment later he added:
-
-“Here he comes over! Play foxy, gents; don’t give him no excuse for
-bother, see?”
-
-Young Kelly approached, and with him were Daily and Foley.
-
-“How are youse, gents?” saluted Martin. “It’s the old man’s treat;
-won’t youse have somethin’?”
-
-“We’re on the floor committee,” said McCarty, “an’ we ain’t touchin’ it
-to-night.”
-
-Martin sneered; Daily heaved his bulging chest contemptuously and
-coughed. It was Foley that spoke.
-
-“When a gent tries to be friendly wit’ me,” announced he, “I be’s
-friendly wit’ him, see? Ain’t that right?”
-
-“It depends on the guy that’s doin’ the stunt,” answered McGonagle.
-
-“Eh, no! What t’ell no! Youse do it every hitch!” And Foley excitedly
-dramatized a scene: “A gent comes up to me, and puts out his fin, see?
-What do I do? Why I takes it, an’ puts away me medicine like a little
-man! All to be sociable, see? All to be sociable!”
-
-“That’s right,” agreed Daily. “That’s the proper t’ing to do. Why
-youse’d cut a hell of a caper, turnin’ down good people, wouldn’t
-youse.”
-
-“Ah, go soak yer head,” growled McGonagle. “Youse guys give me a pain!
-We ain’t suckers; we kin see a play when it’s made, as well as the
-next.”
-
-“Youse’re all gents!” put in Martin, sarcastically. “Here that lobster
-Murphy goes an’ turns down a lady, at the door. I’m ’sponsible to me
-friends for that, d’ye hear? I sold ’em the tickets an’ I’m ’sponsible
-for the game I steered ’em against! Ain’t that right?”
-
-“Sure,” answered Daily and Foley in a breath.
-
-“Where’s Murphy?” demanded Martin. “Murphy’s got to apologize fer
-insultin’ Nobby’s lady friend. He’s got to do it!”
-
-“It’s comin’,” said McGlory, in a low tone.
-
-“We’d better put Larry next,” remarked McCarty in the same voice.
-“Kelly carries a jack; remember how he t’rowed it into Ned Hogan that
-night?”
-
-Larry was dancing; he had his arm about Annie Clancy’s trim waist and
-they swayed and spun with the music. Annie’s face was bright and happy;
-her eyes shone like twin stars, for Larry was telling her how good a
-fellow his friend McGonagle was, and that was a tale that Annie could
-have listened to forever.
-
-Word had gone about among the “floor committee” that Kelly was looking
-for him, and Larry received mysterious nods, winks and signals. He
-could make nothing of it, so he led Annie to a seat beside Miss
-McTurpin, and walked over to where McGonagle, who had crossed the room,
-was standing.
-
-“What’s the new one?” inquired Larry. “What’s the gang all pullin’
-faces about?”
-
-“Keep yer eyes on Kelly,” cautioned Goose. “He’s been puttin’ away
-booze all night, and he wants to see you about the girl what you
-flagged at the door.”
-
-“Oh!” Larry shoved his head forward in a bull-like movement and stared
-about him. “Does he want some o’ my game, eh? Is the lobster spoilin’
-to mix it up with me? There’ll be on’y two blows struck; I’ll hit him,
-and he’ll hit the floor!”
-
-Mike McCarty came out of the barroom and approached them, crossing the
-floor in the midst of the dancers. A girl’s swinging skirts almost
-wrapped themselves about him, as her partner piloted her by.
-
-“Ah, there, Mike?” cried the lady, gleefully, and McCarty bowed like a
-Chesterfield, never pausing in his stride, however, until he reached
-the spot where Goose and Larry were talking.
-
-“Kelly’s comin’ across,” said he pointing among the dancing throng. “He
-just seen youse a minit ago, and he’s goin’ to lay you out, so he says.”
-
-Larry growled an answer deep down in his chest; he was looking at Kelly
-and his two allies as they swaggered through the dancers. McGonagle
-rapped out a vexed oath, as he caught Larry by the arm.
-
-“I t’ought,” complained he, “that we’d pull off this affair wit’out any
-scrappin’; and here them mugs spoils it all. Say, if there’s a fight,
-Annie won’t do a t’ing but climb down me back fer fetchin’ her.”
-
-“My girl too,” said McCarty, dolefully.
-
-“Come out in the entry,” pleaded Goose. “Don’t scare the women!”
-
-Larry reluctantly went with them, casting glances over his shoulder at
-his prospective opponent.
-
-“The mug’ll t’ink I’m afraid o’ him,” said he. When they reached the
-entry he tugged viciously at the breast of his dress coat. “Damn it,”
-growled he, savagely, “the t’ing ain’t got no buttons on! I don’t want
-to get no blood on me shirt front.”
-
-“Keep yer eyes on Foley,” whispered Mike to McGonagle. “I’ll look out
-for Daily.”
-
-“D’ye t’ink ye kin hold him even? He pulls the beam fifty pounds more’n
-youse.”
-
-“I wouldn’t care,” smiled Mike, “if he was as big as the side o’ a
-house. The bigger he is the harder he’ll fall.”
-
-“Youse’re a nice-lookin’ pill, ain’t ye?” were Kelly’s first words.
-“Floor Manager, too,” sneeringly; “why, youse don’t know a lady when ye
-see one.”
-
-“She’s crooked!” remarked Larry, “and youse know she is.”
-
-“You’re a liar,” snarled Martin. “And even if she is, she’s better than
-some women I know of. She don’t live with--”
-
-He did not finish but leaped back and threw up his guard. Larry, his
-face wrinkling with a grin, was upon him, striking with the speed,
-precision and power of a practiced boxer. The exchange was heavy and
-rapid. The men panted and laboured for breath, cursing each other
-between their teeth. The policemen were clattering up the steps from
-the lower passage; the doorway leading to the ballroom was banked solid
-with the strained, anxious faces of partisans; women screamed shrilly;
-the music stopped with a crash.
-
-Suddenly Larry slipped and fell upon one knee; Foley made a quick,
-wicked kick at his side, and the next instant was thrown against the
-wall by the force of a smashing blow from McGonagle. Mike McCarty was
-staring eagerly into Daily’s face, his body quivering like that of a
-crouching cat, when the officers arrived.
-
-“Fire ’em out,” commanded McGonagle. “Fire the t’ree o’ them!”
-
-The offenders were promptly hustled down the stairs and out upon the
-sidewalk. A light rain was falling; the arc lamps sputtered and hissed
-in the silence. A form wrapped in a blue mackintosh, and holding an
-umbrella, was standing upon the steps.
-
-“Here he is,” laughed the policeman who held Martin; “and I didn’t have
-to tell him he was wanted, either.”
-
-The three ejected ones stared curiously at the woman; and the policeman
-laughed again and closed the door.
-
-“Mart,” said the woman, “I want to talk to you.”
-
-“Who’s yer friend,” snickered Foley.
-
-“Give us a knockdown,” said Daily.
-
-“Oh, hell!” Martin’s tone was one of deep disgust and he waved his hand
-in a bored fashion.
-
-“Le’s go have somethin’, then,” suggested Daily, “don’t stand here in
-the damp.”
-
-“Go on home, Bella,” commanded Martin, addressing the woman on the
-steps. “What are ye doin’ around here, anyway? Youse must t’ink I’m a
-chump, don’t ye, to have youse follyin’ me up this way.”
-
-“Just a minute, Mart,” pleaded Bella: “I won’t be longer than a minute,
-so help me God!”
-
-“Ah, git away from me!”
-
-“_Mart!_”
-
-“Go on, Kelly,” said Daily; “don’t talk to a bundle o’ skirts that way.
-See what she wants; we’ll wait for youse at Mintzers.”
-
-Daily and Foley cut across the street to where the lights of a saloon
-flared redly through the mist; Martin and the girl started up the
-street, slowly. She gave one upward glance at the windows of the hall,
-and sighed to see the dancers whirl gayly by. That was of the bright
-past; and the future was black enough for her.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XII
-
- “_When we were lovers, you were my downfall,
- Now I am sneered at and jeered at by all._”
-
- SONGS OF THE CURB.
-
-
-IT was the season of rains, and the great sewer that drains the
-northwestern section of the city had burst again, and with its collapse
-sunk a goodly part of two streets at the junction of Germantown Avenue
-and Third Street. Gartenheim was doing the repairing as he had often
-done before; great heaps of brick and timber lay about the break in
-the street; a donkey engine, shrouded in a canvas covering loomed up
-spectre like in the fog; from the small windows of the tool shanty
-crept a pale flare of light; and a man could be seen within, bent over
-a mass of papers and time-books. Martin and Bella paused at the foot of
-a broken spile-driver.
-
-“It’s our Dick,” breathed Bella. “Let’s go some other way.”
-
-“Oh, come on! What’s the matter with ye. He won’t see ye.”
-
-“I ain’t a-goin’ apast! He’d never let me hear the last of it if he
-seen me out so late.”
-
-“Well, speak yer piece, here. What d’ye want to say?”
-
-“You know well enough what it is.”
-
-“Say, is it that same old cry? Youse make me tired!”
-
-“I don’t care! I on’y want you to do right by me; you promised you
-would.”
-
-Martin laughed. Bella’s face was pale, and the damp, penetrating mist
-made her shiver; a single, heavy drop of water was falling from a
-height upon her umbrella, with a measured beat that kept time with the
-pulsation of her heart.
-
-“I didn’t promise nothin’,” said he. “D’ye take me for a gilly?”
-
-“But ye must!” she cried, desperately. “If ye don’t, what’ll I do?”
-
-“Damn’f I know. But ye don’t tie me up in the t’ing, I know that.”
-
-“You on’y think of yourself! What’ll Dick say? What’ll everybody say?
-I can’t face it, Mart; I can’t face it!”
-
-She began to sob huskily; Martin prodded a stone with the toe of his
-shoe and reflected; he whistled a few bars from a popular song to
-convey an impression of carelessness; nevertheless he was troubled.
-
-“Well,” said he at length; “what are ye goin’ to do?”
-
-“It’s for you to say that.”
-
-“Well,” deliberately, “I ain’t a-goin to do nothin’.”
-
-“Ye don’t want to, I know.” Then she added after a pause: “I was to see
-Father Dawson, yesterday.”
-
-“Eh?”
-
-“He said he was comin’ to see you; and he said it was shameful.”
-
-“So you’ve beefed, eh? Yer goin’ to try that racket, are youse? Well
-you’ve made a scratch, see? Ye forgot to call yer play. I don’t go to
-church; he can’t jump me because I won’t stand for it.”
-
-“Then he’ll go to your father,” said she, “and I will, too. _He’ll_
-make ye do what ye said ye would; he can’t help it!”
-
-“I’ll jump the town,” said he, doggedly. “There ain’t no use chewin’
-it up with the old man; he ain’t got no pull with me! I’d flag him as
-quick as I would youse.”
-
-Then she began to reproach him. He opened an extensive vocabulary of
-abuse, and drenched her with epithets; she grew angry and responded in
-kind; for a time their words reeked with foulness. Suddenly he drew
-back his arm and struck her; she fell backward, the blood spirting from
-her nostrils and mouth. Kelly did not give her a second glance, but
-strode away, cursing under his breath.
-
-People have an awkward habit of dying at all hours of the day and
-night, and an undertaker is never care free for a moment. Roddy
-Ferguson was revolving this fact with gloomy disapproval as he bowled
-stableward in O’Connor’s black wagon, his mud spattered horse picking
-its way along the broken street.
-
-“Old Brannagan,” muttered Roddy, “has been dyin’ once a month reg’lar
-for the last three years; and now, just because it’s the night of the
-ball, he cashes in for real, an’ I have to hustle to fix him up.”
-
-His horse shied, and the youth tightened the reins and chirruped
-soothingly.
-
-“Gartenheim,” he mused, “must be gittin’ paid by the day for this
-sewer; he’s been long enough at it to sew tassels on every brick he
-puts in. Go on there, ye big Indian, what’s the matter with youse,
-anyhow?”
-
-He jumped out to see what frightened the horse, and at once caught
-sight of the prostrate figure at the foot of the spile-driver;
-the pale, wavering rays of a gas lamp gave him a glimpse of the
-blood-smeared face.
-
-“It’s a woman,” he gasped, “she must be hurted!”
-
-He threw his horse blanket over her as a protection from the rain and
-then rushed toward the tool shanty and opened the door.
-
-“Say,” panted he, “there’s a woman out here hurt. Kin I bring her in
-here while I get a cop to ring up for the wagon?”
-
-Dick Nolan stared at him, vacantly, chewing at the end of his pencil,
-the figures of the time tickets buzzing in his head. He did not
-catch the import of the words for a moment, neither did he recognize
-Ferguson; then his brain burst through the maze of arithmetic and both
-flashed upon him.
-
-“Oh,” said he in sullen recognition. “Who is it?”
-
-“I didn’t ask for no card,” returned Roddy, sarcastically. It was the
-first words he had exchanged with Nolan for almost two years, and the
-fact that he had spoken first, galled him. “Lend me a hand,” requested
-he, “I don’t t’ink she kin walk.”
-
-They found the girl upon her feet, leaning dazedly against the
-heavy timbers of the machine. Roddy drew his breath, hissingly as
-he recognized her; and Dick stabbed through the air at him with one
-quivering finger.
-
-“What is this, eh? Tell me, quick!” grated he.
-
-“If there’s anything wrong,” answered Roddy, “may I rot and die if I
-had a hand in it! You know I t’ought well o’ her, Nolan!”
-
-Dick rubbed some of the blood from her face; she was sobbing and clung
-to him tightly.
-
-“Who done this?” demanded he.
-
-Ferguson’s straining ears caught the whispered answer, and a sense of
-smothering filled his breast.
-
-“Kin ye walk?”
-
-“I think so; he didn’t hurt me much.”
-
-“I’ll take her home,” said Dick; “ye needn’t wait.”
-
-He held out his hand and the other gripped it.
-
-“If yer goin’ to do anyt’ing,” said Ferguson, eagerly, “I want to stand
-in with ye.”
-
-“Don’t say anything,” warned Nolan. “An’, say, where kin I see youse in
-the mornin’?”
-
-“At the club,” said Roddy, “afore ye go to work. And ye kin bank on me
-not to say a word.”
-
-And they parted.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XIII
-
- “_A gadder kin put more good t’ings to the bad in a three-minute
- round, than a draught horse could pull from here to the corner._”
-
- CHIP NOLAN’S REMARKS.
-
-
-MRS. BURNS was bending over her washtub, placed upon a bench in the
-alley, taking the skin from her knuckles rubbing one of Tim’s red
-flannel shirts. It was wash day in Murphy’s Court and a network of
-clothes lines was strung from dwelling to stable, making a constant
-bending necessary to safe progress. Mrs. Nolan was hanging out her
-wash in her allotted space, her mouth stopped with clothes-pins and
-her skirts tucked up out of the damp; Mrs. McGonagle, who was making a
-social call, sat upon Mrs. Burns’ doorstep watching the efforts of her
-hostess across the drifting steam.
-
-“Glory be!” exclaimed that lady, at length, pausing and wiping the
-perspiration from her face with one bleached and wrinkled hand, “the
-owld felly himself cud do nawthin’ wid it! Sure I’ve rubbed it, an’
-I’ve b’iled it; I’ve bleached it, an’ I’ve got down on me two knees an’
-scrubbed it, but sorra the cleaner it’ll git!”
-
-“God love yez, avic, don’t I know,” said her caller. “Faith Goose gits
-his shirts in sich a state from his bit av work, that the washin’ fair
-takes me breath from me.”
-
-“An’ it’s Murphy’s wash I’ll have till do after me own,” said Mrs.
-Burns, grappling once more with the labor at hand, half hidden in the
-thick cloud of steam. “It’s a-most dead I’ll be afore noight.”
-
-Mrs. Nolan flung a bedspread to the breeze and clamped it down with
-pins.
-
-“How is Mary gittin’?” inquired she.
-
-“About the same,” answered Mrs. Burns. “Poor sowl; she’s failin’ fast.”
-
-“Tis a sin an’ a shame till hark till the cacklin’ that do be goin’
-aroun’ about her,” said Mrs. McGonagle. “Thim Kelly’s is spalpeens, so
-they are!”
-
-“Divil pull the tongues out av thim!” cried Mrs. Burns. “Did she not
-feed me two children whin I hadn’t a bite nor a sup in the house?”
-
-“Ah! An’ did she iver pass a body widout a good word?”
-
-“Yez may say so, Mrs. Nolan. Iv I wur Larry, it’s have thim afore Judge
-Moran, I wud!”
-
-But a little time had elapsed since the events narrated in the
-preceding chapters. Mary’s frail health had suddenly failed, and Larry
-passed most of his time hovering about the sick-room. Their engagement
-had caused much comment in the parish and afforded the Kellys a chance
-to rid themselves of much of the venom which the willing of the estate
-had distilled.
-
-“Scure till the bit av luck cud they expect,” Mrs. Kelly had declared.
-“The owld man’s eyes were hardly closed afore they were makin’ eyes at
-wan another. The white-faced t’ing is mad after him!”
-
-“It’s the bit av money she wants,” her husband had said. “She do be a
-sly one for all her quietness.”
-
-It was this sort of thing--and worse--that had caused the indignation
-of the trio of ladies in the court; it had gotten about the
-neighbourhood and had long been the topic for conversation over cans of
-beer.
-
-“Here comes Rosie, again,” said Mrs. Nolan.
-
-“Arrah, what wud Larry do at all, at all, widout her? Divil the bit av
-good owld Mrs. Coogan is as a housekeeper. Rosie t’inks a power av Mary
-an’ tinds till her loike a sister. An’ Maggie Dwyer, God bless her,
-she’s the good girl till thim.”
-
-Mrs. Nolan’s red face became solemn. “Whisper!” said she, “did yez hear
-the talk about Rosie an’ Larry?”
-
-“Divil take ye, Mrs. Nolan!” Mrs. McGonagle fairly bristled. “Is it
-help till carry it around ye’d be doin’?”
-
-“Sure, I’m not sayin’ it’s true.”
-
-“Ye had better luk at home,” muttered Mrs. Burns from amid her cloud of
-steam.
-
-Larry was in the kitchen washing his hands at the sink. He had just
-been raking the fire so that it would burn brighter, and the remains
-of his breakfast still littered the table. Mary was in the adjoining
-room propped up by pillows in a big rocker; she had just awakened from
-a light sleep and had been watching his efforts, a faint smile upon her
-lips. When Rosie O’Hara came into the kitchen by the back door, Larry
-greeted her, ruefully.
-
-“I’ve bin tryin’ to make the fire come up,” said he with a glance at
-the grey grate.
-
-Rosie laughed. She set the steaming pitcher of broth, which she
-carried, upon the table.
-
-“I’ve brought that for Mary,” said she, attacking the range with
-vigour; “I thought she might like it. How is she?”
-
-“She had a bad night--had a hemorrhage after youse went home, and she
-don’t breathe very easy. She’s asleep now, though.”
-
-“You mustn’t get frightened, Larry; the doctor says there’s no danger
-yet, you know.” Rosie tied an apron, which she took from a nail, about
-her trim waist. “I’ll wash these dishes for ye,” she said. “I couldn’t
-get in to get your breakfast, for Aunt Ellen kept me busy.”
-
-“I burnt the steak to cinders,” said Larry forlornly, “and youse could
-cut the coffee in slices.”
-
-“Poor fellow!” She looked so bright, so sisterly, so helpful, that the
-poor, strangely circumstanced young man felt his heart go out to her in
-thanks. He never knew what prompted him to do it, but he leaned forward
-and kissed her upon the cheek. She looked up, frightened; but the
-expression in his eyes reassured her and the bright tears sprang to her
-own.
-
-And when he went into the room where Mary sat he thought she looked
-whiter than usual.
-
-“Hello!” he cried gladly, “Yer awake, eh?” He took her slim hand in his
-own strong, rough one, and it was trembling. She looked into his face
-strangely; for her visitors had been many since her illness and she had
-heard things of which she had never spoken.
-
-“D’ye feel worse?” asked he anxiously.
-
-“No! Only a little faint,” she answered.
-
-And from that day her failure was more rapid; from that day her
-patience, her gentleness was more marked; from that day, if the truth
-be known, she grew anxious to die.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XIV
-
- “_Sweet came the hallowed chiming,
- Of the Sabbath bell,
- Borne on the morning breezes,
- Down the woody dell;
- On a bed of pain and anguish,
- Lay dear Annie Lisle,
- Changed were the lovely features,
- Gone the happy smile._”
-
- ANNIE LISLE.
-
-
-IT was a pleasant evening and the groups of children were playing
-“a ring, a ring o’roses,” in front of Clancy’s grocery. Clancy was
-whirling at the handle of the coffee mill; and Annie was attending to
-the other wants of Mrs. McGonagle, who stood at the counter.
-
-“They say that Mary do be very low,” panted the grocer.
-
-“God help uz, yis,” said Mrs. McGonagle, sorrowfully.
-
-“Your heart’d ache to see poor Larry,” remarked Annie. “That’s tea,
-soft soap, two cents’ worth of syrup, and a mackerel, Mrs. McGonagle,
-what elce?”
-
-“That’s all to-noight, barrin’ the bit av coffee. It’s a sore trial for
-him, poor sowl!”
-
-“He thinks the world av her, do Larry, an’ it’ll be a hard job for him
-till lose her.” As he spoke Clancy dumped the ground coffee into a
-paper bag and with deft fingers tied it up. The song of the children
-came through the door:
-
- “_There came two dukes a-riding,
- Riding, riding,
- There came two dukes a-riding,
- All on a summer’s day._”
-
-“Go ’long out av that wid yez!” shouted Clancy; but the joyous little
-crew sang on unheeding:
-
- “_What are ye riding here for,
- Here for, here for?
- What are ye riding here for,
- All on a summer’s day?_”
-
-The exact nature of the noble twain’s errand still remains a mystery,
-for the grocer bounced through the doorway and scattered the tots in
-every direction.
-
-“Ye young villyans!” shouted Clancy with a great assumption of anger;
-“sure a body can’t hear themselves think, for yez. Don’t yez know that
-Mary Carroll do be at death’s dure, ye bla’gards!”
-
-James Kelly polished the walnut top of his bar and nodded a “Good Luck”
-to Schwartz as the barber was about to swallow his evening glass of
-beer.
-
-“I hear that young Murphy’s intended wife do be dyin’,” said he.
-
-Schwartz wiped his mouth upon the towel hanging outside the bar.
-
-“It vas doo pad,” returned he. “An’ she vas sutch a young vooman, doo!”
-
-“She have the con-sum-shun,” went on Kelly, cheerfully, “an’ sorra a
-few av thim iver git well av that.”
-
-“Ach nine! Dey hafe a ferry boor chanct.” And the barber shook his head.
-
-“Oh, well! It’s not any of our doin’, Schwartz,” said Kelly, his voice
-full of comfortable irresponsibility. “But hacks will bring a power av
-money on the day av the berryin’.”
-
-A group of “somewhat drunk” young men sat upon the cellar door in
-McGarragles’ Alley, howling out a popular song between pulls at a can
-of beer. Goose McGonagle, who was passing, paused and regarded them
-disdainfully.
-
-“Did somebody hit youse mugs with a bar rag!” demanded he. “Ain’t none
-o’ youse got no sense? Here’s Mary Carroll a-dyin’ and youse people
-raisin’ hell almost under the window.”
-
-The singing stopped; the young roughs had always taken off their hats
-to Mary, a degree of reverence that they showed no one else, except,
-perhaps, young Father Dawson; and Goose passed on, confident that their
-uproar for that night, at least, was done.
-
-And so it went through all the neighbourhood; in every court and alley
-the news was known; in every kitchen and on every street corner it was
-talked of.
-
-Mike McCarty heard it while stripping the harness from his horses’
-backs in Shannon’s stables; Tim Burns was told of it while still on his
-way from work; and it was the first thing that fell upon the ears of
-Danny Casey as he entered his mother’s house.
-
-“Mary’s dyin’,” trembled upon every lip that had smiled in answer to
-her kindness; and as the night grew old, a hush seemed to fall over
-the district; the very moon, as it sailed across the sky, attended by
-myriads of stars, seemed to blink solemnly down, and ponder sadly.
-
-Yes, the serene, white soul was passing; the shadow of the death
-angel’s wings had fallen across the bed where Mary lay. Larry sat near
-the window, his arm thrown along the back of the chair, his forehead
-resting upon it; Rosie, the only other person in the room, wiped the
-death damp from the pale brow, her eyes bright with tears.
-
-“Don’t take it so hard, Larry,” whispered the sick girl. “It had to
-come, you know, and you’ll be happy, afterward.”
-
-Happy! With a return of the old bare life--the rough, purposeless life
-that she had made bloom with new thoughts? He would drift back to the
-old conditions; there would be nothing to keep him from it when her
-gentle influence had relaxed. And that “afterward” of which she spoke
-so often, and so hopefully! It would be black and barren enough, his
-heart whispered to him--she would be where her voice could not reach
-him and he would be alone with his sorrow.
-
-A picture of the crucifixion hung upon the wall; a slanting ray from
-the dim light brought out the world’s great tragedy with piteous
-distinctness. But the lesson brought no consolation to Larry. He looked
-at the picture with vacant eyes, for his brain was numb, and he could
-think of nothing but his impending loss. Philosophy is a meaningless
-word to such as he; for they who grapple with poverty, and go wrestling
-through a gloom from birth to death, find it hard to submit.
-
-“Are you crying, Rosie?” asked the weak voice. “Don’t, dear; you
-promised not to, you know.”
-
-Rosie’s face rested upon the pillow beside her, and Mary stroked the
-tear-wet cheek, softly.
-
-“I’m sorry that I didn’t see it long ago,” said she, sadly; “sorry
-for you, and Larry. But it won’t be long now, and you both will be
-very happy.” Her voice trembled a little but she continued, bravely:
-“Promise me that you will think of me sometimes, Rosie?”
-
-“I’ll never forget you, Mary,” sobbed the girl.
-
-“And don’t let Larry forget me, either,” eagerly. “And try and be a
-good wife to him, Rosie.”
-
-Both Rosie and the young man lifted their heads quickly and looked at
-each other, searchingly.
-
-From far down the street came a faint, musical drone as of minor voices
-singing; the bell of St. Michael’s boomed the hour solemnly; quick
-footsteps went by the house, grew faint and then died away.
-
-“Do you think,” Rosie’s voice trembled in dread, “that she’s dyin’,
-Larry?”
-
-He had approached the bed and was looking down at the pale face framed
-in the dark, loose hair. She smiled up into his eyes.
-
-“She will be good to you, Larry; she has a kind heart and will be a
-better wife to you than I could have been.”
-
-“Mary!”
-
-“You were kind to me when I was left alone, Larry; you would have
-married me because you felt sorry for me. But you’ll be free now; and I
-have prayed that she’ll be as happy as I was--before I knew!”
-
-“Don’t talk like that, Mary! It was you that was sorry for me! It was
-you--” but his voice broke in a dry sob.
-
-“Hush!” a pleading look crept into her eyes. “Don’t let anything stand
-in the way of your happiness, Larry; don’t let any thoughts of me--any
-regrets--keep you apart. Promise me that!”
-
-He knelt and covered his face with his hands, the deep, hard sobs
-racking him from head to foot; and as he made no answer, Mary turned
-her eyes upon Rosie.
-
-“You will promise, I know,” said she.
-
-“Oh, Mary, Mary I can’t! Please don’t ask me!”
-
-But seeing the look of sorrow that crept into the death-dulled eyes,
-she added frantically--despairingly, thinking of nothing save the
-soothing of her friend.
-
-“Yes, yes, Mary, I will! If it’ll give ye peace, I’ll promise.”
-
-The clock ticked on through the hours; the breathing of the man and
-girl was long and heavy, and their eyes were blood-shot with watching.
-And when dawn drew aside the sky’s black draperies, the gray light
-stole into the room and lighted up a face that was calm and still.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XV
-
-
- “_The weird sisters hand in hand._”
-
- MACBETH, ACT I; SCENE III.
-
-
-“IT’S an ill wind that blows nobody good,” muttered Malachi O’Hara, as
-he stood looking through his store window, his eyes resting upon Goose
-McGonagle who had just drawn his wagon up at the curb. “She’s the lucky
-girl, so she is.”
-
-Goose swung himself from the step of the wagon, a milk-pail in his
-hand. Filling the pitcher, resting for the purpose upon the counter,
-Goose addressed O’Hara.
-
-“I’m sorry,” said he, “that election comes off so soon after Mary
-Carroll’s funeral. Larry ain’t feelin’ fit for a bruisin’ fight, yet.”
-
-“I’ve heard,” said O’Hara, “that yez are both goin’ on the ticket at
-the primaries.”
-
-“It’s a gift! We’ll go t’rough to beat the band, for both divisions is
-behind us, solid.”
-
-“Ye’ll get it if yez are for James Kelly. It’s a walk over he’ll have,
-I’m told.”
-
-“Rats! We go to the convention and we don’t carry no banner for Kelly,
-either, see? And if he t’inks he’s got this t’ing cinched he’s sold.
-The boss is with him this time, but then, McQuirk ain’t the on’y fish
-in the swim. Gartenheim kin have the nomination if he wants it, in
-spite o’ him; and then there’s O’Connor; he wouldn’t shake Kelly’s fin
-if it was made out o’ gold.”
-
-“Sure thim two won’t go afore the convintion! It’s inside information I
-have, from Moran.”
-
-“Moran misses it more times than any guy I know, but he’s put ye next
-to the right graft this time. Gartenheim an’ O’Connor both blowed in
-a bunch o’ money last ’lection, an’ they’ve sort o’ got it into their
-heads that they can’t stand for any more. If Gartenheim’s named he
-could not win out unless O’Connor turned in for him, see? An’ youse kin
-stake yer coin on it, that O’Connor ain’t a-doin’ that--he don’t forget
-so easy.”
-
-“Faith an’ that’s jist what the Judge told me, an’ he says, says he,
-‘They’ll pick Kelly in the end, never fear,’ says he.”
-
-“Ah, we ain’t losin’ any sleep worryin’ about old Kelly scoopin’ the
-pot. The gang’s got their coats off an’ say we’ve got a graft to throw
-into the fight that’ll make him look like t’irty-seven cents. Look out
-for the papers the day after.”
-
-After McGonagle had gone, O’Hara walked back into the kitchen where his
-sisters were crouched behind the range.
-
-“Where’s Rosie?” asked he, glancing about the room.
-
-“She’s above stairs,” answered Ellen, “an’ cryin’ the two eyes out av
-her head!”
-
-“And for why?”
-
-“Troth, Malachi, it’s well enough ye shud know, avic. I niver, since
-Gawd made me, see any wan stand so in their own loight as she.”
-
-He wrinkled his brows, his round little eyes snapping angrily. Going
-to the stairs he called: “Rosie! D’yez hear me? Come down here, this
-minyute!”
-
-“Talk till her, Malachi,” urged Ellen.
-
-“Show yez authority,” approved Bridget; “are ye not her father, faith!”
-
-Rosie descended into the kitchen, slowly; her face was flushed, her
-eyes were red and swollen.
-
-“Will ye tell me the manin’ av this?” demanded her father. She sat
-down, not answering; and he continued: “Yez hay bin cryin’ agin! Will
-yez not give over?”
-
-“I can’t help it,” said the girl. “You’re all against me and I can’t
-help it.”
-
-“Is it thinkin’ av young Larkin yez are!” exclaimed Ellen. “Shame on
-ye, Rosie!”
-
-“Wud yez hav a black sin on yez sowl?” cried Bridget. “An’ wud ye break
-yez promis till the dead? Glory be! Bud the young wans now-a-days t’ink
-nawthin’ av the hereafter.”
-
-“I can’t marry Larry,” sobbed Rosie, “I don’t like him--not that way.
-And then I’ve promised Jimmie!”
-
-“Powers above!” gasped Bridget.
-
-“The son av a ‘Know Nawthin’,” cried Ellen in horror. “Did yez iver
-witness the bate av that?”
-
-“Hold yez tongues!” snapped their brother, “sure a body can’t git in
-a word edgeways for yez cacklin’. Listen till me, Rosie; did ye not
-promise Mary, an’ she a-dyin’, that yez wud be Larry’s wife? Answer me
-that.”
-
-“I didn’t know what I was a-sayin’,” protested Rosie; “I was so took
-back and frightened!”
-
-“Divil a bit do that alter the case! Ye promised, an’ it howlds good in
-the soight av God!”
-
-“An’ the blessed can’ls burnin’ in the room!” cried Ellen.
-
-“An’ she jist after bein’ anointed!” added Bridget.
-
-“Will yez howld yes whist!” exclaimed O’Hara, enraged. “Faix, yez
-tongues do be goin’ from Monday mornin’ till Saturday noight, an’ divil
-raysave the voice kin be heerd bud yez own!”
-
-“She’s yez own choild, Malachi,” admitted Ellen, as though to wash her
-hands of the whole affair.
-
-“Talk till her, an’ good luck!” muttered her sister.
-
-“I will iv yez giv me a chance.” And O’Hara once more turned to his
-sobbing daughter and proceeded with his arguments.
-
-Rosie had been an infant when her mother died, and she had been reared
-by her two aunts in an atmosphere loaded with superstition and reeking
-of omens of good and ill. If the wind but stirred of a night among the
-housetops, Ellen detected the wail of a banshee, and if a lonely dog
-howled at the moon, Bridget, in hushed tones, announced the presence
-of death in the street. They crowded the corners of dimly lit rooms
-with the shadows of those departed, and the very teachings of religion
-were so distorted as to be made to supply exorcisms against agencies
-of evil and tokens calculated to render powerless their incantations.
-The girl was saturated with this; from her childhood she had drawn it
-in with every breath; and it was taught to her as an article of faith,
-to disbelieve which was to imperil her salvation. The father was well
-aware of this. He was far too practical to give heed to such things
-himself, but he was willing enough that they should help him finger
-some of old Larry’s hoarded dollars.
-
-So, like the crafty old fox that he was, he conjured up dreadful
-pictures of the fate that awaited her should she break her promise. The
-girl listened, terrified.
-
-“Glory be! That ye shud even t’ink av sich a t’ing!” cried her father
-in conclusion. “Don’t ye know that Mary do be harknin’ till yez?”
-
-“She hears ivery wurd ye say,” put in Bridget, unable to hold her peace.
-
-“No!” said the poor girl, her face growing pale, “don’t say that, Aunt
-Ellen!”
-
-“Don’t deny it, girl!” exclaimed her father seizing quickly upon the
-suggestion, “for divil the lie’s in it. She’ll go moanin’ about iver
-God’s blessed night wringin’ her two han’s an’ cryin’ the heart out av
-her! Scure till the bit av pace she’ll see till yez word’s made good.”
-
-“Wud yez hav us visited by her?” demanded Bridget.
-
-At this Ellen began a muttering; Bridget took it up, and Rosie stared
-at them, the fear in her heart showing in her wide-open eyes.
-
-That night Malachi O’Hara waited upon his customers with looks of great
-satisfaction; and in the little room above the store, Rosie cried
-herself to sleep thinking of the letter she had sent Jimmie Larkin.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XVI
-
- “_I kape a saloon on the corner, me boys,
- An’ faith I’ve a flourishin’ trade,
- I bought out me cousin, Nathaniel Doyle,
- The money on whisky I made,
- I could sell to youse now a nice pusse caffey,
- Or a Rhino-Victoria cigar;
- No slate, chalk or pencil is kept in the house,
- Whin Malone’s at the back av the bar._”
-
- HARRIGAN.
-
-
-THE big gilt sign over Kelly’s saloon on Girard Avenue was all
-a-glitter with morning sunlight; a crowd of hangers-on leaned against
-the awning-frame, watching with admiration the ease with which a
-powerful German, in a leather apron, lifted huge kegs in and out of a
-brewer’s wagon.
-
-Within, James Kelly stood behind the bar polishing thin glasses, and
-frowning vexedly; a group of customers sat at a table drinking and
-watching the deft fingers of Nobby Foley guide a pencil along a narrow
-strip of paper.
-
-“What are youse buyin’ to-day, Daily?” inquired Foley.
-
-“I’m a sucker for buyin’ anyt’ing;” complained Daily. He wore
-hob-nailed shoes and clothing covered with burnt spots which showed him
-to be an iron-worker. He took some loose silver from his pocket and
-selected a quarter. “Gimme that much,” said he, “o’ whatever ye t’ink’s
-hot.”
-
-“I’m buyin’ the police row meself,” said the policy-writer.
-
-“That’ll do,” said Daily. “It’s just the same; like t’rowin’ good money
-in the street.”
-
-“Two’s a half?” inquired the other, glancing up.
-
-“Not on yer life! If I strike the game I’ll hit it big, see? Good and
-hard! No gittin’ the small end, tryin’ to save me play.”
-
-“It’s your say. Whistle yer own piece, me boy, if youse t’ink it’ll do
-ye any good.” The “writer” looked around at the array of half empty
-glasses and added, “drink yer beer, gents; we’ll have another.”
-
-Kelly glanced at the clock over the bar. His frown grew heavier; and
-opening the door leading to the dwelling portion of the house, he cried:
-
-“Is not Martin had breakfast yet.”
-
-“I can’t swallow me feed whole,” came Martin’s voice angrily. “Shut up,
-will youse!”
-
-Kelly closed the door with a bang. “Damn the bit av good he is till
-me,” growled he, recommencing upon the glasses.
-
-“Beers, Kel,” called Foley. “What’s the matter, old boy. Youse look
-mad.”
-
-“Little wonder,” answered Kelly, drawing the beer and carrying it to
-where his customers sat. “Here I have McQuirk an’ young Haley till meet
-at the City Hall at noine be the day; it’s but a few minutes av it now,
-an’ divil take the wan I have till tind bar.”
-
-“I heerd,” said one of the men, addressing the policy man, “that
-Levitsky’s place was pinched last night.”
-
-“That’s right. He had some words with the lieutenant, and the loot sent
-a wagon down there t’cut even, see? But, say, he’s out an’ wide open
-for biz this mornin’, because McQuirk got him out as soon as he heard
-about it. Youse can’t queer the push!”
-
-O’Hara came in through a side door; his face wore a fat smile, as he
-walked to the bar.
-
-“Good mornin’, James,” saluted he.
-
-“How are yez, Malachi?” returned the saloonkeeper, “is it yez mornin’s
-mornin’ ye’d be after?”
-
-“Divil a ilce! Give me a sup out av the brown bottle, an’ a troifle o’
-porter on the soide.”
-
-“I suppose,” remarked old Kelly as the drink was tossed off and rung up
-on the cash register, “that ye’ll give me a lift at the primaries next
-wake.”
-
-“Sure, James, I’ll strive till be neighbourly; an’ if me vote’ll do yez
-any good, faith, yez shall have it.”
-
-“Ivery wan counts. I’m sure till be nominated, for the boss is wid me;
-but we want all the votes we kin get in yez division, for the young
-bla’gards are makin’ a foight agin me, I hear.”
-
-“True for ye, boy! I wur talkin’ till young McGonagle yesterday, an’
-it’s on the ticket he’ll be, agin ye, Kelly.”
-
-“D’yez tell me so! Faix, he’s soured on me because I wouldn’t take me
-milk from him, I think. But we’ll bate him, never fear. McQuirk an’
-mesilf have bin among Murphy’s frinds an’ we’ll see till him, the
-spalpeen. McQuirk have got the most av thim jobs, an’ they can’t go
-back on him, faith!”
-
-“Good luck till yez, sure. I hope yez’ll have as much av it as mesilf.”
-
-“Ho! Ho! Faith an’ I thought yez wur in good timper this mornin’.
-What’s happened to yez, O’Hara?”
-
-“Nawthin’ till me, sure. Bud Rosie’s till marry young Murphy; an’ the
-money’ll be a foine t’ing--for her.”
-
-Kelly stared at him in dumb astonishment. O’Hara returned the look with
-great good humour.
-
-“Be the powers av Moll Kelly!” ejaculated the saloonkeeper, “but that
-bates all, yet! An’ is it so soon after Mary’s berryin’?”
-
-“Oh, they’ll wait a bit; it’s no hurry they’re in.”
-
-The side door swung open, admitting Mrs. Nolan, in a greasy wrapper,
-her face puffy with drink.
-
-“Good mornin’ till yez gintlemen,” to the nodding, grinning group at
-the table. “It’s takin’ Willie a-walkin’ I am, this foine mornin’.” As
-she spoke, Mrs. Nolan flourished a kettle in the air and then banged
-it down upon the bar. “Tin cints worth av mixed,” requested she.
-
-Kelly jerked the can under the spigot with professional dexterity and
-watched it, pondering.
-
-“I’ll be goin’, James,” said O’Hara.
-
-“Stop an’ have a sup on the house.”
-
-“Another toime. Faith, me business’ed suffer from two drinks av yez
-whisky.”
-
-The second-hand man departed and Kelly slid the filled can along the
-bar, the froth creaming down its sides.
-
-“I’ve had a surprise, Mrs. Nolan,” said he.
-
-“Small blame till yez, Kelly; arrah, it’s all the news yez hear as ye
-stan’ behind yez bar, so yez do!”
-
-“It will surprise ye, mam,” spoke Kelly solemnly. “Rosie O’Hara is till
-take up wid Larry!”
-
-“Is it marry him!”
-
-“Divil a ilce! Her father is jist after tellin’ me av it.”
-
-“Maybe she’s compelled till, faith!”
-
-“Eh!”
-
-“Faix, an’ the talk wint round about thim, long since, James. It’s
-sorry I’d be iv it wur true.”
-
-“God bless uz, Mrs. Nolan! An’ d’yez tell me this?”
-
-“I’m not sayin’ it’s true, moind ye. An’ did yez not hear av it?”
-
-“Sorra the word!”
-
-“What will young Larkin do now, at all, at all. He wur woild after her
-afore he wint away.”
-
-“So he wur, Mrs. Nolan,” agreed Kelly, a change suddenly creeping into
-his face; “so he wur, mam.”
-
-“Glory be! What’ll he do whin he hears av this? He’s got the divil in
-’im whin his timper’s up, so he have.”
-
-“But he’s a frind av Larry’s.”
-
-“It’s on’y worse that’ed make it.”
-
-After Mrs. Nolan had gone, Kelly wiped the little puddles from the bar
-and ruminated.
-
-“He _have_ the divil in him,” muttered he. “Did I not see him, in
-this barroom, knock the padding out av t’ree av’ the ‘Chain Gang’ for
-callin’ his father an Orange bastard.”
-
-The men at the table were shoving back their chairs as though about to
-go.
-
-“Foley,” said the saloonkeeper, “stop a bit an’ give an eye till the
-bar; I want till spake till Martin. Call me iv any wan comes in.”
-
-“All right,” said Foley. “On’y hurry up.”
-
-Martin had a great, half raw beefsteak before him from which he was
-hacking bleeding strips; a newspaper was propped against the salt cruet
-and as he ate Martin read the doings of the sporting world.
-
-“Arrah, don’t be botherin’ him!” cried Mrs. Kelly, as her husband
-entered. “Lave him ate his bit av breakfast in pace. Will ye have
-another cup av coffee, Martin?”
-
-Martin pushed his cup toward her, over the stained table-cloth, in
-silence; his father sat down and watched him as he split a bake-house
-biscuit and covered it with butter, and then resumed his attack upon
-the gory steak.
-
-“I want till tell ye somethin’, Martin,” said the father. “No hurry for
-Foley’s in the barroom.”
-
-“Foley!” exclaimed Mrs. Kelly. Martin only stared.
-
-“The cash register’ll ring if he meddles wid it,” grinned the
-saloonkeeper. “Never fear av Foley.”
-
-“Divil mend ye if yez are robbed av ivery God’s blissid cint ye have,
-some day!” cried Mrs. Kelly, putting the steaming coffee before her
-son. “I’ll go out till him. Sure, I wouldn’t trust that felly wid the
-value av a glass av porter!”
-
-She whisked hurriedly into the barroom, leaving father and son together.
-
-“Good riddance,” said her husband--“yez mother talks too much at
-toimes, Martin; an’ I want till spake till ye privately.”
-
-“Gee!” exclaimed the son, surprised; “what’s the caper, eh?”
-
-Kelly spoke for a long time leaning across the table; Martin listened,
-his knife and fork constantly at work.
-
-“Iv we knowed where Jimmie wur,” said Kelly, “we cud lave him know av
-this dirty pace av wurk. Murphy is no frind av his’n nor moine aither!”
-
-“Larkin’s easy found,” said Martin. “He’s got a match on at the Crib
-Club in Boston for nixt Monday night, and he’s trainin’ at a road-house
-just outside of the city. I kin git the address from somebody and
-we’ll write him, eh?”
-
-“We will, Martin! Go out an’ git a two cint stamp at Mullen’s drug
-store an’ a sheet av paper, an’ an invelope, as soon as yez are done
-atin’. It’s our juty till tell Larkin av this, an’ we must do it.”
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XVII
-
- “_Dull rogues affect the politician’s part,
- And learn to nod, and smile, and shrug with art._”
-
- CONGREVE.
-
-
-IT was the evening of the primaries and the opposing factions were
-lined up for the battle that would decide who was to be the party’s
-standard-bearer within the limits of the ward. The workers had made a
-door-to-door canvass, pleading eloquently with some, making a vague
-statement of principles to others, hinting at “prospective jobs” to
-more. A great deal depended upon the person, and the heelers were
-supposed to have the voters in their precincts gauged to a nicety.
-
-Tim Burns was eating his supper of potatoes and eggs at the kitchen
-table, together with his wife and two children, when a knock came upon
-the door.
-
-“Come in,” called Tim.
-
-It was Gratten Haley, candidate for school director and--McQuirk!
-
-“Hello Tim,” greeted Haley, cheerily, “feedin’ your face?”
-
-“God bless uz an’ save us, Mr. McQuirk,” ejaculated Mrs. Burns,
-confused at the sight of the ward’s great man. “Here Xavier, git down
-wid yez at wanst, an’ give the gintleman yez sate.”
-
-She dumped her eldest son unceremoniously from his chair and dusted it
-with her apron. But McQuirk re-seated the boy and shoved the chair back
-to the table.
-
-“Pitch in, son,” advised he, heartily. He speared an egg with a fork
-and placed it on the child’s plate. “Go to work,” said he. He rumpled
-the youngster’s hair and turned to Mrs. Burns. “This must be a fast
-day,” remarked he.
-
-“There’s two this week, so they give out from the altar on Sunday,”
-answered Mrs. Burns; “an’ a body’s lost widout the bit av mate, after
-workin’ all day.”
-
-Mr. Haley stood in the background, near the range, pulling slowly at a
-fat black cigar, and gazing at his leader admiringly. “For star plays,”
-muttered he with ecstasy, to himself, “run me against McQuirk. He’s a
-miracle!”
-
-The feminine and juvenile side of the house surrendered without firing
-a shot; but Tim was made of different stuff and had a long memory. He
-glowered at his plate from under his brows and caused buttered wedges
-of bread and saucers of tea to disappear with startling rapidity.
-
-“Got plenty to do, Tim?” McQuirk stood with his back to the range and
-tugged at the spike-like points of his moustache.
-
-“Lots av it--_now_!” Tim put a great deal of emphasis on the last word
-so that the boss might not misunderstand.
-
-“The delegates are named to-night,” interrupted the candidate for
-school director, hurriedly, “and the town will be jammed with
-conventions to-morrow, all the way from members o’Congress to,”
-modestly, “school director.”
-
-“I know,” said Mr. Burns.
-
-“I want your support!” said McQuirk, bluntly. “There’s a movement to
-wall me up in me own division by a gang o’ would-be reformers; and I
-want all me friends to stand by me.”
-
-“So yez want me vote?” asked Tim, as he wiped his mouth on a corner of
-the table-cloth and pushed back his chair.
-
-“Sure; you’ve voted with the party ever since you got out your papers,
-an’ you’re entitled to a say in the primaries.”
-
-“Have a cigar,” invited Haley, as Burns got up.
-
-“I’ll smoke me poipe,” said Tim. He took it down from a shelf and
-knocked out the “heel” on the edge of the range, then proceeded to cut
-a fresh charge from a plug of “Rough and Ready,” with his pocket knife.
-
-“I’m a Dimmycrat,” said Tim, “an’ plaze God, I’ll always stay wan.”
-
-The boss beamed approval. “Now look here,” said he, “you know McAteer,
-don’t you? Well this other crowd want to do him out of the nomination
-because he sticks like glue to the party, see? Old Owen Dwyer’s on the
-ticket, instructed for him; so give Owen your support, eh?”
-
-“McAteer,” spoke Mr. Burns, “is an able man, an’ Owen Dwyer, is a
-daysint wan, an’ a friend av my own.”
-
-“So he is; you’re right, Tim! And then there’s Abrams for judge--Jimmie
-Hurley stands for him. Abrams is a sheeney, but he’s all right.”
-
-“I’m agin no man because he sticks till what his father wur before him.”
-
-“And there’s Kelly for select--a neighbour of yours; and here’s Haley
-for school director.”
-
-“I knew yez father,” said Tim to Haley; “he wur a United man, an’ an A.
-O. H., so I’ll do what I can till give his son a boost. But for James
-Kelly--never!” Tim smacked his hands together loudly. “Gartenheim gits
-me vote; for he give me a job av work when the rist av yez passed me
-by!”
-
-“Don’t let any o’ those young fellows jolly you, Tim; for they’re goin’
-to git it in the neck, sure! Kelly’s the man! He’s the only one that
-can hold the workers, for he stands in with the mayor. He can git jobs.”
-
-“I’ve heard that afore now,” remarked Tim, stubbornly. McQuirk touseled
-up the eldest boy’s head once more and also shook hands with the
-mother.
-
-“Gartenheim’s name won’t be mentioned,” prophesied he as he buttoned up
-his light overcoat and paused at the door. “Stand in with the party,
-that’s the thing, eh, Mrs. Burns? The right kind o’ people never
-forgets who puts them in office. Do what’s regular, Tim, that’s all
-I ask, do what’s regular; vote to hold the organization together and
-keep the snide reformers out. And, remember, we’ve got a congressman
-to elect, the only one o’ the right stripe in the city.” He opened the
-door and stood aside while Haley stepped out. “Good night, Tim; I just
-thought I’d drop in and talk to you about the thing. No harm done?”
-
-“Not a bit,” answered Mr. Burns, “Good night.”
-
-And so it went from house to house, from alley to alley, from division
-to division through the ward. McQuirk did not trust himself in the
-hands of his workers; he saw the voters in person, raised the standard
-and appealed to the partisanship that is born in every man; and so if
-there was glory to be gained, he was the gainer; if there was a harvest
-of defeat to reap, it was not because of lack of personal attention on
-his part.
-
-Politics had been McQuirk’s study for years, and he had been an apt
-scholar. He knew nothing of the profundity of statesmanship, and cared
-less; he had never made a speech upon his feet, and could not had his
-life depended upon it. But what he did not know of practical politics,
-as his friend Moran was in the habit of saying, was not worth knowing.
-He possessed a genius for organization: in getting out the full vote he
-was unexcelled, and he dominated the freemen of his district by one of
-three things: Favour--the expectation of favour--the fear of disfavour.
-
-There were people in the ward that had known him when he was a
-dump-cart driver, and others who remembered a later period when his
-only visible means of support was Sunday poker-playing in the parlours
-of social clubs. Then he became a political hanger-on; he fetched and
-carried for the powers that were and by his astuteness gained their
-favour. Little by little he rose in power, and at length, was sent,
-under orders, to represent his division in the ward committee. From
-that time he grew visibly; his name began to appear in the political
-columns of the Sunday papers and he took to wearing a silk hat. Then
-came the revolt of a clique of workers that presaged disaster to the
-ward machine; McQuirk saw his opportunity, threw himself at the head
-of the insurgents and in a desperate battle of the ballots, came off
-victorious. His old benefactors were driven to the wall and ruthlessly
-knifed, and McQuirk stood at the head of the committee in the pivotal
-ward of the district.
-
-With a solid phalanx of admirers and a chain of supporting social
-clubs behind him, he soon made himself manifest; controlling the most
-powerful subdivision of the organization, he held the balance of power
-and was courted and feared. He walked into his first ward convention
-with his breast pocket stuffed with proxies and dictated the nomination
-of his bitterest foe; then he threw his strength, in secret, with an
-independent movement and buried the said foe under an avalanche of
-ballots that effectually stripped him of his dangerous qualities. As
-Mr. Haley had remarked, McQuirk was a miracle.
-
-James Kelly was sweating blood and spending money, provided by the
-Motor Traction Company, right and left, to accomplish his nomination.
-The back room of his saloon, turned into a campaign headquarters, had
-for weeks been a vortex of activity. The air was never clear of cigar
-smoke, or the table of beer bottles. Kelly, aided by that rising young
-politician, Gratten Haley, Nobby Foley and his son, had canvassed the
-ward from end to end. This did him some good; but vastly greater than
-their combined exertions was the fact that the boss favoured him--that
-he was the choice of the machine.
-
-“That mocaraw,” said McQuirk, on Tuesday morning as he stood in Moran’s
-“court,” “has queered the whole shooting match! He’ll have every voter
-out to-night, either for him or against him, and that’ll bring our
-other people into the fight.”
-
-“He ain’t got no gumption,” remarked the magistrate tipping himself
-back in his office chair, and loosening the foil covering of a paper of
-fine cut. “The old way’s the best. Keep quiet and on the night of the
-primaries half of them will forget it, and the other half won’t bother
-their heads. Enough picked people to elect each delegate is all we
-want; when the whole crowd starts to chip in, it keeps you guessing.”
-
-“That’s what! It’s time enough to make a hurrah and shoot off the
-sky-rockets when the convention’s over and your slate’s all to the
-good; you’re fresh for the fight, then; but when there’s a preliminary
-about who’ll carry the flag, it makes hard feelings; and a man who
-would turn out with the gang, with a torch dropping grease down his
-back, in the first place, wouldn’t show up in the second even if you
-promised to put him under a plug hat and on top of a horse ahead of the
-band.”
-
-Moran nodded his approval of this piece of political sagacity; McQuirk
-buttoned up his coat.
-
-“I’ve fixed it,” said the latter, “so that if anybody’s pinched they’ll
-be run over here in the wagon. Be sure you have somebody to bail them
-out if you can’t discharge them.”
-
-“That’ll be all right. I’ll have Pete Slattery hangin’ around
-somewhere; he’ll do for a few more, yet.”
-
-Here the magistrate laughed, but the boss looked glum.
-
-“That young Murphy,” said he, “is bothering me some. I don’t like the
-way he is jumping into this thing. He’s sore on Kelly, eh?”
-
-“I should say so! He’d give him the knife in a minute. Say,” continued
-Moran, suddenly, “ain’t you on the wrong track, McQuirk? You don’t want
-to make an enemy of Murphy, he’s growin’ up and beginning to take
-notice, don’t you know? Keep him in line; one young one’s as good as a
-half dozen old ones, and they do more and don’t ask as much. Ain’t that
-right?”
-
-The boss looked at his watch, snapped the case shut, and dropped it
-into his pocket.
-
-“I’m going down to the Precinct Club,” said he. “The committee holds a
-pow-wow there in half an hour, and I must make good.”
-
-“But, say,” went on the magistrate tenaciously, “what’s the good word,
-Mac? Sling me a line on it, so’s I can put the boys next. Is it Kelly
-or nothin’? Or is it Kelly if we can?”
-
-McQuirk cleared his throat and twisted his fingers among the links of
-his watch chain. He was not revolving a decision--that had been made
-weeks ago. He merely wanted his honour to draw his answer more from his
-manner than his words. He had seen political friendships broken before
-now; and he had also seen men’s words, quoted in fat type, posted upon
-fences.
-
-“We’ll do what we can for Kelly,” said he, “yes, we’ll do all we can
-for him.”
-
-Moran smiled when his visitor left, and caressed his dyed moustache.
-
-“Just as foxy!” murmured he. “It’ll be a slick member that ever makes
-_him_ slip his hold, and that’s no dream. If Murphy draws the most
-water why Kelly gets entered among the also rans, that’s all.”
-
-Not many members of the Aurora Borealis Club who had entered the
-political arena against Kelly had gone to work that day. Some were
-canvassing their divisions for votes or information, and others lounged
-about the club rooms, ready for anything that might turn up. Larry
-Murphy, wearing a deep black band about his hat, dropped in during the
-morning.
-
-“We’re goin’ to do him,” said Larry, after a long talk with his
-friends. “If anybody ever needed a lickin’, it’s Mart Kelly. He wants
-it bad!”
-
-“I heard Mary prayed for in church on Sunday,” said Jerry, with a
-glance at the mourning band.
-
-“Sure,” said Larry. “But she don’t need it, though,” he added
-reverently.
-
-“If we all stood as good as her,” remarked McGonagle, “we’d be all
-right. Me mother was makin’ a novena for her when she died. She
-t’ought she’d get better.”
-
-“Tell her I’m much obliged,” said Larry. “Your mother always liked
-Mary.” After a pause he said: “I’m goin’ out to see what’s doin’. Don’t
-loaf, gents, keep the t’ing goin’.”
-
-After he had gone McGlory asked.
-
-“Did any o’ youse fella’s hear the new one?”
-
-“Bat it out,” requested McGonagle.
-
-“One o’ Rosie O’Hara’s aunts was to see me mother last night, and it
-was the first time she was ever in our house, for her and me mother
-can’t hit it. I was out at the time--over to see Veronica, ye know--but
-I heard all about it at breakfast-time next mornin’.”
-
-“Well, chop it off!” urged McGonagle, impatiently. “Don’t wait until
-I’m grey-headed. Bat it out.”
-
-“Larry and Rose is goin’ to run double.”
-
-“G’way!” Goose stared at his friend, amazedly. “It must be a roast.
-Murphy was a friend o’ Larkin’s; he wouldn’t play him dirt like that!”
-
-“What’s Larkin got to do with it?”
-
-“Why him an’ Rose was engaged--on the quiet, ye know.”
-
-“Whew!” Jerry whistled through his teeth and frowned across the table
-at the other. “I’ll bet the best skate we’ve got in the stable that
-Murphy don’t know a thing about it.”
-
-“But Rose does! She’s give Jimmie the ice-house laugh, that’s what
-she’s done; he’s only a sparrer, an’ Murphy’s got the money, see? I
-never put me lamps on a woman yet that wasn’t daffy after a guy what’s
-got a wad o’ rags.”
-
-Danny Casey who sat by a window, emerged from behind his newspaper,
-took his feet from the sill, and observed:
-
-“There seems to be lots o’ new t’ings chasin’ around. When I heard that
-Dick Nolan and Roddy Ferguson had made up, ye cud a-knocked me down
-with a straw; but when I seen them workin’ together against Kelly, why,
-say, I almost fainted.”
-
-“That _was_ a funny t’ing,” agreed McGonagle. “I tried to pump Roddy,
-but he was dead dry. But, say, it’ll be a good snap for us all, eh?
-Nolan’s ace high with Gartenheim, and if he kin coax him to step out,
-and give O’Connor a push, Kelly’ll be a dead cock in the pit.”
-
-Casey shook his head doubtfully. He felt that Goose’s hopes were a
-trifle too roseate.
-
-“Dick pulls some weight wit’ the old man,” admitted he; “but he can’t
-do all that. I tell youse Gartenheim’s too sore on O’Connor to turn in
-for him. Stick to Murphy’s lay-out; we’ve got the best chance there.
-When we spring it, take me word for it, the whole shootin’ match’ll
-stand up on their hind legs.”
-
-“Youse might be right; I only hope ye are,” said Jerry. “Anyhow let’s
-go down the line; we ain’t doin’ no good holdin’ down chairs around
-here. I want to see old man Hoffer and a lot more guys; they’re friends
-o’ the old man’s and I want to sling ’em a breeze.”
-
-When seven o’clock drew on the division houses were wide open; the
-special policemen and ward workers were clustered in the doorways and
-were aghast at the magnitude of the vote called out by the conflicting
-efforts of Kelly and his opponents; it was as heavy as that of a
-general election and stood unprecedented in their experience. McQuirk,
-in a silk hat and with a cigar between his teeth, was going from
-division to division, in one of McGrath’s hacks; his subordinates
-worked zealously with the vote, feeling that their future weal depended
-upon the impression that they made.
-
-Clancy came through McGarragles’ Alley and turned down the avenue
-toward the polling place of his division; his white apron was tucked up
-about his waist and he carried a ballot fluttering between his fingers.
-Murphy who stood by the curb, watching things, and sending out his aids
-to drag voters from their suppers, at once pounced upon the grocer.
-
-“Just a second, Clancy!” besought he.
-
-A stout man with a red face protested.
-
-“Ah, let the man be!” requested he. “The polls’ll be closed in a little
-while. Go ahead and vote, Clancy!”
-
-“Close yer face, will youse? I’m doin’ this.”
-
-“An’ yer makin’ a mess of it, too. Youse people’ll split the ticket,
-and we’ll get it good and hard, like last time.”
-
-“I take notice youse have all turned in for de guy what licked youse;
-youse fellas would cap for McQuirk to beat yer own gran’father.”
-
-Murphy was about to unmask his batteries and wither the red-faced man
-with sarcasm when Clancy interrupted him.
-
-“What d’yez want av me?” asked he.
-
-“Yer got a pink ticket there. Just open it and paste this sticker over
-Pete Slattery’s name.”
-
-“Divil the bit! Sure, Slattery’s a friend av mine, an’ a customer.”
-
-“But, say, he’s for Kelly! Ye ain’t goin’ to help that slob to lick us,
-are ye?”
-
-“For Kelly! Begorry, they niver towld me that. Where’s yez sticker?
-Divil a boost’ll I give a man that’s for James Kelly.”
-
-A deep murmur that swelled into a smothered roar came from the cigar
-store where the balloting was being held. A dense group of excited,
-gesticulating workers were gathered about the table; in their midst
-stood two men, their noses almost together, their faces pale, their
-voices high-pitched and angry.
-
-“Ye don’t vote, see,” declared one. “Ye ain’t got no vote, here, and
-that goes.”
-
-“I’m as good a Democrat as youse,” maintained the other, “you’re a
-mugwump, ye stiff!”
-
-“You’re a liar!”
-
-In an instant they had clinched and were making maddened efforts to
-strike. A policeman rushed in, tore them apart and hustled one out upon
-the sidewalk. Murphy desperately forced his way through the crowd; he
-saw a vote being lost to his faction, and the sight aroused all his
-combativeness.
-
-“Let him go,” commanded he. “He didn’t do nothin’, Callahan!”
-
-Officer Callahan turned with upraised club. “I’ll break your face!”
-growled he, “I’m dead onto you, anyhow.”
-
-There was no telling to what extreme the young man would have gone, had
-not McGonagle and some others pulled him away.
-
-“Youse must be daffy!” exclaimed Goose, “D’ye want to play right into
-their hands? Every copper around the booth’s a Kelly man and they’ll
-rope in us people if we look cross-eyed; and then we’ll get the wrong
-end of it, sure.”
-
-“The wagon’s been out t’ree times in Tom Hogan’s precinct,” said
-another, “they’re challengin’ all our people and t’rowin’ ’em down--an’
-givin’ ’em a ride if they kick.”
-
-“I know’d Hogan’d get the goose if he’d go against Daily alone.
-Somebody go down and help him out”; continued Murphy. “Hully Gee, we
-gotta’ hold ’em safe down there, it’s our strongest graft, and we can’t
-afford to be gold-bricked, gents.”
-
-“It’s too late,” spoke McGonagle, looking at his open-faced watch; “the
-polls’ll be closed in a quarter of an hour.”
-
-Jerry McGlory dashed up in his father’s falling-top buggy.
-
-“Anything doing?” asked he.
-
-“It’s all done,” answered Larry.
-
-“How’s the vote?”
-
-“Heavy as lead.”
-
-“They’re doin’ us dirt,” said McGlory, bitterly. “They’re pullin’ our
-vote, an’ holdin’ ’em for a hearin’ in the mornin’. They took twelve
-out o’ Mason’s precinct since seven o’clock!”
-
-“Move over,” said Larry. He and McGonagle jumped into the carriage
-beside Jerry, as he continued: “Now throw it into that old skate o’
-yourn for all yer worth.”
-
-“Which way?” asked McGlory.
-
-“Up to Moran’s,” answered his friend. “He’s goin’ to do somethin’
-damned quick, or the next guy he holds for a hearin’ ’ll have done
-somethin’ to be held for!”
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XVIII
-
- “_The iron tongue of midnight hath told twelve._”
-
- SHAKESPEARE.
-
-
-BUT Moran was not to be found. After the horse had been put up,
-Jerry started for the club. Larry and McGonagle began a round of the
-divisions; but finding the polling places closed, followed Jerry’s
-footsteps. The hour was midnight; the moon was pushing its red rim
-above the housetops; and the great heart of the city throbbed but
-slowly. The streets were silent, deserted, save for a single pedestrian
-who now and then loomed up, ghost-like, from the shadows and as
-suddenly vanished from view.
-
-“So youse t’ink we’ve got the bulge, eh?” asked Goose, as they hurried
-along.
-
-“Sure! We copped votes in places where I t’ought we’d get the
-dinky-dink. If the other end o’ the ward’s as much to the good, we’re
-all right.”
-
-An engine pulled out of the freight yard as they were about to pass
-and stood coughing and panting upon the path, blocking their passage.
-A shower of cinders dropped through the grate bars, turned a dull red
-and then expired; a man ran along the top of the cars swinging his lamp
-in frantic signals; the moist, grimy face of the fireman peered through
-the cab window, his inflamed eyes blinking at the fluttering red spark;
-then the lever was reversed with a jerk, and back they go until a
-sudden crash and a shrill “Why-OO!” tells the engineer that another car
-has been added to his string.
-
-“Come on,” said Goose, “here comes the ‘loco’ again. What are youse
-lookin’ at?”
-
-Murphy was gazing over his shoulder into the shadow and did not take
-advantage of the shifting engine’s retreat. Two men were swiftly
-crossing the street toward them.
-
-“Here comes a couple o’ gents what wants to sling us a breeze,” said
-Larry. “It’s either the price of a bed they’re chasin’ up, or they want
-to give us a piece o’ lead pipe.”
-
-“The fat one looks like old Kelly,” observed McGonagle. “Say, _he_
-can’t be on the fight, kin he?”
-
-They waited for the men to come up; and once more the signal lamp
-swayed up and down, once more the engine wheezed out upon the path,
-groaning and hissing as though in protest. A man rushed down the track,
-paused under the flaring head-light to look at some papers, and then
-began swearing at someone in the darkness. He had lost one hand and the
-stump was armed with an iron hook; this he waved frantically.
-
-“Drop them last cars! Go down the next siding and pick up the flats!
-You know better than this, Conroy!”
-
-The engine seemed to have caught his humour for it snorted angrily; the
-crew began twisting madly at the brakes, the lamps were set swinging
-down the track; a shadowy form darted out of the gloom, threw open
-a switch and was immediately swallowed up again. The panting of the
-locomotive grew fainter; from far down the yard its head-light burned
-like a dim, red spark. The man with the hook entered a watch box and
-angrily slammed the door. Silence!
-
-“We heard that yez had come this way,” remarked Kelly, as he came up.
-“McQuirk an’ mesilf were passin’ Phil Burk’s place as he wur shuttin’
-up an’ he towld us yez had started for the club.”
-
-“We want to have a little talk,” said the boss, as they walked along.
-“A little confabulation, you know.”
-
-Larry nudged his friend, and received a like signal in return.
-
-“All right,” said he, cheerfully, “sing your song, Mac. What’s on yer
-mind?”
-
-“We want till ax yez--” Kelly began, hurriedly; but McQuirk stopped him.
-
-“Let me tend to this,” requested he, coolly. He turned to Larry and in
-a fatherly fashion laid his hand upon his shoulder. They were under
-an arc lamp and in the blue-white light, Larry saw that his face was
-wrinkling with smiles.
-
-“You boys put up a good fight,” said McQuirk. “I like the way you
-run things. Me an’ Moran was talkin’ about an hour ago; he’s feelin’
-obliged to the club for turnin’ in for Rhinehardt for common council,
-and told me to tell you so.”
-
-“Don’t mention it,” murmured Larry.
-
-“There’s bigger lobsters than Rhinehardt kickin’ around loose,” put in
-McGonagle. “He kin get a lamp-post put on the corner if youse want one
-bad; an’ he kin have one took away if youse kick. That’s more’n some o’
-the other guys kin do for the ward.”
-
-McQuirk nodded and smiled approvingly.
-
-“Haley’s got a safe majority in the convention,” said he; “the present
-member’ll go back on the ticket for Congress; Abrams has won in a
-canter; and the only man that’s been back-heeled is Kelly, here. You
-boys fought him so hard that he could only split even.”
-
-“Much obliged for puttin’ us on,” said Larry. “So we made it a draw,
-eh?”
-
-“That’s just what you done,” laughed the boss; “an even draw! I like
-to see young roosters make a game fight; it shows that they’re made of
-good stuff. But, look here; now that you’ve showed your spurs, what are
-ye goin’ to do? Kelly’s the choice of the regular crowd.”
-
-Facing them was Kerrigan’s saloon, ablaze with incandescent lamps. A
-number of men came noisily forth and went wrangling up the street; the
-white-jacketed barkeeper came out and looked after them; then he went
-in, banged the door and turned off the lights.
-
-“Damn it!” exclaimed Kelly; “he’s shut up. I wur just goin’ till ax yez
-in till have a sup av somethin’.”
-
-“Much obliged,” returned Larry. “We ain’t hittin’ the booze to-night.
-We’re in trainin’, see?”
-
-“The regulars all want Kelly,” persisted McQuirk, “and we want to hear
-from you people. Who are ye goin’ to throw the vote for?”
-
-Larry looked at him sourly.
-
-“The reg’lar crowd, eh?” sneered he. “That’s a good t’ing, ain’t
-it?” to McGonagle, “that’s a real good t’ing.” He turned once more
-to McQuirk and demanded: “Say who is the regulars, eh? Ain’t it the
-majority o’ the party? And if none o’ us ain’t got the big end o’ it,
-who d’youse call the reg’lar push, eh? Ain’t us guys, what’s workin’
-agin Kelly, inside the lines? Don’t we say our say? And don’t we win if
-we hold the people?”
-
-“Keep yer shirt on,” soothed McQuirk.
-
-“That’s all right, see?” Larry was speaking in a loud, sharp tone,
-working his arms like flails. They had paused upon the sidewalk,
-before the door of the club. The piano was being thumped joyously and a
-thundering chorus came through the partly opened windows:
-
- “_I’m candidate,
- For magistrate,
- An’ believe me what I say,
- So, pull off your coat,
- An’ cast yer vote,
- For me on ’lection day._”
-
-The singing ceased suddenly and a voice shouted:
-
-“What’s the matter wit’ Kelly?”
-
-A cyclone of groans, hisses and profanity came whirling out into the
-night. The execrated one looked at McQuirk; and McQuirk shrugged his
-shoulders and laughed. A man got between the light and one of the club
-windows; his body, silhouetted upon the blind, writhed and swayed; his
-right hand flourished a beer glass above his head, apparently demanding
-silence. At last his voice was heard.
-
-“Gents,” cried he, “we have slammed it into ’em, ain’t that right?
-We’ve got the t’ing cinched! We don’t want that lobster Kelly, and
-we’ll sit on the mugs what trys to ring him in. We got a man of our
-own.” He flourished the glass, seeming to defy contradiction. “We got a
-man of our own,” repeated he; “and he’s a winner in a walk! Gents, I’ll
-ask you for t’ree rips for old man McGlory!”
-
-The yell that followed split the silence like a knife; the man with the
-glass vanished from the blind; the piano resumed its measured beat; the
-triumphant chorus once more began.
-
-“Youse just asked me what us people was agoin’ to do,” said Larry.
-“Well the gang just saved me the trouble o’ tellin’ yez.”
-
-“So McGlory will go afore the convention, Murphy?” asked Kelly.
-
-“It looks like it,” admitted Larry.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XIX
-
- “_We were batting the town, from the sun went down,
- Till the morning grew grey in the sky;
- And we heard the cocks crow, as we homeward did go,
- With our skins full of mellow old rye._”
-
- SONGS OF THE CURB.
-
-
-WHEN the two young men pushed open the door leading to the club’s
-parlour, they found themselves in a vortex of wild enthusiasm. The
-congregated members, for the most part, were coatless; and with cigars
-clinched between their teeth they madly gyrated about the room to the
-tune of:
-
- “_Oh Murphy he was paralyzed,
- McCarty couldn’t see,
- I was drunk, but Ferguson,
- Was a damn sight worse than me!_”
-
-Danny Casey, his suspenders slipped from his shoulders and his derby
-hat tipped back upon his head, presided at the piano; McGlory, standing
-upon the pool table waved his arms like a bandmaster.
-
-Mike McCarty appeared to be the only sane person in the place; he stood
-in the doorway that led to the adjoining room, as self-possessed, as
-well-dressed as ever, a smile upon his face. Though he was born in an
-alley and of a woman who took in washing, Mike, in instinct, taste
-and deportment, was a gentleman. Seeing Larry and McGonagle enter, he
-beckoned them into the other room and closed the door.
-
-“The push is havin’ a good time,” remarked Larry. “That’s a lovely
-skate McGlory’s got.”
-
-“They’re all about half lit up,” returned McCarty; “and they are plumb
-daffy, too. It’s best to save yer sky-rockets till after the game’s
-won; ain’t that right?”
-
-“We’ll take it from youse,” agreed Larry.
-
-“How did youse make out?” asked Mike.
-
-“Knocked ’em cold! We both go to the convention, all right.”
-
-“It was a cinch,” put in Goose. “There’s about forty o’ McGlory’s
-drivers boardin’ in my division, and when the old man cut ’em loose,
-the Kelly push wilted like wet rags.”
-
-“Then we got ’em,” declared Mike, exultantly. “I knowed youse’d win
-out; that gives us two more.” He nodded toward a sheet of foolscap upon
-the table, covered with names and figures. “Kerrigan made that,” added
-he. “It’s all right, I guess.”
-
-Larry and McGonagle bent over the paper attentively; the uproar in the
-other room continued; but the tune was changed; the dancing had ceased
-and the voices of the overjoyed members were raised in the ditty:
-
- “_I’m goin’ down to Kerrigan’s,
- On purpose to get tight,
- An’ when I get home again,
- There’s goin’ to be a fight,
- I’ll smash up all the furniture,
- And all the dishes, too,
- Upset the stove when I go in,
- Is the first t’ing I will do._”
-
-The reasons for these acts of domestic vandalism were not inquired into
-by Murphy or McGonagle; each had his finger upon a name and they were
-looking at each other with something like dismay.
-
-“Tim Daily,” Larry straightened up and fairly glared.
-
-“And Levitsky,” moaned Goose. “Elected by our people, too! Oh, I kin
-see our finish, right here.”
-
-“Hully Gee!” murmured McCarty, “is them people been worked in? Then
-they’re got the bulge.”
-
-There ensued a silence as sulphurous as any profanity ever conceived by
-mortal man. Then McGonagle spoke. “Well,” demanded he, of Larry, “what
-next?”
-
-“They’ve put us up against it, hard,” mourned Larry.
-
-“Got anyt’ing to say Murphy?”
-
-Larry glowered at them in bovine fury. “I went into this mix,” declared
-he, his right hand beating upon his left, “to win! And we’re goin’ to
-win if we have to tear up the ward be the roots! McQuirk’s played a
-foxy game, and worked some of our people for rank suckers, see? But
-we’ll kick the props from under him and do him brown, d’ye hear? We’ll
-do him brown!”
-
-“How?” ventured McGonagle.
-
-“How? I don’t care a damn how we do it! We ain’t a’goin’ to let him
-play us for good t’ings, are we?”
-
-“Let’s go see Daily,” suggested Goose.
-
-McCarty looked at his watch. “It only wants a couple o’ minutes o’
-one,” said he, “Daily’s snorin’ t’ beat the band by this time.”
-
-“Not on yer life! He’s on the night shift this week,” said Larry. “We
-kin see him, all right. Come on, Goose.”
-
-The two repassed through the parlour, almost unnoticed in the
-excitement, and down the stairs to the street. They headed eastward
-over Girard Avenue, their objective point being one of the iron mills
-that line the river front in Kensington.
-
-Down a narrow street, under the light of the lamps, a dozen or more
-of men were swinging long-handled brooms; a pair of bony, dispirited
-horses followed in their track, their driver shovelling the heaps of
-rubbish into the cart. The scavengers droned a strange-sounding song
-as they worked; the watching overseer talked constantly, in a sharp,
-high tone; the horses hung their heads dejectedly and rattled at the
-chains of their harness.
-
-“That’s some of McGlory’s night gang,” remarked Larry. “They start
-’em out early since the loot reported dirty streets in the old man’s
-district.”
-
-They turned into a quiet street leading toward the river. A cellar door
-opened, and a broad barb of light shot across the sidewalk; from the
-midst of this rose a pallid, spectral form, and stood looking calmly
-into the night. But it was only a baker, clad in his spotless working
-dress, popping out of his overheated basement for a breath of air. A
-great stack, towering skyward, and vomiting a blazing shower of sparks
-into the night, showed that they were nearing the mill. The huge, low,
-shed-like buildings lifted their corrugated walls, like the beginnings
-of greater structures; a knot of men were gathered about the wide
-doorway; they had limp, damp towels twisted about their necks and all
-smoked short pipes. Rows of puddlers, naked to the waist, their bodies
-glistening with perspiration, stood before the furnaces “balling” the
-molten metal; from time to time one would drench himself with water,
-and once more face the Cyclopean eye glaring so angrily upon him.
-
-Daily was among the crowd at the door, and he smiled and winked at his
-fellows, as the two young men approached.
-
-“We’ll on’y keep youse a second,” said Larry. He gathered from Daily’s
-expression that he knew the nature of their errand. “Come on in here.”
-
-The three entered the building. The vast mill was in almost complete
-darkness, save for the far end where, sweltering, the puddlers
-toiled; here and there an incandescent light threw a thin gleam over
-the ponderous machines which crouched close to the floor like squat
-black monsters. Huge cogs, a-glitter with grease ground together with
-metallic growls.
-
-“Cut it out,” said Daily; “this heat’ll be on in a minute or so.”
-
-“We’ve heard that yous’re got the papers in your division to vote in
-the convention t’morrow,” said Larry.
-
-“That’s what,” grinned Daily. “I’m the delegate, all right.”
-
-“Who are youse for?” asked Larry.
-
-“Why Kelly, of course! I’m a regular, see? I don’t get dead sore
-because t’ings ain’t batted my way; ain’t that right? I didn’t start to
-work to-night till I got out the vote,” continued Daily, with a laugh,
-“an’ the way your people shoved their little old votes in for me when
-Foley slung ’em a breeze that I was against Kelly, would make youse hit
-yer mother. Say, it was the real t’ing!”
-
-“I knowed youse done us dirt!” exclaimed Larry.
-
-“None o’ youse could a-squeezed in any other way in that division,” put
-in McGonagle, angrily.
-
-“Ah, git out! If they was fools enough, whose fault is it? If you was
-dead set on carryin’ the precinct, why didn’t youse watch your end o’
-the game, eh? But I got the vote, and I’m for Kelly!”
-
-From far away in the dimness of the mill, a hammer rang upon an iron
-plate with a tumultuous clangour. A voice vociferated:
-
-“Heat! Heat! Heat-oo!”
-
-Pipes were laid aside; heavy shoes rattled along the plated floor; the
-rolls began to rumble slowly as the belts were shifted from the loose
-pulleys; the men seized their tools and stood ready.
-
-“So long,” said Daily. “The heat’s up.”
-
-“Hold on!” Murphy held him by the arm and spoke rapidly. “Listen to me.
-A delegate sits in a pow-wow to talk for the people what sends him;
-ain’t that right? An’ if they sends him to salt a man, and he supports
-him, why he’s playin’ ’em all for good t’ings!”
-
-Daily turned away. “Youse give me a pain,” sneered he, over his
-shoulder.
-
-They watched him as he took his place at the rolls. Huge tongs running
-upon trolleys, were shoved into the gaping maws of the furnaces and
-each emerged gripping a white-hot mass of metal. A jarring concussion
-rang through the building; it was the first of these being passed
-through the rolls, and its scattering scales made even the hardened
-“passers” flinch. Report followed report; the darkness had vanished
-before the lurid glare; the heat of the place became blistering. Amid
-the blinding flashes and the serpentlike bars that crawled about the
-floor, the men worked furiously, like heat-maddened demons, engaged in
-some dread incantation.
-
-Then they turned and walked away. Larry’s face worked with rage;
-McGonagle walked gloomily along at his side, his hands stuffed into his
-pockets, his head bent dejectedly.
-
-“We’ve got it where we live,” said the latter. “It was all serene till
-we heard o’ this, and if he’s goin’ to vote for Kelly, why we can’t
-stop him, that’s all; we can’t do nawthin’.”
-
-“T’ell we can’t!” cried the enraged Murphy. “Say, look’et here, Goose;
-one hour after Tim Daily says ‘yea’ for Kelly he’ll be in St. Mary’s
-done up in splints! He’s played crooked with us people, ain’t that
-right? And we’ll git even if we have to t’ump him. Ah!”
-
-They walked along for a time, in silence.
-
-“Are ye goin’ to see the other lobster?” questioned Goose.
-
-“Let’s go over to the Dutchman’s, hit a bracer and talk t’ings over,
-first. I’ve got cobwebs in me head an’ I want to brush ’em away. The
-motzer kin wait till daylight.”
-
-The saloon was the only all-night establishment in the neighbourhood.
-It glittered with clusters of electric lamps and broad, gilt-framed
-mirrors; a marble-topped bar backed by pyramids of glasses and bottles
-stood upon one side.
-
-They talked in a desultory way for some time, consuming much beer and
-many plates of sandwiches. Dawn stretched a grey hand through the
-window and dimmed the clusters of lights; and when they ranged along
-the bar for the last drink, the streets were filling with people
-hurrying toward their work.
-
-Then they tramped off toward the spreading Hebrew settlement on North
-Second Street. Levitsky, the man whom they sought, while he claimed
-a voting place in the ward, really lived south of the line, in one
-of the row of houses that face the old market sheds. These teem with
-long-coated, huge-bearded Russian Jews, who drag their stock in trade
-upon the sidewalk each morning and prowl up and down before it watching
-for customers, and hoarsely shouting in a mixture of English and
-Yiddish.
-
-Larry and his chum paused before a dirty bulk window heaped with odds
-and ends of merchandise; on a stand upon the sidewalk lay little
-stacks of Yiddish newspapers and pamphlets; a thin, yellow-faced man,
-in a round, high-crowned cap, and with a beard of patriarchal length,
-sat in the doorway twisting a cigarette out of some damp tobacco. He
-was a wise man in the Ghetto, learned in the law and a public reader
-of the scrolls; he knew the ways of Gentile youth when it was half
-drunken, for he drew his long coat about his gaunt frame as they
-approached, and raised his hand to prevent the expected plucking at his
-beard.
-
-“Where’s Levitsky?” asked Larry.
-
-The man in the velvet cap gestured his relief and called shrilly to
-someone within. A girl came out; a dark-eyed, deep-breasted girl, the
-perfect type of Jewess.
-
-“Levitsky’s gone down to get his breakfast at Sam’s,” said she.
-
-“Much obliged,” said Larry. “Come on, Goose.”
-
-Down the street a scarlet lettered sign flamed conspicuously among a
-wilderness of others, and thither they hurried and entered at the door
-over which it hung. The revolving fans drove the hot, strong-odoured
-breath of the place into their faces; waiters, greasy aproned and
-perspiring, rushed about dexterously balancing pyramids of food-filled
-crockery; the room resounded with shouted orders and the incessant
-ringing of the cash register.
-
-“There he is,” said Larry.
-
-A stocky young man, in a collarless shirt, was just about to seat
-himself at a table; he greeted them surprisedly.
-
-“Vy cert’ny,” answered he, “ye kin see me. But I cand sell no bolicy
-here, chends; there ish doo many beoble.”
-
-“We ain’t lookin’ for policy. We want to see youse about yer little old
-vote in the convention.”
-
-Levitsky grinned. “Oh!” said he, “vell, sit down. Vill you have anyding
-to eat?”
-
-“No!” said Larry. “We’ll on’y stay in here a second.”
-
-The policy-writer did not urge them, but turned to the waiter.
-
-“Two fried eggs; a rare steak ant onions, ant a cup of coffee.”
-
-And then Larry proceeded to state his views; Levitsky listened, never
-volunteering a word, until he had finished his excited remarks, then he
-spoke.
-
-“Youse chends alvays treaded me right,” said he, “and I wud like to
-do someding for you, an’d dot ride? But McQuirk jusd god me oudt of
-drouble and I cand go pack on him, can I?” He flourished his arms
-wildly as though protesting against the mere thought. “I vill leave id
-to you fellas!” exclaimed he, “vould id be ride?”
-
-This involved a question of ethics with which neither Larry nor
-McGonagle felt themselves capable of grappling.
-
-“But say,” demanded Murphy, “do youse t’ink us people’s goin’ to make
-good to McQuirk because he got youse out o’ hock? If ye want’s to
-square yerself, don’t make us stand for that. Ye’ve copped a sneak on
-us, Levitsky, ye know ye have.”
-
-They argued the question until the ordered breakfast appeared. Levitsky
-attacked it, apparently unmoved in his determination to remain faithful
-to the boss; the others got up angry and despairing.
-
-“Just now,” said Larry, “it looks as if youse had us skinned to death;
-but, say, there’s a block for every punch, and if Daily and youse try
-to double bank us, we’ll git even in the convention if we have to pull
-the shack!”
-
-And they left the place.
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XX
-
- “_Come all ye sons of Erin an’ listen to my lay,
- An’ I’ll tell the story av the wise man av Galway,
- A credit to his country--a credit to his name,
- Three provinces a-ringin’ wid the echoes av his fame._”
-
- AN OLD COME-ALL-YE.
-
-
-THERE were but few at the six o’clock service, and these were so
-scattered about the church as to create the impression of vacancy.
-The priest, glittering in gold-embroidered vestments intoned the mass
-at the high altar; the acolytes drowsily made the responses; the
-worshippers followed the sacrifice with devout attention; a restless
-child now and then broke the silence that pervaded.
-
-A light stole through a long, stained window, throwing shafts of
-crimson and purple radiance across the side altar, where stood a carven
-image of the Holy Virgin. A girl knelt at the altar rail, her head
-bowed, her hands clasped. Even the black-robed sisters, who taught in
-the parochial school, now and then raised their eyes to look at her,
-for she was so white, her attitude was so supplicating.
-
-Larry Murphy who was very regular at church since Mary died, often
-glanced up from his book to look at the pleading figure; but he did not
-recognize her, he was too far off, or the light was too dim. It was
-Rosie O’Hara.
-
-With all her pure young heart Rosie was pleading for her love. Right or
-wrong she had been taught to carry her griefs to her who had been born
-into the world to crush the serpent’s head; and with an intensity for
-which her mind could find no words, she prayed mutely.
-
-The gleaming, richly-wrought vessels had been taken from the tabernacle
-and stood upon the pure white altar cloth; the good father bent his
-knee, and every head sank in adoration. Rosie, awed to the very soul at
-the proximity of the unveiled host, found words--the words of the angel:
-
-“Hail Mary, full of grace,” she breathed, “blessed art thou among
-women; and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.”
-
-At intervals the bell continued to ring softly, the people beat their
-breasts; all bent before the uplifted host, save the child, who looked
-on, open-eyed, wondering.
-
-“Holy Mary, mother of God,” pleaded the girl. “Pray for us sinners, now
-and at the hour of our death!”
-
-When the services were ended, Rosie lingered until the priest had left
-the altar and the people had gone. Upon her way out she paused. In a
-far corner, where the light scarcely fell, hung a pale, white Christ
-upon a cross; she knelt and pressed her lips to the wounded feet, her
-eyes bright with tears, and then she passed out through the great
-swinging doors.
-
-Larry had been one of the first to leave the church; Jimmie Larkin, who
-was standing upon Kerrigan’s corner, saw him, instantly crossed the
-street and advanced to meet him.
-
-“Larkin!” young Murphy’s voice showed his surprise; and he held out his
-hand in a hearty, full-blooded fashion. But Jimmie stuffed his hands
-into his pockets, and stared at him, with a sneer.
-
-“Ain’t youse forgot somethin’?” asked he.
-
-Larry looked his astonishment: “What’s hurtin’ ye?” he demanded.
-
-“Ye know well enough! I’ve bin put next to the cross game yer workin’,
-Murphy; I’m dead on, I tell ye, and I’m rotten sorry! I trusted ye, I
-did; I trusted youse like I would me brother.”
-
-“Say, what’s the matter with youse, Larkin? Don’t stand there like a
-stuffed shirt! Put me on to the trouble. What are youse jumpin’ me for?”
-
-“Ah! Don’t try that; it won’t work. I ain’t sore because I got the
-dinky-dink, but on’y because youse had a hand in it! You was me pal,
-wasn’t youse? Didn’t I usta sleep with youse? And didn’t we eat
-together? I borried yer coin when I was strapped, and lent youse mine
-when I had any. You knowed all about how it was with me and her,
-ye knowed it and done me dirt when me back was turned. That’s the
-part what hurts, an I’ve broke trainin’ to come here and lick youse,
-Murphy--to lick youse till ye beg!”
-
-Larry drew back, frowning into the other’s flushed face.
-
-“I don’t know what ye mean,” said he, sharply. “Youse’re a friend o’
-mine, Larkin, and I’ll stand for all kinds o’ talk from ye, but, say,
-if ye go t’rowin’ any punches my way, I’ll try to give ye a run for yer
-trouble.”
-
-It was then that Rosie came out of the church. She saw, with frightened
-eyes, the angry and threatening gestures, and caught the high, sharp
-tones of their voices. She hurried forward, her heart palpitating,
-realizing at once the cause of the quarrel.
-
-“Oh, Jimmie,” she exclaimed. “Have you got back home!”
-
-“Oh, yes,” said he mockingly: “I’ve come back. I just wanted to see
-Larry, that’s all.”
-
-“Don’t ask Larry about it,” she pleaded, eagerly. “He don’t know a
-thing. Let’s walk down toward McTurpin’s, and I’ll tell you--”
-
-Larkin laughed and interrupted her. “Gee!” exclaimed he, “is it that
-bad, eh? Is he a-goin’ to hide behind yer skirts?”
-
-“I ain’t a-goin to hide, and I ain’t got no reason to hide,” stormed
-Murphy. “Come on, whatever it is! We’ll settle this right here.”
-
-“Don’t fight,” said Rosie, frightened more than ever. “Look you’re
-a-most in front of the church. Honest to God, Larry, I couldn’t help
-it! Me father got it around: He told everybody.”
-
-“Eh! Told what?”
-
-“Why, you know that, what Mary said; you ain’t forgot about that? When
-she was dyin’, I mean.”
-
-“Oh! No! But what’s he gotta do with that? That’s what I want to know;
-where’s his kick a-comin?”
-
-“Me and him was engaged, ye know, an’ Pop made me write to him that me
-and you--”
-
-“No!” Murphy fairly gasped as he caught her meaning. “Say, did youse do
-that?”
-
-Rosie began to choke and sob.
-
-“Oh, Larry, I couldn’t help it; they frightened me so; and I was
-willing to do anything.”
-
-Larkin was looking from one to the other, puzzled, glowering and
-suspicious. Murphy turned to him.
-
-“You’re right,” said he. “If ye t’ought I was doin’ that, I don’t blame
-youse for wantin’ to start t’ings my way. But, say, we kin fix this up
-to suit. Les’ go in here,” nodding to the open iron gate that led to
-the little burial ground behind the church. “We kin talk all we want
-and nobody’ll hear us.”
-
-They walked about the tiny inclosure where lay the parish dead, under
-the rank tufts of grass and the weather-beaten stones; and there they
-told Jimmie of Mary’s request, and Rosie narrated the story of her
-father’s crafty handling of her to break one promise and keep the other.
-
-Young Larkin drew his breath, slowly, after all had been said, and then
-expelled it with great force. He held out his hand to Larry.
-
-“It’s up to me,” said he. “I might a-knowed, old pal; but youse know
-how it is.”
-
-“It’s all right,” said Murphy, shaking his hand; “on’y ye might
-a-looked at it that way before ye jumped me. But let it go at that,
-it’s all to the good now.”
-
-“But the promise,” said Rosie. “That’ll always be there; I can’t break
-it; I’d be frightened to.”
-
-“Gee!” cried Larkin, impatiently. “Don’t mind that; Mary was outa
-her head, see? And the old ones was a-workin’ youse; they was after
-Murphy’s money, see?”
-
-But the fear was implanted too deeply in her breast to be moved by
-this. Larry understood and pondered the matter, while Jimmie argued
-and Rosie sobbed.
-
-“Why, it’s easy,” said he, suddenly. “You needn’t break your promise,
-Rosie, if youse’re afraid.”
-
-The others looked at him, hopefully.
-
-“It was you what promised,” said Larry. “I didn’t say a word, see? I’ll
-lay down! I won’t marry youse; and if I won’t, how kin youse go ahead,
-eh? It lets youse out! That’s what it does--it lets youse out!”
-
-The simplicity of this made Larkin stare, and caused Rosie hopefully to
-dry her eyes. Larry was vociferously triumphant; he saw all made clear,
-and was as happy as he desired them to be.
-
-“I’ll go round and bruise up yer father,” said he. “I’ll talk to him
-like a Dutch uncle, I will. Him and the two old ones’ll play light on
-the ghost game when I get through. They’ll see it ain’t no use. Take a
-walk with Jimmie, Rosie; don’t go home till youse t’ink I’ve left. I’ll
-make it right, all right!”
-
-But this was not the only incident of the morning. Annie Clancy stood
-in the door of the grocery store; and as Goose McGonagle came along
-he naturally stopped for a chat. The voice of Clancy could be heard
-grumbling from the interior.
-
-“What’s the matter with yer father?” asked Goose.
-
-“Don’t talk too loud,” warned Annie, with uplifted finger, “he might
-hear ye. He’s been in an awful temper ever since his half sister, old
-Miss Cassidy, died. They say she left her money to the Church. He
-thought he’d git it, and then he’d be able to pay--you know what.”
-
-The milkman nodded.
-
-“I ought to,” answered he, “I can’t t’ink o’ the mess I’m in meself
-without t’inkin’ o’ that. But his temper don’t cut no ice with me,
-Annie, I’m goin’ to talk to him to-day if I git t’run down or not.”
-
-“Annie!” called Clancy, angrily. “Sure, what keeps yez glosterin’ be
-the dure? Come in at wanst, an’ tind till yez bit av wurk.”
-
-“He knows I’m here,” smiled Goose.
-
-“I must go in,” whispered Annie, “good-by.”
-
-Goose started up the street upon his round, muttering:
-
-“Clancy ain’t so many, if he does run a grocery store. Annie’s willin’
-to call it a go, an’ I don’t see--Gee! Here comes O’Hara.”
-
-The second-hand dealer had just come out of his shop; he wore his
-narrow-rimmed high hat and carried his thick black-thorn cane.
-
-“Good mornin’ till yez, McGonagle,” saluted he.
-
-“How are youse?” responded Goose.
-
-“I have no rayson till complain,” said O’Hara. Then he tapped his stick
-once or twice upon the pavement, and cleared his throat. “McGonagle,”
-said he, “yez will be after havin’ the troifle av money that’s due me
-nixt week?”
-
-“Why, say, O’Hara, t’tell youse the trut’ I don’t see how I kin git it.
-Bizness is so rotten bad, ye know.”
-
-“What’s that? Bad luck till ye, McGonagle, what talk have yez?”
-
-“Don’t git hot! Youse heard me speak me piece, didn’t ye? Well, that’s
-jist what I mean. An’ I can’t stand chewin’ it with youse all day,
-O’Hara; me customers’ll be waitin’ for their milk. So long.”
-
-And with this he hurried off while O’Hara gazed angrily after him for
-a moment, then started off toward Clancy’s.
-
-“The bla’gard!” muttered O’Hara. “The thafe av the world till keep a
-daysint man out av his bit av money!”
-
-He entered Clancy’s and found the grocer alone, seated astride a crate,
-sorting eggs.
-
-“The top av the mornin’ till yez, Clancy,” said O’Hara, politely.
-
-“The same till yezsilf,” responded Clancy. “Sure, an’ it’s glad till
-see yez I am, this foine mornin’.” Then under his breath he added: “God
-forgi’me for the lie I’m tellin’.”
-
-“I’ve jist luked in till ask if yez have the troifle av money that’s
-due me,” said O’Hara.
-
-“I have not the price av a can av beer in the house. Faix an’ I’ve jist
-paid me butter man who shud have had his money last Chuesday, an’ it’s
-claned out I am, entirely.”
-
-“An’ might I ax yez, Mister Clancy, what’s till become av me?”
-
-“Scure till the wan av me knows. Can’t ye extind the time?”
-
-“Divil raysave the day!” And O’Hara turned abruptly toward the door.
-“Mister Clancy, I will have me money, principal an’ intrust, or I will
-sell yez out!” He paused upon the threshold. “Iv ye are not at me store
-t’morry at twelve be the day, I will have Haggerty, the constable, down
-on yez. Mister Clancy, good day till yez, sir!” And he slammed the door
-behind him.
-
-“An’ the divil go wid ye,” exclaimed Clancy, savagely, as he resumed
-his work upon the crate of eggs.
-
-“Ain’t ye goin’ to church this mornin’, Pop?” called Annie, from an
-inner room.
-
-“Faith an’ I am,” answered her father, rising hurriedly, and slipping
-off his apron. “It’s bad luck enough I’m havin’ widout missin’ me juty.
-What time is it, asthore?”
-
-“It wants on’y a few minutes.”
-
-Clancy put on his coat. “It wur a black day,” he muttered, as he
-started off, “when I borryed that money av Malachi O’Hara. The owld
-villyan’ll keep his word, bad luck till him; it’s in a trench wid a
-pick I’ll be, afore the week’s out.”
-
-After leaving Rosie and Larkin, Larry Murphy headed straight for
-O’Hara’s; but he had scarce gone a half block when he encountered
-Kerrigan and Mason, who had just paused before Owen Dwyer’s door. Mason
-grasped the young man’s hand and shook it warmly.
-
-“I am delighted that you have made such a splendid fight against
-McQuirk,” said he.
-
-“It ain’t McQuirk, so much,” said Larry. “Kelly’s the man I’m after.”
-
-“We’re just going in to see Owen Dwyer, about the delegates for his
-division,” said Kerrigan. “Won’t you come in? He’ll want to see you, I
-know.”
-
-Owen had seen the trio from the window and had opened the door in time
-to catch these words.
-
-“Come in, Larry,” said he cordially. “It’s a stranger ye’ve made av
-yezsilf long enough.”
-
-Owen had asked him to visit them many times before, but Larry had never
-done so because of the fear that Maggie would think he was forcing
-himself upon her, and this his pride would not permit. He was reluctant
-to enter even now, but somehow there was also a feeling of gladness in
-his being unable to refuse.
-
-He sat upon the edge of the chair that Owen offered him, stole covert
-glances about the parlour and earnestly hoped that Maggie was not at
-home. A glance at the clock showed him that it was but shortly after
-eight, and he wonderingly confessed to a sense of satisfaction in the
-knowledge that school did not begin until nine. Owen settled his doubts
-by poking his head through the hangings of a doorway, and calling:
-
-“Maggie, asthore; can ye come here for a minyute? Sure, it’s company
-we’re after havin’ so airly in the mornin’.”
-
-Maggie entered the room, obediently; she flushed a little at sight of
-Larry, but managed to greet him in a calm, even voice that betrayed
-nothing of what she might feel.
-
-She talked to him of neighbourhood events, he answering awkwardly and
-distantly, as he always did with her. Her father had plunged into an
-earnest discussion, with the others, of the coming convention, and
-finally swept them out of the room to look at some figures which he
-had compiled, bearing upon the comparative strength of the opposing
-factions.
-
-There was a short silence after this; and, at length Maggie said:
-
-“I have wanted so to speak to you lately, but you are such a stranger!”
-
-A little thrill ran through Larry at these words. She had thought of
-_him_, then; and he fancied that he caught a note of vexation in her
-voice. He pondered this, confusedly, and did not reply. She continued:
-
-“I wanted to tell you how sorry I was at your great loss. Mary was a
-sweet and good girl.”
-
-“That’s right,” said he, eagerly. “There ain’t many like her, is there?”
-
-“No!” answered Maggie, gently.
-
-“She was too good for me,” said he, soberly.
-
-Though Maggie did not agree with him in this, she did not say so. And
-this is why: She had been a constant visitor during Mary’s illness,
-and the sorrow that had grown so upon the sick girl toward the end had
-not escaped her. Little by little she grasped the causes of this and
-realized why Larry had asked Mary to be his wife. She had laboured
-strenuously to persuade the gentle girl that love alone had been his
-motive, but without success. Though she had loved Larry from the
-days of her girlhood--and this Maggie had confessed to herself long
-before--still her heart was great enough to appreciate what he had
-endeavoured to do; and all the more because it proved him to be as
-noble as she had always believed him.
-
-“I also wanted to thank you,” said Maggie, “for what you did last
-night. Daddy has a great deal of money--for him, you know--invested in
-the City Railway Company’s stock, and the loss of his savings, now that
-he is old, would be bitter enough.”
-
-This was news to Larry and it startled him. The proposed steal of the
-Motor Traction Company had had very little to do with the fight he and
-his friends had made. As he had informed Mason, Kelly’s defeat was his
-object and so long as he accomplished this he had cared little for
-anything else.
-
-But Kelly and his hate of Kelly suddenly shrunk into insignificance,
-and the Traction Company began to loom up dragon-like with Maggie as
-its prospective victim.
-
-“I didn’t know that yer father stood to lose anyt’ing,” said he.
-Maggie’s face fell; she had thought that perhaps he had made the fight
-partly for her sake. He saw the change in her countenance and hastened
-to add: “He’ll come out all right, though; McGlory’s against that job
-they’re tryin’ t’work.”
-
-“And do you think Mr. McGlory will secure the nomination?”
-
-“Sure. They’ve worked a couple o’ ringers on us, but we’ll win out in
-spite o’ them.”
-
-The others re-entered the room at this point.
-
-“The thing is as plain as day,” said Kerrigan. “There were only three
-votes in the past session that held them down; the figures show that
-they have defeated two of these, and if this is the case and Kelly is
-not beaten, they have a majority of one.”
-
-“An’ that,” said Owen, “is as good as a hundred till do their darty
-wurk.”
-
-“Is it that close?” asked Larry. “Gee! we’ll have to hustle.”
-
-“They will seat these men, Daily and Levitsky, in the convention, by
-hook or by crook,” remarked Kerrigan. “And in that case they will have
-a majority of two.”
-
-“But the two-thirds rule,” Mason interrupted. “They must have
-two-thirds of the delegates to nominate.”
-
-“The bunch with the most tallies always wins out,” said Larry. “If they
-show a lead in the runnin’, enough’ll flop over to make good for them.”
-
-After a time Larry and Kerrigan arose to go, while Mason remained to
-talk with Owen.
-
-“Don’t forget, Mason,” said Kerrigan, “that I’ll want to see you
-to-morrow about old Miss Cassidy’s will.”
-
-“God help uz all”; said Owen. “All av the owld neighbours is dyin’ off.
-She wur a kind body, too, wur Miss Cassidy, for all she wur an owld
-maid.”
-
-Maggie opened the door for the two young men as they departed. She
-smiled as she said:
-
-“You must come again, Larry,” and then as an after-thought, “And you
-too, Mr. Kerrigan.”
-
-Kerrigan looked at Murphy quizzically, as they walked down the street.
-
-“You’re ace high there, Larry.”
-
-“Oh, cut it out,” said Larry, impatiently. But he was glad to hear it
-said, nevertheless.
-
-Goose McGonagle had covered his route quickly that morning and by the
-time service was finished in the church and the thin stream of people
-began to flow into the street, he was standing on the step of Regan’s
-cigar store anxiously awaiting Clancy.
-
-The grocer had stopped to discuss the primaries upon the sidewalk in
-front of the church, and some little time elapsed before he arrived at
-the point where Goose was awaiting him.
-
-“Hello, Clancy,” saluted the latter, cordially. “How’s t’ings?” But
-without pausing for a reply he took the elder man by the sleeve and
-led him out to the curb. “Say,” inquired he, “have youse noticed that
-I’ve been hangin’ around your place a good bit in the last two or t’ree
-mont’s?”
-
-“I have,” answered Clancy, bracing himself stiffly.
-
-“Then I guess youse’re onto the reason.”
-
-The grocer’s looks were not encouraging and Goose began to waver. But
-he pulled himself together, and blurted out. “Say, do youse mind if me
-and Annie gits Father Dawson to tie the knot?”
-
-“Is it yezsilf would take Annie till Father Dawson?”
-
-“Sure.”
-
-“Well, the divil himself niver witnessed sich a cheek. An’ might I ax
-what yez have till kape a wife on?”
-
-“Why, I ain’t got much dough,” admitted Goose, ruefully. “But there’s
-me milk route and--”
-
-“Arrah, go long wid ye! There’s a dale av money in the milk business,
-Goose, me b’y, bud yez route’ll niver make ye rich. An’ as for Annie,
-she’ll stay at home, an’ help her mother wid the wurk, as she hav
-always done. Now don’t be after vexin’ me!” Goose was about to protest;
-“’twill do ye no good.”
-
-And the grocer went on his way down the street leaving the young man
-gazing despondently after him. He did not notice the approach of Larry
-and Kerrigan who had just emerged from Dwyer’s; and Larry slapped him
-on the back, remarking:
-
-“Yer lookin’ green around the gills. What’s wrong?”
-
-“I’m gittin’ it in the neck, all around,” answered Goose, savagely.
-“They’re all givin’ me the dinky-dink for further orders. I just now
-went against Annie’s old man, and he flagged me, cold!”
-
-“Oh, was that Clancy you were speaking to?” asked Kerrigan looking
-interestedly after the retreating figure. “I’ve got something to tell
-him, but I’ll see him again. Say, you knew old Miss Cassidy, Annie’s
-aunt, didn’t you, Goose?”
-
-“Sure,” answered the milkman. “She was me star customer, up till she
-died the other day.”
-
-“Well, she left a queer kind of a will.” Kerrigan hesitated a moment,
-and then continued: “Say, I know how it is between you and Annie; walk
-down the street with us and I’ll tell you about it. It might help you
-somehow.”
-
-As they went along, Kerrigan, with a wealth of technical phrases,
-explained the peculiarities of the document. A great part of the
-explanation was Greek to McGonagle; but Larry grasped the points of the
-matter, and by the time Kerrigan had finished, his face was lighted
-with suppressed excitement. They paused before the door of the Aurora
-Borealis Club in the midst of a rapid debate between the two latter
-gentlemen; finally Larry said:
-
-“Then youse’ll keep it quiet for a while?”
-
-“Only until to-morrow afternoon,” said Kerrigan, decisively. “You’ll
-have to work quick.”
-
-After the attorney left them, Goose turned to his friend, and inquired
-bewilderingly:
-
-“Say, Murphy, put me next, will youse. What kind o’ a graft have youse
-got? Hit it out, quick!”
-
-Larry leaned against the frame of Riley’s show window and laughed
-exultantly; McGonagle frowned vexedly at his mirth, snapping his
-fingers with impatience.
-
-“Say!” exclaimed the latter, as Larry continued to laugh, “youse must
-be crazy. What’s the matter, anyhow?”
-
-Larry smothered his laughing, and took Goose rapturously by the lapel
-of his coat, proceeding to put into words the idea which he had
-conceived while Kerrigan was speaking. When he had finished, Goose tore
-himself away and executed a mad acrobatic dance about the sidewalk, and
-wound it up by throwing his arms about Larry and hugging him until his
-ribs cracked.
-
-“It’s the slickest t’ing I ever run against,” declared he, with
-enthusiasm. “I always said you was foxy, Murphy; and if youse work this
-right, ye kin take the front seat, and I’ll never say a word!”
-
-After a few moments’ consultation they separated and Larry made his way
-toward O’Hara’s. The freight engines, as usual, were coughing up and
-down the tracks, hissing and straining at their trailing loads. O’Hara
-was repairing the fire brick in an old stove outside; his sleeves were
-turned up and he was soot to the elbows.
-
-“I want to talk to youse,” said Larry, as he paused.
-
-“Yez are an early caller!” exclaimed O’Hara, delightedly. “But, faith,”
-poking him in the ribs, “I t’ought yez’ed called long afore this, b’y.
-She’s a smart slip av a girl, Larry.”
-
-He led the young man through the store and back into the kitchen. The
-sisters sprang up tumultuously.
-
-“Larry, asthore,” piped Ellen, “sure an’ it’s a glad heart I have this
-day. Glory be! bud yez are fitted for wan another. Sit down; she’ll be
-here this minyute; she do be only gone as far as the church.”
-
-“I seen her,” said Larry. “I was talkin’ to her.”
-
-Bridget shrieked with mirth. “Lave the young wans alone!” cried she.
-“They’ll see each other, niver fear. Arrah, avic, it’s the great b’y
-yez are.”
-
-“She told me,” went on Larry, “all about it.”
-
-“About how foolish she wur?” questioned O’Hara. “She’s seen it, have
-she. Bud, niver fear b’y, niver fear.”
-
-“It wasn’t Rosie what was foolish, O’Hara, it was youse. Didn’t ye see
-that there was two ends to this t’ing. Ye scared her, and then t’ought
-youse was all to the good, didn’t ye? But yer out o’ line: ye can’t
-play me; I won’t have it.”
-
-“What talk have ye, Larry?”
-
-“Ah, ye know damn well what I mean! Youse t’ink yer a hot guy, O’Hara,
-but ye’ll buy a gold brick some day, le’me tell youse that. Ye’ll go
-flat on yer back wit’out a cent in yer pants.”
-
-“Divil take ye, have yez gone crazy!”
-
-“I’m tellin’ ye what’s right, ain’t I?”
-
-“Shame on ye, Larry Murphy!” exclaimed Bridget, “is poor Mary’s dyin’
-words--”
-
-“Say, cut that out! I won’t’ stand for any o’ youse draggin’ _her_ into
-yer little game.”
-
-“God forgi’ yez!” cried Ellen. “Oh, God forgi’ yez.”
-
-O’Hara strove to look impressive. “Iv any wan had towld me,” said he,
-“that yez had no rayspect for Mary, I would’ve towld him that he lied!”
-
-Larry laughed. “That’s a slashin’ good jolly,” remarked he. “It might
-have worked, too; on’y I’m next to yer little scheme,” he paused a
-moment, regarding O’Hara, soberly. “Say,” he resumed “I didn’t come to
-see youse on’y about that, but to do youse a good turn if ye’ll on’y
-let me.”
-
-“What have ye till say?” inquired O’Hara.
-
-“Come into the store,” said Larry, with a glance at the two old women.
-“This t’ing’s private.”
-
-They re-entered the store. O’Hara closed the door, while Larry seated
-himself upon the end of the counter.
-
-“Clancy,” began the latter, “owes youse money.”
-
-“He do,” admitted O’Hara. “Six hundred dollars, an’ ’tis due the day.”
-
-“What d’youse t’ink his grocery’ed bring if ye sold him out?”
-
-“About half av it, bad scram till him,” said O’Hara, viciously.
-
-“McGonagle owes youse somethin’, too, don’t he?”
-
-“Yis; I loaned him enough till buy his milk route, a year since, an’
-divil the cint do I iver expect till see av it again!”
-
-Larry crossed one leg over the other, and clasped his hands comfortably
-about his knee.
-
-“I kin put youse next to a way to collect every cent, interest and
-all,” he informed O’Hara.
-
-The second-hand dealer’s eyes snapped with interest. But he said,
-doubtfully:
-
-“How can yez do that? Sure, nayther av thim have a cint till bless
-thimselves wid!”
-
-Larry leaned forward and began to explain away the other’s doubts. He
-talked straight to the point and in a few moments O’Hara brightened up
-wonderfully.
-
-“I’ll see Clancy at wanst!” exclaimed he.
-
-“But there’s somethin’ else,” said Larry. “There’s Rosie and Larkin;
-what about them?”
-
-“Arrah, what have they till do wid it?”
-
-“Just as much as the others. Youse’re got to say ‘yes’ to them or
-you’ll slip yer trolley.”
-
-“Hell till yez sowl!” cried O’Hara. “Is it a girl av mine marry that
-dirty Derry spawn av the divil!”
-
-“Keep yer shirt on,” advised Larry, evenly. “Don’t make any wild
-swings. Money’s money, O’Hara; and ye must make good or youse don’t see
-a dollar.”
-
-O’Hara spluttered with rapidly evaporating wrath; and at length he
-cooled down sufficiently to say:
-
-“Yez are in the Church yezsilf, Larry; an’ ye know that the clargy do
-be down on mixed marriages.”
-
-“Say,” said Larry, getting down from the counter and buttoning up his
-coat, “youse might as well git yer money back by doin’ what I ask ye
-to do. Rosie’s twenty-one, and she’ll marry Larkin some o’ these days,
-anyhow. Speak quick; is it yes or no; I’ve got to see the delegates
-afore the convention opens.”
-
-O’Hara hesitated for a moment; then he burst out.
-
-“I’ll not lose me bit av hard arned money till save the trollop! Iv she
-wants till make her bed so, why lave her lie in it, an’ divil do her
-good wid it!”
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XXI
-
- “_He stood for Dooley, and for Dooley cast his vote,
- I stood for Conroy, as did Hooly,
- There was Fagan and O’Ragan, Flannigan and Hagan,
- All bound to kick the pants off Michael Dooley._”
-
- BALLADS OF BACK STREETS.
-
-
-IN the parlour of the Precinct Club, McQuirk was just concluding an
-interview with the political manager and lobbyist of the Motor Traction
-Company.
-
-“McGlory,” said the lobbyist, “mus’n’t think he’s too big a fish. Some
-other people that I know of will give the administration as good a
-rake-off, and be glad of the chance.” He got upon his feet, as their
-conference was over and shook McQuirk encouragingly by the hand. “Just
-send for him, and talk things over. Alex’s got good sense; he’ll see
-the point.”
-
-“I don’t think he’d come,” said McQuirk, “so I’ll go over and see
-_him_.”
-
-“All right,” said the other, “do as you think best. And, say, how’s
-Conlin doing with the vote in his division?”
-
-McQuirk compressed his lips. “Bad,” returned he. “They separated him
-from it, clean.”
-
-“I think,” mused the other, “that Conlin’s too short for the police
-force. The examining board’s mighty strict just now, Mac.”
-
-The ward boss grinned. “He won’t like it much,” said he. “It’s funny,”
-he went on, humorously, “how much better tall men are at gittin’ out
-the vote than short ones.”
-
-The other laughed. “You’re right, Mac,” said he; “but let me say this,
-again, before I go: Whatever you do, don’t have a fight in your ward.
-Go into your convention and find the man that’s goin’ to win--and stand
-good with him _if we can handle him_. The administration wants lots of
-friends next session.”
-
-McQuirk found McGlory, dressed in his best, at the stables in Murphy’s
-Court, superintending the doctoring of a worn-looking horse. The
-contractor’s greeting was stiff and formal.
-
-“Anyone got your proxy, Alex?” asked the boss, after they had exchanged
-some general remarks.
-
-“I’ll go till the convintion mesilf,” answered McGlory. “There do be
-too damn much of this proxy business.”
-
-McQuirk brushed a fly or two from a raw saddle gall on the horse’s
-back, and reflected.
-
-“I understand,” he said finally, “that you’re out for the nomination.”
-
-“The young fellys want someone till stan’ for it, an’ sure I’m willin’
-till try an’ bate Kelly. I don’t forget what he done last illection,
-an’ at the time, McQuirk, yez said yezself that he played ye a bla’gard
-trick, an’ that yez’ed git even.”
-
-“Oh, hell!” McQuirk waved his hand, deprecatingly. “It don’t do to hold
-grudges, Alex; Kelly’s a good fellow.”
-
-“He’s not good enough for me.”
-
-“You’re makin’ a mistake,” said the boss.
-
-The horse stretched his stiff old limbs in the sunlight at the stable
-door; McQuirk whistled softly; a couple of dirty children from across
-the narrow court stared at him, curiously.
-
-“Say,” said the boss at length, “when’s your contract out, Alex?”
-
-“It have a few mont’s yet till go.”
-
-“Think you’ll get it again?”
-
-McGlory stiffened up and bent his brows at him.
-
-“I have hopes av it,” said he, soberly.
-
-“Well, don’t be foolish. Things happen, sometimes, you know.”
-
-“Look here, Tom McQuirk, is it threatenin’ me yez are?”
-
-“I never threaten anybody, I _do_ things, you know that.”
-
-“Ye threatened Kelly, an’ ye done nawthin’.”
-
-“That’s all right. You’re not inside, Alex; ye don’t know everything.
-Now think the thing over, as ye go down to the hall; and take my
-advice--keep your eye on your bread and butter! That’s all.”
-
-The crowd on Girard Avenue had been waiting for over an hour for
-some sign of a stir, when a sudden blare of brass instruments and a
-thundering drubbing of drums broke forth, and into the avenue wheeled
-the Emmet Band, Eddie Brennen at its head, splendid in a scarlet coat
-and towering shako, his drum-major’s staff whirling about his head
-like a metallic circle. Hogan, the policeman, darted into the street
-with uplifted club, to hold back the teams from the cross streets. The
-throng ranged quickly along the curb; from the adjacent alleys poured
-a horde of whooping children; draymen pulled up their nags in order
-to watch the passing cohorts. Everyone knew that the gathering of the
-clans had begun.
-
-It was the anti-Kelly faction, and they swung along behind the drums
-like veterans. Those of them who were to sit in the convention wore
-huge scarlet badges upon their breasts. Larry Murphy, in all the glory
-of a high silk hat, borrowed from one of McGrath’s hack drivers,
-marched at the head of the column, and his aids, Nolan and Ferguson,
-were immediately behind him.
-
-“Be me soul!” ejaculated the grocer, “bud young Brennen kin twirl his
-bit av a stick, so he kin. An’ luk at the walk av Murphy; sure yez’ed
-t’ink he had a mortgage on the City Hall!”
-
-“It puts me in mind,” remarked Tim Burns; “av the owld days whin we
-stepped till the music oursilves, Clancy, on Paddy’s day, beyant on
-Broad Street.”
-
-“True for ye, Tim, an’ we wid the axes on the shoulders av uz, an’ the
-bokays, an’ the strings av doughnuts till ate on the march. Faith an’
-the young fellys know nawthin’ av the harp an’ the sunburst; an’ it’s
-withered in the hearts av most av the owld wans too, I’m thinkin’. God
-luk down on uz! Till think av all the talk there wur av the owld land,
-then, an’ the little we hear av it now. Divil a green flag d’yez see
-hangin’ out av the windys on the siventeenth av March; an’ the Land
-League do be forgotten. The owld blood’s growin’ thin, Tim--thin as
-water!”
-
-About the doors of the convention hall, the same hall where the Aurora
-Borealis Club had held their ball, the scene was one of extreme
-animation. The groups of high-hatted, tobacco-chewing men, seemed
-possessed by demons of movement and noise. They laughed with the full
-strength of their chests, waved their arms wildly and swore joyously,
-with the unconscious finish of experts. Kelly and his henchmen had
-already arrived; he had been greeted as a hero by his own faction and
-now stood in the hallway surrounded by a solid circle of supporters.
-Gratten Haley who had been named for school director the night before
-in a convention held in a back kitchen on Second Street, approached
-Owen Dwyer.
-
-“Has McQuirk got here yet?” asked Haley.
-
-“I haven’t seen him. Sure, Gratten, it’s not at a side issue like this
-he’d be, whin there’s McAteer’s nomination for Congress till be looked
-after.”
-
-“That’s where you make your little old mistake,” smiled Mr. Haley.
-“This is the only fight in town; all the others is cinched; and Mac’ll
-be on the ground to keep the gang in line.”
-
-“An’ tell me, Gratten; d’yez t’ink Kelly will win?”
-
-“Ye can search me! McQuirk says yes; but I wouldn’t put me roll on it,
-at that. It runs t’rough me that there’ll be doin’s this mornin’, and
-if Jim Kelly wins, it’ll be a mix for yer life. And if he goes under,
-he’ll fall like a rotten wall!”
-
-“I hear the young fellys’ll be contestin’ Tim Daily an’ what’s-his-name
-that kapes the policy shop. Young Kerrigan do be after tellin’ me that
-they got the papers by a trick.”
-
-Owen was innocence personified; he knew that Haley possessed
-information that would be of use.
-
-“Oh, they’ll contest ’em, all right,” laughed Haley.
-
-“Here comes the kickers!” shouted Martin Kelly. “The marks is gotta
-band, too. Don’t they look gay?”
-
-The anti-Kellyites had swept around the corner with their band playing
-a “cake-walk” march, their flags waving and themselves cheering
-lustily. O’Connor, the undertaker, had just arrived in one of his own
-hacks and now shook hands with his friends.
-
-“The young fellas,” smiled O’Connor, “bate the divil whin they cut
-loose. Sure, here they are with the Emmet Band till the fore, ready
-till nail Kelly’s hide on the back dure. Well, well, an’ so Alex
-McGlory’ll go afore the convention?”
-
-“So I’ve heard,” said one of his friends. “Just to t’ink av ‘McGlory
-an’ clane streets’ as a campaign cry.” The speaker paused, delighted
-with the shout that greeted his sally; then he added “Here comes
-Gartenheim, O’Connor; sure this time a few years ago yezsilf an’ him
-wur at it, hard enough.”
-
-O’Connor smiled patronizingly, and reared his head in his most
-dignified fashion; Gartenheim, stout, rosy and smiling was advancing
-toward him through a lane of outstretched hands.
-
-“Gartenheim, how are ye?”
-
-“O’Connor, I’m glad to see you!”
-
-And the ancient foes grasped each other by the hand, while the gaping
-spectators swore soft oaths of wonder.
-
-The band had ceased playing; the marchers were halted in the street and
-this reconciliation was in plain view. Roddy Ferguson swung his derby
-hat above his head, shouting:
-
-“Gents, t’ree cheers for Gartenheim and O’Connor!”
-
-A whirlwind of shrieks swept over the crowd, sustained until the veins
-of their necks swelled to bursting and their faces turned purple;
-sticks, hats and flags were tossed wildly in the air.
-
-The two gentlemen whose public burial of the hatchet occasioned this
-outburst, bowed and smiled genially and once more shook hands, which
-had the effect of renewing the tumult. James Kelly and his supporters
-gazed glumly on; the delirious display was not pleasant to them.
-
-“Bloody wars,” breathed Owen in Haley’s ear, “d’yez see that, Gratten?
-They’ve made up.”
-
-“It looks bad for Kelly,” admitted Mr. Haley; “and he don’t like it for
-a cent.”
-
-“Here’s them two old guys doin’ the love feast stunt,” sneered young
-Kelly, “right out in the open. It’s bin fixed to cop votes with; a
-blind man kin see that. It makes me sick!”
-
-“We’ll do that all right,” said Goose McGonagle; “youse’ll all be a
-sick lot o’ ducks after we slam youse a few.”
-
-The procession had broken ranks; the members of the band had blown
-themselves breathless and beaten their arms helpless, and now dispersed
-into saloons adjacent to the hall to seek refreshment. The delegates,
-by degrees, began to drift upstairs to the room where the convention
-was to be held. Here a band, perched in a little gallery at the back,
-discoursed music; a flag hung from every point where it was possible
-to drive a nail; the platform stood at the far end holding an array of
-chairs and tables.
-
-Dick Nolan and Roddy Ferguson, who formed the connecting links between
-the formerly hostile factions of Gartenheim and O’Connor, were working
-desperately with delegates; they felt that it depended upon them to
-secure a solid vote from these two bodies, and they spared themselves
-no effort. Neither the undertaker nor the contractor had been active
-in the canvass, so their personal followings were not heavy in the
-convention; but it served to give the anti-Kelly faction a slight
-advantage that they were compelled to exert themselves to the utmost
-to sustain. Each man in the hall with a ballot to cast was under
-pressure to vote against them, and the pressure would be increased a
-hundred-fold when McQuirk got upon the ground.
-
-Gartenheim had Larry Murphy in a corner giving him some fatherly
-advice; O’Connor stood listening, with approving nods; Kerrigan,
-red-faced and perspiring, came bustling up.
-
-“Gentlemen,” asked he, “who are you for, for chairman?”
-
-“Who do you want?” asked Gartenheim.
-
-“Well, I’d like to see Pete Comisky hold the office. He’s a straight
-man.”
-
-“Peter’s all right,” said O’Connor.
-
-“Who do you say, Larry?” inquired Kerrigan.
-
-“Grat Haley.”
-
-“Haley!” Kerrigan stared at him amazedly. “Haley! Why you’re mad.
-Haley would rule against us every time.”
-
-“He might--if we let him. It’s just like this. Haley’s got the
-chairmanship cinched; no one else can win against him; I’ve been over
-the bunch, and I know.” Larry took his cigar from his mouth and pointed
-it at Kerrigan, impressively. “The chairmanship’s the first test o’
-strength. Make a fight on that and lose, and youse might as well chuck
-up the sponge, on the spot. We’ve got grafters on our side, Johnnie,
-and you know it; if they see us shake they’ll fly the coop.”
-
-“That sounds good,” admitted Kerrigan. “What do you suggest?”
-
-“We’ll t’row our vote to Haley; they can’t see our hand then; and we’ll
-hold all our people for the real work.”
-
-“But Daily and Levitsky!” remonstrated Kerrigan. “He’ll seat them,
-they’ll vote and they have no right!”
-
-“They kin seat all they want,” determinedly, “but they don’t vote for
-Kelly.”
-
-“You’re a bolitician, Larry,” said Gartenheim, admiringly. “Dot’s a
-good scheme, ain’d it?”
-
-“Say, Larry,” said Roddy Ferguson, allowing a crowd of delegates to
-precede him to the stairs, “I’m goin’ out to t’row a couple o’ beers
-into this gang. Look out for Nolan while I’m out, will ye? Don’t let
-him get near Mart Kelly.”
-
-“What’s on the hooks?”
-
-“That’s all right; just keep an eye on him; we don’t want no trouble.”
-
-“There’s McQuirk,” said Kerrigan, as that gentleman entered and shook
-old Kelly’s hand with theatrical warmth. A crush of delegates gathered
-about the boss, who seemed in high good humour. He stooped over and
-whispered something in Kelly’s ear, and the saloonkeeper laughed
-uproariously, his face growing mottled with excitement, his hands
-gesticulating madly.
-
-“We have thim!” vociferated the candidate, glowing upon his supporters
-like a spotted sun; “we have thim on the run, so we have. Begorry,
-McQuirk, it’s at school they shud be instead av playin’ at politics!”
-
-“Keep it quiet,” advised McQuirk; “keep it quiet, and let’s get down to
-business.” He took Haley aside. “How is it goin’?” questioned he.
-
-“All to the good,” answered Mr. Haley. “The chairmanship’s ourn. There
-ain’t no one else but me in sight!”
-
-The boss laughed: “The old man’ll show ’em a few tricks,” said he
-complacently. “I think they expected me to lay down, eh?”
-
-After a time everything was in readiness; the temporary chairman
-mounted the platform; the scribes of the gathering took their seats and
-the convention came to order.
-
-“Gentlemen,” said the temporary chairman, advancing to the edge of the
-platform, “we are called together this morning to name a man for the
-important office of selectman. I feel that--”
-
-“Chop it off,” advised McGonagle.
-
-“Order! Order!” came from different parts of the house.
-
-The temporary chairman was an elderly man, little known and with a
-colourless manner. He endeavoured to go on with his remarks but the
-volume of interruption steadily increased.
-
-“We will proceed with the business of electing a chairman,” said he at
-length.
-
-McQuirk was on his feet in an instant; Larry followed, also demanding
-recognition.
-
-“McQuirk,” said the chairman.
-
-“I give you,” said the boss, “the name of Gratten Haley, of the
-nineteenth division, for chairman.”
-
-The supporters of Kelly leaped to their feet with shrieking acclaim; it
-was some moments before Larry could be heard.
-
-“I second the nomination of Mr. Haley,” said he, “and move that his
-’lection to the chair be made unanimous!”
-
-Dead silence followed. McQuirk looked dumbfounded; Larry smiled sweetly
-at him over the heads of the intervening delegates. The vote was a
-rising one, and the temporary chairman surrendered the gavel to Haley.
-
-McQuirk was dazed, but respectful; old Kelly smiled broadly and rubbed
-his hands gleefully; young Murphy moved among the opposition like a
-spirit of wisdom.
-
-McQuirk once more arose. “Let’s keep things moving,” said he. “There
-has been no protest against anyone sitting in the convention, with the
-exception of Mr. Daily and Mr. Levitsky. We will now look into their
-cases.”
-
-“I wouldn’t,” sneered McGonagle, “take too much work on me shoulders,
-if I was youse. I’d let the chairman do a little.”
-
-“Shut up.”
-
-“Fire him out!”
-
-“I’d like,” growled Goose, “to see any of youse try to fire me out.”
-
-“Cheese it; sit down, and keep yer shirt on!” warned Larry, leaning
-forward, “if youse make trouble now, I’ll put a muzzle on ye.”
-
-Johnnie Kerrigan was entrusted with the business of protesting against
-the seating of Levitsky and Daily; but Haley, as was expected, carried
-matters with a high hand, and overruled him at all points.
-
-“All right,” said Kerrigan, “you can let ’em vote if you want to, and I
-know you want to; you can use ’em in your business.”
-
-The Kellyites were triumphant and voiced it until the hall was filled
-with their clamour.
-
-“We’ve got ’em burnt to the ground!” declared Martin Kelly. “Why, the
-mugs capped the game for us! They must be rank suckers.”
-
-The roll was called amid much tumult; then Chairman Haley hammered with
-his gavel for order; when something like silence had been obtained, he
-said:
-
-“Gentlemen, our object is to get done with the business in hand as soon
-as we can. We will, therefore, pass over all unnecessary forms and go
-into the matter of nominating our candidate at once.”
-
-Mr. Haley had carefully rehearsed this little speech during those
-moments when there was nothing doing behind the bar over which he
-presided, and was much pleased with the applause which it provoked. He
-added:
-
-“The chair recognizes Mr. Shulze.”
-
-Mr. Shulze arose amid much disorder on the part of the insurgents.
-By virtue of his ability to deliver a certain amount of goods each
-election Mr. Shulze held a position in the post-office; he had a
-voice like a megaphone, and a fixed set of gestures that resembled
-the jerkings of an automatic doll. In tones that shook the windows he
-placed the elder Kelly in nomination, and sat down amid a whirlwind of
-cheers.
-
-Johnnie Kerrigan got up to name McGlory; he had not spoken a dozen
-words before the contractor and his son Jerry, rushed into the hall and
-beckoned the speaker and Larry into an anteroom. The old man was pale
-and agitated; Jerry acted like a man dazed.
-
-“What’s the graft?” asked Larry.
-
-“He’s quit at the post!” exclaimed Jerry. “He’s laid down like a dub.”
-
-“No!” cried the two young men, aghast.
-
-“I’m tellin’ youse, ain’t I. From a kid up,” added Jerry, bitterly, “I
-t’ought the old gent was an ace, but now I find he’s on’y a two-spot!
-Say, I t’row up the towel; I’ll never stack against the bunch again.”
-
-Kerrigan grasped the elder man’s arm. “Why, McGlory,” protested he,
-“you’re not going to shirk at the last moment, are you?”
-
-“I’m sorry,” said the contractor, “but I can’t allow me name till be
-used.” He was trembling under the stress of the moment and looked
-appealingly from one to the other. “Don’t blame me too much,” implored
-he. “I have too much at stake, b’ys. Sure iv I make the fight, it’s a
-ruint man I’d be.”
-
-There was a pause; Jerry was viciously biting at his nails; Larry was
-fighting visibly to keep down his anger; from the main hall came the
-subdued roar of many voices.
-
-“Afore God!” exclaimed the contractor, “I niver t’ought till do the
-like av this! But they have me on the hip, divil take thim, and I can
-do no better.”
-
-“Let ’em do youse outa the contract,” rapped out his son. “Let the
-whole shootin’ match go t’ell! Youse can do better’n scratch streets.”
-
-“Shut yer mouth,” roared McGlory. “Don’t be stanin’ there talkin’
-till me like that. Lose the contract is it, with Matthew Fitzmaurice
-holdin’ a paper agin me beyant in his rale estate office? Divil a long
-it’s stay in his safe iv he knowed I’d no contract. Gawd help yez
-for a fool! Is it till the La Salle College yez cud have gone, iv it
-hadn’t been for the contract? An’ how many av thim young fellys wid the
-flowers in their coats ’ed call till see yez sister av a Sunday night,
-widout it? Tell me that, ye igit!”
-
-“Ease up,” soothed Kerrigan; “I wouldn’t make any trouble between you
-for the world.”
-
-“Then this goes?” said Larry.
-
-“I have sorra another word till say,” answered McGlory.
-
-Larry turned to Kerrigan. “D’youse see anyt’ing?” asked he. “Is it our
-finish?”
-
-“Not in a thousand years!” retorted the young attorney. “Find another
-man for the running; I’ll go in there an’ do some spell-binding while
-you canvass the crowd. If Gartenheim’ll swing in line for O’Connor,
-give me the word and I’ll name him.”
-
-They left the McGlorys engaged in a wordy duel, and rushed back into
-the main hall. McQuirk, the Kellys and some others of their adherents
-were gathered in the doorway leading into the entry; they greeted the
-young men with a laugh.
-
-“All to the bad, eh?” sneered Martin. “Yer star nag’s on’y a sellin’
-plater.”
-
-“What’d I tell ye, boys,” said McQuirk with the easy assurance of a man
-who has won his fight. “There’s only one man. We’ve got the nomination
-safe, ye can see that. Now don’t be sore-heads; be nice, clean boys,
-an’ ye won’t miss anything.”
-
-Kerrigan hurried into the convention hall without replying; but Larry
-turned on the boss like a sullen bear.
-
-“Don’t josh us, McQuirk,” warned he, “because we won’t stand for it.
-Youse people ain’t scooped the pot yet, so don’t give yerself the glad
-hand.”
-
-“Come, come,” smiled McQuirk, winking at his co-labourers, “don’t take
-it so hard. Alex McGlory knows where he stands, and he shows good sense
-when he gets out from under.”
-
-“Don’t take me for a mark!” flared Murphy, shoving his head forward,
-his jaw protruding, wickedly. “We kin split the shootin’ match wide
-open, McQuirk, and afore we let youse git the bulge with Kelly, we’ll
-do it. If youse are wise, ye’ll write that on yer cuff.”
-
-He rushed into the convention hall, hot with anger; Nolan, Ferguson and
-others of his lieutenants were quickly enlightened as to the state of
-affairs, and they passed the word among the others that someone other
-than McGlory would be named, at the same time working zealously to
-allay the feeling of insecurity that these tidings naturally aroused.
-
-Kerrigan was speaking and the convention was giving him its undivided
-attention. The youthful attorney possessed that self-assured poise and
-explosive style that captures such gatherings; and then he was easily
-the most popular young man in the ward, and his father’s saloon was a
-well-known place of resort. Most of the younger men among the delegates
-had gone to school with him, and though they, for the most part, were
-day-labourers and Johnnie had his name painted upon a ground-glass door
-in a down-town office building, he had always kept up old friendships
-and clung to old surroundings. As one of his friends said:
-
-“Johnnie’s a high guy, but he’s as common as dirt; he don’t have to
-put ice in his hat to keep his head from swellin’. When youse stack up
-against him on the street, he’s always got the glad hand for youse, and
-a cigar what ain’t workin’.”
-
-It was this democratic quality that made him liked and secured him
-attention from the delegates when he arose to deliver the address that
-was to give Larry an opportunity to select a new candidate.
-
-These facts came to Larry as he paused for a moment to listen; and like
-one inspired he proceeded to consult Ferguson and Nolan.
-
-“Somethin’s gotta be done, and done quick,” said he. “Now look here, if
-I go against Gartenheim and ask him to turn in for O’Connor, what’ll he
-say?”
-
-“He’ll say, ‘nay, nay, Pauline!’” exclaimed Ferguson.
-
-“Youse’ll queer the game if youse do that,” protested Nolan.
-
-“That’s what I t’ought. And how about O’Connor for Gartenheim?”
-
-“There’s no difference,” said Nolan. “If one was ast to work for the
-other he’d git dead wise all of a sudden and t’ink he was bein’ worked
-for a good t’ing, and havin’ a con game slung into him from the start!
-It won’t do; take it from me.”
-
-“Then I’ve gotta bran’ new graft!” exclaimed Larry starting up the
-aisle.
-
-“What is it?” asked Ferguson, following him, his hand upon his sleeve.
-
-“Sit down and hold yer breath; youse’ll be wise in a minute.”
-
-Larry said something to Kerrigan in a low tone. Johnnie looked
-surprised; he closed his remarks abruptly and sat down, while Larry
-nodded to the chair for recognition. Upon obtaining this he wasted no
-words.
-
-“Gentlemen,” said he, “I’m goin’ to put in nomination a man that
-youse can all vote for.” He paused a moment and glanced around at the
-expectant faces; he raised both arms, with a sweep and shouted: “Mr.
-John Kerrigan, of the 12th Division!”
-
-For an instant there was dead silence; then the anti-Kellyites came to
-their feet with an ear-splitting scream of delight. Kerrigan sprang to
-Larry’s side protesting excitedly; men stood upon chairs and beat the
-backs of their neighbours; pandemonium reigned. Kerrigan was ringed in
-by dozens of outstretched hands; his appeals for a hearing were drowned
-by the clamour of his partisans.
-
-James Kelly was stricken mute; a moment before he had seen victory in
-his grasp; now it had eluded him and was dancing away in the distance.
-McQuirk looked on at the scene of disorder, astonished at Larry’s act.
-He had expected to hear the name of a man steeped in the factional
-differences of the ward--a man easily beaten--and now he was at a
-loss, for here was one not only without political enemies but with fast
-friends in every faction of the party.
-
-“It ain’t a half-bad move,” said the boss to himself, angry, but forced
-to admiration. “If I wasn’t sure about McGlory, I’d say the thing was
-fixed.”
-
-Haley hammered vigorously for order; old Kelly and his friends were
-gathered in a clump, shouting their observations in each other’s ears;
-Larry stood near the platform, frantically endeavouring to attract the
-chairman’s attention, and turning every moment to swear at his friends
-for their uproar. He saw that the moment for action was at hand; the
-surprise had been sprung and had given his faction heart, and he
-determined to strike again while they were white hot. Gradually the
-noise began to settle; and, though now and then a cheer volleyed across
-the hall, his voice could be heard:
-
-“A vote,” stormed he, “a vote.”
-
-The cry was taken up by a dozen voices.
-
-“Vote! Vote!” vociferated the insurgents. “Take the vote!”
-
-This, at a nod from McQuirk, Haley proceeded to do; the secretary
-began to read off the names, and the delegates answered “Kelly” or
-“Kerrigan” as the case might be. As the vote began, a concerted
-movement of a dozen young men, led by Larry and McGonagle, was made
-toward the point where Daily and Levitsky were sitting.
-
-“Changed yer mind, Daily?” questioned Larry.
-
-“Not on yer life,” answered Daily, but with an uneasy glance about him.
-He saw in their faces that they were ready for anything; and that they
-were awkward men to handle, he knew, partly from experience, partly by
-hearsay.
-
-“I t’ink youse’ll turn in for Kerrigan when they hand out yer name.”
-Larry leaned carelessly upon the back of Daily’s chair, and spoke very
-quietly.
-
-“It’s just as easy to say Kerrigan as Kelly,” put in McGonagle, “an’ I
-guess Levitsky’ll say it, too, when it’s up to him.”
-
-“I wut like to oblitch your--” began the policy-writer.
-
-“Ah, rats!” returned McGonagle, savagely. “Youse’ll chirp for Kerrigan,
-or the next stunt youse’ll do’ll be at the morgue, stretchin’ slabs!”
-
-“Play light, Goose,” advised Larry, “I t’ink they’ll be in line.”
-
-News of the state of affairs reached the elder Kelly as he stood
-talking to McQuirk at the far side of the room; and they hurried toward
-the storm centre to prevent the coercion of their vote. Because of some
-trifling hitch the polling of the delegates had stopped for the time
-being, and Haley and the secretary were wrangling with a cluster of men
-about the platform.
-
-A man rushed up the aisle and stopped McQuirk, at the same time handing
-him a card.
-
-“He wants to see youse right away,” said the stranger.
-
-“Go ahead over and talk to them, Kelly,” said McQuirk. “I’ve got to go
-out for a second.”
-
-“What’s this,” asked Kelly, upon reaching the spot where Larry and his
-friends were gathered behind the chairs of the two protested delegates.
-“What call have yez till be threatenin’ these two min?”
-
-“Who’s threatenin’ ’em?” asked McGonagle, innocently.
-
-“You are, ye bla’gard!” exclaimed the saloonkeeper, hotly. “You an’ the
-likes av yez. Divil take me, bud youse’ll sup sorra for it, ye thaves
-av the world.”
-
-“Ah, go scratch yer head,” elegantly advised Larry. “Don’t cut loose
-with any o’ yer fireworks, Kelly; youse’re carryin’ weight for age and
-don’t work fast enough to mix it with this bunch.”
-
-“Youse’d t’ink,” said Martin Kelly, coming to the aid of his father,
-“that youse people run the shack, and no other body has a look in.”
-
-His proximity and the sound of his voice had an immediate effect upon
-Dick Nolan; his sister’s shame and young Kelly’s brutality on the night
-of the ball had burned themselves into his brain.
-
-“Let me plug him,” gasped Nolan, his face as white as death, his
-whole frame shaking with an overwhelming desire for revenge. He was
-struggling as he spoke in the arms of Roddy Ferguson; but Roddy dragged
-him away.
-
-“Don’t make a mess of it,” implored Roddy. “If youse jump him now ye’ll
-put the whole snap on the bum, maybe.”
-
-“What’s eatin’ Nolan?” asked McGonagle, wonderingly.
-
-“He’s leary on Kelly, youse can bank on that,” answered Casey. “From
-the cracks he made to me a while ago, he’s goin’ to put him out o’
-business. I don’t know what he’s sore for.”
-
-The commotion attracted Haley’s attention and he commenced to sound his
-gavel and cry for order. The roll-call recommenced and just as Kelly
-turned to acquaint the chairman with the attempt being made upon Daily,
-that gentleman’s name was reached.
-
-“Now then!” grated Larry. The circle narrowed about Daily as he arose
-to his feet. Martin Kelly attempted to rally his friends; but the
-determined looks of the cordon of young men and Daily’s unpopularity
-caused it to result in nothing more than a scattering fire of protest.
-
-Daily swallowed several times, and his voice was somewhat husky, as he
-said:
-
-“I’ve got this to say: As I was ’lected by the parties against Mr.
-Kelly, I t’ink it’s best for me to save me reputation by votin’ for
-Kerrigan.”
-
-“Youse saved a damn sight more’n your reputation,” observed Murphy, as
-they turned away to give their attention to Levitsky.
-
-In the meantime McQuirk had hurried out into the entry to see the
-person who had sent in the card. It was he with whom he had had the
-conversation in the Precinct Club a few hours before.
-
-“Well,” said the gentleman, “what do ye know? Did McGlory do the right
-thing?”
-
-“Yes, and almost put them in the ditch. But they’ve got their second
-wind, now, and I don’t like the looks of things.”
-
-“No?” The politician looked questioningly at McQuirk, and then added:
-“They’ve fixed upon a new man? Who is it?”
-
-“Young John Kerrigan.”
-
-“Humph! He’s well liked, too, isn’t he?”
-
-“He’s about the last man I’d want them to push forward.”
-
-The other reflected a moment, then said:
-
-“You can win, though, can’t you?”
-
-A henchman of McQuirk’s rushed into the entry and looked anxiously up
-and down.
-
-“Of course,” said McQuirk.
-
-“Tom!” exclaimed the supporter, hurrying up. “Daily’s just voted for
-Kerrigan, and Levitsky’s goin’ to do the same!”
-
-“I’ll take it back,” said McQuirk, coolly. “They’ve got me hung up.”
-
-“For heaven’s sake, don’t let that happen!”
-
-“It’s bound to unless--”
-
-“Unless what?”
-
-“We drop Kelly and turn in for Kerrigan.”
-
-“How does he stand on the franchise business?”
-
-“He’s against it.”
-
-“Then fight it out with them! If they split the party we can elect
-Kelly on the opposing ticket as was done last time.”
-
-“Not if I know it!” said McQuirk, frowning at the lobbyist.
-
-“What! I say, Mac, you’re not gitting weak-kneed at the last moment,
-are you?”
-
-“I’m ready to stand in and help your company out as long as I can do
-it regularly. This is _my_ ward and the only way to keep it my ward is
-to be a regular. I’m against split tickets, you know that. If young
-Kerrigan can swing the convention, I’m for Kerrigan.”
-
-“But think of what this means? This vote must be had or we will fall
-flat.”
-
-“And I must carry my ward,” said McQuirk. “If I lose twice in
-succession you’ll be makin’ deals with another man next election; I’ll
-have lost my grip.”
-
-Upon McQuirk’s return to the convention hall his adherents gathered
-about him; he paid no attention to them, but at once buttonholed the
-elder Kelly and drew him aside. The first ballot had resulted in a
-tie and the second had not yet begun; Kerrigan, reconciled to the
-situation, was receiving the noisy congratulations of his friends; the
-band in the gallery brayed and throbbed through a popular air. Suddenly
-a volley of incoherent adjectives came from James Kelly; his face was
-purple with wrath and he gesticulated with the fury of one demented. No
-one caught the words, but all saw that McQuirk was the object of his
-vituperations.
-
-“There’s a plank loose,” prophesied McGonagle. “It must be a come-back,
-he’s makin’ it so strong.”
-
-McQuirk broke away from Kelly’s detaining clutch and approached the
-group surrounding Kerrigan; the delegates, clearly seeing that
-something important was about to occur, pressed about him.
-
-“Gentlemen,” said the boss, “above everything else we must preserve
-unity. As things stand, I would advise you all to turn in for Mr.
-Kerrigan.”
-
-The compact mass of delegates was torn as by a tempest; personal
-friends of Kelly stormed about McQuirk with clamorous denunciations;
-the opposition in a frenzy of rapture, hoisted their candidate upon
-their shoulders and began a march of victory about the hall, while the
-band blared brazenly through the noise.
-
-When at length comparative silence had been restored, the poll
-recommenced. McQuirk’s “advice” to his followers had been rightly
-interpreted as an order, and the name of Kerrigan seemed to be on every
-lip as man after man responded to his name. Upon its conclusion and
-Haley’s announcing that Kerrigan had won by more than two-thirds of the
-vote, the uproar broke out afresh. Suddenly, however, it hushed and all
-crowded toward the rear end of the hall. There was a quick grinding
-of feet upon the floor, a heaving of straining bodies, a growling of
-curses between tight-shut teeth. In the centre of the crowd, his face
-smeared with blood, fighting viciously, was Martin Kelly. With the
-full, swinging strength of their arms Nolan and Ferguson were battering
-at him and all who sought to interfere; upon the outskirts of the crowd
-the elder Kelly, white-faced, blue-lipped, and gasping, desperately
-sought to break through to the aid of his son.
-
-“He’s down!” shouted a voice.
-
-“Let him up!” protested a second.
-
-“Give him the leather!” advised still another.
-
-Larry and McGonagle and some others fought their way through the press
-and tore Nolan and Ferguson away.
-
-A half hour later a patrol wagon dashed away from the hall toward the
-nearest hospital bearing the bleeding, broken form of young Kelly. Upon
-the steps stood his assailants in the custody of two policemen, and
-with their friends gathered about them.
-
-“Don’t make no kick,” said Larry. “The cops game is too strong for
-youse. Go ahead with ’em.”
-
-“Make no resistance,” advised O’Connor. “I’ll try if they’ll take bail
-for yez in the mornin’.”
-
-
-
-
-Chapter XXII
-
- “_Some people’s born with the notion that for sharpness they’ve got
- the rest o’ the world tied hand an’ foot; and they are sharp, in
- their way--but they don’t weigh much._”--CHIP NOLAN’S REMARKS.
-
- “_The cool shades of evening their mantles were spreading,
- And Maggie, all smiling, was listening to me,
- The moon through the valley her pale light was shedding,
- When I won the heart of the rose of Tralee._”
-
- OLD SONG.
-
-
-CLANCY was reading the news of the convention in the evening paper
-behind his counter; the rush was over for the night, and he pulled at
-his pipe contentedly, for O’Hara had failed to keep his threat, and
-Clancy fancied that his creditor had thought better of it.
-
-“Sure, Young Murphy is the b’y for thim,” said Clancy, as he finished
-the account. It was a McQuirk sheet and lauded that gentleman’s action
-to the skies. Its story of the convention teemed with such phrases as
-“Magnificent battle against organized greed,” “Opponent of municipal
-corruption,” “Able friend of the working class,” etc. “But, divil take
-thim,” continued the grocer, “yez’d t’ink, from this, that McQuirk done
-it all.”
-
-He adjusted his steel-rimmed glasses and was about to resume his
-reading when a step sounded upon the floor and a shadow fell across the
-newspaper; looking up he saw O’Hara.
-
-“Good avenin’,” said the visitor. “I wur passin’ an’ t’ought I’d drop
-in on yez.”
-
-“An’ welcome,” said Clancy, but his looks belied his tongue.
-
-“Yez towld me this mornin’, Mr. Clancy,” said O’Hara, “that yez could
-not pay me the troifle av money yez owe me.”
-
-“An’ I towld yez the truth.”
-
-“On con-sider-rayshun av yez bein’ an ’owld frind av mine,” said
-O’Hara, “I have daysided till give yez back the note, widout the payin’
-av a cint--upon wan condition.”
-
-“Give me back me note!” Clancy could not believe his ears.
-
-“Upon wan condition,” repeated O’Hara.
-
-“An’ wat’s that?”
-
-“That yez give yez consint till Annie’s marriage wid young McGonagle.”
-
-Clancy looked thunderstruck; he gazed at the other with mingled wonder
-and anger.
-
-“What call have yez till meddle wid me family affairs?” demanded he,
-indignantly. “An’ what rayson have ye till be pullin’ wid McGonagle?”
-
-“Sorra the t’ing hav that till do wid it. Give yez consint, an’ I will
-give ye a raysate for the money ye owe me the minyute the marriage
-lines are wrote.”
-
-Clancy’s objection to Goose was solely because of his poverty, but
-a son-in-law with money could do no more than pay off his debt, so
-the grocer figured it out, and the reluctance with which he at last
-consented to O’Hara’s proposition was more assumed than real.
-
-“The ceremony must take place t’morry,” said O’Hara.
-
-“I have no objection till offer,” said Clancy, resignedly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-THE door bell of Larry’s home at the end of Murphy’s Court kept up an
-almost constant ringing next morning, and old Mrs. Coogan’s breath grew
-short through answering the calls.
-
-First it was McGonagle and Larkin, dressed in their best, with beaming
-faces and movements of suppressed excitement.
-
-“Everyt’ing’s all to the velvet,” said Goose airily. “The girls have
-been up and dressed since five o’clock, and Father Dawson’ll do his
-turn at eleven, sharp.”
-
-“Say, Larry,” put in Jimmie, “one bridesmaid’s goin’ to do for both;
-who d’youse t’ink it is?”
-
-“I don’t know,” replied Larry.
-
-“It’s Maggie Dwyer,” said Jimmie. “Say, there’s a girl for yer life!
-She’s got ’em all tied hand an’ foot.”
-
-“If there was no Annie,” remarked Goose, “and I had the drag with
-Maggie that youse have, why her name’d be McGonagle in short order,
-le’me tell ye that.”
-
-“G’way,” said Larry. “Quit yer stringin’.”
-
-“This is on the level,” insisted McGonagle. “I’ve heard it talked about
-for years. Everybody in the ward knowed that she wanted ye,--everybody
-but yerself. But, say, youse seemed so dead leary about the t’ing that
-nobody had the nerve to say anyt’ing to youse.”
-
-After the two young men departed, a perfect stream of reporters began
-to call, all anxious to get Larry’s views upon the political situation;
-and when this had subsided, Mason and Kerrigan came in, to talk over
-yesterday and confer about to-morrow.
-
-“Did youse see McQuirk since yesterday?” asked Larry, after some time
-spent in this fashion.
-
-“No,” answered Kerrigan, “but I received a note from him late last
-night, asking me to call upon him this afternoon.”
-
-Larry nodded. “I was at his house when he wrote it,” said he. “Youse
-don’t need to worry any about him; he’s right in line. He kin carry the
-ward, with youse on the ticket, hands down. And that’s McQuirk’s game,
-every time. As long as he’s on the side that wins he can make good, ye
-know, and any time they need the ward in a deal they have to come to
-him with the money.”
-
-“Owen Dwyer seems to think,” said Mason, “that the election is only a
-matter of the size of Kerrigan’s majority.”
-
-“That’s right,” said Larry. “In this ward, and in all the others for
-that matter, the fightin’s done at the primaries; the guy what’s
-named in the regular way by the party what runs the ward, has got the
-election cinched.”
-
-When he and Mason were ready to go, Kerrigan said:
-
-“I am glad that Nolan and Ferguson came out of their matter all right.
-I know Cullen, one of the doctors at St. Mary’s, and he told me that
-Mart Kelly’s condition, while painful, is not necessarily serious.”
-
-“O’Connor an’ Gartenheim talked to McQuirk,” said Larry; “and McQuirk
-squared it all right at the front office. They had to give bail but the
-case’ll never come to trial, because Jim Kelly won’t push it; he knows
-what Mart was done up for, and he dasn’t.”
-
-“McGonagle tells me that things are all O. K. in his matter,” remarked
-Kerrigan, as they stood upon the steps, Larry in the doorway. “I’ll be
-on hand promptly at noon to attend to my end of it.”
-
-Larry closed the door after they had departed and returned to the
-sitting room. He was glad that matters political had turned out as
-they did--but only because it would prevent the loss of Owen Dwyer’s
-savings, and thereby please Maggie--outside of that he seemed to have
-lost all zest of the battle, all exultation in the victory.
-
-Maggie was in his thoughts, Maggie and Maggie only. Since his talk
-with her the morning before, she seemed to have grown nearer to him.
-He did not dream that this was caused by a lessening of his sense of
-inferiority--by a gradual growth of faith in himself, which had its
-conception in the hardly realized fact that he had been the dominant
-spirit in a matching of wits which, in result, meant not a little to
-her.
-
-He only thought of her kind manner, her smile and invitation to call
-again; he only remembered Kerrigan’s half-jesting remark after they
-had left the house. And then there were McGonagle’s words; Goose was a
-friend of his and would not deceive him. He had said that Maggie was
-not indifferent! Could this be so? Had he been so blind, so full of
-self-pride as to not see it? Could it be that the aloofness with which
-he had long secretly charged her had all been of his own doing? It is
-not often that a man wishes himself in the wrong; but that, at this
-moment, was Larry’s most earnest desire.
-
-“I’ll settle it to-night,” he said to himself. “I’ll brace up and give
-her a chance to flag me.”
-
-Half past eleven saw Larry hurrying toward Clancy’s. Two of O’Connor’s
-hacks were drawn up at the curb before the grocery, from one of which
-McGonagle and Larkin were assisting Rosie, Annie and Maggie. Clancy and
-O’Hara were alighting from the second, which they had shared with the
-two bridegrooms; a flock of marvelling children were gathered upon the
-sidewalk; and the heads of their elders were popping out of windows and
-doorways full of wonder and surprise.
-
-Larry raised his hat and took the hand which Maggie offered him.
-
-“I’m sorry,” said she, “that I can’t remain to see the result of your
-planning. It is very clever!” Larry caught the look in her eyes and it
-said as plainly as words that it was no more than she had expected of
-him. A sudden tumult was raised in his breast and perhaps he pressed
-her hand a little; at any rate she flushed and withdrew it quickly.
-
-“I must get back to my class before the morning session is over,”
-she continued. “The principal would only give me an hour’s leave of
-absence.”
-
-“I’m comin’ to see you to-night,” said he, courageously.
-
-He did not even ask her permission! She gasped a little, in surprise,
-but laughed as though she liked it.
-
-“I shall be at home,” said she. Then she kissed the two girls.
-“Good-by, I shall run around this afternoon to see you both, and,” with
-a sly glance at O’Hara, “to hear of the fun.”
-
-When she had gone, Larry followed the others into the house, Mrs.
-Clancy embraced Annie and sobbed; then Annie and Rosie began to sob
-also, while Goose and Jimmie looked uncomfortably at one another, each
-with a feeling of guilt heavy upon him.
-
-“Here is yez raysate, Mister Clancy,” said O’Hara, handing the grocer a
-slip of paper. “It’s a man av me word I am.”
-
-“Youse’ll get your cash, as soon as the fortune comes along, O’Hara,”
-McGonagle informed him reassuringly.
-
-It was at this point that Kerrigan walked into the room.
-
-“It’s a queer thing to do right after a wedding,” said the young
-attorney, after he had congratulated the happy couples, “but the fact
-is, Mr. Clancy, I am here to read a will. And as all the persons spoken
-of in the document are present, I will, with your permission, get down
-to business.”
-
-He took a neatly folded paper from his breast pocket.
-
-“The will,” he continued, “is that of the late Honora Cassidy,
-spinster.”
-
-“Ah! Ah!” exclaimed Clancy, striking the table with his fist; “Now
-we’ll know the rights av it. Faith an’ I knew Honora had money.”
-
-“So it’s Honora Cassidy that yez meant?” said O’Hara looking at
-Larry. Then he turned to Kerrigan. “Sure, I wur acquainted wid her in
-Skibereen whin I wur a young felly.”
-
-“I am aware of the fact,” returned Kerrigan, dryly. “The document reads
-this way:
-
-“I, Honora Cassidy, being in sound physical and mental health, do make
-this my last will and testament. Having remained a spinster up to this
-date and recognizing the emptiness and loneliness of such a state, I,
-in this instrument, do all in my power to prevent my half-brother’s
-child, Annie Clancy, from following my example.
-
-“With this end in view I bequeath all my estate, both real and
-personal, with Charles Mason as Trustee, to the man who marries the
-said Annie Clancy, on the condition that the ceremony is performed
-within thirty (30) days after my decease.”
-
-“Ha! An’ so yez knew av this, O’Hara!” exclaimed Clancy. “Yez knew av
-it an’ played me the darty trick till git yez money out av McGonagle!”
-
-“A stroke av business, Clancy,” murmured O’Hara soothingly, “A mere
-stroke av business, sir.”
-
-“But say, Kerrigan,” put in Larry, with great innocence, “if Annie
-hadn’t got married within the thirty days?--what then?”
-
-“Then,” replied the attorney, referring to the will, “the estate would
-have gone to the only man who ever made a proposal of marriage to the
-deceased--and whom she refused.”
-
-Larry had his eyes fixed upon O’Hara, who at these words, started
-suddenly, and sat bolt upright.
-
-“An’ who wur that, Johnnie?” asked Mrs. Clancy, who, womanlike, felt a
-great curiosity upon this point.
-
-“Our esteemed friend, Malachi O’Hara.”
-
-“What!” shrieked Clancy, leaping to his feet. “D’yez mane till say,
-Goose, me b’y, that yez made the owld harp do himself out av a fort’in?”
-
-“Not me,” said McGonagle, modestly; “it was Murphy.”
-
-O’Hara had slowly arisen, his dumpy form quivering, his face crimson
-with wrath.
-
-“It wur a conspiracy!” exclaimed he, thumping the floor with his cane;
-“a conspiracy to defraud me out av me possible roights!”
-
-“’Twur a nate bit av wurk,” cried Clancy, enthusiastically shaking his
-son-in-law by the hand. “An’ I forgi’ yez for my part av it. Sure, yez
-are all great b’ys together!”
-
-O’Hara continued to stamp about the room; Rosie wept on Jimmie’s
-shoulder, frightened at her father’s anger. At last the second-hand
-dealer grabbed up his hat and made for the door.
-
-“Come home wid me, Rosie!” commanded he. “Don’t be stayin’ here till
-see yez father chated an’ robbed.”
-
-“She’ll go home with me, after this,” said Jimmie Larkin, as he fondly
-kissed the tears from her cheek.
-
-“Thin, the divil do her good av ye!” O’Hara swept the room with a
-stormy glance. “It’s the law I’ll have on yez,” foamed he, “Ivery wan
-av yez’ll sup sorra for yez divilment, raymimber that!”
-
-And he banged the door after him and was gone.
-
- * * * * *
-
-IT was a beautiful night; the moon was sailing through the heavens
-attended by countless myriads of jewel-like stars; the breeze rustled
-gently through the street, and as Larry neared Maggie’s home he caught
-the soft notes of an old, old song.
-
-Owen sat upon the step, enjoying the fineness of the night, and as the
-young man came up he arose and gripped him by the hand.
-
-“God bless ye, Larry,” said he, with a subdued emotion rare in the
-Celt. “God bless ye for what yez done for me and mine! I niver towld
-Maggie till the day, but iv Kelly had won, it’s find another home we’d
-had till do, for ivery dollar I could rake an’ scrape were in that
-stock. I took a great risk, b’y, I see it now; but it wur all for her
-sake, Larry, all for her sake.”
-
-Larry entered, leaving the old man smoking peacefully upon the steps.
-The hallway was dim, and he walked softly to avoid knocking against
-things. But a shaded lamp threw a soft light about the parlour, and he
-paused in the doorway to listen to the faint music and the words of the
-song. Maggie sat at the piano, her back toward him; she was dressed in
-white, clinging stuff that displayed the full charm of her fine figure;
-her fingers touched the keyboard lightly, caressingly and she sang in a
-subdued, brooding way:
-
- “_Oh promise to meet me when twilight is falling,
- Beside the blue waters that slumber so fair,
- Each bird in the meadow your name will be calling,
- And every sweet rose-bud will look for you there._”
-
-She paused, her fingers still straying over the keys, and Larry took up
-the song:
-
- “_In morning and evening for you I am sighing,
- The heart in my bosom is yours evermore,
- I’ll watch for you, darling, when daylight is dying,
- Sweet rose of Killarney, Mavourneen asthore._”
-
-She arose and slowly turned toward him. Her face was rosy, her eyes
-shining with a light that was good to see.
-
-He advanced half way, then paused, his arms outstretched. She
-understood, on the instant, and came the remainder of the way; then the
-strong arms were around her and he had kissed her upon the lips.
-
-“When shall it be?” he asked, in a masterful way.
-
-“Not for a long, long time,” she answered. “Remember Mary!”
-
-“I’ll never forget her.” His eyes were dim with feeling.
-
-“Poor Mary,” whispered Maggie, softly. “Dear, sweet, gentle Mary!”
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
- RECENT
- PUBLICATIONS
- _of_
- McClure, Phillips
- & Co.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- _New York_
- 1901-1902
-
-
-
-
-By Joel Chandler Harris
-
-GABRIEL TOLLIVER
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THIS is by far the most mature and important work that Mr. Harris has
-yet given us. Like _David Copperfield_, _Gabriel Tolliver_ is intensely
-personal, and is practically the story of Mr. Harris’ own boyhood
-experiences. In so far as its setting is concerned it is a novel of
-Reconstruction in the South. It is the most perfect picture in fiction
-of those disheartening days following the war, when the Southern
-States seemed likely to sink into anarchy through the corruption of
-the carpet-baggers. In the midst of such conditions, and the quaint,
-unprogressive life of the little Georgia community, Shady Dale, a
-beautiful study of boy and girl love is developed and carried to a
-happy conclusion after exciting adventures on the part of the hero,
-who is falsely accused of the murder of a Government agent engaged in
-inciting the negro population to violence against the whites.
-
-$1.50
-
-
-
-
-By S. R. Crockett
-
-Author of “The Stickit Minister,” “The Black Douglas,” “The Firebrand,”
-etc.
-
-THE BANNER OF BLUE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-IN _The Banner of Blue_ Mr. Crockett offers a new version of that most
-wonderful of parables, the prodigal son. Against the sombre background
-of the Disruption Period in Scotland he draws with a master hand two
-brilliantly colored love-stories, the one intense to its tragic end,
-the other delightful in its quaint Scotch humor. The character-drawing
-possesses in particular the quality of nearness and reality, and he who
-reads must suffer with the proud Lord of Gower in the downfall of his
-idolized son, laugh with Veronica Cæsar in her philosophical bearing of
-domestic burdens and tyranny, and share with John Glendonwyn his love
-for the will-o’-the-wisp sweetheart, Faerlie Glendenning. That part of
-the story dealing with the separation of church and state calls forth
-not only the strongest but the most picturesque traits of the Scottish
-people.
-
-$1.50
-
-
-
-
-By Mary Stewart Cutting
-
-LITTLE STORIES OF MARRIED LIFE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-MRS. CUTTING begins where other storytellers leave off. Marriage is a
-very general experience, and the married in actual life seem as much
-alive as other people; but in literature they generally pass out of any
-existence worth the name when the ceremony is performed. In the very
-heart of domesticity Mrs. Cutting finds moving crises and climaxes,
-perils and triumphs. Why not? Domestic affairs make or break the daily
-existence of most of us. Her book has a peculiarly American quality,
-for the American home is its field; at the same time its pages are
-especially rich in those touches of nature, humorous or pathetic--often
-humorous and pathetic--that make the whole world kin.
-
-$1.25
-
-
-
-
-GOLDEN NUMBERS
-
-_A Book of Verse for Youth_
-
-_Edited by_
-
-KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN AND NORA ARCHIBALD SMITH
-
-_with an Introduction and Little Letters on Poetry by_
-
-KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN
-
-FOR the purpose of compiling this book Mrs. Riggs [Kate Douglas Wiggin]
-and her sister, Miss Smith, have explored practically the entire body
-of English poetry, and have spent two years in the work of selection
-and arrangement. The result, it is hardly necessary to say, in view of
-Mrs. Riggs’ well-known sympathy with the needs and interests of young
-life, is the greatest work ever planned to put the boys and girls of
-America and England in possession of the poetic heritage of their
-literature. The volume may well serve as a general anthology for all
-ages, so representative is it and so complete. And yet so skillfully
-has the work been done that nothing is introduced which might not serve
-immediately to win the attention of the young reader and to stimulate
-his curiosity to make independent discoveries in the broad fields that
-lie beyond the covers of his book. A second volume is in preparation.
-It will be entitled _The Posy Ring_, and will aim to interest still
-younger readers than those to which _Golden Numbers_ will make an
-appeal.
-
-
-
-
-By A. Conan Doyle
-
-THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES
-
-A Sherlock Holmes Novel
-
-Illustrated by Sidney Paget
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_The London Chronicle_, in a review headed
-
-“THE ZENITH OF SHERLOCK HOLMES,”
-
-says:
-
-“We should like to pay Dr. Doyle the highest compliment at our
-command. It is not simply that this book is superior in originality
-and construction to the earlier adventures of the great detective. Dr.
-Doyle has provided a criminal who, as Mr. Holmes admits, is indeed a
-foeman worthy of his steel.[A] Hitherto he has found it comparatively
-easy to unmask his antagonists. But in the present case he finds
-himself checkmated again and again. There is pitted against him a skill
-nearly equal to his own, and he wins the game almost by a hair.”
-
-[A] “I tell you, Watson, this time we have a foeman who is worthy of
-our steel.”--_Sherlock Holmes._
-
-$1.25
-
-
-
-
-By George Douglas
-
-THE HOUSE WITH THE GREEN SHUTTERS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THE first novel of a new master. The work has gained wide-spread
-recognition on both sides of the water. Three of the most conservative
-and authoritative publications in England include it among the first
-twelve of the year. In this country _Harper’s Weekly_ gives it as one
-of the two most interesting novels of the year.
-
-_The critics differ as to with what other master George Douglas should
-be compared_:
-
- _The London Times_ says: “Worthy of the hand that drew ‘Weir of
- Hermiston,’” and that “Balzac and Flaubert, had they been Scotch,
- would have written such a book.”
-
- _The Spectator_: “His masters are Zola and Balzac, but there are few
- traces of the novice and none of the imitator.”
-
- _Vanity Fair_: “It moves to its end with all the terrible unity of an
- Æschylean tragedy.”
-
- _Harper’s Weekly_: “If Thomas Hardy had written of Scotland, instead
- of Wessex, it would have been something like ‘The House with the
- Green Shutters’.... If any man is his (Douglas’) master it is Thomas
- Hardy.”
-
- Hardy, Stevenson, Zola, Flaubert, Balzac, and Æschylus.
-
- Eighth Edition. $1.50.
-
-
-
-
-By Henry Wallace Phillips
-
-RED SAUNDERS
-
-His Adventures, West and East
-
-[Illustration]
-
-There is plenty of dash and adventure in this book, told with a humor
-whose most delightful quality is its unstudied naturalness. The critics
-are all laughing, not at the book, but with it.
-
-“Chantay Seechee Red is the sort of cowpuncher it benefits one to meet
-even between the covers of a book.”--_N. Y. Evening Post._
-
-“Mark Twain has written no more delicious stories.”--_Philadelphia
-Inquirer._
-
-“A delightful study of life in the West.”--_Newark Call._
-
-“The wind blows through it, and the meaning of it is health and
-joy.”--_N. Y. Sun._
-
-“The creator of Red Saunders has an exuberant sense of humor.”--_N. Y.
-Evening Telegram._
-
- Second Edition $1.25
-
-
-McClure, Phillips & Co.
-
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-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
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- Superscripted text is preceded by a carat character: M^c.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
- Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.
-
- No attempt has been made to regularize dialect and brogue.
-
- There was a typesetting error that occurred at the beginning of
- Chapter VIII, and the affected chapter numbers have been corrected.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The ragged edge, by John T. McIntyre</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The ragged edge</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>A tale of ward life &amp; politics</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: John T. McIntyre</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: November 17, 2022 [eBook #69373]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by University of California libraries)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RAGGED EDGE ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="450" alt=""></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1>THE RAGGED EDGE</h1>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt=""></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<p><span class="xxlarge">The Ragged Edge</span><br>
-<br>
-<span class="large">A T<i>ale of</i> W<i>ard</i> L<i>ife &amp;</i> P<i>olitics</i></span></p>
-
-<p>By<br>
-
-<span class="xlarge">John T. M<span class="ls"><sup>c<sub>.</sub></sup></span> Intyre</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="large">First Novel</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_titlelogo.jpg" alt=""></div>
-
-<p><span class="large">Series</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_titledeco.jpg" alt=""></div>
-
-<p>New York<br>
-
-<span class="large">M<i>c</i>C<i>lure</i>, P<i>hillips &amp;</i> C<i>o</i>.</span><br>
-Mcmii</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center"><i>Copyright, 1902, by</i><br>
-McCLURE, PHILLIPS &amp; CO<br>
-<br>
-Published, September, 1902, R</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="center"><span class="large"><i>To</i><br>
-Wayne, Andy, George &amp; Lew</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="ph2">THE RAGGED EDGE</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter I</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">“<i>Arrah, me jewel, sure, Larry’s the boy!</i>”</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="indentleft"><span class="smcap">Old Song.</span></span></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WEARY horses dragged ponderous trucks
-homeward; the drivers drooped upon their
-high seats and thought of cans of beer; a
-red sun threw shafts of light along the cross-town
-streets and between the rows of black warehouses.</p>
-
-<p>The porters had all gone for the night from Mason
-&amp; Sons, and young Mason stood upon the office step,
-about to lock the door, when Kerrigan jumped from
-a passing car and hailed him.</p>
-
-<p>“I just happened to notice you as I was going by,”
-Kerrigan said; “and that reminded me that I wanted
-to speak to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come in and sit down,” said Mason, leading the
-way into the office.</p>
-
-<p>“I drew up a will the other day in which you were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-named as executor,” said Kerrigan, mounting a stool
-at the bookkeeper’s desk.</p>
-
-<p>Mason looked at him questioningly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s old Miss Cassidy who kept house for your
-father, years ago. She said that she had not spoken
-to you about the matter, but that she felt sure that
-you would consent to act.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a queer old soul,” smiled Mason.</p>
-
-<p>“No queerer than the will she had me make for
-her. Quite a tidy sum of money, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“She was very saving; and then father thought
-well of her and advised her about small investments
-which were successful. But what induced her to
-make a will? Is she ill?”</p>
-
-<p>“She says she is getting old, and thought that the
-matter should be settled. By the way, Mason, there
-are rumours going about the City Hall that must interest
-a reformer like you,” and Kerrigan smiled at his
-friend. “The Motor Traction Company is endeavouring
-to secure possession of Center and Line streets.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do they contemplate purchasing the rights of the
-new company?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not while there’s a chance to steal them; and from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-what I’ve heard during the last few days that has been
-their object since the time the injunction was granted
-against the rival concern.”</p>
-
-<p>The young attorney planted his back against the
-desk and braced himself with his elbows. “Let me
-give you a sketch of the thing,” said he. “The City
-Railway Company was duly chartered, secured the
-franchise from councils for these two streets and spent
-thousands of good dollars in putting down road-bed,
-rails and all that sort of thing. At this stage the Motor
-Company suddenly discovered that Center and Line
-streets were arteries that would tap the thickly populated
-sections, and that the new company would reduce
-their earnings.</p>
-
-<p>“Under cover of a protest from citizens living
-along the line of the new road, an injunction was
-gotten out staying all work; the matter was carried
-into the courts, where it has been hanging fire ever
-since.”</p>
-
-<p>“But,” put in Mason, “a decision was rendered in
-favour of the City Company less than a week ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know that; and in that decision the new move
-of the Motor people had its birth. The long delay, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-cost of fighting the case and all that, pretty well
-drained the resources of the City people, who were
-none too rich to begin with. And a time limit was
-put upon the building of the line at the time the franchise
-was granted. The time specified will shortly
-expire and the road is but half built. The Motor
-Company intends to put unlimited money into the
-next local election in order to elect a majority in both
-branches of councils favourable to revoking the franchise
-on the ground of failure to live up to their
-contract.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, this is infamous!” exclaimed Mason.
-“How could the road be built in the time specified
-when the courts prevented their working upon it?”</p>
-
-<p>Kerrigan shrugged his shoulders. “The Motor
-Company want that franchise and it is not at all particular
-about how it is gotten.”</p>
-
-<p>The two young men rose and made their way to
-the sidewalk.</p>
-
-<p>“I understand,” said Mason, as he sprang the catch
-of the office door, “when the new company was organized
-that the stock was mostly taken up in small<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-lots by small store-keepers and people with accounts
-in saving banks.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s true,” answered Kerrigan; “and that’s
-what makes the company easy game.”</p>
-
-<p>A heavy team swung up to the curb and a square-jawed
-young fellow climbed down from his seat. A
-battered, drink-sodden man tremulously clutched him
-by the arm and began mumbling incoherently. The
-teamster slipped him a nickel and gave him a helpful
-shove down the street; then he approached and said
-to Mason:</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a lot o’ stuff up at Shed B for youse
-people. Shannon wants t’ know when ye want it
-hauled.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes,” replied Mason. “We received the notice
-late this afternoon. Tell Shannon to have it here
-the first thing in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good enough!” The driver was about to turn
-away when Kerrigan exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Larry! What’s doing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Johnnie,” greeted the other. “I didn’t
-know youse.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>“Who’s your friend?” questioned Kerrigan, nodding
-toward the receding form of the tramp.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, just a guy what braced me for a nickel so’s
-he could hang up his hat on the inside of a wall. He
-said it’s been so long since he covered his stilts wit’
-a sheet that he forgets what it feels like.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“I told him that I was workin’ this side o’ the
-street meself. Say, it’s a big t’ing when a guy kin dig
-down in his pants an’ produce a roll that would stop
-a window; but the minute I run up against a bundle
-o’ rags me vest buttons is in danger. Say, Johnnie,
-was youse ever strapped?”</p>
-
-<p>Kerrigan confessed that he had been.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess every geezer along the line has done the
-stunt at some stage o’ the game. Why, I’ve been so
-tight on the hooks that I couldn’t tell the difference
-between a coon blowin’ a cake walk an’ a gutter band
-handin’ out the ‘Dead March in Saul’; an’ if Queen
-Anne cottages was sellin’ for a quarter a bunch I
-couldn’t buy in a cellar window. I tell youse what it
-is, Kerrigan, when a guy’s room rent’s six weeks on
-the wrong side o’ the ledger an’ his meal ticket wont<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-stan’ for another hole in it, it’s time for him to start
-somethin’ doin’, an’ try an’ git his eyes on a graft
-what’s got ‘In God we trust’ chalked on its back.
-Ain’t that right?”</p>
-
-<p>“A man entirely without money,” said Mason, “is
-certainly an object for sympathy.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry gestured his contempt.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to deal in that,” said he. “If I could sell
-it at two bits a crate I’d make money till youse
-couldn’t rest. The lobsters what runs the beanery’s
-got sympathy to give away; but youse couldn’t coax
-a beef stew out o’ the kitchen if ye had a smile like
-Maude Adams. And the gent that runs the hock
-shop keeps it in stock too, but the same guy wouldn’t
-lend youse a half a plunk on a pair o’ bags wit’ a
-hole in ’em if ye was spittin’ blood.</p>
-
-<p>“Sympathy,” continued the square-jawed young
-man, “is the cheapest graft that ever looked over the
-hill; it’s got every other con game skinned to death
-and a guy in a tight pull takes chances o’ breakin’
-his neck over it every time he opens his mouth. But,
-say, on the level, when a man’s single, an’ on’y got
-one end to watch he kin pipe up a breeze if he ain’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-dead leary on action; but when he’s got a full hand
-o’ kids like me friend Chip Nolan, an’ has to keep
-leather on their tootseys an’ their first teeth busy
-three times a day, he’s got to keep his t’ink-tank
-stirrin’ to beat the band, or he’ll look like a last year’s
-poster on a broken-down fence.”</p>
-
-<p>He climbed up to his high seat and gathered up the
-reins.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t t’ink from this song an’ dance,” said he,
-“that I’ve ever stood in line wit’ a yellow ticket an’
-a tin can. But, say, as Chip Nolan ’ed say: ‘Yer on
-the turf, mate, but youse ain’t under it yet.’ See?
-Git ’ep, Pete!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter II</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>Ding, dong, ding-el, ding-el, dong,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Listen to the echo in the dell,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Hurry, little children, Sunday morn,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>There goes the old Church bell.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Harrigan.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was Sunday morning. The iron heart of the
-bell that hung in the tower of St. Michael’s
-beat against its brazen ribs, and the clangour
-went rioting over the housetops. Streams of people,
-dressed in their Sunday best, picked their way
-across the railroad toward the sound; heavy faces
-peered through bedroom windows and sleep-dry lips
-murmured curses at the noise; a shifting engine panted
-heavily as it dragged a milk train over the rails, and
-spat cinders into the face of day.</p>
-
-<p>In the kitchen of a squat, shabby building fronting
-on the railroad, a lean, yellow-faced old woman sat
-beside the range, nursing her knees and drawing at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-a black clay pipe. Another, almost her counterpart,
-was sweeping the floor with the worn stump of a
-broom.</p>
-
-<p>“God be good till uz, Ellen!” suddenly exclaimed
-the first. “What are yez about?”</p>
-
-<p>“What talk have ye, Bridget?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure ye wur as near as a hair till swapin’ the bit
-av dust out av the dure!”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil a fear av me. Is it swape the luck from the
-house I’d be doin’?”</p>
-
-<p>Ellen scraped up the sweepings. “There do be
-bad luck enough about the place,” she continued, as
-she slid the dust into the fire and watched it burn,
-the flame lighting up her old, faded face, her dirty
-white cap, her bony, large-veined hands. “Malachi
-tells me that the biz’ness do be poorly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Little wonder,” declared Bridget, knocking the
-ashes from her pipe and laying it carefully on the top
-of a tin at the back of the stove. “I know’d what
-’ud come av havin’ the son av a Know-nothin’ glosterin’
-about the place! Sure the curse av God is on
-the loike!”</p>
-
-<p>“True for yez,” assented her sister. “Owld Larkin<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-wur the spit av the owld felly himself; he wur
-a Derry man an’ as black a Presbyterian as iver cried
-‘To h—l wid the Pope!’”</p>
-
-<p>Ellen took up the hot pipe and charged it from the
-tin, shaking her head ominously.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, the Orange thafe!” piped the other. “Well
-do I raymember him, years ago, at the riots at the
-Nanny-Goat Market, that stood beyant there where
-the railroad is. Sure it wur him that put the divil in
-their heads till burn down St. Michael’s; an’ wid me
-own two eyes I see him shoutin’ an’ laffin’ as the cross
-tumbled intill the street!”</p>
-
-<p>Ellen made a hurried sign of the cross and muttered
-some words in Gaelic.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ they say,” whispered she, awed, “that he
-barked loike a dog iver after!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorra the lie’s in it, avic. Owld Mrs. Flannagan,
-that lived nixt dure till him, towld me, wid her own
-two lips, that it wur so. Bud he always said it wur
-asthma he wur after havin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the robber! It wur himself that cud twist
-t’ings till serve his turn. More like it wur the divil in
-him, cryin’ till be let out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>“An’ d’yez raymember at the toime av the riots,
-Ellen, whin he stood be the fince, overight our back
-yard, wid Foley’s musket, waitin’ for any av uz till
-pop out our heads?”</p>
-
-<p>Ellen, through some mischance, had swallowed
-some of the rank pipe smoke, and she gasped and
-strangled, with waving hands and protruding eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Well do I, asthore,” she panted between her fits of
-coughing. “Oh, the Crom’ell!”</p>
-
-<p>“Bridget,” cried a voice from the storeroom in front,
-“have ye not me bit av breakfast ready? It’s late for
-Mass I’ll be iv yez don’t stir yezself, woman.”</p>
-
-<p>Malachi O’Hara stood in his shop among his stock
-in trade. About him were heaped the rakings of low
-auction rooms and pawnbrokers’ sales; stacks of half-worn
-clothing lay upon the counter; the shelves were
-loaded with crockery, oil lamps, plaster of paris
-images, table cutlery, clocks, fly-specked pictures and
-a heterogeneous mass of battered, greasy and utterly
-useless articles for which it would be impossible to
-find names. In the window hung a banjo with two
-broken strings; a family Bible, its pages held open
-by a set of steel “knuckle dusters” lay just below,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-and it was garnished on all sides with old-fashioned
-silver watches, seal rings, black jacks and so on down
-the list of articles that clutter such establishments.</p>
-
-<p>O’Hara, a pot-bellied man, bald, broad-faced and
-with hard little eyes, walked back to the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>“We wur talkin’ av owld Jimmie Larkin,” said
-Bridget putting the crockery upon the table. “Look
-till the sup av coffee, Ellen,” she whispered, hurriedly,
-“d’ye not see that it’s b’ilin’ over!”</p>
-
-<p>O’Hara glowered at them, angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ it’s only startin’ yez are!” he cried. “D’ye
-si’ here like a pair av owld cacklin’ hens, an’ the bell
-just rung for Mass!”</p>
-
-<p>The bell had just ceased and people were still hurrying
-on; the red sun peeped at them from behind the
-church tower; the hands of the big clock reproachfully
-pointed out the fact that they were late. Bridget
-glanced through the side window.</p>
-
-<p>“There goes Clancy’s wife in her new silk,” said
-she. “It’s proud enough she’s gettin’ till be, since
-her husband opened the grocery.”</p>
-
-<p>“May the divil fly away wid Clancy’s wife an’ her
-silks as well! Faix an’ there do be other things that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-Clancy could do wid his money!” O’Hara was in a
-stormy mood.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit down till yez bit av breakfast,” soothed Ellen.
-“Clancy do be doin’ well an’ will pay the money he
-borried av ye, Malachi. It’s drink yez coffee black
-yez’ll have till,” she added, “for young McGonagle
-have not come wid the milk yet.”</p>
-
-<p>He sat down with a crabbed laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“McGonagle is it!” exclaimed he. “Faith an’
-there’s another wan. The toime is drawin’ on, so it
-is, but divil the dollar richer is he. It’s wait for me
-bit av money he’ll be wantin’ me till, but scure till
-the day will I. I’ll sell him out, the spalpeen! He do
-not trate me wid rayspect.”</p>
-
-<p>A rattling of wheels ceased at the door, and it
-shook under a thundering hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Spake av the divil!” remarked Ellen. She took a
-pitcher from the table and opened the door. “A pint,”
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>The youth with the milk-pail dexterously dipped
-out the required quantity.</p>
-
-<p>“Heard the news?” inquired he.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>“We’ve heerd nothin’,” returned Ellen, “barrin’
-that Hogan as he passed on his bate this mornin’,
-towld uz that his b’y Tom wur near kilt las’ noight
-at yez bla’gard club.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Hogan’s daffy! I meant did ye hear about
-old man Murphy a-dyin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” exclaimed O’Hara, his mouth full, “is
-owld Larry cold, thin?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet; but he’ll die before the day’s over.” And
-with this the milkman threw himself and can into the
-wagon at the curb, and rolled down the street. Ellen
-closed the door and put the pitcher upon the table.</p>
-
-<p>“So he’ll be goin’ at las’,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“Small wonder,” put in the sister; “sure he’s been
-poorly this long time.”</p>
-
-<p>“The owld man made a tidy bit av money in his
-day,” said the brother, admiringly. “Bud,” with a
-sigh, “it’s lavin’ it all he’ll be.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ tell me, Malachi,” said Bridget, “d’yez think
-the gran’son’ll git any av it?”</p>
-
-<p>O’Hara spilled some of the milk into his coffee.</p>
-
-<p>“Divil a cint,” answered he, positively. “Sure, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-owld man have niver noticed him since the day he
-wur born. An’ small blame till him,” rapping upon
-the table with his spoon, “for what call had his son
-till take up wid a Jewess?”</p>
-
-<p>“But,” reasoned Ellen, “now that he do be dyin’
-he might call him in an’—”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorra the fear av that! Faix an’ whin Mike lay
-dead at O’Connor’s, the undertaker, he wint naythur
-nixt nor near him. Some say Kelly wur the cause
-av that, but owld Larry had timper enough av his own,
-God knows.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ do ye t’ink he’ll lave the property till the
-Church?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ayther that or till Mary Carroll. Kelly t’inks
-there do be a chance for his boy, Martin; but Martin’s
-a hard drinker an’ the owld man niver liked a
-bone in his body.”</p>
-
-<p>The gong over the store door rattled sharply. A
-plump little woman with a rosy, chubby face had
-entered; she wore a bright scarlet shawl shot with
-green and saffron, and upon her head was perched a
-tiny black bonnet with blue strings.</p>
-
-<p>“Good mornin’ all,” greeted this lady with a sweeping<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-flourish of a big brass-clasped prayer book. “An’
-Bridget, acushla, have ye heard about poor owld
-Larry Murphy?”</p>
-
-<p>“God luk down on uz, I have,” answered Bridget,
-wagging her head from side to side. “Ah bud death’s
-a sad t’ing, Mrs. McGonagle.”</p>
-
-<p>“True for ye, asthore, true for ye!” And Mrs.
-McGonagle wagged her head also. “But,” she continued,
-“what will become av the houses in the alley,
-an’ the power av money they say he have in bank?”</p>
-
-<p>“We wur this minit spakin’ av that same,” said
-Ellen; “an’ Malachi t’inks the gran’son’ll git sorra
-the cint av it.”</p>
-
-<p>“God be good till uz, Malachi! An’ d’ye t’ink so?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. McGonagle caught her breath and stared at
-O’Hara in horror. “Till t’ink,” she added, in an
-awed tone, “av him holdin’ the grudge an’ him
-a-dyin’.”</p>
-
-<p>O’Hara had finished his breakfast and was putting
-on his coat.</p>
-
-<p>“I can see nothin’ ilce for it,” remarked he, sagely.</p>
-
-<p>“Young Larry is a study, sober, hard workin’ boy!”
-exclaimed Mrs. McGonagle, “an’ its a sin an’ a shame<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-for him till be treated so. He have lodged in me third
-story for a long time, now, an’ I have the first time
-till see him wid a sup av drink in him; an’ I’d say that
-iv it wur me last breath, so I wud!”</p>
-
-<p>The gong rattled; the door slammed; and a girl,
-flushed and breathless, darted through the store and
-into the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Ellen,” cried she, “give me the candles we
-had from last Candlemas Day; an’ I want the ivory
-crucifix, too, for they’ve sent for Father Dawson.”</p>
-
-<p>Ellen began a hurried rummaging for the articles
-named; the girl caught sight of Mrs. McGonagle and
-grasped her by the arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” she exclaimed, “is it you, Mrs. McGonagle?
-I’m glad you’re here; I was just a-goin’ to run around
-to your house.”</p>
-
-<p>“For why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Here!” cried Ellen pushing a parcel into the girl’s
-hand. “Here’s what yez want; away wid ye, now,
-an’ don’t be stan’in’.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll hurry home, won’t you, Mrs. McGonagle,”
-the girl was now at the door, her hand on the latch,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-“an’ tell Larry Murphy his gran’father wants to see
-him before he dies.”</p>
-
-<p>And with that the side door closed behind her and
-she went by the window like a flash.</p>
-
-<p>“Be the powers av Moll Kelly!” exclaimed O’Hara,
-his broad face blank with wonder, “but that bates
-the Owld Nick.”</p>
-
-<p>He stood staring at his sisters, who had their
-withered hands in the air in gestures of amazement.
-Mrs. McGonagle’s face shone with glee and she cackled
-rapturously.</p>
-
-<p>“I must hurry home,” said she, “an’ waken Larry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he still in bed?” cried Ellen.</p>
-
-<p>“Do he not go till Mass?” cried Bridget.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, not very often,” admitted Mrs. McGonagle,
-reluctantly. “He an’ Jimmie Larkin slapes till a’most
-dinner toime ivery Sunday. But Larry’s a daysint
-b’y for all that. Good day till yez.” And with that
-the good little woman bolted into the street and went
-sailing toward McGarragles’ Alley, her bright shawl
-fluttering in the breeze.</p>
-
-<p>The two old crones clawed mystic signs in the air<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-over the spot where their visitor had lately stood and
-began muttering in Gaelic. O’Hara was brushing his
-Sunday high hat with the sleeve of his coat and paused
-as he caught the words.</p>
-
-<p>“What humbuggin’ are yez at now?” demanded he.</p>
-
-<p>“Would yez be after lettin’ the curse stay in the
-house?” cried Bridget.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, she hav the evil eye!” asserted Ellen.</p>
-
-<p>O’Hara regarded them fixedly for a moment; then
-with a snort he put on his hat, took his black-thorn
-stick from behind the door, and started off for church.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>My grandfather, he, at the age of eighty-three,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>One day in May was taken ill and died,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And after he was dead, the will, of course, was read,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>By a lawyer, as we all stood by his side.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Popular Song.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap2">LARRY MURPHY awoke and sat up in bed;
-the sun was streaming in through the one
-small window of Mrs. McGonagle’s third
-story room, and the peal of the bell sounded
-solemnly in his ears. Through the window could be
-seen the church tower, pointing like a gigantic finger
-heavenward; the hands of the clock were slowly lifting
-as though to screen its face from the glare of the
-sun. Larry stretched himself lazily.</p>
-
-<p>“Solemn High Mass,” yawned he.</p>
-
-<p>A second young man lay upon a cot opposite,
-propped up with a pillow and reading a pink sporting
-paper. He glanced up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>“That’s the one,” remarked he, “that the property
-holders come together at, ain’t it? Ye kin see every
-plug hat in the parish on Second Street at half past
-ten on Sunday morning; but I’ll bet five cases to one
-that the collection ain’t no heavier than it is at the
-one what the dump-cart drivers goes to.”</p>
-
-<p>Young Murphy grinned. “Ye’d better not say too
-much about that when yer on the street,” advised he.
-“Some o’ the Turks around here’s dead sore on youse
-since youse led the march at the ‘Sons o’ Derry’s
-Ball,’ an’ they’ll cop youse a sly one when yer not
-next.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t lose any sleep over that,” said the other.
-“Somebody’ll get hurt if they run up against me, and
-that’s no dream. I don’t have to ask no gang o’
-Mocaraws if I kin go to a ball; ain’t that right?”</p>
-
-<p>Murphy nodded the subject aside.</p>
-
-<p>“Anything new?” he inquired, looking at the paper
-which his friend had thrown upon the bare floor.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’ much, ’cept that Jack Slattery got the life
-lammed out o’ him in his twenty round job with McCook’s
-‘Pidgeon.’ There’s a good t’ing gone wrong!
-I know the time when Slattery went right down the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-line and give ’em all a go; but drink got the best o’
-him, and now he’s willin’ to take dimes for a hard
-job agin a big man, where he used to stan’ pat for
-dollars to put out a dub.”</p>
-
-<p>“Rum’s a tough game to go up against,” commented
-Larry. “Say,” after a pause, “how’s yer trip South
-comin’ up?”</p>
-
-<p>“Big. Me manager’s got me go’s at New Orleans,
-Galveston an’ half a dozen other burgs; an’ if I holds
-up me end, he’ll stack me against the champion fer as
-many plunks as youse kin hold in yer hat. That’ll
-be a great graft; eh, Larry? I’ll be a main squeeze
-meself then, and sportin’ guys’ll come out from under
-their hats as soon as they gits their eyes on me!”
-And Jimmie Larkin twisted himself around on his
-elbow and waved one thick, hairy arm delightedly.</p>
-
-<p>“But, talkin’ about fight,” resumed he, “puts me
-in mind o’ the mix up at the club last night. Mart
-Kelly didn’t do a t’ing but open up Hogan wit’ a
-jack.”</p>
-
-<p>Murphy sneered. “Kelly’s gittin’ to be a reg’lar
-slugger,” said he. “What was the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he was a-shootin’ off his mouth like he always<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-does. He said his old man was the best councilman
-the ward ever had; Hogan was about half drunk, and
-he said he was a stiff, and had trun down the party.
-Then they clinched and Kelly started to hammer him.”</p>
-
-<p>All was now quiet in the street except for the rattle
-of an occasional wagon, and the faint wheeze of a
-broken accordion being played down the alley. A
-barb of yellow sunlight shot through the window and
-fell upon a bright lithograph of the Virgin which was
-tacked upon the wall near Larry’s bed. He had bought
-this years before and he had always kept it because
-he thought it looked like his dead mother. Across
-the room was a large photograph of Larkin in ring
-costume, as he had appeared just previous to his
-desperate battle with the champion of the sixth ward;
-and under this again was pasted a policy slip with
-three numbers underscored, commemorative of the
-day that same gentleman had struck the “Hard
-Luck Row,” at Levitsky’s policy shop, and gotten his
-name down upon the books of the tenth police district
-as a “drunk and disorderly.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder,” said Larry, his eyes dwelling soberly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-upon the Jewish face of the Virgin, “how the old
-one is?”</p>
-
-<p>“I saw Rosie O’Hara stan’in’ in the door last night,”
-returned Jimmie, “an’ she said that he was as good
-as gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry,” said Larry. Then catching the look
-which Larkin threw him, he added: “He never done
-nothin’ to me, sure; but when I was a kid an’ me
-father was a-livin’, he told me never to knock.”</p>
-
-<p>The plaster ceiling was seamed with cracks, discolored
-by the soaking through of rain. Larkin, lying
-on his back, thoughtfully followed the longest of these
-with his eye; and when he had reached its termination,
-he said:</p>
-
-<p>“If youse was in with yer gran’dad just now,
-Larry, ye’d come in for some o’ the gilt.”</p>
-
-<p>Murphy turned about with a jerk that threatened
-to end the cot’s unity.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want his coin; I wouldn’t make a play for
-it if I was flat on me uppers! I said that I was sorry
-for the old man, not that I would scoop his money after
-he was planted!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>“Keep yer shirt on,” said Larkin; “I was on’y
-sayin’, ye know.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. McGonagle’s son, Goose, was seated upon an
-empty cracker box in front of Clancy’s grocery; his
-wagon was drawn up at the curb, and a small Italian
-was shining his russet leather shoes. His mother came
-up, panting and wheezing from her haste.</p>
-
-<p>“Run intill the house!” she exclaimed breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“All right; I’m gittin’ me leathers shined,” said her
-son.</p>
-
-<p>“Faith yez shine kin wait, an’ somethin’ ilce can’t.”
-Mrs. McGonagle dropped upon a salt-fish barrel, regardless,
-in her excitement, of what effect the brine
-would have upon her church-going skirt. “Run” she
-continued, “an’ tell Larry Murphy that his poor owld
-gran’father’s at death’s door an’ wants till spake till
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>Goose stared at her incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>“G’way,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t sit there starin’ at me, all as wan as a
-County Down peat cutter, but go at wanst! Divil another
-step cud I stir iv the gates av Heaven wur
-stan’in’ open till me!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>Within a minute after hearing the above tidings
-McGonagle came charging up the crooked steps leading
-to their lodger’s room, like a drove of mavericks.</p>
-
-<p>“Git into yer rags, Murphy,” cried he, “yer
-wanted.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it about Kelly an’ Hogan?” asked Larry. “I
-ain’t no witness. I didn’t see the scrap.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, it’s yer gran’father; he’s a cashin’ in, an’ wants
-to see youse. Me mother jist told me.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry was out on the floor like a shot, pulling on
-his clothes and talking incoherently.</p>
-
-<p>“I kin hear the song they’ll sing,” said he. “They’ll
-pull me into rags; ain’t that right, Larkin? Where’s
-me collar buttons?”</p>
-
-<p>“Look in yer other shirt,” Jimmie was also up, and
-dressing rapidly. Murphy found the missing articles
-and resumed:</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll say I wus on’y waitin’ fer a chance to get
-next to the gilt.” The thought seemed to anger him
-and he glared at his friends. “But it ain’t so,” he
-cried, “so help me God, it ain’t! I don’t want the
-coin; I’ve got a job, ain’t I? And I’ve went up against
-it this far, alone, an’ I kin go the rest o’ the distance,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-too.” He turned to the others, an appeal in his voice.
-“Did I ever make a play? Speak out, did I?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure not,” said McGonagle.</p>
-
-<p>“Yer raw there, Murphy,” said Larkin. “If youse
-hadn’t been afeared o’ what people’d say the old man’d
-shook yer hand long ago.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry drew in the slack of his suspenders and closed
-the catch with a snap. He looked at Larkin in surprise;
-this was a thought that had never struck him.</p>
-
-<p>“D’ye t’ink so?” was all he said.</p>
-
-<p>“I cert’ny do. I often seen youse brush elbows with
-him on the street, and him turn and look after ye.
-He’d a-spoke to ye if youse had give him on’y half a
-chance, see?”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t he have a chance when I was a kid? Didn’t
-he have a chance when me father died and the neighbours
-in the alley had to take up a collection to bury
-him? Did he do anyt’ing for me then? Not on yer
-life, he didn’t! He let ’em put me in a Home.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, say, that wuz a dead long time ago, ain’t that
-right? If youse put a stick o’ wood in the stove it’ll
-burn hard at first, won’t it—but it’ll burn out at last,
-eh? The old one was leary on yer father then; but,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-say, take it from me, the blaze went down long ago,
-and it’s bin a kid game ever since; neither one o’
-youse’d speak first.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry buttoned up his square-cut sack coat and
-looked at his tie in the little glass near the stairway.</p>
-
-<p>“That might be all right,” said he; “but look at the
-time he—” here he stopped short and then added:
-“I don’t want to knock. I promised that I wouldn’t
-and it’s too late to begin now.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot2">
-
-<p>“<i>When yer flat on yer back, wit’ a doctor as referee
-an a train’d nurse holdin’ the towel, why it’s up t’
-youse, Cull, it’s up t’ youse!</i>”</p>
-</div>
-<p class="center"><span class="indentleft"><span class="smcap">Chip Nolan’s Remarks.</span></span></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">A RED-FACED, bare-armed woman opened a
-door in Murphy’s court and threw a pan of
-garbage into the gutter. Her next door
-neighbour was walking up and down the narrow
-strip of sidewalk, hushing the cry of a weazened
-baby.</p>
-
-<p>“Is Jamsie not well, Mrs. Burns?” inquired the red-faced
-woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry the bit, Mrs. Nolan; he’s as cross as two
-sticks. It’s walk up an’ down the floor wid him I’ve
-been doin’ all the God’s blessed night. Scure till the
-wink av slape I’ve had since I opened me two eyes at
-half after foive yisterday mornin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor sowl! Yez shud git him a rubber ring till<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-cut his teeth on; it’s an illigant t’ing for childer’, I’m
-towld.”</p>
-
-<p>Contractor McGlory’s stables and cart sheds stood
-on the opposite side of the court. A young man sat
-on a feed-box in the doorway polishing a set of
-light harness; a group of dirty children were playing
-under an up-tilted cart, and a brace of starving curs
-fought savagely up the alley over a mouldy bone. Mrs.
-Nolan called to the young man:</p>
-
-<p>“An’ sure, is it out drivin’ yez’ed be goin’ so arly
-on Sunday mornin’, Jerry?”</p>
-
-<p>“On’y a little spin,” said the youth. “I want to
-try out a new skate what the old gent bought at the
-bazar.” He rubbed away in industrious silence for a
-moment and then, nodding toward a clean-looking
-brick house at the end of the court, inquired:</p>
-
-<p>“Did youse see Johnnie Kerrigan go in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it young Kerrigan go intill Murphy’s!” Mrs.
-Nolan seemed dumbfounded.</p>
-
-<p>“Not the saloon-keeper’s son that do be at the
-’torneyin’!” cried Mrs. Burns.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the guy,” said Jerry. “He went in a couple
-o’ minutes ago.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>Mrs. Nolan looked at her neighbour, and the latter
-lady returned the look with interest.</p>
-
-<p>“I declare till God!” said the former, “Iv that don’t
-bate all I iver heerd since the day I wur born. Sure
-an’ his father an’ owld Larry have been bitter at wan
-another for years.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s forgivin’ his enemies he’ll be doin’ now that
-the breath do be lavin’ him,” said Mrs. Burns. “Divil
-the fear av him forgivin’ me the bit av rint I owes
-him, though,” she added bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s worse than old Murphy,” said Jerry.
-“Kelly’s got his net out after the court, an’ if he
-lands it, it won’t be long before youse find it out,
-either.”</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Burns could only think of the crusty old
-harpy who went from door to door down the court on
-the first day of the month, the skinny old claw that
-reached out so graspingly for the rent, the leathery
-old face frowning blackly upon delay, of the bitter
-tongue that spat venom into the faces of all not ready
-to pay. And for the life of her, the good woman
-could think of none worse than old Larry Murphy to
-deal with.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>“Faix an’ he’d take the bit av bread out av the
-children’s mouths,” declared she.</p>
-
-<p>A flock of grimy sparrows suddenly lit upon the
-roof of the stable, chattering, fluttering and fighting
-madly; one of the quarrelling dogs had been defeated
-and licked his wounds and howled dolefully; a drunken
-man, passing the end of the court, pitched into the
-gutter and lay there.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother av Heaven!” exclaimed Mrs. Nolan with
-a suddenness that caused her neighbour to jump. She
-was pointing toward the house spoken of as Murphy’s.
-“Look there!”</p>
-
-<p>Young Larry Murphy was standing upon the white
-stone step; he had just pulled the door bell softly;
-and catching the astonished stare of the two women, he
-swore at them under his breath.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re next already,” he muttered. “They’ll
-chew me up, an’ spit me out, an’ laugh about it! Why
-don’t the fagots stay in the house!”</p>
-
-<p>The door opened and he went in, leaving them staring
-at the house over which death was hovering.</p>
-
-<p>Clean and fresh-looking the house stood among its
-squalid surroundings of dirty stables, frowsy, ill-smelling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-drains and pestilential manure pits. Its stone
-steps were spotless, the brass bell knob was as bright
-as burnished gold, the pretty curtains at the windows
-like snow. And this was the home of the landlord
-of the court—the clean, bright, comfortable home he
-had dreamed of years before, when he stepped from
-the emigrant ship to begin life in a new land.</p>
-
-<p>He was dying now, and the money for which he had
-slaved and demeaned himself—the money which he
-had hoarded and loved—was about to pass from him.
-Once more he was going to begin in a new land, and
-a land where hard craft was as nothing beside clean
-hands. Not that old Larry had ever exacted more
-than his due; but he had stood flat-footed for that,
-in spite of prayers and tears; and the reckoning was
-now at hand.</p>
-
-<p>The door had been opened for young Larry by a
-stout, heavy-browed man, dressed in decent black; and
-as he stood aside for the youth to pass him in the
-narrow entry, he showed his discoloured teeth in a
-sneer.</p>
-
-<p>“So ye have hurried here at wanst, eh?” said he.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-“Divil the foot have yez iver put in the house afore,
-Larry?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s manners to wait till yer asked,” returned Larry
-gruffly.</p>
-
-<p>The stout man closed the door. The house was
-soundless, and there was a heavy smell of sickness;
-the door of the sitting room stood partly open, and
-Larry caught the rustle of skirts.</p>
-
-<p>“I knowed yez’ed come,” continued the man who
-had admitted him. “Ah, but it’s the sharp wan yez
-are, Larry.”</p>
-
-<p>The youth turned and grasped the door knob. “I
-knowed how it’d be,” snarled he, looking savagely
-over his shoulder at the stout man. “I’ll lick youse
-for this, Kelly!”</p>
-
-<p>He jerked open the door and was about to depart
-when a woman’s voice called:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Murphy!” A girl had come into the entry
-from the sitting room; she was tall and slim; a bright
-spot burned in each cheek and she coughed slightly as
-the draft from the open door struck her. She held out
-her hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>“I’m glad that you’ve come,” said she. “Your
-grandfather has been asking for you again. Were you
-going away?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Larry. He closed the door and took
-the proffered hand, ashamed of the anger which Kelly
-had awakened. She looked into his face with quiet,
-candid eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“That was wrong,” she said. “He is very low;
-will you come up?”</p>
-
-<p>He silently followed her up stairs. Kelly entered
-the sitting room and stood by the window; his heavy
-brows were bent and his lips were muttering. The
-people were streaming back from the church, across
-the railroad; the sooty shifting engine was still making
-up its train, panting and whistling like some asthmatic
-animal; a priestly-looking young man paused at the
-door of the house and looked up at the number.</p>
-
-<p>“Father Dawson,” muttered Kelly hurrying to open
-the door. “He tuk his toime comin’, faith.”</p>
-
-<p>The sick man, parchment-faced and wasted by disease,
-lay upon his bed; his lips were moving, and his
-gaunt hands clutched the ivory crucifix. The wax<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-candles burned upon a table; beside them stood a
-glass bowl of water blessed at Easter time; a bisque
-image of the Virgin stood upon a shelf, and Rosie
-O’Hara knelt before it, her head bent, her eyes fixed
-upon the floor. Young Kerrigan sat beside the bed,
-reading a newly written paper; the sun slanted in
-between the partly closed blinds and lay like a bar
-of gold upon the floor.</p>
-
-<p>“You have stated your wishes very clearly, Mr.
-Murphy,” said the attorney, “and I see nothing that
-should be changed.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man opened his eyes and tried to sit up.
-“Mary!” said he. “Where’s Mary?”</p>
-
-<p>“Here, Uncle Larry.” The girl knelt beside him
-and smoothed his pillow. “You must lie still,” said
-she, gently.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye will be a witness till me mark,” said he, faintly,
-“an’ so must Rosie. Is she here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes Uncle, she’s here.”</p>
-
-<p>“The sight do be lavin’ me. An’ the b’y? Did he
-say he’d come, Mary?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s here, Uncle Larry.” She took the young<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-man’s hand and placed it within that of his grandfather:
-and once more the old man strove to lift himself,
-peering at the other with dim eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ this is Mike’s son?” he muttered.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.” Larry would have liked to have said
-“Grandfather,” but somehow it stuck in his throat.
-He looked upon the old man with awed, wondering
-eyes; it was the first person he had ever seen upon the
-threshold of death; and the drawn face, wet with the
-death damp, sent a chill through him.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t do right by yez father, Larry,” said the
-sick man, “I t’ought a curse lay upon him for marryin’
-yez mother!”</p>
-
-<p>Larry stepped back from the bedside, and Mary
-Carroll’s quiet eyes alone kept back the angry words
-that leaped to his lips in his mother’s defence. His
-mother—that oriental-eyed mother—bring a curse
-upon anyone! The words still sounded in his ears as
-he looked down at the shrunken form, pity contending
-with anger in his heart.</p>
-
-<p>His mother had died a Christian; she had deserted,
-in fear and trembling, the faith of her fathers; she
-had knelt before the altar raised to the Nazarene Carpenter,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-and strove with all the power of her tortured
-soul to believe that He was the same God who had
-spoken to the Law-Giver of her tribe upon the heights
-of Sinai. And she had done all this through love for
-his father, the father whom this hard old man had disowned.</p>
-
-<p>“I wud niver knowed better iv it hadn’t a-been for
-Mary; she made me see it; it wur her that towld me
-av the black wrong I done yez, both. I’ll make up for
-it, Larry, I’ll make it up, never fear!” The old man
-paused for a moment, his face twitching. “D’ye
-t’ink it’s too late?” he added eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s never too late.” And thinking to soothe the
-fears that gripped at the darkening brain, Larry added.
-“It wasn’t much, ye know.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it wur, lad, it wur. Ye don’t know the gredge
-I wanst held in me heart agin yez both. Didn’t I walk
-the flure, when he lay dead beyant there at O’Connor’s,
-half mad wid the thinkin’? I t’ought till give him a
-daysint berryin’ an’ bring yezself home here; but the
-divil got the better av me, lad, so he did! Yez
-don’t know the black bitterness I’ve held against yez;
-yez don’t know!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>The agitation seemed to exhaust him; he sank back,
-a thin streak of blood showing on his purple lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t excite yourself, Uncle Larry,” said Mary.
-“That is all past and gone now; Larry has forgiven
-you, and his father has, too.”</p>
-
-<p>A smile of hope flickered over the face of the sick
-man, and the girl kissed the withered cheek. The
-youth with the screed leaned forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Hadn’t he better attend to this,” whispered he;
-“he may die at any moment, now. This meeting, or
-rather the prospect of it, was all that kept him up.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man caught the words.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that young Kerrigan?” breathed he; “yez are
-r’ght, Johnnie; soign me name, lad, an’ I’ll make me
-mark.”</p>
-
-<p>The name was attached to the paper, the mark was
-made and the two girls witnessed it. Kerrigan folded
-the paper and put it into his pocket; the old man lay
-back upon his pillow and seemed scarce to breathe; his
-chest was sunken, his eyes stared vacantly. A dog
-yelped dolefully below in the court; from the railroad
-came the hiss of escaping steam and the grind of
-wheels. Kelly opened the door softly, and said:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>“Father Dawson’s comin’ up.” He returned into
-the passage and looked over the stair rail. “This way,
-Father,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>The pure-faced young priest came into the room.
-Mary’s lips trembled and her voice broke slightly as
-she greeted him.</p>
-
-<p>“Bear up,” said he gently; “death is the common
-lot; and then he is very old.” He bent over the bed;
-the bar of light had shifted and old Larry’s hair
-shone like silver under its warm touch. “He should
-have the last rites of the Church,” said the priest.
-Then turning to Kelly and Larry he added: “I will
-ask you to leave the room for a few moments, please.
-You may stay,” to Kerrigan, who had moved toward
-the door with the others. “I may need you.”</p>
-
-<p>The two men stood in the passage for a time in
-silence; Rosie could be heard sobbing heavily, and the
-priest’s voice murmured holy words. At length Kelly
-spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“What wur Kerrigan called in for?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know he was called in,” answered Larry.</p>
-
-<p>Kelly regarded him for a moment, disbelief written
-upon his face. Then he resumed, anxiously:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>“Did the owld man put his mark till anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” and Kelly bent his heavy brows. “Wur
-there anything mention av Martin an’ meself?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t hear nobody mentioned.”</p>
-
-<p>“Humph!” Kelly bit the nail of his thumb viciously
-and spat over the stair rail. Then, after a pause,
-longer than the first, he said: “How is the toide?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tim Burns says it’s on the stan’,” said Kelly. “An’
-whin it goes down, he’ll go out wid it.”</p>
-
-<p>They waited in silence after this; Rosie’s sobs had
-ceased, the clergyman was reciting the litany for the
-dying, and the others were giving the responses. And
-then their voices were hushed; there was a stir in the
-room; the door opened and Mary came out.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Murphy,” said she, “will you hurry over to
-O’Connor’s and tell him to come, at once?”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter V</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>He’d strop up his razor, graceful an’ nice,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>An’ then from your face he’d carve off a slice.</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Your life from the gallows! Ye couldn’t be vexed,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>When Tecumsha O’Riley’s calling out ‘next.’</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Comic Song.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">SCHWARTZ’S barber shop stood almost within
-the shadow of the church tower. The gas
-light streamed through his plate window and
-across the sidewalk; a row of customers lined up
-along the wall, waiting their turn in the chair; the
-fat proprietor stropped a razor and conversed with a
-short man who stood at the stove rubbing a freshly
-reaped chin. A large aired man, with a dyed moustache,
-was pulling a pair of kid gloves over hands
-too large for them. He wore a light overcoat, a silk
-hat, a flower in his buttonhole and seemed to sweat
-importance. This was Squire Moran, thrice elected
-to the minor judiciary and a power in the ward.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>“Ach!” exclaimed Schwartz, “dot vas too pad,
-Misder Purns.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s gittin’ a bit wurried I am,” said the little man;
-“for what kin a body be doin’ wit’out a bit av
-wurk.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure I t’ought, Squire,” said Clancy, the grocer,
-who lay back in the barber’s chair, tucked about with
-towels, “that yez wur goin’ till give Tim a job in
-the water daypartment.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s many a slip, Clancy,” quoth his honour,
-struggling with the gloves. “I’m not the only duck
-in the pond, ye know; and it’s Tim’s own fault that
-he ain’t in the department long ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’s that?” queried the grocer.</p>
-
-<p>“McQuirk’s against him,” answered Moran.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Burns looked downhearted; the others nodded
-sagaciously as though the reason given was all sufficient.</p>
-
-<p>“I almost got down on my knees to him,” went on
-the magistrate, “but he said no; so what can I do?”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s he sore on Tim for?” asked Goose McGonagle
-who, in a bright scarlet tie, sat near the
-wash-stand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>“I wouldn’t vote for O’Connor,” Burns hastened to
-say. “Sure Gartenheim did me a favour wanst; an’
-wud yez have me go back on a friend?”</p>
-
-<p>A murmur went around the room.</p>
-
-<p>“But O’Connor was the reg’lar nominee,” argued
-Moran, “an’ if it hadn’t been for the push that turned
-in for Gartenheim, O’Connor ’ud be holdin’ down the
-office instead of Kelly. McQuirk’s dead leary on split
-tickets—unless he gives the order—an’ he told ye at
-the time that he’d remember ye for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“He had little till do,” mumbled Clancy.</p>
-
-<p>Moran laughed. “What the boss don’t know about
-practical politics ain’t worth knowin’,” said he. “An’
-it’s the little things what holds the party in line. So
-stick to McQuirk an’ McQuirk’ll stick to you.” He
-had succeeded with his gloves by this time and was
-about to depart. “If I can do anything for you, Tim,”
-he added, “I’ll do it. But when Mac says no, why
-he generally means it. Good night, everybody.”</p>
-
-<p>“Niver talk till me av politicians,” said Clancy; “be
-dad they’re all tarred wid wan stick. An’ divil a better
-are they across the say; sure, I wur radin’ in the <i>Irish
-World</i> that Redmond do be at his tricks wanst more.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>“D’yez say so,” exclaimed Burns; “ah, but the owld
-dart is in a bad way betune thim all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Redmond do be after firin’ off some illigant
-spaches,” put in Malachi O’Hara, from behind a newspaper,
-“an’ he’s an able lad, so he is. Didn’t he take
-up for Parnell whin—”</p>
-
-<p>“Parnell!” Clancy snorted his disgust so violently
-as to endanger his safety from the barber’s razor.
-“Don’t talk till me av that felly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yez wur a Parnell man yezself wanst, Clancy,”
-said Burns, with an elaborate wink at the others.
-“Sure, I see the chromo av him that came with the
-<i>Freeman’s Journal</i> nailed up on yez wall overight the
-kitchen dure.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ divil a long it stayed out av the stove after
-he wur found out,” said the grocer stoutly.</p>
-
-<p>“Filled up, Schwartz?” cried Jerry McGlory, poking
-his head in at the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>“Gome in, Mr. McGlory; dere’s nod many aheat of
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>Jerry entered, greeted his acquaintances, and hung
-up his coat.</p>
-
-<p>“Goin’ to the wake?” asked he of O’Hara.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>“’Twuld be but daysint fer me till pay my rayspects
-till the family. Are yez goin’ yezself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! There’ll be a mob there, though.” Then
-turning to the youth in the scarlet tie he inquired:
-“Well, what d’ye know, McGonagle?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. McGonagle had just finished a graphic description,
-for the benefit of his right-hand neighbour, of the
-last performance of a “brass back” cock, the victorious
-veteran of a score of mains, and answered
-affably:</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’ much. On’y the selectman’s the sorest
-mug ye ever put yer lamps on. If ye’d touch him wit’
-a wet finger, he’d sizzle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Arrah, yer right, Goose,” confirmed Burns. “I
-stopped intill his place for a sup av drink as I wur
-comin’ by, an’ from the talk av him yez’d t’ink young
-Murphy had put his hand intill his money drawer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil mend him!” said Clancy.</p>
-
-<p>“I heard,” said McGlory, “that Mary Carroll wasn’t
-left a cent.”</p>
-
-<p>“D’ye tell me so?” O’Hara was greatly interested.</p>
-
-<p>“Glory be!” ejaculated Burns; “an’ the nace so
-good till him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>“Sure, Mary wurn’t his nace,” said Clancy.</p>
-
-<p>“Wur she not! Faix an’ that’s news till me, so
-it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard me father say,” said Jerry, “that Mary’s
-grandfather put up the coin to bring old man Murphy
-over here, and start him in the tea biz. That was a
-good many moons ago; and when her folks lost all
-their gilt and she was left alone, old Larry sent to
-Dublin for her, and he’s took care o’ her ever since.”</p>
-
-<p>“Begorra, the owld fox had a heart in his body for
-all! Bud scure till the wan av me iver give him credit
-for it. God save uz,” resumed Mr. Burns, after a
-pause, “what a power av money he made at the tay
-peddlin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“He uster be a great old geezer, didn’t he?” remarked
-McGonagle. “I kin remember him as plain
-as day in his old plug hat, an’ he wuz hot after the
-needful, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“There do be a good profit in tay,” put in the grocer,
-who was now sitting up, having his hair brushed;
-“but how he iver made all av the property he’s left, be
-peddlin’ it from dure till dure, gits the better av me.”</p>
-
-<p>“He had a head for commerce, sure,” put in O’Hara.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-“It wur himself that cud lay out a dollar till advantage;
-an’ divil the bate av him did iver I see for buyin’
-chape an’ sellin’ dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“He was a winner if he cud beat youse at that game,
-O’Hara,” laughed McGlory.</p>
-
-<p>“Nexd!” cried Schwartz, as Clancy got out of his
-chair. Malachi took the vacated place, a frown wrinkling
-his brow. The grocer, thinking of the hard
-bargain which O’Hara had driven when he had gone to
-him for money, some time before, winked at Jerry,
-delighting in the cut; and Schwartz, as he drew some
-hot water from the copper tank upon the stove into
-O’Hara’s shaving mug, grinned widely.</p>
-
-<p>“Dod vas a good von, Cherry,” muttered he. “You
-hid him hardt, ain’t id?”</p>
-
-<p>Burns, who was gazing through the window, suddenly
-uttered an exclamation, rushed into the street
-and buttonholed a young man who was passing.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that not Dick Nolan, Jerry?” asked Clancy tieing
-his four-in-hand before the mirror over the wash-stand.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” answered Jerry. “I guess Tim’s hittin’
-him for a job.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>“Be the powers! the crayture nades the bit av
-wurk. The good woife an’ two childer’ mus’ find it
-hard; an’ Tim’s a study, sober felly.”</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes Tim returned; his face had a
-brighter look and he was lilting an old country air.</p>
-
-<p>“I go till wurk in the mornin’,” said he with a
-rapturous smile. “Young Nolan is a man av his wurd;
-he promised me a job at the first chance, an’ now he
-have give me wan. McQuirk an’ his political bums
-kin go till the devil, for me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Good luck, lad,” wished the grocer. “Gartenheim
-is the man for yez till stick till.”</p>
-
-<p>“He have the contract for layin’ the sewer above, at
-Frankford,” went on Burns; “an’ he’ll start till open
-the strate t’morry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nolan’s a good guy,” commented Jerry.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s no joke,” agreed McGonagle. “He’s a real
-good t’ing.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a pity,” commented Clancy, “that his mother
-is so tuck up wid the sup av drink.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay!” said Tim, shaking his head dismally.</p>
-
-<p>“She hocks everyt’ing she kin carry,” said McGonagle.
-“Dick can’t trust her wit’ a cent.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>“Small blame till him,” said Clancy; “she’d git
-drink wid it. He comes in an’ pays me bill every
-Saturday noight himself, poor b’y.”</p>
-
-<p>“Makes big money, too,” remarked McGonagle;
-“and she cud live like a lady if she’d cut the bottle.
-It’s hard lines for Dick, le’me tell youse; for he’s a
-hard worker, an’ he’s got mighty big notions ’bout
-gittin’ to the top o’ the heap.”</p>
-
-<p>“That sister o’ his is a nice-lookin’ fairy,” said McGonagle.</p>
-
-<p>“Poody as a bicture,” agreed Schwartz. O’Hara
-gave a grunt; the barber snatched away his blade and
-inquired, “Does der razor hurd?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yez damned near cut me chin!” growled the dealer
-in second-hand goods. “Shut up, an’ tind till yez
-wurk.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a nice girl enough,” said Jerry, “but, say,
-she’s cert’ny playin’ Roddy Ferguson for a dead
-one.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ is Roddy shparkin’ her, sure?” inquired
-Clancy.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! I never seen anybody so broke up on a
-bundle o’ skirts in me life. Say, he’s dead twisted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-about her; he talks about her every time he opens
-his mouth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Roddy’s a study b’y,” said Burns. “I heerd that
-O’Connor’ll be takin’ him intill the bizness wan av
-these days. It’s a good man he’d make her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dick’s leary on him,” said McGonagle, “he won’t
-let her even look at him.”</p>
-
-<p>“D’yez say so!” And Clancy regarded the speaker
-with great surprise. “Faith an’ I t’ought they wur
-great buddies. They wint till the Brothers’ School
-together, an’ in thim days, divil a long they wur iver
-apart.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why it’s a chestnut!” exclaimed McGonagle. “I
-t’ought everybody in the ward was next to that.
-They’ve bin given each other the stony smile ever
-since las’ election, when O’Connor and Gartenheim run
-against each other for select council.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ach!” cried Schwartz, “dot vas a hod dime!”</p>
-
-<p>“The warmest ever,” agreed McGonagle. “It was
-a reg’lar drag out or I never seen one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wur they not both Dimmycrats?” asked Tim.
-“What call had they till foight, I dunno? I wur in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-the division at the toime, sure, bud I niver got the
-roight av the t’ing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, when the gang went to the convention they
-was split an’ primed for trouble, see? One crowd
-wanted O’Connor, an’ the other was a-fracturin’ their
-suspenders whoopin’ t’ings up for Gartenheim. And
-when the O’Connor push got the bulge, the Dutchman’s
-people broke for the door, and started a convention
-o’ their own upstairs o’ Swinghammer’s saloon.
-Both o’ ’em was in the fight from that on, and the
-way they shovelled out the long green ’ed make youse
-t’ink they was rank suckers. Why a mug couldn’t
-turn aroun’ wit’out runnin’ into a bunch o’ money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Glory be!”</p>
-
-<p>“Nolan worked for Gartenheim, of course; he
-couldn’t turn down his own boss, ye know. An’
-Ferguson ’lectioneered for O’Connor for the same
-reason, see? An’ he chased aroun’ the ward waggin’
-his face for votes an’ givin’ Gartenheim the knife
-every chance he got. On election night,” continued
-McGonagle, proudly, “we had the returns at the club
-by private wire, ye know, and when Roddy was dead<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-sure that Kelly had flim-flammed the push, he opened
-up on Nolan an’ said that Gartenheim had been workin’
-wit’ the other side, all along. In a minute they was
-clinched an’ the crowd had to pull ’em apart. That’s
-how it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Goose,” complained Tim, “I don’t see how
-Kelly, who calls himself a Dimmycrat, got on the Raypublican
-ticket.”</p>
-
-<p>“He was foxy,” returned Goose; “I ain’t stuck on
-him, but I’ll say that for him—he’s dead foxy. As
-soon as he seen his own party split he made a play for a
-place on the other ticket; the other side knowed that he
-cud lift a lot o’ votes from us, and that they cud win
-wit’ him, see? McQuirk got onto the game an’ tried
-to make a deal. But they gave him the laugh, and
-wiped up the ward wit’ him on ’lection day, wit’ Kelly
-at the head o’ their column. The boss was red hot,
-le’me tell youse: I heerd him in Kerrigan’s back room
-the next afternoon, and he said he’d be at Kelly’s finish
-if it took every cent he had in his clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Next chendt!” called Schwartz. O’Hara got out
-of the chair, and McGonagle took his place.</p>
-
-<p>“It was all blow, though,” added Goose as Schwartz<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-swathed him in clean towels and began to apply the
-lather. “He’s got over his spasm, an’ they’re both as
-t’ick as t’ives. Say,” to the barber, “keep that soap
-on the outside o’ me face, will youse!”</p>
-
-<p>“Den keep your face shud, aind’t it,” smiled
-Schwartz.</p>
-
-<p>Clancy and Burns were about to leave.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll see yez at the wake, Jerry,” said the former.
-“Will ye go along wid us, Malachi?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have till go to the length av Coogan’s till see a
-stove that they do be waitin’ me till buy,” answered
-O’Hara, “but I’ll folly right after yez.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good night, gentlemen.” And the door closed
-behind Mr. Burns and Mr. Clancy, who headed in the
-direction of Murphy’s Court.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>That’s how they showed their respects for Paddy Murphy,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>That’s how they showed their honour and their pride,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>They said it was a shame for Pat, and winked at one another,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Everything in the wake-house went, on the night that Murphy died.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Murphy’s Wake.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">O’CONNOR’S wagon had come and gone several
-times; a black streamer hung from the
-bell knob; the shutters were bowed with a
-ribbon of the same sombre hue. Groups of children
-sat upon cellar doors and talked in whispers;
-slatternly women stood on doorsteps, morbidly watching
-all who came or went at the house where old Larry
-lay dead. Mrs. Nolan, her head muffled in a woollen
-shawl, was leaning out at her kitchen window, likewise
-engaged, when Hogan the policeman came
-through the court upon his evening round.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>“Are yez goin’ in?” asked he, pausing.</p>
-
-<p>“Not the noight,” replied Mrs. Nolan, “all me bits
-av rags is in the wash, an’ sorra’ a t’ing have I till
-put on me back. Bella an’ Dick will, though, an’ mesilf
-will t’morry noight, plaze God.”</p>
-
-<p>Hogan drummed lightly upon a fireplug with his
-club. “It’s a Solemn High Mass they’ll be havin’,”
-said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Divil doubt it! An’ there’ll be a power av hacks
-at the funeral; Dick wint for wan till McGrath’s, bud
-they wur all spoken.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yez’ll not be at the Holy Cross, thin?”</p>
-
-<p>“Faith, yiz. We have a hack av O’Connor’s, an’
-it’s go in stoyle we will.” Mrs. Nolan was looking
-toward Murphy’s as she spoke, and suddenly exclaimed,
-in a startled voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Who is that, Micky, that young McGonagle have
-be the scruff av the neck? Glory be! Is it foightin’
-he’d be in front av the house where the corpse is?”</p>
-
-<p>A thick-set young man had staggered drunkenly up
-the steps of Murphy’s house, just as Goose McGonagle
-halted before the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Say Kelly,” Goose had remarked, “don’t youse<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-t’ink ye’d better sober up a little before youse go in
-there?”</p>
-
-<p>The man on the steps swayed to and fro and regarded
-him with drink-reddened eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Wha’s it your bizh’ness?” demanded he. “Don’t
-ye put yer beak in thish, McGonagle. D’ye hear?”</p>
-
-<p>“Put yer head to work,” advised Goose, “an’ have
-some sense, Murphy’s got enough trouble now wit’out
-youse botherin’ him, Mart.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m goin’ in,” declared Martin Kelly, his thick
-voice raising angrily, “an’ what’s more I’m a-goin’
-to lick Larry Murphy! He’s done me dirt; an’ I’m
-a-goin’ to do him up.”</p>
-
-<p>He tried to open the door, but McGonagle whirled
-him off the steps.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye ain’t a-goin’ to kick up no muss here, and that
-goes,” said Goose, decisively; “youse must be daffy,
-ain’t ye?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelly had just aimed a wild blow at McGonagle
-when Hogan pounced upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“So it’s yezsilf, Martin,” sneered the policeman;
-“it’s a great foighter yez are gittin’ to be!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>“Take yer paws off a-me, Hogan,” growled the
-drunken youth, struggling. “Me old man’ll have
-youse broke for this.”</p>
-
-<p>“If ye don’t quit makin’ a monkey av yezsilf it’s
-a ride in the wagon yez’ll git.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take the lush away,” begged McGonagle; “he’ll
-have the whole bloomin’ neighbourhood up.”</p>
-
-<p>The expostulating Martin was hustled down the
-street just as Mary Carroll opened the door.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s on’y Mart Kelly,” Goose informed her, lifting
-his hat.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad he’s gone away,” said Mary; “for he
-was here this afternoon when Mr. Murphy was out,
-and his talk was shameful. Are you coming in?”</p>
-
-<p>“For a little while. Don’t stand in the draf’; it
-makes youse cough.” McGonagle followed her into
-the sitting room where the black box rested upon a pair
-of low trestles. A number of wax lights burned at its
-head and an aged woman knelt at the foot, her withered
-lips muttering prayers for the repose of the departed
-soul. A dozen more women neighbours sat around the
-room talking lowly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>“The men are all in the kitchen,” said Mary to the
-young man, “and I suppose you will want to go there,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Arrah, then, Mary,” spoke his mother who sat
-among the group of women, “it’s himself that ’ud
-stay here till the cows come home iv Annie Clancy
-were on’y here.”</p>
-
-<p>A titter ran about and Goose looked embarrassed.
-“Don’t mind her,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Annie’s a nice girl,” said Mary, smiling at him
-with her kind eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Do Goose still droive the milk wagon, Mrs. McGonagle?”
-asked Mrs. Burns after the young man
-had gone into the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>“He do that same,” proudly, “an’ arns a good profit
-ivery wake.”</p>
-
-<p>The street door had opened and voices were heard
-in the entry.</p>
-
-<p>“It sounds like the O’Hara’s,” said Mrs. McGlory,
-wife of the contractor, who sat in a corner fanning herself,
-with all the dignity of her social position. Mrs.
-Burns elevated her hands in dismay.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll be keenin’, jewel!” she cried to Mary.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>“I wouldn’t have it!” declared Mrs. Clancy, the
-grocer’s wife. “What’ll people t’ink?”</p>
-
-<p>The O’Hara sisters came bobbing into the room in
-queer-looking quilted bonnets that hid their faces, and
-triangularly folded shawls pulled tightly about their
-narrow shoulders. Espying Mary, they threw themselves
-upon her with lamentations.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary, darlin’,” cried Bridget, “it’s a heart full av
-trouble yez have this noight!”</p>
-
-<p>“God be good till yez, allanna!” exclaimed Ellen,
-“an’ kape death from uz all for many a day!”</p>
-
-<p>Then they crouched down beside the ice box, betraying
-every symptom of great grief.</p>
-
-<p>“Divil a tear did I see in her eyes,” muttered Ellen.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s vexed at not gittin’ the bit av money,” said
-her sister in the same low tone.</p>
-
-<p>Then they began muttering prayers in the Irish
-tongue; the others watched them, silently, from time
-to time exchanging intelligent nods. Then the sisters
-began swaying their bodies back and forth in unison,
-and the other old woman rose to her feet.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s comin’,” said she, “divil choke thim!”</p>
-
-<p>A long, low wail burst from them that immediately<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-filled the kitchen doorway with the grinning faces of
-the men. It was the weird death cry of the Irish race,
-with which they lamented the passage of a soul, in
-their island home. Mary quickly approached the
-women and spoke a few determined words; they
-bounced upon their feet angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“Shame on yez, Mary Carroll,” cried Ellen.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it prevint our showin’ our rayspects till the dead
-ye’d be doin?” demanded Bridget.</p>
-
-<p>“The custom is not understood in this country,” said
-Mary quietly; and they flounced indignantly down
-upon the sofa and glowered about them.</p>
-
-<p>“Luk at that stuck-up shtrap, McGlory’s wife,
-makin’ game av uz,” muttered Bridget. “Sure an’
-iv she’d git her drunken brother out av the House
-av Correction ’t wud be fitter for her!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, the big, fat hussy!” exclaimed Ellen, “it’s
-well I raymimber the toime whin her owld man drove
-an ash cart, an’ hersilf tuk in washin’.”</p>
-
-<p>All unknowing, Mrs. McGlory was smoothing out
-her silk dress and hoping that the others noticed the
-sparkle of her chip diamond ring.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary,” inquired she, leaning forward as far as her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-tight waist would permit, “is it owld Kate Sweeney
-yez’ll have till lay him out?”</p>
-
-<p>“I hadn’t thought of that,” answered Mary, “but
-I suppose so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kate do have illigant taste,” affirmed Mrs. Clancy.</p>
-
-<p>“Troth she do that!” spoke Mrs. McGonagle, “an’
-sorra a few have doide in the parish in the last thirty
-years that she haven’t put the shroud on. Ye’ll have
-till have some wan, Mary, an’ yez moight as well put
-the troifle av money in the poor owld crayture’s way.”</p>
-
-<p>The door bell rang softly, and Mary went to answer
-it.</p>
-
-<p>“Is Rosie not here the noight Ellen?” asked Mrs.
-Burns.</p>
-
-<p>“She do be in her bed, the crayter,” answered
-Ellen rather stiffly. “It’s up t’ree nights han’ runnin’
-she’s bin wid him,” with a nod toward the box, “as
-he lay sick; an’ a bit av slape’ll do her no hurt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Rosie have a good heart,” said Mrs. Clancy.</p>
-
-<p>“True for yez,” put in Mrs. McGonagle, “sure an’
-iv it hadn’t been for her, what ’ud Mary done at all,
-at all!”</p>
-
-<p>“Spakin’ av Mary,” said Mrs. McGlory; “where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-did she get her eddycation? It’s carry herself very
-ladyloike, she do.”</p>
-
-<p>“She wur taught in a convent in Dublin,” said Mrs.
-Clancy.</p>
-
-<p>“I t’ought it wur somethin’ av the koind,” said the
-contractor’s wife, “seein’ that she goes till the altar
-ivery second Sunday. It’s a good livin’ girl she is.”</p>
-
-<p>“None better. But, God betune us an’ all harm,
-it’s delicate she is. She have a bad cough.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary re-entered, accompanied by a pretty girl, very
-showily dressed, and a young man.</p>
-
-<p>“How do yez do, Bella?” greeted Mrs. McGonagle.
-“An’ is it yezsilf Dick?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m very well, thanks,” answered the girl, stealing
-a side glance at the looking-glass and arranging her
-fluffy bang. “How have you been?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have me health, thanks be till God.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tim wur tellin’ me, Dick,” said Mrs. Burns, “that
-yez have got him a job av wurk. It’s pray for yez
-this noight, I will.”</p>
-
-<p>“I need it,” laughed young Nolan, “so fire ahead,
-Mrs. Burns.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>He walked back toward the kitchen, his sister following
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Bella!” called Mary, “won’t you sit here? The
-men are all in there, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be back in a second,” said Bella, over her
-shoulder. “I on’y want t’ take a peep.” And she disappeared
-into the kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>“Hark till that!” exclaimed Bridget O’Hara, looking
-about, grimly. “It’s young Kelly she do be lookin’
-after.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a bowld wan, that t’ing,” chimed in her
-sister.</p>
-
-<p>“Yez shud be ashamed av yezselves, both av yez!”
-cried Mrs. McGlory, reddening with indignation.
-“Wud yez take away the girl’s ker-act-er!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re sayin’ nawthin’ bud the truth, sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Raymimber, yez hav a nace av yer own!”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ I wud have yez till know, Mary Ann McGlory,
-that she do be a daysint girl!”</p>
-
-<p>“Wud ye say that Bella Nolan is not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, hush!” said Mary, pained beyond expression
-at this outbreak. “Please do hush!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>When Bella came back into the room she sat down
-beside Mary, and began twisting a ring about her
-finger, and giggling.</p>
-
-<p>“I just wanted to see if Mart Kelly was in there,”
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>The sisters threw glances of triumph at the contractor’s
-wife, and the other women looked slyly at each
-other and shook their heads.</p>
-
-<p>Two dishes stood upon the kitchen table, one filled
-with loose tobacco, and the other with clay pipes; the
-air was heavy with smoke; the elder men leaned back
-and talked of times past; the younger grouped together
-and discussed current events of a sporting character.
-Larry sat upon the edge of the table, swinging his feet
-slowly and stirring up the tobacco with the yellow
-tipped stem of a pipe, a thoughtful look upon his face.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a foine lot ye hav for him at the Holy Cross,”
-said Clancy, “marble at the head an’ feet, an’ iron
-rails all about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“That so? I never seen it,” Larry had answered.</p>
-
-<p>But he had seen another grave, away near the fence,
-in the same cemetery—a narrow, neglected grave, flat
-and bare, with a wooden cross above it—a grave that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-lay at the end of a long row of others, the cramped resting
-places of poor wretches whose lives had been as
-cramped, and as bare, and as flat.</p>
-
-<p>“Wid his side face to’ard ye, he luks like the gran’father,”
-said O’Hara, lowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it loike old Larry?” said Tim Burns.</p>
-
-<p>“No; the other.”</p>
-
-<p>“Old Cohen, thin. Sure, now that I t’ink av it, he
-do. But thin he hav the blood in him, an’ why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“D’yez raymember owld Aaron, Clancy?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well do I. Faix an’ I got me clothes av him up
-till the toime he died. Divil a-far from crazy he wur
-whin his girl ran off wid Mike Murphy! An’ iv owld
-Larry wur mad at his b’y’s marryin’ a Jewess, the other
-wur worse at his dawther for takin’ up wid a Christian.
-By dad, he cursed her up hill an’ down dale; he
-frothed at the mouth, an’ groun’ his stumps av teeth
-together loike a madman; an’ nothin’ ud do him bud
-he’d hav her taken be the police. But Moran towld
-him he cud do nawthin’. He’d a tramped her under
-his feet wan day beyant on Second Street whin he met
-her, iv it hadn’t bin for Peter Nolan, Dick’s father,
-God rist his sowl in glory! Peter jumped out av his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-cart an’ dragged him away. Put Aaron an’ owld
-Larry in a bag together, an’ scure till the wan cud
-tell which ’ud jump out the first, for timper.”</p>
-
-<p>The clock ticked and struck through the hours; the
-people came and went as is the custom. When the
-hands approached the hour of one, Tim Burns arose.</p>
-
-<p>“I wur goin’ till offer till sit up wid ye, Larry,”
-said he, “but as I have me job till go till in the mornin’
-I mus’ git a bit av slape.”</p>
-
-<p>“Much obliged, all the same,” said Larry. “Larkin
-an’ McGonagle are goin’ to stay with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be goin’ mesilf,” said Clancy, reaching for his
-hat. “I mus’ have me grocery open be four, be the
-day.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a general arising, putting on of hats and
-shaking of hands with Larry; the women had gone
-long before; and when the clock struck again the three
-watchers were nodding together beside the kitchen
-range.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>Oh they laid him away,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>On one bleak Winter day,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>An’ the sun he’ll never see more.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Ballads of Back Streets.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THURSDAY morning broke clear, and before
-the factory whistles had done blowing,
-O’Connor and Roddy Ferguson had carried
-in the coffin, the great brass candelabra, and all
-the other things that went to make up O’Connor’s
-first-class funeral. O’Connor’s arrival was followed
-promptly by that of old Mrs. Sweeney, and under their
-practised hands things progressed rapidly; for when
-the clock of St. Michael’s struck the hour of nine, and
-then began tolling sadly, all was ready and the doors
-thrown open.</p>
-
-<p>Hacks from neighbouring livery stables began arriving
-and lined up at the curb, and the friends of the
-departed began to gather. The women went in, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-the men, for the most part, collected upon the sidewalk.
-Frowsy-haired women stood in groups at the
-mouth of each alley in the block, blue faced and shivering,
-but anxious to miss nothing. A crowd of young
-men were smoking and laughing near Clancy’s coal
-box; the drivers of the hacks, in shabby livery coats
-and grotesque high hats, called to each other from their
-high seats.</p>
-
-<p>It wanted but a half hour of the time when the
-cortège was to move when Goose McGonagle pushed
-his way through the people who were crowding in at
-the front door; he had a band of crape about his arm
-and was hatless. Approaching the group at Clancy’s,
-he said hurriedly:</p>
-
-<p>“I’m goin’ to be a pall bearer, fellas, and Larry
-wants five o’ youse to help. Talk quick!”</p>
-
-<p>Nolan and McGlory promptly volunteered.</p>
-
-<p>“That makes three,” said Goose. “Won’t youse
-help to carry him, Larkin?”</p>
-
-<p>“Try to get somebody else,” begged Jimmie. And
-with a nod of his head toward the smoky grey tower
-from which came the doleful strokes of the bell, he
-added: “I don’t go there, ye know; an’ it might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-make talk about Larry, see? Here’s Casey an’ Mike
-McCarty comin’ up; give ’em a brace.”</p>
-
-<p>Danny Casey who worked for Contractor McGlory,
-and Mike McCarty, who drove a truck for Shannon,
-the teamster, and was considered the best-dressed
-young man in the ward, were promptly “braced” and
-gave consent.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll git another one and give Ferguson yer names,”
-said Goose, “an’ he’ll fix youse up with gloves and
-crape for yer skypieces.”</p>
-
-<p>And McGonagle plunged into the house with the
-crowd. The prospective pall-bearers resumed their
-comments upon the passing throng; a pastime at which
-they had been interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>“Here comes Kelly and his wife,” remarked McGlory.</p>
-
-<p>“With Mart pluggin’ along behind. And he’s half
-lit up, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good mornin’, Mr. McGlory,” saluted Casey to
-his employer.</p>
-
-<p>“How are yez, Danny?” answered the contractor
-as he went by with his wife. “Good mornin’ gintlemen.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>“Gee!” whispered Casey, “ain’t the old lady a
-swell!”</p>
-
-<p>“Git onto Clancy’s stove-pipe lid! Ain’t it a bird!”</p>
-
-<p>“It was made during the siege o’ Limerick,” said
-McCarty, “an’ Clancy’s wore it at every funeral an’
-at every A. O. H. procession since then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Schwartz; goin’ to the funeral?”</p>
-
-<p>“Say,” said McGlory, “don’t Rosie O’Hara look
-nice in black? Look at the two old ones givin’ their
-wipes a shower bath! Say, Larkin, there’s Rosie
-wavin’ her hand, on the quiet; she wants youse.”</p>
-
-<p>Her aunts had gone in, but Rosie paused upon the
-step, and Jimmie was at her side in a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Who are ye goin’ to walk with?” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“With youse, if ye’ll let me!” eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>Rosie looked pleased. “Git our names down,” said
-she, “so’s we’ll be called out.”</p>
-
-<p>She entered the house just as Roddy Ferguson came
-out, his hands full of black cotton gloves and streamers
-of crape.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold out yer fin, McCarty,” commanded Roddy.
-“Say, Casey, youse kin tie a bow knot, so gimme a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-lift with these. I’d ask youse to come inside, gents,”
-went on O’Connor’s aid, “but the house is packed with
-women, and I know youse ain’t proud.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s got the list, Furgy?” asked Larkin.</p>
-
-<p>“O’Connor. Him and Larry’s makin’ it up in the
-kitchen.”</p>
-
-<p>Jimmie Larkin took off his hat in the entry and
-pushed into the room where the body lay exposed to
-view. Mary sat at the head of the casket; beside her
-were the Kellys, the mother with her handkerchief to
-her eyes, the father talking across the corpse to a
-friend, the son half asleep in his chair. Tall candles
-shed their light about the room; the walls were draped
-in dead black; the polished lid of the casket stood awesomely
-in a corner; the flowers sent by friends and
-the potted plants furnished by the undertaker smelt
-sickeningly sweet and heavy in the close, crowded
-room.</p>
-
-<p>The old man looked very peaceful; death had removed
-the hard, crabbed lines from his face, and the
-pale hands, twined about with a rosary, and holding a
-small crucifix, seemed, to the tenants, very different<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-from the grasping old claws that he had been accustomed
-to thrust out for the rent. Some of the people
-sat, some stood, others again knelt, hurrying over the
-set prayers for the dead.</p>
-
-<p>“What a beautiful corpse!” ejaculated Ellen
-O’Hara, in a loud whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“Loike a child gone till slape,” said her sister.</p>
-
-<p>“He have fallen away a good bit,” commented Mrs.
-McGonagle.</p>
-
-<p>“Yis,” said Mrs. Clancy; “but not so much as I
-expected.”</p>
-
-<p>“He vas der hardest corbse to shafe I ever dackled,”
-Schwartz informed the latter lady’s husband.</p>
-
-<p>“What an illigant ‘Gates Ajar’!” exclaimed Mrs.
-McGlory. “Is that the piece that the A. O. H. sent,
-Mary?”</p>
-
-<p>“It takes Kate Sweeney till make thim look daysint
-in the coffin,” remarked Mrs. Nolan. “What
-splindid flowers she have put under his head!”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me, Mrs. Clancy,” whispered Bridget O’Hara;
-“who will walk wid Larry?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Mary, av corse.”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil a fear av her!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>“Is she settin’ her cap for him, I dunno?” said
-Ellen.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Clancy turned to Mrs. McGonagle. “D’yez
-harken till the talk av thim two?” asked she.</p>
-
-<p>“God save uz,” answered Mrs. McGonagle,
-“they’ed talk about any wan. But, whist; is that not
-Mrs. Noonen’s black skirt, Casey’s wife have on?”</p>
-
-<p>“Av coorse. She borryed it yisterday; for scure till
-the stitch av black she have av her own.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is the Father Matt’oo comin’?” inquired Mrs.
-Nolan.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it the T. A. B. yez mean?” questioned Mrs.
-Contractor McGlory.</p>
-
-<p>“What ilce?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure Larry wur not a mimber.”</p>
-
-<p>“D’yez tell me so! An’ did he take the sup av
-drink, thin? Begorry I’d niver a-t’ought it.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Nolan blinked at the corpse with renewed interest.
-O’Connor came into the room with Larry and
-handed Mary a slip of paper.</p>
-
-<p>“Iv there’s any other names ye want down,” said
-he, “just say the word.”</p>
-
-<p>But Mary shook her head and returned it. Roddy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-Ferguson pushed his way into the room and drew his
-employer aside.</p>
-
-<p>“Callahan’s outside with the hearse,” said he in a
-whisper, “and if we want to catch the Solemn High
-Mass we’d better push t’ings.”</p>
-
-<p>The undertaker drew himself up to his full height
-and looked gravely about him; then in his deepest and
-most professional voice, he said:</p>
-
-<p>“The relatives an’ friends of the family will take a
-last farewell look at the departed before proceedin’ till
-the church.”</p>
-
-<p>Veils were dropped, gloves were put on, and a subdued
-sobbing and whispering began. All pushed forward
-anxious to see everything at this critical and interesting
-moment. Larry was moved but silent; Mary
-sobbed, quietly; Mrs. Kelly’s grief was stormy; but
-her husband and son regarded the body stolidly, then
-gave way to those behind. In a few moments the
-casket lid was screwed down and the six young men
-had borne it through the door to the waiting hearse.
-Young Ferguson took the list of names and stationed
-himself by the door.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>“Mr. Lawrence Murphy and Miss Mary Carroll,”
-called he.</p>
-
-<p>“Do she go afore me?” demanded Mrs. Kelly.
-“Mr. O’Connor is a black stranger till walk ahead av
-a sister av the corpse?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelly sneered. “Sure they have it all their own
-way, Honora,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. James Kelly and wife,” called Ferguson.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks be!” cried the angry lady. “I wur expectin’
-till be left till the last!” and out she went on
-the arm of her husband, to treat the watching crowd
-to an energetic exhibition of sisterly grief.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Martin Kelly!” cried Roddy. He hesitated
-a moment, then added: “and Miss Bella Nolan.”</p>
-
-<p>Bella came forward, smiling, and took the young
-man’s arm. The sisters O’Hara threw looks of malice
-toward Mrs. McGlory; but the good woman disdained
-to notice them.</p>
-
-<p>“Go on, Roddy!” directed O’Connor. “Is it aslape
-ye are?”</p>
-
-<p>His assistant had followed Bella and her partner
-with moody eyes, and now stood gazing at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-empty doorway. But he roused himself at O’Connor’s
-voice and before his abstraction was noticed by anyone
-else he continued:</p>
-
-<p>“James Larkin, and Miss Rosie O’Hara.”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil the bit will she,” broke in the latter’s father.
-“Rosie walks wid me, an’ not wid the son av an’
-Orangeman!”</p>
-
-<p>Rosie grew red, and the tears sprang into her eyes;
-Jimmie hesitated, uncertain how to act, but at a glance
-from Rosie, he drew back and allowed her father to
-lead her out.</p>
-
-<p>“What a shame!” said good-natured Mrs. McGonagle.</p>
-
-<p>“Will nothin’ do the cub but Rosie?” sneered
-Bridget.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t like his trade,” said Mrs. Clancy, “but
-he’s a foine young felly.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s his father’s son,” said Ellen, bitingly.</p>
-
-<p>The list of names was gone quickly through; those
-intending to walk in the cortège as far as the church
-fell in, and all moved slowly down the street, O’Connor
-at their head.</p>
-
-<p>Larry Murphy’s recollections of what followed were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-but dim; through a sort of haze he heard the chanting
-priests, and saw the swinging censers, and his mind retained
-but little of what the pastor said in regard to the
-old man’s life and acts. He had been but a child when
-his father lay at the same altar rail, but his remembrance
-of that was vivid. The organ was silent then;
-the church was deserted save for a few friends, and a
-single priest performed the hurried service. It came
-back to him that he had cried bitterly; not that he had
-much idea of what was happening, but the dull light
-that crept in through the stained windows seemed to
-add to the gloom that filled the church, and a vague
-sense of loss had clutched at his childish heart. He did
-not begrudge the pomp that marked his grandfather’s
-burial services, but he thought that the old man could
-have spared a little from his store, that his dead son
-might have gone to the grave in a fitting manner, and
-not wait until death’s hand was upon him before giving
-a sign.</p>
-
-<p>But it was all over now; the pall-bearers had drunk
-their glasses of red wine, crumbled their pieces of
-sweet cake, shaken hands with Larry and departed.
-The Kellys had remained until Johnnie Kerrigan had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-informed them that the entire property had gone to
-Larry, and then left in a gust of anger.</p>
-
-<p>The young man and Mary were alone. She sat by
-the window, crying softly; he stood with his back to
-the stove, his hands clasped behind him, staring at the
-bright pattern in the carpet.</p>
-
-<p>He was trying to think of something to say that
-would ease her grief; but all that came to his mind
-seemed vapid and without much meaning. He had
-been thinking of her a great deal during the last few
-days and it hurt him to see her cry. He had never
-spoken to her before the day of his grandfather’s
-death; but he had seen her often on the street and at
-the church—when he went there—and he had often
-marvelled at the calm purity of her face. He had
-heard much of her in different ways; of her goodness
-of heart, of her gentle ways, of her deep love and
-veneration for the faith in which she had been reared.
-He had lived rough, a young man in his place could
-hardly help it; and he had seen, and said, and done
-things which would have made him hang his head had
-she known; but, for all, he liked, as most men do, reverence<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-for holy things in a woman. It was Mary that
-broke the silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. McGonagle will take care of the house for
-you until you have time to get settled,” she said. And
-he looked at her blankly, not understanding. “I will
-stay with a friend for a while,” she continued, “for I
-haven’t had time to think of anything yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re goin’ away, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“To be sure!” wonderingly. “This is your home
-now, and I can’t stay here, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” said he. He hadn’t thought of it before;
-and now that he did his heart sank a little at
-her helplessness. She fumbled at the catch of her
-mourning glove; he looked at her for a long time,
-thinking of another—of the tall, splendid girl whom he
-had known best as a child and playmate. But <i>she</i>
-seemed far away now; her people were his people no
-longer. Ah, yes that was it: Education had done
-much for this girl of whom he had dreamed since boyhood;
-but association had done more; and she seemed
-as far away as though she had dwelt upon a star. He
-could never reach her plane; and of late years he had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-only thought of her as one thinks of the dream-built
-hopes of youth. At last he said to Mary:</p>
-
-<p>“This house’s been your home for a good while,
-now; and it’ed look like drivin’ youse away, wouldn’t
-it?—I mean if ye went.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” answered she doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyway, I don’t want ye to go,” said he, with sudden
-courage. “Stay here—and marry me!”</p>
-
-<p>He looked into the pure, candid eyes and saw sweeping
-into them a quiet happiness that caused him to
-stoop and kiss her cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Larry spoke of that just before he died,”
-she said; “and if you are sure you want me, I’ll stay.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>There’s an organ in the parlour,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Just to give the house a tone,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And you’re welcome every evening,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>At Maggie Murphy’s home.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Harrigan.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">NOT many steps from St. Michael’s is the
-Academy of the Sacred Heart, where the
-girls of the parish are taught by the
-gentle-mannered sisters; and not far from that
-again, was the home of Maggie Dwyer. Time
-was, and not so many years before, when Owen
-Dwyer mixed the mortar for McMullen the builder
-and lived in one of the little houses in McGarragles’
-Alley. But Owen made good wages and was a saving
-man and a sober one. All his neighbours knew
-that he had an account in the savings bank; but when
-he sent his daughter to the Normal School and thereby
-showed that he had sufficient to educate and support
-her it excited much comment; and when he bought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-the Second Street house, and Fitzmaurice, the real
-estate man, caused it to be known that four thousand
-dollars was the price paid, a cry of wonder went up,
-and the old country tale of the finding of “a crock of
-gold,” began to be whispered from one to the other.</p>
-
-<p>And, although he shortly afterward gave up his job
-with McMullen, Owen was still the same quiet, good-natured
-man, passing the collection plate in the church
-on Sunday morning and acting as president of the
-T. A. B. society, as he had been accustomed to do
-for years.</p>
-
-<p>His daughter was his darling. Splendid, capable
-Maggie! whose fine eyes and handsome form were the
-talk of all who knew her. Owen had some influence
-in a political way, and after her graduation, Maggie
-was made a teacher at the Harrison School; her strong
-young voice was soon heard in the church choir; she
-sketched, embroidered, composed, and adorned their
-pretty home with pictures, dainty bric-a-brac and other
-things that a refined taste delights in, until Owen
-walked about the rooms in awe, and admired with all
-his soul.</p>
-
-<p>One evening about a week after the funeral at Murphy’s,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-Maggie, in a close-fitting gown that displayed
-the splendid lines of her figure, sat at her piano softly
-playing over some music which she was to use at a
-concert of the teachers’ society; Owen read the evening
-paper and smoked his brier pipe by the shaded
-lamp.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afeered, Maggie,” said he, in a troubled tone,
-laying down the paper, “that these goings on av the
-Motor Traction Company’ll bring sorra’ till many a
-body yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, Daddy?” asked Maggie, pausing in
-her playing.</p>
-
-<p>“They do be after the franchise av the new company,”
-answered Owen. “An’ the politicians are
-sidin’ wid ’em in their rascality. I have put more
-money in this than I shud,” added he, soberly, “an’ iv
-the franchise is revoked be the next set av councilmen,
-it’s in a bad way we’ll be, Maggie.”</p>
-
-<p>She leaned over and kissed him on the cheek, in the
-motherly fashion that Owen loved.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t worry, Daddy, you’ll see that all will come
-right in the end. And what matter, even if the stocks
-you own are made worthless; we still have our home.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>“Bud we can’t ate bricks an’ mortar, sure,” complained
-he. “An’ I’m too owld till go till work, now,
-Maggie.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I am not,” said Maggie, with a laugh. “Why
-you have said yourself, Daddy, that I earn more in a
-month than you ever did with Mr. McMullen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it have me sponge on yez bit av wages ye’d
-have me do?” exclaimed the old man. “God forgimme,
-Maggie, I couldn’t do that.”</p>
-
-<p>The door bell rang at this moment.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Mr. Mason, I suppose,” said Maggie. “He
-told me that he would drop in during the evening, and
-said that he wanted to speak to you.”</p>
-
-<p>But it was Annie Clancy, the grocer’s daughter,
-a quiet, pretty girl, and a great favourite of
-Maggie’s.</p>
-
-<p>“I only came in to say that Mary Carroll is coming
-around to see you,” announced Annie. “She said that
-she was afraid you’d be goin’ out, so she asked me to
-run around and tell you to wait.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ how is young McGonagle, Annie?” asked
-Owen, banteringly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>“Now, Daddy!” warned Maggie, with uplifted
-finger.</p>
-
-<p>“What harm?” persisted Owen, who delighted to
-twit the girl about her sweetheart. “Sure, they tell
-me, Annie, that he do sarve yez father wid better milk
-than any av his other customers.”</p>
-
-<p>Annie tossed her head.</p>
-
-<p>“He don’t,” denied she. “And even if he did,” regretfully,
-“Pop wouldn’t like him any better.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ does not take till Goose?” inquired Owen.</p>
-
-<p>“You know he don’t. And it’s all because Goose is
-in debt to Mr. O’Hara. Pop says he’ll never be able
-to keep a wife; and that he’ll be sold out.”</p>
-
-<p>Owen saw the tears in the girl’s eyes, and said
-gently.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t mind, Annie. You’ll have him, never fear.
-Goose is a good b’y till his mother an’ that kind do
-have luck.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll have to go now, Maggie,” said the grocer’s
-daughter. “Pop’s going to the Clan-na-Gael meeting
-to-night and I have to tend store.”</p>
-
-<p>Annie had hardly left when Mason came, and he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-had barely been welcomed when Mary Carroll followed.
-The two men were left in the parlour to discuss
-the matter of Mason’s visit, while the girls withdrew
-to the sitting room upstairs.</p>
-
-<p>“I could not delay telling you any longer, Maggie
-dear,” said Mary. “It came so sudden after poor
-Uncle Larry’s death that we have been keeping it a
-secret.”</p>
-
-<p>“A secret?” exclaimed Maggie. “Tell me, quick.”</p>
-
-<p>“Larry Murphy has asked me to be his wife.”</p>
-
-<p>A quick change came over Maggie’s face; she
-paled, then flushed, and faltered when she tried to
-speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Maggie,” said Mary, anxiously. “What’s
-the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>But Maggie had recovered quickly and replied:</p>
-
-<p>“I am only glad, Mary—glad for your sake; you
-will be very happy; for Larry has a good heart.”</p>
-
-<p>“It came so strangely, too,” said Mary, a happy
-light in her quiet eyes. “We barely knew each other,
-I mean in the conventional sense, but I must have
-loved him and he must have loved me for ever so
-long without either of us knowing it. And, oh, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-thinks so much of you, Maggie; why, you and he were
-boy and girl together, and yet I don’t remember ever
-hearing you speak of him.”</p>
-
-<p>“We have not seen much of each other for a long
-time,” said Maggie quietly.</p>
-
-<p>When they finally came down into the parlour, Mason
-was ready to take his leave; he had his hat and stick
-in his hand and was exchanging some last words with
-Owen.</p>
-
-<p>“Every man,” he was saying, “who has the good
-of the city at heart, and who has the slightest sense
-of justice, will do everything in his power to prevent
-this proposed steal. I have made up my mind that the
-only way to prevent its consummation is to canvass
-persons who have influence in their own neighbourhood,
-acquaint them with the facts and endeavour to
-organize an opposition at the primaries.”</p>
-
-<p>“There yez have it,” said Owen, approvingly.
-“The primaries is the place till make the fight; lave
-thim wanst git control av the convintions in the different
-wards, an’ they’ll put their own bla’gards on the
-regular ticket an’ thin the divil himself couldn’t bate
-thim.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>“And this young man whom you advised me to see;
-where can he be found?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Larry Murphy? Yis, yez could do worse thin
-have Larry wid yez. Sure, he’s so solid in his own
-division that McQuirk himself has till take second
-place, there.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary,” and Owen turned to the girl, “Is Larry
-at home?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” answered Mary.</p>
-
-<p>“If you want to find Mr. Murphy,” laughed Maggie,
-“we will provide a way for you. Mr. Mason, this
-is Miss Carroll.” The introduction being acknowledged,
-Maggie continued: “You can be of mutual
-service to each other, Mr. Mason—you as escort, and
-Miss Carroll as guide.”</p>
-
-<p>But, after their visitor had gone, and Maggie had
-sought her own room, the laugh vanished and she
-threw herself upon the bed and burst into a storm of
-tears.</p>
-
-<p>Her thoughts went back to the time of her childhood,
-to the little home in McGarragles’ Alley. She
-once more saw the dark-eyed boy who had been her
-very slave, who was always ready to fight for her, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-who was happiest when by her side. But as they
-grew up the years had separated them; she lived in her
-present home, went to the Normal School and found
-new friends very different from the old, though her
-heart was still true to them. And Larry only saw the
-change from the outside. When she came tripping
-along on Sunday morning, prayer book in hand, on her
-way to church, he, standing on the corner in front of
-Regan’s cigar store, rigged out in a cream-coloured
-overcoat with pearl buttons, saluted her with a nod
-of assumed indifference and she would return it in
-kind and continue on her way, wondering: “What
-in the world Larry Murphy saw in standing on
-Regan’s corner all day of a Sunday.”</p>
-
-<p>An incident had occurred later that should have
-ended this misunderstanding; and it would have done
-so had not the sense of distance between them been
-magnified, in Larry’s mind, by the very nature of the
-happening.</p>
-
-<p>Shannon, the teamster by whom he was employed,
-had one day called Larry into the little office down by
-the river.</p>
-
-<p>“Larry,” said he, “I’m after havin’ great call from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-the mills above in Kensington, as ye know. Sure the
-bell av me telyphone’s jingling all the God’s blessed
-day, an’ I have the divil’s own job gittin’ me teams up
-there in time. Yesterday I bought six pair av the
-foinest jacks yez iver laid eyes on, an’ five trucks as
-good as new; I have rinted the back room av Kavanaugh’s
-on the Frankford road as an up-town branch;
-an’ it’s yezsilf I want till take charge av it. The work
-will be asey an’ genteel an’ I’ll pay yez twinty dollars
-a week.”</p>
-
-<p>After a moment’s sober thought Larry had replied:</p>
-
-<p>“The job’s a cinch, an’ the money’s good; but, say,
-Pat, how do youse t’ink I’ll size up to the work? I
-can’t write a’tall an’ on’y kin read a little.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now God forgi’mine for an ijit!” exclaimed
-Shannon. “Sure an I niver wanst thought av that.
-That puts an end till it, Larry; the work is beyant yez,
-b’y.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry understood this and felt it keenly. He endeavoured
-to convey an impression of carelessness;
-but Shannon was not deceived.</p>
-
-<p>“Common since’ll tell yez, Larry,” said he, kindly,
-“that the man that takes howld av me up-town branch<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-must have a bit av larnin’. Give up runnin’ wid the
-gang, lad, an’ go till the night school.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry paid very little attention to what the boss was
-saying; he was wrestling with the bitterness within
-him. But that night, as he was crossing the railroad
-on his way to the club, he noticed that a broad shaft
-of light flowed from each window of the old Harrison
-School, and then Shannon’s words came back to him.
-A group of boys were skylarking in the entry where
-a single gas light flared redly in the gloom.</p>
-
-<p>“Night school?” inquired he of one of these.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” answered the boy. “Started last week.”</p>
-
-<p>His mind was made up in an instant, and he started
-up the stairs toward the principal’s room. But with
-his hand upon the door knob, he paused. What would
-the gang say when they heard? He pictured himself
-standing in the midst of them, an object of derision;
-he saw two of them meet upon the street and heard
-the laugh that greeted the words, “Larry Murphy’s
-goin’ to school, like a kid.” But he drove these visions
-from him, muttering:</p>
-
-<p>“If they kid me, there’ll be somethin’ broke, that’s
-all!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>He half expected the principal to laugh when he
-stated his business; but, on the contrary, that gentleman
-seemed to regard the matter approvingly; this
-made Larry feel better, and he entered the schoolroom
-indicated with scarcely a tremor. A number of
-young men of his own age sat at the little desks, handling
-the spelling books with pathetic care. There
-were two teachers in the room, flitting helpfully from
-desk to desk; no one noticed Larry and he slid into a
-vacant seat, and awaited developments.</p>
-
-<p>One of the teachers was working from pupil to pupil
-up the aisle toward him. His back was turned to her,
-but he knew, from the sound of her voice, that she
-was young. In a few moments she was, as Larry
-afterward expressed it, “givin’ points to the guy right
-back o’ me.”</p>
-
-<p>It was not until then that he recognized the voice;
-and a panic immediately possessed him.</p>
-
-<p>“Gee!” he mentally exclaimed, “what did I drift
-into this joint for, anyhow; I might a-knowed she’d
-be here.” He looked longingly toward the door. “If
-I t’ought nobody was next, I’d take a chance, and fly
-the coop!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>But he delayed until too late; in another moment
-Maggie had sat down beside him, inquiring:</p>
-
-<p>“How are you getting on with—?” then in great
-astonishment. “Why, Larry Murphy!”</p>
-
-<p>He began to stammer a confused explanation; but
-she knew of his shortcomings and realized the situation
-like a flash.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t t’ink I’d see youse here,” he finished
-awkwardly.</p>
-
-<p>Maggie knew this; she also knew that if he had
-dreamed of her presence wild horses could not have
-dragged him there. Her tact soon put him more at
-his ease, and, finally her manner of putting things,
-awoke an interest in the lessons that almost made him
-forget his situation.</p>
-
-<p>When the class was dismissed she had called him
-aside.</p>
-
-<p>“You will return to-morrow night?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he answered hesitatingly; “I guess so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you promise?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; I promise.”</p>
-
-<p>He kept his word, finished the term and mastered the
-studies in hand. But after that it was the same as before;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-she could only feel sorry for him, he thought;
-and when he chanced to meet her on the street his
-manner was formal, and for her pride’s sake her own
-could not be otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>And this, perhaps, is why Maggie wept so bitterly.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot2">
-
-<p>“<i>Reform: A t’ing what the wise guys gits busy
-at—when the other push is holdin’ the jobs.</i>”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="indentleft"><span class="smcap">Chip Nolan’s Definition.</span></span></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">OLD Mrs. Coogan, who was distantly related to
-Mary, opened the door for her and Mason.
-Mrs. Coogan had been there since the old
-man’s death, as a sort of chaperon and housekeeper,
-and vastly pleased was she with the arrangement.
-Larry in his shirt sleeves came out of the sitting
-room as they entered:</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, back so soon!” exclaimed he. Then, seeing
-Mason, he added surprisedly: “Mr. Mason, how
-are youse?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Dwyer advised me to come to see you,” said
-Mason, shaking hands; “but I had not the slightest
-notion that I should meet an old acquaintance.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary left them to themselves; and Mason plunged
-at once into the matter in hand. He explained in detail<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-the nature of the scheme on foot and then continued:
-“Now the local reform organization has resolved to
-fight this thing, and wants to enlist as many men acquainted
-with practical politics as possible.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Larry. “That’s the first crack out o’
-the box every time youse hear from ’em. Say, I’ll give
-it to youse straight: reform’s all to the good, but the
-reformers give me a pain.”</p>
-
-<p>Mason grew a little red, and looked nettled.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t take that to yerself,” said Larry, noticing
-this; “I ain’t a-backheelin’ you or any other man;
-it’s the reformers as a bunch that I’m hittin’. When
-they hear of a crooked job they start to kick up the
-dust, hold meetin’s at the Academy of Music and do
-other red-hot stunts; then the first t’ing youse know
-they’re backin’ up the worst kind of a gang of tin horn
-pipes who are on’y fightin’ the administration because
-they ain’t in on the rake-off. If they win out, the pipes
-git the plums and work ranker jobs than the other
-bunch ever thought of, and then the reformers flop
-over into the other camp and trot the race all over
-again. Ain’t I right?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is some truth in this,” said Mason, “but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-then fusion is our only hope; we have not the strength
-to name and elect a man of our own.”</p>
-
-<p>“As long as youse t’ink that ye’ll be easy game.
-Say, the people who wants the cards dealt square in
-the city’s got the bulge, but they’re dead leary on
-gettin’ their hands dirty; a man with aces in his
-fist is beat if he don’t use ’em at the show down.”</p>
-
-<p>“I take it that you would support a reform delegation
-providing you were satisfied it was controlled
-by reformers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not on yer life! Le’me tell youse somethin’. Some
-o’ the fiercest guys what ever broke into politics,
-started their turn as reformers, and I don’t take no
-chances on havin’ a confidence game worked on me,
-see? The man what goes to the convention from this
-division stands to do a certain t’ing; he’s sent there
-to do it by the voters and he does it. Nobody outside’s
-got anyt’ing to say.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s as it should be,” said Mason. “But in
-how many divisions or wards is that the case? The
-ring controls the primaries in nine out of ten of them;
-the voice of the man with the ballot is seldom or never
-heard. Slavery was a liberal institution compared with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-the electoral serfdom that exists in some of our municipalities.”</p>
-
-<p>Mason’s warmth led him into exaggeration; but
-Larry had views upon this particular subject himself
-and proceeded to unburden himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Youse’re dead right!” declared he. “I was talkin’
-to the old coon what peddles calamus root to the
-avenoo, the other day, an’ he said that he wished he
-was a slave again, pickin’ cotton an’ dancin’ the buck.
-He says that he got a skin full o’ corn pone then, but
-that it keeps him scratchin’ with both hands these days
-to git next to anything with more stick in it than
-water. Say, the Uncle Tom racket wasn’t a bad graft
-when ye look at it right, and maybe it’ed been a
-good t’ing for the wool growers if Uncle Abe had
-changed his mind.”</p>
-
-<p>Mason smiled at Larry’s literal interpretation of his
-words and made a vague remark regarding the blessings
-of liberty. But the other received it with contempt.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s got moss on it,” said he. “Liberty’s all
-right, but it don’t put beef and beans into a man.
-There ain’t a mug in this ward that ain’t got it to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-lose; but they don’t lay in bed in the mornin’ thinkin’
-about it, either, when the whistles are a blowin’; they
-have to climb down the street, eatin’ their breakfast
-out o’ one hand and buttonin’ their overalls with the
-other.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the slave,” protested Mason, “before the
-Civil War also had to work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure!” exclaimed Murphy. “I didn’t t’ink that
-the main squeeze took off his coat and drove mules,
-while they sat on the porch an’ spit at their boots. A
-young Willie, what had the Sunday-school class what
-I went to onct, told us that the slave owner’d open
-up a hand with a black snake whip, if he looked cross-eyed,
-and that it was the reg’lar t’ing to hang the cook
-up by the t’umbs if she broke a plate. But, say, that
-sassy t’ing was a-stringin’ me cold; because when a
-guy put up a thousand plunks for a bogie he wasn’t
-goin’ to lam the life out o’ him like they do in the
-show. I don’t say that he was stuck on him, mind
-youse, but I do say that the price worried him some,
-and that the worsted motto what his wife worked, and
-hung up in the parlor read: ‘T’ink twice before youse
-slug a nigger onct.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>“The gang down in Washin’ton,” proceeded Larry,
-“riffled the deck in ’62 an’ made a new deal; the coons
-looked at their hands and t’ought they had the pot
-cinched; they stood pat on the Fourteenth Amendment
-and waited for the guys with the dough to buck up.
-But they’re waitin’ yet. They never git their eyes
-on any o’ the blessin’s o’ liberty cept at ’lection time—and
-then they must deliver the goods. Liberty ain’t
-a bad game; but youse want to size up the dealer
-from start to finish, so’s he don’t stack the cards.
-There’s lots o’ people in the liberty line what used
-to carry a lead pipe in their pockets, but made the
-change because the gilt grew thicker and there wasn’t
-so much chance for doin’ time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some one, long ago,” remarked Mason, “said
-something about the ‘crimes committed in the name of
-liberty,’ and, unfortunately, it holds good to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s no pipe dream! Now look here; there’s
-lots o’ guys right in this division, what’s swingin’ a
-pick for a dollar an’ a half a day, an’ hangin’ up
-their hats in a third story back where they have to
-stand on the stove and hold the kid while their wives
-make the bed. If a slave got sick his owner hustled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-in a doctor, for if the coon went up the flue it was
-good money goin’ to the bad. But if the pick swinger
-gits down on his back, the main guy cashes his time
-ticket, hires a Polack, an’ don’t care a picayune if
-his friends are invited to meet at two an’ go at t’ree,
-an’ he has a plain black box and an undertaker’s
-wagon, with a drunken carriage washer to drive it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But all employers are not so unfeeling; some are
-heard of, now and then, who help their people out of
-the hard places.”</p>
-
-<p>“That might be right,” agreed Larry; “but I never
-piked off one that was out o’ breath through handin’
-out money. His daughter belongs to a flower mission,
-maybe, and if she t’ought of it she might send the
-sick man a bunch of hyacinths done up in a waxed
-paper; but she’d stop the kids from cryin’ quicker if
-she trotted out a beef stew done up in a tin kettle,
-an’ that’s no joke. Say, as Chip Nolan ’ed say: It’s
-no wonder the coons are all whistlin’ ‘Lemme take
-me clothes back home.’”</p>
-
-<p>Mason managed to head him off at this point and
-began an earnest plea for his support; but Larry would
-not bind himself to the support of anyone at that time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>“I’m leary on makin’ promises,” said the latter, as
-Mason, at length, arose to depart; “t’ings’ll be dead
-ripe by the night o’ the primaries; so after that I kin
-talk to youse.”</p>
-
-<p>The bell had rung a few moments before, without
-their noticing it; and now Mrs. Coogan opened the
-sitting room door, saying: “Sure, here is Mr. McQuirk,
-as large as life.”</p>
-
-<p>“Murphy,” said the visitor, as he stepped into the
-room, “I hope I didn’t interrupt ye? I can wait if
-you’re busy.”</p>
-
-<p>It was Tom McQuirk, the boss of the ward, a big-bodied,
-pleasant-faced man, well-dressed and of assured
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello,” said Larry, “glad to see ye, Tom. Sit
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>McQuirk glanced toward Mason and a smile of
-recognition crossed his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Mason, how d’ye do!” exclaimed he, reaching
-out his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Mason shook hands with him without enthusiasm.
-He had sat too long at the feet of the sages of the
-Civic Club not to believe that this man and his kind<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-were the very bacillus of corruption. He had met
-him a year or two before at a conference held with
-a view to allying the Democrats and the reformers in
-favour of an independent candidate for city treasurer.
-But McQuirk had been against the fusion—and it
-had failed.</p>
-
-<p>And Mason, after he had taken his departure and
-walked homeward, admitted to himself, with some
-bitterness, that McQuirk’s voice, in this ward at least,
-would very likely be the deciding one in the matter
-in hand.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter X</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>Oh! The room was decorated,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>With the flags of every land,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>The gents were elevated,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Malone he couldn’t stand;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Canaries in their cages,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>With flowers in a tub,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Stood on the piano,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>At Casey’s Social Club.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Popular Song.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">BELLA NOLAN looked through the half glass
-door of Riley’s Oyster Café and tapped
-softly upon the pane. Goose McGonagle
-stood before Riley’s bar, fork in hand, while Riley,
-with amazing dexterity, wrenched open oysters
-and placed them before him on the shell. At the sound
-of the tapping, McGonagle looked up and Bella beckoned
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“A mash?” smiled Riley.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ve got another guess,” answered Goose. He
-laid down his fork and stepped out upon the sidewalk.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>“Goose,” asked the girl, “have you seen Mart
-Kelly to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; ain’t he up in the club?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. Will you go up and see, please?”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” consented McGonagle. He opened the
-door, “Say Riley,” said he, “just open the rest and
-have ’em on the bar. I’ll be back in a second.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t let on to nobody,” cautioned Bella. “Because
-I wouldn’t be talked about for the world.”</p>
-
-<p>The rooms of the Aurora Borealis Club were over
-Riley’s place of business; the entrance was by a side
-door and a flight of steps led directly into the parlour.
-The members were present in force, dressed in their
-best and, as it was Saturday night, chinking their
-money in their trousers’ pockets.</p>
-
-<p>Larry Murphy and Roddy Ferguson in their shirt
-sleeves, were engaged in a game of pool, discussing,
-between shots, the merits of the various candidates for
-nomination at the coming ward convention. Mr. McCarty
-sat at the piano endeavouring to pick out a ragtime
-melody which he had heard at some “free and
-easy”; and Johnnie Kerrigan was critically examining
-a portrait of McQuirk, the boss of the ward, a work<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-of art which the boss had lately presented to the club.
-Other and less distinguished members lounged about
-the room, indulging in gossip of a sporting character
-and strong cigars.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell ye,” said Ferguson, slipping a ball into the
-rack, “O’Connor’s got the t’ing cinched if he gets the
-delegates. He’ll win in a walk!”</p>
-
-<p>Murphy chalked the tip of his cue and looked doubtful.
-“Gartenheim’s dead agin him,” said he, “an’
-Gartenheim kin scare up some votes, youse know that.
-McQuirk’s pullin’ with Kelly this hitch, and he’ll wheel
-the machine in line. I don’t t’ink O’Connor’ll do; if
-we want to have a say we must ring in a man what
-kin hold the push together, see?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dum-had, dah; doodle-day!” hummed McCarty,
-banging away at the keyboard. “How’s that, Kerrigan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing like it,” answered Johnnie, “you’re
-getting worse every minute.”</p>
-
-<p>Tom Hogan, son of the policeman, came from an
-adjoining room.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re makin’ up a game,” said he. “Any o’
-youse gents want t’ sit in?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>Murphy paused with his cue poised. “Not me,”
-remarked he. “Last Saturday night was my finish; I
-don’t play no more poker with people what deals from
-the bottom o’ the deck.”</p>
-
-<p>McCarty stopped his piano practice and whirled
-about on the stool. “This joint’s gittin’ to be a reg’lar
-hang-out for sharks,” complained he. “We hold a
-meetin’ to-night, and if Kelly don’t git the razoo why
-I git out o’ the club, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>Young Kelly, unnoticed, had followed Hogan into
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that!” demanded he. “Speak yer piece,
-McCarty, don’t talk behind me back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t worry; I’ll talk in front o’ yer face when
-the time comes.”</p>
-
-<p>Martin struck the cushion of the pool table with his
-fist. “I want to hear it right now; what are youse
-goin’ to put me before the meetin’ for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yer crooked,” said McCarty.</p>
-
-<p>“Me crooked! I can lick the guy that says it.”</p>
-
-<p>Murphy leaned his cue against the wall. “Ye done
-me out o’ a five spot by stackin’ the papers,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>Kelly hesitated. Larry was one of the quietest men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-in the district; but then he was also the man that
-the club had entered in the tournament for amateurs
-a few years before and he had carried off the light
-weight cup by beating three men in the finals.</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t scrappin’ with no professionals,” growled
-Martin at length.</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t no professional,” insinuated McCarty.</p>
-
-<p>“Let it drop, gents!” advised Jerry McGlory who
-had just come in. McGlory was the club’s president
-and he felt that in his office it behoved him to act the
-part of a peacemaker. He took the wrathful Kelly
-aside and was trying to soothe him when McGonagle
-entered upon his errand.</p>
-
-<p>“Somebody wants ye outside, Kelly,” announced
-Goose.</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead out an’ see ’em,” begged McGlory, delighted.
-“Ye’ll feel better after ye come back.”</p>
-
-<p>Muttering under his breath, Kelly followed McGonagle
-down the steps, and after he had gone McGlory
-observed:</p>
-
-<p>“That lobster’s too gay! He’s got a notion he
-runs this outfit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he’s got another t’ink,” said Murphy. “Say,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-us people made a foxy play when we turned down the
-fifty dollars his old man wanted to chip in toward
-gittin’ the pool table.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Lection’s comin’,” remarked Ferguson. “He
-t’ought he’d cop our support be that move.”</p>
-
-<p>“He don’t git no support o’ mine,” Murphy informed them.
-“I ain’t for no gent that pulls on both
-ends o’ the string. Le’me tell youse this,” rapping
-with his knuckles upon the piano top; “if Kelly scoops
-the nomination we’re a push o’ dead ones.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s puttin’ his net out though,” affirmed Roddy
-Ferguson. “O’Connor told me that he’s got the ward
-committee fixed, an’ that the heelers’ll pull for him
-at the primaries.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s got all the bums in the ward on his staff,”
-said McGlory. “He gits ’em out o’ jail when they’re
-pinched, an’ he’s loadin’ rum into them all day, over
-his bar.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Mozart Sangerbund give him an invitation to
-their last meetin’,” put in McCarty, “and he wanted
-Kerrigan to write him a speech. He’s makin’ a play
-for the German vote.”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard in City Hall, yesterday,” said Kerrigan,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-“that the Mayor offered him the indorsement of the
-other side again, if he could split our ticket. McQuirk
-was at the pow-wow and somebody slipped him
-a bunch of money. But say! if that’s right he’ll have
-a warm time delivering the goods.”</p>
-
-<p>“When is the delegate election, Murphy?” inquired
-McGlory.</p>
-
-<p>“About a month after our ball,” answered Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“Talkin’ about the ball,” remarked McCarty: “we
-won’t have Larkin to lead the march for us this time,
-eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a guy what knows the figures,” commented
-McGlory. “How’s he doin’ now?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s doin’ ’em all; an’ right off the reel too,” said
-Murphy, who was a pupil of Jimmie’s in the manly
-art, and had watched his progress, through the newspapers,
-with interest. “He’s done stunts wit’ the best
-o’ them, since he left town, and they kin hardly put
-a glove on him. He knocked the Pohoket Cyclone
-dead to the world in the second minute o’ the fifth
-round last Monday night at New Orleans. Larkin’s
-a comer, le’me tell youse.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>McGlory had pulled aside one of the window blinds
-and was gazing down into the street.</p>
-
-<p>“Say!” exclaimed he suddenly, “it’s a bundle o’
-skirts what sent McGonagle up after Kelly.” He regarded
-the two figures standing near the curb below
-under the glare of the gas light, intently. “It looks,”
-said he, “like Nolan’s sister.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cheese it!” whispered Murphy. But Roddy Ferguson
-had caught the words; and he stood with his
-elbow resting on the piano top, chewing at the end
-of his cigar, and looking with clouded brow into the
-fire. It was an open secret that Bella had thrown him
-over for Martin Kelly; Roddy was too quiet and
-steady to suit her light temperament, he lacked Martin’s
-swagger and bluster, qualities which Bella liked,
-for she was one of those women who mistake excess
-for a proof of spirit and dissolute living for a mark
-of manhood.</p>
-
-<p>Martin had found Bella waiting for him in front
-of Riley’s. His anger had not had time to cool, and
-he demanded roughly:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what d’youse want?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>“I’d like to speak to you Martin,” timidly.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, don’t youse begin to dog me up, d’ye hear!
-I won’t have it!”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t meet me last night at Whalen’s dance
-like ye said ye would, and I thought somethin’ might
-be the matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’s the matter only I’m ’lectioneering for the
-old man, an’ I ain’t got no time to meet women.”</p>
-
-<p>“S-h-h! Mart Kelly, I don’t thank you one bit
-for talkin’ to me like that! Anybody to hear ye would
-think I was common.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her for a moment, and then laughed:</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I guess not,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, don’t do it no more! I don’t want people
-talkin’ about me and giving me a shamed face. Ye
-know, yourself, they’d on’y be too ready. Oh, my
-Gawd,” suddenly, “here comes Mom!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Nolan, a market basket upon her arm, came
-down the street with staggering step. Dick had entrusted
-her with money enough to go marketing and
-it had gone for drink; she was muttering to herself
-and gesticulating drunkenly, and as she caught sight
-of the pair by the curb, she halted:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>“Ah!” cried she. “Is it spharkin’ be the gutter
-yez’ed be doin’, jewels? Have ye no home till go till,
-Bella, that yez must stan’ on the strate!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, go home!” cried Bella, scarlet with shame,
-“everybody’s lookin’ at you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil a hair do I care. Sure, an’ haven’t I the
-roight till take a sup av drink iv I have the price? It’s
-not long yez father ’ud be in biz’ness,” she added to
-Martin, “iv it wurn’t for the loikes av me.”</p>
-
-<p>The young man growled out an oath. He saw McGonagle
-looking at him through Riley’s window, and
-Riley, himself, with a grin upon his face. A Saturday
-night crowd filled Second Street; many that knew him
-stopped and looked and laughed; on the opposite
-corner, in front of Kerrigan’s saloon and under the
-glare of an arc lamp, a crowd of loungers were enjoying
-the sight; Officer Hogan was slyly pointing
-at him with his club, and saying something to the
-bartender who stood in the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>“And is me poor home not good enough for yez,”
-went on Mrs. Nolan with increased pitch, “that yez
-do be kapin’ me daughter stan’in’ in the strate till be
-talked about. Divil a better had yez father till he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-tuk to sellin’ the drop. Lave go av me arm Bella;
-I’ll go home whin I plaze!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll go home now!” said her son, pushing his
-way through the crowd which had collected. “For
-God’s sake,” as she began struggling, “don’t make
-a show of yourself! T’ink of the neighbours!”</p>
-
-<p>“May the divil fly away wid the neighbours! What
-call have I till be afeerd av thim?”</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, Mom,” urged Bella, almost in tears,
-“if ye go on this way, I’ll never show me face outside
-the door again!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye promised to do right,” said Dick, with white
-face, “and ye’ll never get another cent o’ my money
-in yer hands as long as ye live!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelly had darted into Riley’s; and the tittering,
-thoughtless crowd was growing greater.</p>
-
-<p>“Is this the way yez talks till yez owld mother!”
-cried Mrs. Nolan. “May the cross av Christ darken
-the day yez wur born.”</p>
-
-<p>A man laughed loudly: Dick turned with a snarl,
-caught him by the throat with one hand, the other
-drawn back for a blow. Bella screamed and Hogan
-ran across the street.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>“Don’t hit him,” shouted the policeman; “don’t
-hit him, Dick!” He dragged the angry, shame-maddened
-youth away from his victim. “I don’t want to
-pull yez,” said he, “for I know just how it is. Go
-along home, now and take yez mother wid ye.”</p>
-
-<p>The mother, frightened by her son’s sudden exhibition
-of fury submitted to being led away. And an hour
-afterward she was deep in a drunken sleep on a narrow
-settee in her kitchen. Bella sat upon the steps leading
-to the room above, and her brother was walking the
-floor, his head throbbing and a sickening feeling at
-his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a bad t’ing to say,” said he suddenly, “but
-sometimes I wisht she was in her grave.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dick!” cried his sister, frightened.</p>
-
-<p>“I know! I know!” waving his hand impatiently,
-“yer goin’ to say that it ain’t right; an’ I know
-that as well as you.” He paced up and down in silence
-for a moment. “Look at what I could do for her,”
-he resumed, “if she’d on’y do what was right. I make
-big money, and I’d a-bought a house out o’ the Building
-Association long ago if it hadn’t been for that”—with
-a gesture toward the sleeping form. “She could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-live like a lady—like a lady! And I’d only ask her
-to do right.”</p>
-
-<p>He took a clay pipe from the shelf over the door
-and struck a match upon the stove.</p>
-
-<p>“How often has she promised to break it off?”
-demanded he staring at the flickering flame. “A hundred
-times if she’s done it once.” Here the match
-sputtered and went out, and he threw the pipe angrily
-from him, smashing it to fragments upon the floor.
-“It was jist like that, though,” he said. “She broke
-’em all! She’ll do anyt’ing to get rum. Look at last
-week when I was invited to Gartenheim’s sister’s
-weddin’! When I got home from work I hadn’t a
-rag to put on me back; she’d lifted ’em, and soaked
-’em all at Rosenbaum’s hock shop.”</p>
-
-<p>And bitterly he went over the long list of drink-inspired
-acts that had made his life so hard to live,
-and with a sense of despair he looked at the poor bare
-room, and contrasted it with the comfortable home
-that he could have supported had all been right. The
-thought came, too, of Gartenheim’s bright snug home,
-of the gas-lit parlour on the Sunday night when last
-he had been there, of the boss’s flaxen-haired niece,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
-and of how she had sung the “Holy City” for him
-in deep, rich, contralto voice. Then came darker
-thoughts, and he sat down staring vacantly into the
-fire. Bella watched him in silence, listening to the tick
-of the little nickel clock, and petulantly frowning at
-the bother of it all.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I’ll go to bed,” she said, at last. She
-opened the stair door and was about to ascend when
-she felt her brother’s hand upon her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“I oughtn’t to say this maybe,” said he, slowly,
-“but if yer mother can’t tell ye—why I must. I hope
-yer a good girl Bella; but I see youse with Mart Kelly
-often, and a girl can’t hold her head up long if she
-sticks to sich people as him. Break it off! Break
-it off, I tell ye, for he’s no good.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked steadily into her frightened face for a
-moment and then turned away.</p>
-
-<p>“Good night,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>He heard the clock strike every hour through the
-long night, but still he sat there struggling under
-the weight of his cross.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>Oh! There was a social party,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Of Repubs and Democrats;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Met at Michael Casey’s,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And put away their hats,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>One ticket gave a lady,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Admittance and her grub,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Invited by the committee,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Of the Casey Social Club.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Popular Song.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE entrance to the hall was a-glitter with
-gas lights; freshly barbered young men in
-high collars and sack coats stood about
-the doorway, smoking cigarettes and spitting
-on the steps. A wagon was unloading kegs of beer
-at a side door; people flocked into the smoky
-entry; now and then a hired hack would pull up at
-the curb and a member of the club would hand his
-sweetheart out and up the steps. Four policemen,
-engaged at three dollars a head to keep order, stood
-on the sidewalk counting the ingoing kegs.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>“Forty quarters, all told,” said a pock-marked
-officer, lifting his huge shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Whew! The club’ll have a neat wad to put away
-if they sell all that! An’ just look at the people
-goin’ in!”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, there’s one fight in every two kegs o’ beer,”
-said a third policeman. “That makes twenty turns
-before the janitor turns off the lights. We ain’t a-goin’
-to have no cinch.”</p>
-
-<p>The others laughed.</p>
-
-<p>At the far end of the entry stood a pair of half
-doors so arranged that only one person could pass
-them at a time. Behind these, bathed in a glare of
-yellow light from a cluster of gas jets which hung
-directly overhead, stood Danny Casey, attired in a
-dress suit rented from Goldstine the costumer, a huge
-crimson badge edged with gold braid hanging from
-his lapel. He was taking tickets and deftly slipping
-them into a slot in a tin box which stood beside him
-on a chair; on the stairs leading to the ballroom, a
-man with a mass of brass checks hanging by strings
-from his fingers was keeping up a continuous fire of
-patter. Murphy and McGonagle, feeling rather queer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-behind their glittering expanses of shirt front, walked
-stiffly down the steps to where Casey was standing.</p>
-
-<p>“A mob!” said McGonagle. “The floor’s blocked
-with ’em already.”</p>
-
-<p>“And they’ve on’y started to come,” said Casey.
-“Who ordered the extree beer?”</p>
-
-<p>“McGlory: an’ we’ll need it, too; for the guys
-what’s a-comin’ in looks dead t’irsty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say,” put in Murphy, in an injured tone, “I don’t
-know how youse people take it but I feel like a sign
-for a clothin’ store. I can’t bend wit’out breakin’ me
-shirt and the pants ain’t got no pockets in.”</p>
-
-<p>“You look,” commented McGonagle, “like a dressed
-up prize-fighter. Somebody ought to slam McGlory
-in the jaw for makin’ that motion that we all
-must wear dress suits. I know I look a mess in
-mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thirty-eight dress suits at a dollar a throw,”
-figured Casey, as he politely plucked ticket after ticket
-from hands extending them to him; “that’s thirty-eight
-plunks. Goldstine’s makin’ money and McGlory
-will be holdin’ him up for a comish.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a stir among the sack-coated and high-collared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-coterie at the entrance. A tall, well-built girl,
-tastefully dressed and carrying herself with a dashing
-air, had come in, escorted by a blushing youth who
-looked very uncomfortable under the notice they created.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Nelly Fogarty,” said someone. “She don’t
-look like a poverty knocker when she’s dressed up,
-eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh Nelly was a lady,’” sang another. “Say,
-Brennen, here’s yer girl!”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee!” exclaimed the person addressed. “And I
-told her I wasn’t comin’; she’s got me dead!”</p>
-
-<p>The congregated youths grinned over their high
-collars and bowed after the fashion approved by Professor
-Whalen, teacher of the “Glide Waltz.” The
-girl flashed them a smile as she went by, a bunch of
-La France roses in her hand. But a cloud crossed
-her face, and she bit her lips at sight of young
-Brennen.</p>
-
-<p>“Go on, please, Mr. Shimph,” requested she, of her
-escort. “I’ll folly you in a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, say Nell!” exclaimed Shimph, who had also
-caught sight of Brennen, “yous’re with me, ain’t ye?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>“Cert’n’y!” with a lofty air, “I don’t shake me
-friends that way.”</p>
-
-<p>Re-assured, Shimph walked down the entry; Miss
-Fogarty beckoned with the roses, and Brennen, a little
-abashed, came to her.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought,” said she, “that you couldn’t come to-night.
-What’s the matter?—didn’t ye want to take
-me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, say, Nell! What’s the use—”</p>
-
-<p>“Who did ye come with? Was it Mary Haley?”</p>
-
-<p>“I came alone Nell; ’pon me soul, I did!”</p>
-
-<p>“Eddy Brennen, if I thought you was double-faced
-enough to—”</p>
-
-<p>“Will ye cheese it! If the gang git next they’ll
-give me the laugh. I didn’t bring no lady, Nell. I’m
-dead broke and couldn’t, see! That’s the reason I
-give youse the song and dance about not comin’.
-When I take youse out, I want to do the right t’ing.”</p>
-
-<p>Nell’s face grew brighter at this explanation and she
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“I knowed you wasn’t workin’, didn’t I; and I
-didn’t expect ye’d blow your money when ye hadn’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-much. You ain’t acquainted with me, I can see that
-right here. I ain’t no leg-puller. Got a ticket?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” answered the youth awkwardly; “I’m waitin’
-for a slow. Casey told me there’d be some goin’
-aroun’ after the push got in.”</p>
-
-<p>“For Heaven’s sake!” cried Miss Fogarty: “Don’t
-hang around the door waitin’ for a captain; ye’ll git
-a hard name!” She looked down the entry where
-Casey was riffling a packet of tickets his shirt front
-and rhinestone studs gleaming under the slanting rays
-of light. “After I go in,” continued she, “ask Danny
-for one; I’ll fix it with him as I pass.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, say Nell! I don’t like—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh bother!” She started to rejoin her escort, but
-stopped suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” she cautioned, “don’t you ask me
-for a single dance; for if ye do ye’ll get flagged! Rox
-Shimph sent me these flowers and put up money for
-a hack, and he’s me partner for all the dances.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, are youse goin’ to t’row me down for that—”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t call him names! He’s run the pair o’ looms
-next to mine for three years now, and he’s always<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-acted like a perfect gentleman. You come to see me
-steady, Mr. Brennen, but I won’t play Rox for a
-lobster even for you.” And with this she once more
-started away fumbling in her purse and saying over
-her shoulder: “Don’t forget to ask Danny for the
-ticket.”</p>
-
-<p>Murphy had gone to the street door to speak to a
-friend while the above scene was enacting; now he
-came hurrying back to the “gate” excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“McGonagle,” exclaimed he, “here comes Nobby
-Foley and Tim Daily wit’ a couple o’ skirts. I’ll bet
-we’ll have the ‘chain gang’ here!”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee,” murmured Goose. “If they cut loose this
-won’t be a ball, it’ll be a scrappin’ match. Say d’youse
-t’ink four cops is enough? Hadn’t we better git the
-loot to send two more?”</p>
-
-<p>Murphy looked at him, disdainfully.</p>
-
-<p>“We ain’t a lot o’ kids, are we?” inquired he.
-“I might be dead wrong but I t’ink the push kin hold
-their own with any of ’em. There’s only one t’ing to
-do; as soon as they git gay, go in an’ slam ’em; ain’t
-that right?”</p>
-
-<p>Foley was short and square-jawed; Daily was big<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-and brawny; and both carried themselves with much
-aggressiveness, swaggering into the hall, their convoys
-on their arms, with the air of men whose deeds were
-epic in the ward.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a swell one wit’ Foley,” whispered a voice.
-“Who is she, Brennen?”</p>
-
-<p>“An old party rammer,” answered Brennen; “an’
-she’s the star pivoter of Whalen’s Academy. Her an’
-Bat Mahoney won the prize waltz at the Emmet
-Band’s picnic, Decoration Day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Her hair’s bleached,” remarked the other; “an’
-that rouge on her face is the reddest t’ing that ever
-come down the pike.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl was taller than her escort; she was remarkably
-handsome, dressed richly, and held herself
-in a way that made the women whisper and the men
-stare. As they neared the gate, she laughing and
-showing her beautiful teeth and flashing her splendid
-eyes here and there, McGonagle leaned forward and
-whispered a few quick words in Murphy’s ear.</p>
-
-<p>“No!” exclaimed the latter, incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure t’ing! What are youse goin’ to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, put out the flag!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>Brennen suddenly craned his neck out of its circle
-of stiff linen, excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Murphy won’t take their tickets!” he breathed,
-“there’s goin’ to be a run in at the start!”</p>
-
-<p>All surged toward the gate; McGonagle whistled
-through his thumb and fore-finger; a policeman came
-looming along through the cigar smoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Stand back, gents,” requested he. He flourished
-his club airily, and measured Daily with his eye.
-“On’y three couple allowed at the gate at a
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>The crowd fell back disappointedly. The group
-at the gate were engaged in excited debate; Foley was
-describing aerial hieroglyphics with his clenched fist;
-the girl had let go his arm and was staring Murphy
-boldly in the eye.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve insulted this lady!” declared Foley in a
-sharp high-pitched voice.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t insult nobody,” said Murphy. “Didn’t I
-flag her on the quiet? Nobody knowed it until youse
-made a holler.”</p>
-
-<p>“This is the rankest snap I ever stacked up against,”
-remarked the girl, tossing her head and rubbing the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-wrinkles out of her long gloves. “If I’d a-knowed it
-was a nasty-nice affair, I wouldn’t a-come!”</p>
-
-<p>“This ain’t the first time youse gave me the wrong
-end of it, Murphy,” said Foley, drawing back in such
-a way as to cause McGonagle to brace himself for the
-expected rush. “For the last time; does she go in,
-or is she barred?”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s barred!” said Murphy.</p>
-
-<p>“This ain’t no flash shine,” broke in McGonagle,
-“we’ve got our girls here to-night, and I, for one,
-won’t let mine dance on the same floor with her, and
-that goes!”</p>
-
-<p>“Push along, gents,” hinted the policeman, “inside
-or out; yer blockin’ the passage.”</p>
-
-<p>Daily jogged his companion’s elbow and whispered:</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t git leary; ye’ll queer Kelly if ye kick up a
-row, now. Give him a chance to work the gang what’s
-runnin’ the show. We can come back, ye know, when
-he’s done; and if youse wants to do business, then,
-with the guy on the door, why you kin go ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>The crush was growing; Levi and his orchestra had
-just gone in, and the tuning of the harp and violins
-came floating down the stairway. Belated Jerry McGlory<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-came striding in, in a light top coat and a
-glossy silk hat, bowing like a duke to his acquaintances,
-with Veronica McTurpin, the little widow who kept
-the millinery store; she was half hidden in her
-bouquet, and also bowing and smiling, dazzlingly.
-Mike McCarty followed, more than ever earning his
-right to the title of Brummel of the ward. He carried
-his stick and one glove in his right hand; with the
-other he was barely touching the elbow of Mazie Driscoll,
-who sold ribbons in a down-town store. Then
-there was Shaffer the collector for the brewery, and
-Carrie Lentze, whose father carried on the “Delicatessen”
-store on the avenue; while behind them came
-Koskee McGurk and a daughter of O’Mally, who kept
-the junk shop back of the railroad.</p>
-
-<p>“Checks!” cried the man on the stairs jingling his
-bunch of brass tags. “Put yer wardrobe away, gents;
-youse can’t go on the floor with yer overcoat or sky-piece.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hully gee!” gasped a youth in soiled white kid
-gloves and a scarlet Ascot tie; “they sticks youse a
-quarter for wardrobe!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a t’row down,” echoed a neighbour. “Mame,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-to the girl at his side, “it’ll cost two bits to put away
-yer hat.”</p>
-
-<p>“G’way,” said Mame, shocked. “It’s not the right
-thing, when you’re asked a dollar admission.”</p>
-
-<p>The man with the checks was growing impatient.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t hold a meetin’ and make speeches about it,”
-requested he. “If yer goin’ to cough up, do it.”</p>
-
-<p>The bar was on the second floor and had a door
-leading into the ballroom; groups of men and women
-were gathered about the tables; waiters were rushing
-about, the fingers of each hand twisted, in some miraculous
-fashion, about the handles of a dozen beer
-glasses; a young man was seated at a piano, singing a
-popular ballad in a high, throaty voice; some members
-of the club, their coats stripped off, their sleeves rolled
-up, were drawing beer, popping corks and passing out
-dry-looking cigars to a long line of thirsty patrons who
-stood along the bar.</p>
-
-<p>It was ten o’clock. The floor of the ballroom shone
-with wax; the rows of chairs upon three sides were
-filled with chattering couples; Levi and his musicians
-stood ready. All were waiting for Master-of-Ceremonies
-Murphy, to give the word.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>“The floor looks great,” remarked that gentleman.
-He was surrounded by the “floor committee” at the
-far end of the room, and was running his eye over
-everything like a general before going into battle.
-There would be no hitch if he could help it. He
-hummed a tune and went through a few steps of a
-“glide waltz” by way of a test.</p>
-
-<p>“Like old cheese,” commented he, “jist as slippy
-as ice.” He looked about him, again. “Where’s McGonagle?”
-he inquired. “Oh, there youse are,” seeing
-that gentleman. “All ready?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” responded Goose, “it’s up to youse to
-say when.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry took some half dozen steps out upon the floor;
-then he paused, rapped sharply with his heel, and drew
-himself up with a dignity that Professor Whalen could
-not have excelled. All eyes were upon him; he extended
-both arms, palms held downward, waving them
-up and down. Silence fell. The palms came together
-with a sharp report; Levi described a wild flourish
-with his bow; the cornet blared brassily; McGonagle
-and Annie Clancy stepped out upon the floor to lead
-the march. The ball was on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>At midnight the affair was in full blast; quadrille,
-schottische and waltz succeeded each other with hardly
-a pause, the dancers whirled, stamped and pirouetted
-with exhaustless energy; the musicians blew and
-scraped, the perspiration dropping from their faces.
-A sergeant of police, on his round of inspection, had
-just dropped in; he stood in the doorway leading
-to the staircase looking wet and chilled, for it
-had begun to rain, and talked to the men on duty
-in the hall.</p>
-
-<p>“Anything doing?” asked he, shaking the drops
-of water from the brim of his hat, his eyes taking in
-the heaving mass on the floor, swaying in rhythm with
-the music.</p>
-
-<p>“On’y a couple o’ drunks,” answered the pock-marked
-officer; “an’ we just fired ’em out, not botherin’
-to pull up for the wagon.”</p>
-
-<p>“I seen Daily and some o’ that crowd, in the barroom,”
-said another. “From the way things look he’s
-cappin’ for Kelly, and Kelly’s dealin’ out the dough
-for further orders.”</p>
-
-<p>“For drinks, eh?” The sergeant frowned. “Say
-Laughlin, go in there and tell Kelly I want to see him,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-right away. The damn fool oughtn’t make work for
-me!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelly had a roll of notes in his hand and was flourishing
-them animatedly over his head; a crowd of half
-drunken youths surged about him, approvingly; he
-was their idol, having usurped the post held an hour
-before by Shaffer, the collector for the brewery.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the stuff that makes the world move!” declared
-the saloonkeeper. “We’re all after it, me
-bucko’s, ivery wan av us an’ small blame till him that
-puts the fattest wad in the bank, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yer dead right, Kel,” agreed a supporter.</p>
-
-<p>“Barkeeper,” remarked Kelly after a glance about,
-“me friends here are doin’ nawthin’.” He stripped
-a note from the bundle and threw it upon the sloppy
-bar. “Work that out,” requested he, “an’ tell me
-when it’s done. There’s more to folly, for I’m out
-for a good toime the noight.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a good t’ing!” exclaimed Nobby Foley.
-“He’s a blood, d’ye hear—a blood! He treats youse
-right, see?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gintlemen,” affirmed the object of these remarks,
-“I haven’t a mane bone in me body, an’ the man that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-do be after callin’ James Kelly a friend, is welcome till
-share his last dollar. Iv any av yez gits pinched does
-yez friends have till ax me twice till go yez bail? Be
-hivens!” excitedly, “there ain’t a magistrate in the
-city, Raypublican or Dimmycrat, that’ed kape yez in
-the jug a minyute after I wint forninst him and told
-him till lave ye go.”</p>
-
-<p>The enthusiasm that greeted this statement shook
-the walls. Daily, Foley, and a select circle of kindred
-spirits added no little volume to it. They rapturously
-patted the speaker on the back and beat the bar with
-their glasses, for each had a five dollar note tucked
-snugly away in his pocket and felt in duty bound to stir
-up the promised amount of enthusiasm. The outburst
-elated the selectman; his voice was husky with drink,
-but he climbed upon a chair and plunged into a
-speech.</p>
-
-<p>“The fellys that are again’ me,” declared he, “say
-that I am not a Dimmycrat, an’ would have yez vote
-to bate me. But whin the day comes I’ll show thim
-what the people of the ward t’ink, because the dillygates’ll
-be there that’ll name me in spoite av thim!”</p>
-
-<p>He forgot his protestation of a few minutes before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-that he was out for a good time, and proceeded to
-make a bid for his hearers’ support at the primaries;
-Daily and his henchmen were punctuating his remarks
-by salvos of applause, when Laughlin summoned
-the orator into the entry.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Phil,” Kelly greeted the sergeant, “sure
-an’ it’s glad till see yez I am; but divil take ye, cud
-yez not wait till I got through! I had ’em jist where
-I wanted thim; I wur makin’ votes by the dozen.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a slashin’ good game for you,” grumbled the
-sergeant; “but look at my end of it! You load ’em
-up with booze—they’ll fight—my men’ll pull ’em, an’
-I’ll have to hold ’em till Moran kin give’m a hearin’
-in the mornin’. Then what? There’s lots of fellows
-from my division here, an’ I must carry that division,
-Kelly, I must carry it, or lose me job; that’s just
-how I stand. An’ if I put me people away in the
-cooler how am I goin’ to do any carryin’, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tut, tut, man dear, I must make meself solid wid
-the gang av young fellys. Sure a drop av drink’ll
-do thim no harm, Phil; it’ll make thim feel good,
-that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>The uproar raised by Daily and his friends and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-Kelly’s display of ready money had captured both the
-rowdy and the frothy elements. But the popular
-young men—the members of the club for example—held
-aloof; and it was these that Kelly was working
-for.</p>
-
-<p>“The stiff!” exclaimed Jerry McGlory, as Kelly
-came back into the barroom; “he t’inks if he blows
-his coin over the bar we’ll fall in line.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look at Mart, over there,” said McCarty, “he’s
-looking black about something.”</p>
-
-<p>“He was backcappin’ Murphy a while ago. He’s
-half lit up, and he’ll say somethin’ to Larry afore the
-night’s over, and Larry’ll slam him.”</p>
-
-<p>It was McGonagle that spoke, and a moment later
-he added:</p>
-
-<p>“Here he comes over! Play foxy, gents; don’t give
-him no excuse for bother, see?”</p>
-
-<p>Young Kelly approached, and with him were Daily
-and Foley.</p>
-
-<p>“How are youse, gents?” saluted Martin. “It’s
-the old man’s treat; won’t youse have somethin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re on the floor committee,” said McCarty,
-“an’ we ain’t touchin’ it to-night.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>Martin sneered; Daily heaved his bulging chest contemptuously
-and coughed. It was Foley that spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“When a gent tries to be friendly wit’ me,” announced
-he, “I be’s friendly wit’ him, see? Ain’t that
-right?”</p>
-
-<p>“It depends on the guy that’s doin’ the stunt,” answered
-McGonagle.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh, no! What t’ell no! Youse do it every hitch!”
-And Foley excitedly dramatized a scene: “A gent
-comes up to me, and puts out his fin, see? What do
-I do? Why I takes it, an’ puts away me medicine like
-a little man! All to be sociable, see? All to be
-sociable!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right,” agreed Daily. “That’s the proper
-t’ing to do. Why youse’d cut a hell of a caper, turnin’
-down good people, wouldn’t youse.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, go soak yer head,” growled McGonagle.
-“Youse guys give me a pain! We ain’t suckers; we
-kin see a play when it’s made, as well as the next.”</p>
-
-<p>“Youse’re all gents!” put in Martin, sarcastically.
-“Here that lobster Murphy goes an’ turns down a
-lady, at the door. I’m ’sponsible to me friends for
-that, d’ye hear? I sold ’em the tickets an’ I’m ’sponsible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-for the game I steered ’em against! Ain’t that
-right?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” answered Daily and Foley in a breath.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Murphy?” demanded Martin. “Murphy’s
-got to apologize fer insultin’ Nobby’s lady
-friend. He’s got to do it!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s comin’,” said McGlory, in a low tone.</p>
-
-<p>“We’d better put Larry next,” remarked McCarty
-in the same voice. “Kelly carries a jack; remember
-how he t’rowed it into Ned Hogan that night?”</p>
-
-<p>Larry was dancing; he had his arm about Annie
-Clancy’s trim waist and they swayed and spun with
-the music. Annie’s face was bright and happy; her
-eyes shone like twin stars, for Larry was telling her
-how good a fellow his friend McGonagle was, and
-that was a tale that Annie could have listened to
-forever.</p>
-
-<p>Word had gone about among the “floor committee”
-that Kelly was looking for him, and Larry
-received mysterious nods, winks and signals. He
-could make nothing of it, so he led Annie to a seat
-beside Miss McTurpin, and walked over to where
-McGonagle, who had crossed the room, was standing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>“What’s the new one?” inquired Larry. “What’s
-the gang all pullin’ faces about?”</p>
-
-<p>“Keep yer eyes on Kelly,” cautioned Goose. “He’s
-been puttin’ away booze all night, and he wants to
-see you about the girl what you flagged at the door.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” Larry shoved his head forward in a bull-like
-movement and stared about him. “Does he want
-some o’ my game, eh? Is the lobster spoilin’ to mix
-it up with me? There’ll be on’y two blows struck;
-I’ll hit him, and he’ll hit the floor!”</p>
-
-<p>Mike McCarty came out of the barroom and approached
-them, crossing the floor in the midst of the
-dancers. A girl’s swinging skirts almost wrapped
-themselves about him, as her partner piloted her by.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, there, Mike?” cried the lady, gleefully, and
-McCarty bowed like a Chesterfield, never pausing in
-his stride, however, until he reached the spot where
-Goose and Larry were talking.</p>
-
-<p>“Kelly’s comin’ across,” said he pointing among the
-dancing throng. “He just seen youse a minit ago,
-and he’s goin’ to lay you out, so he says.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry growled an answer deep down in his chest;
-he was looking at Kelly and his two allies as they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-swaggered through the dancers. McGonagle rapped
-out a vexed oath, as he caught Larry by the arm.</p>
-
-<p>“I t’ought,” complained he, “that we’d pull off this
-affair wit’out any scrappin’; and here them mugs
-spoils it all. Say, if there’s a fight, Annie won’t do a
-t’ing but climb down me back fer fetchin’ her.”</p>
-
-<p>“My girl too,” said McCarty, dolefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Come out in the entry,” pleaded Goose. “Don’t
-scare the women!”</p>
-
-<p>Larry reluctantly went with them, casting glances
-over his shoulder at his prospective opponent.</p>
-
-<p>“The mug’ll t’ink I’m afraid o’ him,” said he.
-When they reached the entry he tugged viciously at
-the breast of his dress coat. “Damn it,” growled he,
-savagely, “the t’ing ain’t got no buttons on! I don’t
-want to get no blood on me shirt front.”</p>
-
-<p>“Keep yer eyes on Foley,” whispered Mike to McGonagle.
-“I’ll look out for Daily.”</p>
-
-<p>“D’ye t’ink ye kin hold him even? He pulls the
-beam fifty pounds more’n youse.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t care,” smiled Mike, “if he was as big
-as the side o’ a house. The bigger he is the harder
-he’ll fall.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>“Youse’re a nice-lookin’ pill, ain’t ye?” were
-Kelly’s first words. “Floor Manager, too,” sneeringly;
-“why, youse don’t know a lady when ye see
-one.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s crooked!” remarked Larry, “and youse
-know she is.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a liar,” snarled Martin. “And even if she
-is, she’s better than some women I know of. She don’t
-live with—”</p>
-
-<p>He did not finish but leaped back and threw up his
-guard. Larry, his face wrinkling with a grin, was
-upon him, striking with the speed, precision and power
-of a practiced boxer. The exchange was heavy and
-rapid. The men panted and laboured for breath, cursing
-each other between their teeth. The policemen
-were clattering up the steps from the lower passage;
-the doorway leading to the ballroom was banked
-solid with the strained, anxious faces of partisans;
-women screamed shrilly; the music stopped with a
-crash.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Larry slipped and fell upon one knee;
-Foley made a quick, wicked kick at his side, and the
-next instant was thrown against the wall by the force<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
-of a smashing blow from McGonagle. Mike McCarty
-was staring eagerly into Daily’s face, his body
-quivering like that of a crouching cat, when the officers
-arrived.</p>
-
-<p>“Fire ’em out,” commanded McGonagle. “Fire
-the t’ree o’ them!”</p>
-
-<p>The offenders were promptly hustled down the
-stairs and out upon the sidewalk. A light rain was
-falling; the arc lamps sputtered and hissed in the
-silence. A form wrapped in a blue mackintosh,
-and holding an umbrella, was standing upon the
-steps.</p>
-
-<p>“Here he is,” laughed the policeman who held
-Martin; “and I didn’t have to tell him he was wanted,
-either.”</p>
-
-<p>The three ejected ones stared curiously at the woman;
-and the policeman laughed again and closed the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>“Mart,” said the woman, “I want to talk to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s yer friend,” snickered Foley.</p>
-
-<p>“Give us a knockdown,” said Daily.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, hell!” Martin’s tone was one of deep disgust
-and he waved his hand in a bored fashion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>“Le’s go have somethin’, then,” suggested Daily,
-“don’t stand here in the damp.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go on home, Bella,” commanded Martin, addressing
-the woman on the steps. “What are ye doin’
-around here, anyway? Youse must t’ink I’m a chump,
-don’t ye, to have youse follyin’ me up this way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just a minute, Mart,” pleaded Bella: “I won’t
-be longer than a minute, so help me God!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, git away from me!”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Mart!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“Go on, Kelly,” said Daily; “don’t talk to a bundle
-o’ skirts that way. See what she wants; we’ll wait for
-youse at Mintzers.”</p>
-
-<p>Daily and Foley cut across the street to where the
-lights of a saloon flared redly through the mist; Martin
-and the girl started up the street, slowly. She gave
-one upward glance at the windows of the hall, and
-sighed to see the dancers whirl gayly by. That was
-of the bright past; and the future was black enough
-for her.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>When we were lovers, you were my downfall,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Now I am sneered at and jeered at by all.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Songs of the Curb.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was the season of rains, and the great sewer
-that drains the northwestern section of the
-city had burst again, and with its collapse
-sunk a goodly part of two streets at the junction
-of Germantown Avenue and Third Street.
-Gartenheim was doing the repairing as he had often
-done before; great heaps of brick and timber lay about
-the break in the street; a donkey engine, shrouded in
-a canvas covering loomed up spectre like in the fog;
-from the small windows of the tool shanty crept a pale
-flare of light; and a man could be seen within, bent
-over a mass of papers and time-books. Martin and
-Bella paused at the foot of a broken spile-driver.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s our Dick,” breathed Bella. “Let’s go some
-other way.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>“Oh, come on! What’s the matter with ye. He
-won’t see ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t a-goin’ apast! He’d never let me hear the
-last of it if he seen me out so late.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, speak yer piece, here. What d’ye want to
-say?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know well enough what it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, is it that same old cry? Youse make me
-tired!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care! I on’y want you to do right by me;
-you promised you would.”</p>
-
-<p>Martin laughed. Bella’s face was pale, and the
-damp, penetrating mist made her shiver; a single,
-heavy drop of water was falling from a height upon
-her umbrella, with a measured beat that kept time
-with the pulsation of her heart.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t promise nothin’,” said he. “D’ye take
-me for a gilly?”</p>
-
-<p>“But ye must!” she cried, desperately. “If ye
-don’t, what’ll I do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Damn’f I know. But ye don’t tie me up in the
-t’ing, I know that.”</p>
-
-<p>“You on’y think of yourself! What’ll Dick say?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-What’ll everybody say? I can’t face it, Mart; I can’t
-face it!”</p>
-
-<p>She began to sob huskily; Martin prodded a stone
-with the toe of his shoe and reflected; he whistled a
-few bars from a popular song to convey an impression
-of carelessness; nevertheless he was troubled.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he at length; “what are ye goin’ to
-do?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s for you to say that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” deliberately, “I ain’t a-goin to do nothin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye don’t want to, I know.” Then she added after
-a pause: “I was to see Father Dawson, yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“He said he was comin’ to see you; and he said it
-was shameful.”</p>
-
-<p>“So you’ve beefed, eh? Yer goin’ to try that racket,
-are youse? Well you’ve made a scratch, see? Ye
-forgot to call yer play. I don’t go to church; he can’t
-jump me because I won’t stand for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then he’ll go to your father,” said she, “and I
-will, too. <i>He’ll</i> make ye do what ye said ye would;
-he can’t help it!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll jump the town,” said he, doggedly. “There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
-ain’t no use chewin’ it up with the old man; he ain’t
-got no pull with me! I’d flag him as quick as I would
-youse.”</p>
-
-<p>Then she began to reproach him. He opened an
-extensive vocabulary of abuse, and drenched her with
-epithets; she grew angry and responded in kind; for
-a time their words reeked with foulness. Suddenly
-he drew back his arm and struck her; she fell backward,
-the blood spirting from her nostrils and mouth.
-Kelly did not give her a second glance, but strode
-away, cursing under his breath.</p>
-
-<p>People have an awkward habit of dying at all hours
-of the day and night, and an undertaker is never care
-free for a moment. Roddy Ferguson was revolving
-this fact with gloomy disapproval as he bowled stableward
-in O’Connor’s black wagon, his mud spattered
-horse picking its way along the broken street.</p>
-
-<p>“Old Brannagan,” muttered Roddy, “has been
-dyin’ once a month reg’lar for the last three years; and
-now, just because it’s the night of the ball, he cashes
-in for real, an’ I have to hustle to fix him up.”</p>
-
-<p>His horse shied, and the youth tightened the reins
-and chirruped soothingly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>“Gartenheim,” he mused, “must be gittin’ paid by
-the day for this sewer; he’s been long enough at it to
-sew tassels on every brick he puts in. Go on there, ye
-big Indian, what’s the matter with youse, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>He jumped out to see what frightened the horse, and
-at once caught sight of the prostrate figure at the foot
-of the spile-driver; the pale, wavering rays of a gas
-lamp gave him a glimpse of the blood-smeared face.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a woman,” he gasped, “she must be hurted!”</p>
-
-<p>He threw his horse blanket over her as a protection
-from the rain and then rushed toward the tool shanty
-and opened the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Say,” panted he, “there’s a woman out here hurt.
-Kin I bring her in here while I get a cop to ring up
-for the wagon?”</p>
-
-<p>Dick Nolan stared at him, vacantly, chewing at the
-end of his pencil, the figures of the time tickets buzzing
-in his head. He did not catch the import of the
-words for a moment, neither did he recognize Ferguson;
-then his brain burst through the maze of arithmetic
-and both flashed upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” said he in sullen recognition. “Who is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t ask for no card,” returned Roddy, sarcastically.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-It was the first words he had exchanged
-with Nolan for almost two years, and the fact that he
-had spoken first, galled him. “Lend me a hand,” requested
-he, “I don’t t’ink she kin walk.”</p>
-
-<p>They found the girl upon her feet, leaning dazedly
-against the heavy timbers of the machine. Roddy
-drew his breath, hissingly as he recognized her; and
-Dick stabbed through the air at him with one quivering
-finger.</p>
-
-<p>“What is this, eh? Tell me, quick!” grated he.</p>
-
-<p>“If there’s anything wrong,” answered Roddy,
-“may I rot and die if I had a hand in it! You know
-I t’ought well o’ her, Nolan!”</p>
-
-<p>Dick rubbed some of the blood from her face; she
-was sobbing and clung to him tightly.</p>
-
-<p>“Who done this?” demanded he.</p>
-
-<p>Ferguson’s straining ears caught the whispered answer,
-and a sense of smothering filled his breast.</p>
-
-<p>“Kin ye walk?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think so; he didn’t hurt me much.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take her home,” said Dick; “ye needn’t wait.”</p>
-
-<p>He held out his hand and the other gripped it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>“If yer goin’ to do anyt’ing,” said Ferguson,
-eagerly, “I want to stand in with ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t say anything,” warned Nolan. “An’, say,
-where kin I see youse in the mornin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“At the club,” said Roddy, “afore ye go to work.
-And ye kin bank on me not to say a word.”</p>
-
-<p>And they parted.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot2">
-
-<p>“<i>A gadder kin put more good t’ings to the bad in a
-three-minute round, than a draught horse could pull
-from here to the corner.</i>”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="indentleft"><span class="smcap">Chip Nolan’s Remarks.</span></span></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">MRS. BURNS was bending over her washtub,
-placed upon a bench in the alley,
-taking the skin from her knuckles rubbing
-one of Tim’s red flannel shirts. It was wash day in
-Murphy’s Court and a network of clothes lines
-was strung from dwelling to stable, making a constant
-bending necessary to safe progress. Mrs. Nolan was
-hanging out her wash in her allotted space, her mouth
-stopped with clothes-pins and her skirts tucked up out
-of the damp; Mrs. McGonagle, who was making a
-social call, sat upon Mrs. Burns’ doorstep watching
-the efforts of her hostess across the drifting steam.</p>
-
-<p>“Glory be!” exclaimed that lady, at length, pausing
-and wiping the perspiration from her face with one
-bleached and wrinkled hand, “the owld felly himself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
-cud do nawthin’ wid it! Sure I’ve rubbed it, an’ I’ve
-b’iled it; I’ve bleached it, an’ I’ve got down on me
-two knees an’ scrubbed it, but sorra the cleaner it’ll
-git!”</p>
-
-<p>“God love yez, avic, don’t I know,” said her caller.
-“Faith Goose gits his shirts in sich a state from his
-bit av work, that the washin’ fair takes me breath
-from me.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ it’s Murphy’s wash I’ll have till do after me
-own,” said Mrs. Burns, grappling once more with the
-labor at hand, half hidden in the thick cloud of steam.
-“It’s a-most dead I’ll be afore noight.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Nolan flung a bedspread to the breeze and
-clamped it down with pins.</p>
-
-<p>“How is Mary gittin’?” inquired she.</p>
-
-<p>“About the same,” answered Mrs. Burns. “Poor
-sowl; she’s failin’ fast.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tis a sin an’ a shame till hark till the cacklin’ that
-do be goin’ aroun’ about her,” said Mrs. McGonagle.
-“Thim Kelly’s is spalpeens, so they are!”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil pull the tongues out av thim!” cried Mrs.
-Burns. “Did she not feed me two children whin I
-hadn’t a bite nor a sup in the house?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>“Ah! An’ did she iver pass a body widout a good
-word?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yez may say so, Mrs. Nolan. Iv I wur Larry, it’s
-have thim afore Judge Moran, I wud!”</p>
-
-<p>But a little time had elapsed since the events narrated
-in the preceding chapters. Mary’s frail health
-had suddenly failed, and Larry passed most of his
-time hovering about the sick-room. Their engagement
-had caused much comment in the parish and afforded
-the Kellys a chance to rid themselves of much
-of the venom which the willing of the estate had
-distilled.</p>
-
-<p>“Scure till the bit av luck cud they expect,” Mrs.
-Kelly had declared. “The owld man’s eyes were
-hardly closed afore they were makin’ eyes at wan another.
-The white-faced t’ing is mad after him!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the bit av money she wants,” her husband had
-said. “She do be a sly one for all her quietness.”</p>
-
-<p>It was this sort of thing—and worse—that had
-caused the indignation of the trio of ladies in the
-court; it had gotten about the neighbourhood and had
-long been the topic for conversation over cans of beer.</p>
-
-<p>“Here comes Rosie, again,” said Mrs. Nolan.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>“Arrah, what wud Larry do at all, at all, widout
-her? Divil the bit av good owld Mrs. Coogan is as a
-housekeeper. Rosie t’inks a power av Mary an’ tinds
-till her loike a sister. An’ Maggie Dwyer, God bless
-her, she’s the good girl till thim.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Nolan’s red face became solemn. “Whisper!”
-said she, “did yez hear the talk about Rosie an’
-Larry?”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil take ye, Mrs. Nolan!” Mrs. McGonagle
-fairly bristled. “Is it help till carry it around ye’d
-be doin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, I’m not sayin’ it’s true.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye had better luk at home,” muttered Mrs. Burns
-from amid her cloud of steam.</p>
-
-<p>Larry was in the kitchen washing his hands at the
-sink. He had just been raking the fire so that it would
-burn brighter, and the remains of his breakfast still
-littered the table. Mary was in the adjoining room
-propped up by pillows in a big rocker; she had just
-awakened from a light sleep and had been watching
-his efforts, a faint smile upon her lips. When Rosie
-O’Hara came into the kitchen by the back door, Larry
-greeted her, ruefully.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>“I’ve bin tryin’ to make the fire come up,” said he
-with a glance at the grey grate.</p>
-
-<p>Rosie laughed. She set the steaming pitcher of
-broth, which she carried, upon the table.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve brought that for Mary,” said she, attacking
-the range with vigour; “I thought she might like it.
-How is she?”</p>
-
-<p>“She had a bad night—had a hemorrhage after
-youse went home, and she don’t breathe very easy.
-She’s asleep now, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mustn’t get frightened, Larry; the doctor
-says there’s no danger yet, you know.” Rosie tied an
-apron, which she took from a nail, about her trim
-waist. “I’ll wash these dishes for ye,” she said. “I
-couldn’t get in to get your breakfast, for Aunt Ellen
-kept me busy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I burnt the steak to cinders,” said Larry forlornly,
-“and youse could cut the coffee in slices.”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor fellow!” She looked so bright, so sisterly,
-so helpful, that the poor, strangely circumstanced
-young man felt his heart go out to her in thanks. He
-never knew what prompted him to do it, but he leaned
-forward and kissed her upon the cheek. She looked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-up, frightened; but the expression in his eyes reassured
-her and the bright tears sprang to her own.</p>
-
-<p>And when he went into the room where Mary sat
-he thought she looked whiter than usual.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello!” he cried gladly, “Yer awake, eh?” He
-took her slim hand in his own strong, rough one, and
-it was trembling. She looked into his face strangely;
-for her visitors had been many since her illness and
-she had heard things of which she had never spoken.</p>
-
-<p>“D’ye feel worse?” asked he anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“No! Only a little faint,” she answered.</p>
-
-<p>And from that day her failure was more rapid; from
-that day her patience, her gentleness was more marked;
-from that day, if the truth be known, she grew anxious
-to die.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>Sweet came the hallowed chiming,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Of the Sabbath bell,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Borne on the morning breezes,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Down the woody dell;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>On a bed of pain and anguish,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Lay dear Annie Lisle,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Changed were the lovely features,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Gone the happy smile.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Annie Lisle.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was a pleasant evening and the groups of
-children were playing “a ring, a ring o’roses,”
-in front of Clancy’s grocery. Clancy was
-whirling at the handle of the coffee mill; and
-Annie was attending to the other wants of Mrs. McGonagle,
-who stood at the counter.</p>
-
-<p>“They say that Mary do be very low,” panted the
-grocer.</p>
-
-<p>“God help uz, yis,” said Mrs. McGonagle, sorrowfully.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>“Your heart’d ache to see poor Larry,” remarked
-Annie. “That’s tea, soft soap, two cents’ worth of
-syrup, and a mackerel, Mrs. McGonagle, what elce?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all to-noight, barrin’ the bit av coffee. It’s
-a sore trial for him, poor sowl!”</p>
-
-<p>“He thinks the world av her, do Larry, an’ it’ll be
-a hard job for him till lose her.” As he spoke Clancy
-dumped the ground coffee into a paper bag and with
-deft fingers tied it up. The song of the children came
-through the door:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“<i>There came two dukes a-riding,</i></div>
-<div class="indent4"><i>Riding, riding,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>There came two dukes a-riding,</i></div>
-<div class="indent2"><i>All on a summer’s day.</i>”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>“Go ’long out av that wid yez!” shouted Clancy;
-but the joyous little crew sang on unheeding:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“<i>What are ye riding here for,</i></div>
-<div class="indent2"><i>Here for, here for?</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>What are ye riding here for,</i></div>
-<div class="indent2"><i>All on a summer’s day?</i>”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>The exact nature of the noble twain’s errand still
-remains a mystery, for the grocer bounced through
-the doorway and scattered the tots in every direction.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye young villyans!” shouted Clancy with a great
-assumption of anger; “sure a body can’t hear themselves
-think, for yez. Don’t yez know that Mary Carroll
-do be at death’s dure, ye bla’gards!”</p>
-
-<p>James Kelly polished the walnut top of his bar and
-nodded a “Good Luck” to Schwartz as the barber
-was about to swallow his evening glass of beer.</p>
-
-<p>“I hear that young Murphy’s intended wife do be
-dyin’,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>Schwartz wiped his mouth upon the towel hanging
-outside the bar.</p>
-
-<p>“It vas doo pad,” returned he. “An’ she vas sutch
-a young vooman, doo!”</p>
-
-<p>“She have the con-sum-shun,” went on Kelly,
-cheerfully, “an’ sorra a few av thim iver git well av
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ach nine! Dey hafe a ferry boor chanct.” And
-the barber shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well! It’s not any of our doin’, Schwartz,”
-said Kelly, his voice full of comfortable irresponsibility.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-“But hacks will bring a power av money on
-the day av the berryin’.”</p>
-
-<p>A group of “somewhat drunk” young men sat upon
-the cellar door in McGarragles’ Alley, howling out a
-popular song between pulls at a can of beer. Goose
-McGonagle, who was passing, paused and regarded
-them disdainfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Did somebody hit youse mugs with a bar rag!”
-demanded he. “Ain’t none o’ youse got no sense?
-Here’s Mary Carroll a-dyin’ and youse people raisin’
-hell almost under the window.”</p>
-
-<p>The singing stopped; the young roughs had always
-taken off their hats to Mary, a degree of reverence that
-they showed no one else, except, perhaps, young Father
-Dawson; and Goose passed on, confident that their
-uproar for that night, at least, was done.</p>
-
-<p>And so it went through all the neighbourhood; in
-every court and alley the news was known; in
-every kitchen and on every street corner it was
-talked of.</p>
-
-<p>Mike McCarty heard it while stripping the harness
-from his horses’ backs in Shannon’s stables; Tim
-Burns was told of it while still on his way from work;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>
-and it was the first thing that fell upon the ears of
-Danny Casey as he entered his mother’s house.</p>
-
-<p>“Mary’s dyin’,” trembled upon every lip that had
-smiled in answer to her kindness; and as the night
-grew old, a hush seemed to fall over the district; the
-very moon, as it sailed across the sky, attended by
-myriads of stars, seemed to blink solemnly down, and
-ponder sadly.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, the serene, white soul was passing; the shadow
-of the death angel’s wings had fallen across the bed
-where Mary lay. Larry sat near the window, his arm
-thrown along the back of the chair, his forehead resting
-upon it; Rosie, the only other person in the room,
-wiped the death damp from the pale brow, her eyes
-bright with tears.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t take it so hard, Larry,” whispered the sick
-girl. “It had to come, you know, and you’ll be happy,
-afterward.”</p>
-
-<p>Happy! With a return of the old bare life—the
-rough, purposeless life that she had made bloom with
-new thoughts? He would drift back to the old conditions;
-there would be nothing to keep him from it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-when her gentle influence had relaxed. And that
-“afterward” of which she spoke so often, and so
-hopefully! It would be black and barren enough, his
-heart whispered to him—she would be where her voice
-could not reach him and he would be alone with his
-sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>A picture of the crucifixion hung upon the wall; a
-slanting ray from the dim light brought out the world’s
-great tragedy with piteous distinctness. But the
-lesson brought no consolation to Larry. He looked at
-the picture with vacant eyes, for his brain was numb,
-and he could think of nothing but his impending loss.
-Philosophy is a meaningless word to such as he; for
-they who grapple with poverty, and go wrestling
-through a gloom from birth to death, find it hard to
-submit.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you crying, Rosie?” asked the weak voice.
-“Don’t, dear; you promised not to, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>Rosie’s face rested upon the pillow beside her, and
-Mary stroked the tear-wet cheek, softly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry that I didn’t see it long ago,” said she,
-sadly; “sorry for you, and Larry. But it won’t be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-long now, and you both will be very happy.” Her
-voice trembled a little but she continued, bravely:
-“Promise me that you will think of me sometimes,
-Rosie?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll never forget you, Mary,” sobbed the girl.</p>
-
-<p>“And don’t let Larry forget me, either,” eagerly.
-“And try and be a good wife to him, Rosie.”</p>
-
-<p>Both Rosie and the young man lifted their heads
-quickly and looked at each other, searchingly.</p>
-
-<p>From far down the street came a faint, musical
-drone as of minor voices singing; the bell of St.
-Michael’s boomed the hour solemnly; quick footsteps
-went by the house, grew faint and then died away.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think,” Rosie’s voice trembled in dread,
-“that she’s dyin’, Larry?”</p>
-
-<p>He had approached the bed and was looking down
-at the pale face framed in the dark, loose hair. She
-smiled up into his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“She will be good to you, Larry; she has a kind
-heart and will be a better wife to you than I could
-have been.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mary!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>“You were kind to me when I was left alone, Larry;
-you would have married me because you felt sorry for
-me. But you’ll be free now; and I have prayed that
-she’ll be as happy as I was—before I knew!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t talk like that, Mary! It was you that was
-sorry for me! It was you—” but his voice broke in
-a dry sob.</p>
-
-<p>“Hush!” a pleading look crept into her eyes. “Don’t
-let anything stand in the way of your happiness,
-Larry; don’t let any thoughts of me—any regrets—keep
-you apart. Promise me that!”</p>
-
-<p>He knelt and covered his face with his hands, the
-deep, hard sobs racking him from head to foot; and
-as he made no answer, Mary turned her eyes upon
-Rosie.</p>
-
-<p>“You will promise, I know,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mary, Mary I can’t! Please don’t ask me!”</p>
-
-<p>But seeing the look of sorrow that crept into the
-death-dulled eyes, she added frantically—despairingly,
-thinking of nothing save the soothing of her friend.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes, Mary, I will! If it’ll give ye peace, I’ll
-promise.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>The clock ticked on through the hours; the breathing
-of the man and girl was long and heavy, and their
-eyes were blood-shot with watching. And when dawn
-drew aside the sky’s black draperies, the gray light
-stole into the room and lighted up a face that was
-calm and still.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">“<i>The weird sisters hand in hand.</i>”<br>
-<p class="center"><span class="indentleft"><span class="smcap">Macbeth, Act I; Scene III.</span></span></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">“IT’S an ill wind that blows nobody good,” muttered
-Malachi O’Hara, as he stood looking
-through his store window, his eyes resting
-upon Goose McGonagle who had just drawn his
-wagon up at the curb. “She’s the lucky girl, so
-she is.”</p>
-
-<p>Goose swung himself from the step of the wagon,
-a milk-pail in his hand. Filling the pitcher, resting
-for the purpose upon the counter, Goose addressed
-O’Hara.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry,” said he, “that election comes off so
-soon after Mary Carroll’s funeral. Larry ain’t feelin’
-fit for a bruisin’ fight, yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve heard,” said O’Hara, “that yez are both goin’
-on the ticket at the primaries.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>“It’s a gift! We’ll go t’rough to beat the band, for
-both divisions is behind us, solid.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll get it if yez are for James Kelly. It’s a
-walk over he’ll have, I’m told.”</p>
-
-<p>“Rats! We go to the convention and we don’t
-carry no banner for Kelly, either, see? And if he
-t’inks he’s got this t’ing cinched he’s sold. The boss
-is with him this time, but then, McQuirk ain’t the on’y
-fish in the swim. Gartenheim kin have the nomination
-if he wants it, in spite o’ him; and then there’s O’Connor;
-he wouldn’t shake Kelly’s fin if it was made out
-o’ gold.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure thim two won’t go afore the convintion! It’s
-inside information I have, from Moran.”</p>
-
-<p>“Moran misses it more times than any guy I know,
-but he’s put ye next to the right graft this time.
-Gartenheim an’ O’Connor both blowed in a bunch o’
-money last ’lection, an’ they’ve sort o’ got it into their
-heads that they can’t stand for any more. If Gartenheim’s
-named he could not win out unless O’Connor
-turned in for him, see? An’ youse kin stake yer coin
-on it, that O’Connor ain’t a-doin’ that—he don’t forget
-so easy.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>“Faith an’ that’s jist what the Judge told me, an’
-he says, says he, ‘They’ll pick Kelly in the end, never
-fear,’ says he.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, we ain’t losin’ any sleep worryin’ about old
-Kelly scoopin’ the pot. The gang’s got their coats
-off an’ say we’ve got a graft to throw into the fight
-that’ll make him look like t’irty-seven cents. Look
-out for the papers the day after.”</p>
-
-<p>After McGonagle had gone, O’Hara walked back
-into the kitchen where his sisters were crouched behind
-the range.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Rosie?” asked he, glancing about the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s above stairs,” answered Ellen, “an’ cryin’
-the two eyes out av her head!”</p>
-
-<p>“And for why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Troth, Malachi, it’s well enough ye shud know,
-avic. I niver, since Gawd made me, see any wan
-stand so in their own loight as she.”</p>
-
-<p>He wrinkled his brows, his round little eyes snapping
-angrily. Going to the stairs he called: “Rosie!
-D’yez hear me? Come down here, this minyute!”</p>
-
-<p>“Talk till her, Malachi,” urged Ellen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>“Show yez authority,” approved Bridget; “are ye
-not her father, faith!”</p>
-
-<p>Rosie descended into the kitchen, slowly; her face
-was flushed, her eyes were red and swollen.</p>
-
-<p>“Will ye tell me the manin’ av this?” demanded
-her father. She sat down, not answering; and he
-continued: “Yez hay bin cryin’ agin! Will yez not
-give over?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t help it,” said the girl. “You’re all against
-me and I can’t help it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it thinkin’ av young Larkin yez are!” exclaimed
-Ellen. “Shame on ye, Rosie!”</p>
-
-<p>“Wud yez hav a black sin on yez sowl?” cried
-Bridget. “An’ wud ye break yez promis till the dead?
-Glory be! Bud the young wans now-a-days t’ink
-nawthin’ av the hereafter.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t marry Larry,” sobbed Rosie, “I don’t like
-him—not that way. And then I’ve promised
-Jimmie!”</p>
-
-<p>“Powers above!” gasped Bridget.</p>
-
-<p>“The son av a ‘Know Nawthin’,” cried Ellen in
-horror. “Did yez iver witness the bate av that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hold yez tongues!” snapped their brother, “sure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>
-a body can’t git in a word edgeways for yez cacklin’.
-Listen till me, Rosie; did ye not promise Mary, an’
-she a-dyin’, that yez wud be Larry’s wife? Answer
-me that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know what I was a-sayin’,” protested
-Rosie; “I was so took back and frightened!”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil a bit do that alter the case! Ye promised,
-an’ it howlds good in the soight av God!”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ the blessed can’ls burnin’ in the room!” cried
-Ellen.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ she jist after bein’ anointed!” added
-Bridget.</p>
-
-<p>“Will yez howld yes whist!” exclaimed O’Hara,
-enraged. “Faix, yez tongues do be goin’ from Monday
-mornin’ till Saturday noight, an’ divil raysave the
-voice kin be heerd bud yez own!”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s yez own choild, Malachi,” admitted Ellen,
-as though to wash her hands of the whole affair.</p>
-
-<p>“Talk till her, an’ good luck!” muttered her sister.</p>
-
-<p>“I will iv yez giv me a chance.” And O’Hara once
-more turned to his sobbing daughter and proceeded
-with his arguments.</p>
-
-<p>Rosie had been an infant when her mother died,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
-and she had been reared by her two aunts in an atmosphere
-loaded with superstition and reeking of omens
-of good and ill. If the wind but stirred of a night
-among the housetops, Ellen detected the wail of a
-banshee, and if a lonely dog howled at the moon,
-Bridget, in hushed tones, announced the presence of
-death in the street. They crowded the corners of
-dimly lit rooms with the shadows of those departed,
-and the very teachings of religion were so distorted
-as to be made to supply exorcisms against agencies of
-evil and tokens calculated to render powerless their
-incantations. The girl was saturated with this; from
-her childhood she had drawn it in with every breath;
-and it was taught to her as an article of faith, to disbelieve
-which was to imperil her salvation. The father
-was well aware of this. He was far too practical to
-give heed to such things himself, but he was willing
-enough that they should help him finger some of old
-Larry’s hoarded dollars.</p>
-
-<p>So, like the crafty old fox that he was, he conjured
-up dreadful pictures of the fate that awaited her
-should she break her promise. The girl listened,
-terrified.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>“Glory be! That ye shud even t’ink av sich a
-t’ing!” cried her father in conclusion. “Don’t ye
-know that Mary do be harknin’ till yez?”</p>
-
-<p>“She hears ivery wurd ye say,” put in Bridget, unable
-to hold her peace.</p>
-
-<p>“No!” said the poor girl, her face growing pale,
-“don’t say that, Aunt Ellen!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t deny it, girl!” exclaimed her father seizing
-quickly upon the suggestion, “for divil the lie’s in
-it. She’ll go moanin’ about iver God’s blessed night
-wringin’ her two han’s an’ cryin’ the heart out av
-her! Scure till the bit av pace she’ll see till yez word’s
-made good.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wud yez hav us visited by her?” demanded
-Bridget.</p>
-
-<p>At this Ellen began a muttering; Bridget took it
-up, and Rosie stared at them, the fear in her heart
-showing in her wide-open eyes.</p>
-
-<p>That night Malachi O’Hara waited upon his customers
-with looks of great satisfaction; and in the
-little room above the store, Rosie cried herself to sleep
-thinking of the letter she had sent Jimmie Larkin.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>I kape a saloon on the corner, me boys,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>An’ faith I’ve a flourishin’ trade,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>I bought out me cousin, Nathaniel Doyle,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>The money on whisky I made,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>I could sell to youse now a nice pusse caffey,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Or a Rhino-Victoria cigar;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>No slate, chalk or pencil is kept in the house,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Whin Malone’s at the back av the bar.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Harrigan.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE big gilt sign over Kelly’s saloon on
-Girard Avenue was all a-glitter with
-morning sunlight; a crowd of hangers-on
-leaned against the awning-frame, watching with
-admiration the ease with which a powerful German,
-in a leather apron, lifted huge kegs in and out
-of a brewer’s wagon.</p>
-
-<p>Within, James Kelly stood behind the bar polishing
-thin glasses, and frowning vexedly; a group of customers
-sat at a table drinking and watching the deft<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>
-fingers of Nobby Foley guide a pencil along a narrow
-strip of paper.</p>
-
-<p>“What are youse buyin’ to-day, Daily?” inquired
-Foley.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a sucker for buyin’ anyt’ing;” complained
-Daily. He wore hob-nailed shoes and clothing covered
-with burnt spots which showed him to be an iron-worker.
-He took some loose silver from his pocket
-and selected a quarter. “Gimme that much,” said
-he, “o’ whatever ye t’ink’s hot.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m buyin’ the police row meself,” said the policy-writer.</p>
-
-<p>“That’ll do,” said Daily. “It’s just the same; like
-t’rowin’ good money in the street.”</p>
-
-<p>“Two’s a half?” inquired the other, glancing up.</p>
-
-<p>“Not on yer life! If I strike the game I’ll hit it
-big, see? Good and hard! No gittin’ the small end,
-tryin’ to save me play.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s your say. Whistle yer own piece, me boy, if
-youse t’ink it’ll do ye any good.” The “writer”
-looked around at the array of half empty glasses and
-added, “drink yer beer, gents; we’ll have another.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelly glanced at the clock over the bar. His frown<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>
-grew heavier; and opening the door leading to the
-dwelling portion of the house, he cried:</p>
-
-<p>“Is not Martin had breakfast yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t swallow me feed whole,” came Martin’s
-voice angrily. “Shut up, will youse!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelly closed the door with a bang. “Damn the bit
-av good he is till me,” growled he, recommencing
-upon the glasses.</p>
-
-<p>“Beers, Kel,” called Foley. “What’s the matter,
-old boy. Youse look mad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Little wonder,” answered Kelly, drawing the beer
-and carrying it to where his customers sat. “Here
-I have McQuirk an’ young Haley till meet at the City
-Hall at noine be the day; it’s but a few minutes av it
-now, an’ divil take the wan I have till tind bar.”</p>
-
-<p>“I heerd,” said one of the men, addressing the
-policy man, “that Levitsky’s place was pinched last
-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right. He had some words with the lieutenant,
-and the loot sent a wagon down there t’cut
-even, see? But, say, he’s out an’ wide open for biz this
-mornin’, because McQuirk got him out as soon as he
-heard about it. Youse can’t queer the push!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>O’Hara came in through a side door; his face wore
-a fat smile, as he walked to the bar.</p>
-
-<p>“Good mornin’, James,” saluted he.</p>
-
-<p>“How are yez, Malachi?” returned the saloonkeeper,
-“is it yez mornin’s mornin’ ye’d be after?”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil a ilce! Give me a sup out av the brown
-bottle, an’ a troifle o’ porter on the soide.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose,” remarked old Kelly as the drink was
-tossed off and rung up on the cash register, “that
-ye’ll give me a lift at the primaries next wake.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, James, I’ll strive till be neighbourly; an’ if
-me vote’ll do yez any good, faith, yez shall have it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ivery wan counts. I’m sure till be nominated, for
-the boss is wid me; but we want all the votes we kin
-get in yez division, for the young bla’gards are makin’
-a foight agin me, I hear.”</p>
-
-<p>“True for ye, boy! I wur talkin’ till young McGonagle
-yesterday, an’ it’s on the ticket he’ll be, agin
-ye, Kelly.”</p>
-
-<p>“D’yez tell me so! Faix, he’s soured on me because
-I wouldn’t take me milk from him, I think. But
-we’ll bate him, never fear. McQuirk an’ mesilf have
-bin among Murphy’s frinds an’ we’ll see till him, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>
-spalpeen. McQuirk have got the most av thim jobs,
-an’ they can’t go back on him, faith!”</p>
-
-<p>“Good luck till yez, sure. I hope yez’ll have as
-much av it as mesilf.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ho! Ho! Faith an’ I thought yez wur in good
-timper this mornin’. What’s happened to yez,
-O’Hara?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nawthin’ till me, sure. Bud Rosie’s till marry
-young Murphy; an’ the money’ll be a foine t’ing—for
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelly stared at him in dumb astonishment. O’Hara
-returned the look with great good humour.</p>
-
-<p>“Be the powers av Moll Kelly!” ejaculated the
-saloonkeeper, “but that bates all, yet! An’ is it so
-soon after Mary’s berryin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they’ll wait a bit; it’s no hurry they’re in.”</p>
-
-<p>The side door swung open, admitting Mrs.
-Nolan, in a greasy wrapper, her face puffy with
-drink.</p>
-
-<p>“Good mornin’ till yez gintlemen,” to the nodding,
-grinning group at the table. “It’s takin’ Willie
-a-walkin’ I am, this foine mornin’.” As she spoke,
-Mrs. Nolan flourished a kettle in the air and then<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>
-banged it down upon the bar. “Tin cints worth av
-mixed,” requested she.</p>
-
-<p>Kelly jerked the can under the spigot with professional
-dexterity and watched it, pondering.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be goin’, James,” said O’Hara.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop an’ have a sup on the house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Another toime. Faith, me business’ed suffer from
-two drinks av yez whisky.”</p>
-
-<p>The second-hand man departed and Kelly slid the
-filled can along the bar, the froth creaming down its
-sides.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve had a surprise, Mrs. Nolan,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Small blame till yez, Kelly; arrah, it’s all the news
-yez hear as ye stan’ behind yez bar, so yez do!”</p>
-
-<p>“It will surprise ye, mam,” spoke Kelly solemnly.
-“Rosie O’Hara is till take up wid Larry!”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it marry him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil a ilce! Her father is jist after tellin’ me
-av it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe she’s compelled till, faith!”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh!”</p>
-
-<p>“Faix, an’ the talk wint round about thim, long
-since, James. It’s sorry I’d be iv it wur true.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>“God bless uz, Mrs. Nolan! An’ d’yez tell me
-this?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sayin’ it’s true, moind ye. An’ did yez
-not hear av it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorra the word!”</p>
-
-<p>“What will young Larkin do now, at all, at all.
-He wur woild after her afore he wint away.”</p>
-
-<p>“So he wur, Mrs. Nolan,” agreed Kelly, a change
-suddenly creeping into his face; “so he wur, mam.”</p>
-
-<p>“Glory be! What’ll he do whin he hears av this?
-He’s got the divil in ’im whin his timper’s up, so he
-have.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he’s a frind av Larry’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s on’y worse that’ed make it.”</p>
-
-<p>After Mrs. Nolan had gone, Kelly wiped the little
-puddles from the bar and ruminated.</p>
-
-<p>“He <i>have</i> the divil in him,” muttered he. “Did I
-not see him, in this barroom, knock the padding out
-av t’ree av’ the ‘Chain Gang’ for callin’ his father an
-Orange bastard.”</p>
-
-<p>The men at the table were shoving back their chairs
-as though about to go.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>“Foley,” said the saloonkeeper, “stop a bit an’ give
-an eye till the bar; I want till spake till Martin. Call
-me iv any wan comes in.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Foley. “On’y hurry up.”</p>
-
-<p>Martin had a great, half raw beefsteak before him
-from which he was hacking bleeding strips; a
-newspaper was propped against the salt cruet and
-as he ate Martin read the doings of the sporting
-world.</p>
-
-<p>“Arrah, don’t be botherin’ him!” cried Mrs. Kelly,
-as her husband entered. “Lave him ate his bit av
-breakfast in pace. Will ye have another cup av coffee,
-Martin?”</p>
-
-<p>Martin pushed his cup toward her, over the stained
-table-cloth, in silence; his father sat down and
-watched him as he split a bake-house biscuit and covered
-it with butter, and then resumed his attack upon
-the gory steak.</p>
-
-<p>“I want till tell ye somethin’, Martin,” said the
-father. “No hurry for Foley’s in the barroom.”</p>
-
-<p>“Foley!” exclaimed Mrs. Kelly. Martin only
-stared.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>“The cash register’ll ring if he meddles wid it,”
-grinned the saloonkeeper. “Never fear av Foley.”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil mend ye if yez are robbed av ivery God’s
-blissid cint ye have, some day!” cried Mrs. Kelly,
-putting the steaming coffee before her son. “I’ll go
-out till him. Sure, I wouldn’t trust that felly wid the
-value av a glass av porter!”</p>
-
-<p>She whisked hurriedly into the barroom, leaving
-father and son together.</p>
-
-<p>“Good riddance,” said her husband—“yez mother
-talks too much at toimes, Martin; an’ I want till spake
-till ye privately.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee!” exclaimed the son, surprised; “what’s the
-caper, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelly spoke for a long time leaning across the table;
-Martin listened, his knife and fork constantly at work.</p>
-
-<p>“Iv we knowed where Jimmie wur,” said Kelly,
-“we cud lave him know av this dirty pace av wurk.
-Murphy is no frind av his’n nor moine aither!”</p>
-
-<p>“Larkin’s easy found,” said Martin. “He’s got a
-match on at the Crib Club in Boston for nixt Monday
-night, and he’s trainin’ at a road-house just outside<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
-of the city. I kin git the address from somebody and
-we’ll write him, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“We will, Martin! Go out an’ git a two cint stamp
-at Mullen’s drug store an’ a sheet av paper, an’ an
-invelope, as soon as yez are done atin’. It’s our juty
-till tell Larkin av this, an’ we must do it.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>Dull rogues affect the politician’s part,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And learn to nod, and smile, and shrug with art.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Congreve.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was the evening of the primaries and the opposing
-factions were lined up for the battle
-that would decide who was to be the party’s
-standard-bearer within the limits of the ward. The
-workers had made a door-to-door canvass, pleading
-eloquently with some, making a vague statement
-of principles to others, hinting at “prospective jobs”
-to more. A great deal depended upon the person, and
-the heelers were supposed to have the voters in their
-precincts gauged to a nicety.</p>
-
-<p>Tim Burns was eating his supper of potatoes and
-eggs at the kitchen table, together with his wife and
-two children, when a knock came upon the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Come in,” called Tim.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>It was Gratten Haley, candidate for school director
-and—McQuirk!</p>
-
-<p>“Hello Tim,” greeted Haley, cheerily, “feedin’
-your face?”</p>
-
-<p>“God bless uz an’ save us, Mr. McQuirk,” ejaculated
-Mrs. Burns, confused at the sight of the ward’s
-great man. “Here Xavier, git down wid yez at wanst,
-an’ give the gintleman yez sate.”</p>
-
-<p>She dumped her eldest son unceremoniously from
-his chair and dusted it with her apron. But McQuirk
-re-seated the boy and shoved the chair back to the
-table.</p>
-
-<p>“Pitch in, son,” advised he, heartily. He speared
-an egg with a fork and placed it on the child’s plate.
-“Go to work,” said he. He rumpled the youngster’s
-hair and turned to Mrs. Burns. “This must be a fast
-day,” remarked he.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s two this week, so they give out from the
-altar on Sunday,” answered Mrs. Burns; “an’ a body’s
-lost widout the bit av mate, after workin’ all day.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Haley stood in the background, near the range,
-pulling slowly at a fat black cigar, and gazing at his
-leader admiringly. “For star plays,” muttered he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-with ecstasy, to himself, “run me against McQuirk.
-He’s a miracle!”</p>
-
-<p>The feminine and juvenile side of the house surrendered
-without firing a shot; but Tim was made of
-different stuff and had a long memory. He glowered
-at his plate from under his brows and caused buttered
-wedges of bread and saucers of tea to disappear with
-startling rapidity.</p>
-
-<p>“Got plenty to do, Tim?” McQuirk stood with his
-back to the range and tugged at the spike-like points
-of his moustache.</p>
-
-<p>“Lots av it—<i>now</i>!” Tim put a great deal of emphasis
-on the last word so that the boss might not misunderstand.</p>
-
-<p>“The delegates are named to-night,” interrupted the
-candidate for school director, hurriedly, “and the town
-will be jammed with conventions to-morrow, all the
-way from members o’Congress to,” modestly, “school
-director.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said Mr. Burns.</p>
-
-<p>“I want your support!” said McQuirk, bluntly.
-“There’s a movement to wall me up in me own division<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-by a gang o’ would-be reformers; and I want all me
-friends to stand by me.”</p>
-
-<p>“So yez want me vote?” asked Tim, as he wiped his
-mouth on a corner of the table-cloth and pushed back
-his chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure; you’ve voted with the party ever since you
-got out your papers, an’ you’re entitled to a say in the
-primaries.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have a cigar,” invited Haley, as Burns got up.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll smoke me poipe,” said Tim. He took it down
-from a shelf and knocked out the “heel” on the edge
-of the range, then proceeded to cut a fresh charge from
-a plug of “Rough and Ready,” with his pocket knife.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a Dimmycrat,” said Tim, “an’ plaze God, I’ll
-always stay wan.”</p>
-
-<p>The boss beamed approval. “Now look here,” said
-he, “you know McAteer, don’t you? Well this other
-crowd want to do him out of the nomination because
-he sticks like glue to the party, see? Old Owen
-Dwyer’s on the ticket, instructed for him; so give
-Owen your support, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“McAteer,” spoke Mr. Burns, “is an able man, an’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
-Owen Dwyer, is a daysint wan, an’ a friend av my
-own.”</p>
-
-<p>“So he is; you’re right, Tim! And then there’s
-Abrams for judge—Jimmie Hurley stands for him.
-Abrams is a sheeney, but he’s all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m agin no man because he sticks till what his
-father wur before him.”</p>
-
-<p>“And there’s Kelly for select—a neighbour of yours;
-and here’s Haley for school director.”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew yez father,” said Tim to Haley; “he wur
-a United man, an’ an A. O. H., so I’ll do what I can
-till give his son a boost. But for James Kelly—never!”
-Tim smacked his hands together loudly.
-“Gartenheim gits me vote; for he give me a job av
-work when the rist av yez passed me by!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t let any o’ those young fellows jolly you,
-Tim; for they’re goin’ to git it in the neck, sure!
-Kelly’s the man! He’s the only one that can hold the
-workers, for he stands in with the mayor. He can git
-jobs.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve heard that afore now,” remarked Tim, stubbornly.
-McQuirk touseled up the eldest boy’s head
-once more and also shook hands with the mother.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>“Gartenheim’s name won’t be mentioned,” prophesied
-he as he buttoned up his light overcoat and paused
-at the door. “Stand in with the party, that’s the thing,
-eh, Mrs. Burns? The right kind o’ people never forgets
-who puts them in office. Do what’s regular, Tim,
-that’s all I ask, do what’s regular; vote to hold the organization
-together and keep the snide reformers out.
-And, remember, we’ve got a congressman to elect, the
-only one o’ the right stripe in the city.” He opened the
-door and stood aside while Haley stepped out. “Good
-night, Tim; I just thought I’d drop in and talk to you
-about the thing. No harm done?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit,” answered Mr. Burns, “Good night.”</p>
-
-<p>And so it went from house to house, from alley to
-alley, from division to division through the ward.
-McQuirk did not trust himself in the hands of his
-workers; he saw the voters in person, raised the standard
-and appealed to the partisanship that is born in
-every man; and so if there was glory to be gained, he
-was the gainer; if there was a harvest of defeat to reap,
-it was not because of lack of personal attention on his
-part.</p>
-
-<p>Politics had been McQuirk’s study for years, and he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-had been an apt scholar. He knew nothing of the profundity
-of statesmanship, and cared less; he had never
-made a speech upon his feet, and could not had his
-life depended upon it. But what he did not know of
-practical politics, as his friend Moran was in the habit
-of saying, was not worth knowing. He possessed a
-genius for organization: in getting out the full vote
-he was unexcelled, and he dominated the freemen of
-his district by one of three things: Favour—the expectation
-of favour—the fear of disfavour.</p>
-
-<p>There were people in the ward that had known him
-when he was a dump-cart driver, and others who remembered
-a later period when his only visible means
-of support was Sunday poker-playing in the parlours
-of social clubs. Then he became a political hanger-on;
-he fetched and carried for the powers that were and by
-his astuteness gained their favour. Little by little he
-rose in power, and at length, was sent, under orders,
-to represent his division in the ward committee. From
-that time he grew visibly; his name began to appear
-in the political columns of the Sunday papers and he
-took to wearing a silk hat. Then came the revolt of a
-clique of workers that presaged disaster to the ward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>
-machine; McQuirk saw his opportunity, threw himself
-at the head of the insurgents and in a desperate battle
-of the ballots, came off victorious. His old benefactors
-were driven to the wall and ruthlessly knifed,
-and McQuirk stood at the head of the committee in
-the pivotal ward of the district.</p>
-
-<p>With a solid phalanx of admirers and a chain of
-supporting social clubs behind him, he soon made himself
-manifest; controlling the most powerful subdivision
-of the organization, he held the balance of
-power and was courted and feared. He walked into
-his first ward convention with his breast pocket stuffed
-with proxies and dictated the nomination of his bitterest
-foe; then he threw his strength, in secret, with an
-independent movement and buried the said foe under
-an avalanche of ballots that effectually stripped him of
-his dangerous qualities. As Mr. Haley had remarked,
-McQuirk was a miracle.</p>
-
-<p>James Kelly was sweating blood and spending
-money, provided by the Motor Traction Company, right
-and left, to accomplish his nomination. The back
-room of his saloon, turned into a campaign headquarters,
-had for weeks been a vortex of activity. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-air was never clear of cigar smoke, or the table of beer
-bottles. Kelly, aided by that rising young politician,
-Gratten Haley, Nobby Foley and his son, had canvassed
-the ward from end to end. This did him some
-good; but vastly greater than their combined exertions
-was the fact that the boss favoured him—that he
-was the choice of the machine.</p>
-
-<p>“That mocaraw,” said McQuirk, on Tuesday morning
-as he stood in Moran’s “court,” “has queered the
-whole shooting match! He’ll have every voter out to-night,
-either for him or against him, and that’ll bring
-our other people into the fight.”</p>
-
-<p>“He ain’t got no gumption,” remarked the magistrate
-tipping himself back in his office chair, and loosening
-the foil covering of a paper of fine cut. “The
-old way’s the best. Keep quiet and on the night of the
-primaries half of them will forget it, and the other half
-won’t bother their heads. Enough picked people to
-elect each delegate is all we want; when the whole
-crowd starts to chip in, it keeps you guessing.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what! It’s time enough to make a hurrah
-and shoot off the sky-rockets when the convention’s over
-and your slate’s all to the good; you’re fresh for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
-fight, then; but when there’s a preliminary about who’ll
-carry the flag, it makes hard feelings; and a man who
-would turn out with the gang, with a torch dropping
-grease down his back, in the first place, wouldn’t show
-up in the second even if you promised to put him under
-a plug hat and on top of a horse ahead of the band.”</p>
-
-<p>Moran nodded his approval of this piece of political
-sagacity; McQuirk buttoned up his coat.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve fixed it,” said the latter, “so that if anybody’s
-pinched they’ll be run over here in the wagon. Be
-sure you have somebody to bail them out if you can’t
-discharge them.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’ll be all right. I’ll have Pete Slattery hangin’
-around somewhere; he’ll do for a few more, yet.”</p>
-
-<p>Here the magistrate laughed, but the boss looked
-glum.</p>
-
-<p>“That young Murphy,” said he, “is bothering me
-some. I don’t like the way he is jumping into this
-thing. He’s sore on Kelly, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should say so! He’d give him the knife in a
-minute. Say,” continued Moran, suddenly, “ain’t you
-on the wrong track, McQuirk? You don’t want to
-make an enemy of Murphy, he’s growin’ up and beginning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>
-to take notice, don’t you know? Keep him in
-line; one young one’s as good as a half dozen old ones,
-and they do more and don’t ask as much. Ain’t that
-right?”</p>
-
-<p>The boss looked at his watch, snapped the case shut,
-and dropped it into his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going down to the Precinct Club,” said he.
-“The committee holds a pow-wow there in half an
-hour, and I must make good.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, say,” went on the magistrate tenaciously,
-“what’s the good word, Mac? Sling me a line on it,
-so’s I can put the boys next. Is it Kelly or nothin’?
-Or is it Kelly if we can?”</p>
-
-<p>McQuirk cleared his throat and twisted his fingers
-among the links of his watch chain. He was not revolving
-a decision—that had been made weeks ago.
-He merely wanted his honour to draw his answer more
-from his manner than his words. He had seen political
-friendships broken before now; and he had also
-seen men’s words, quoted in fat type, posted upon
-fences.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll do what we can for Kelly,” said he, “yes,
-we’ll do all we can for him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>Moran smiled when his visitor left, and caressed his
-dyed moustache.</p>
-
-<p>“Just as foxy!” murmured he. “It’ll be a slick
-member that ever makes <i>him</i> slip his hold, and that’s
-no dream. If Murphy draws the most water why
-Kelly gets entered among the also rans, that’s
-all.”</p>
-
-<p>Not many members of the Aurora Borealis Club who
-had entered the political arena against Kelly had gone
-to work that day. Some were canvassing their divisions
-for votes or information, and others lounged
-about the club rooms, ready for anything that might
-turn up. Larry Murphy, wearing a deep black band
-about his hat, dropped in during the morning.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re goin’ to do him,” said Larry, after a long
-talk with his friends. “If anybody ever needed a
-lickin’, it’s Mart Kelly. He wants it bad!”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard Mary prayed for in church on Sunday,”
-said Jerry, with a glance at the mourning band.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Larry. “But she don’t need it,
-though,” he added reverently.</p>
-
-<p>“If we all stood as good as her,” remarked McGonagle,
-“we’d be all right. Me mother was makin’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
-a novena for her when she died. She t’ought she’d
-get better.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell her I’m much obliged,” said Larry. “Your
-mother always liked Mary.” After a pause he said:
-“I’m goin’ out to see what’s doin’. Don’t loaf, gents,
-keep the t’ing goin’.”</p>
-
-<p>After he had gone McGlory asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Did any o’ youse fella’s hear the new one?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bat it out,” requested McGonagle.</p>
-
-<p>“One o’ Rosie O’Hara’s aunts was to see me mother
-last night, and it was the first time she was ever in
-our house, for her and me mother can’t hit it. I was
-out at the time—over to see Veronica, ye know—but
-I heard all about it at breakfast-time next mornin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, chop it off!” urged McGonagle, impatiently.
-“Don’t wait until I’m grey-headed. Bat it
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Larry and Rose is goin’ to run double.”</p>
-
-<p>“G’way!” Goose stared at his friend, amazedly.
-“It must be a roast. Murphy was a friend o’ Larkin’s;
-he wouldn’t play him dirt like that!”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s Larkin got to do with it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>“Why him an’ Rose was engaged—on the quiet, ye
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whew!” Jerry whistled through his teeth and
-frowned across the table at the other. “I’ll bet the
-best skate we’ve got in the stable that Murphy don’t
-know a thing about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But Rose does! She’s give Jimmie the ice-house
-laugh, that’s what she’s done; he’s only a sparrer, an’
-Murphy’s got the money, see? I never put me lamps
-on a woman yet that wasn’t daffy after a guy what’s
-got a wad o’ rags.”</p>
-
-<p>Danny Casey who sat by a window, emerged from
-behind his newspaper, took his feet from the sill, and
-observed:</p>
-
-<p>“There seems to be lots o’ new t’ings chasin’ around.
-When I heard that Dick Nolan and Roddy Ferguson
-had made up, ye cud a-knocked me down with a straw;
-but when I seen them workin’ together against Kelly,
-why, say, I almost fainted.”</p>
-
-<p>“That <i>was</i> a funny t’ing,” agreed McGonagle. “I
-tried to pump Roddy, but he was dead dry. But, say,
-it’ll be a good snap for us all, eh? Nolan’s ace high<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-with Gartenheim, and if he kin coax him to step out,
-and give O’Connor a push, Kelly’ll be a dead cock in
-the pit.”</p>
-
-<p>Casey shook his head doubtfully. He felt that
-Goose’s hopes were a trifle too roseate.</p>
-
-<p>“Dick pulls some weight wit’ the old man,” admitted
-he; “but he can’t do all that. I tell youse Gartenheim’s
-too sore on O’Connor to turn in for him.
-Stick to Murphy’s lay-out; we’ve got the best chance
-there. When we spring it, take me word for it, the
-whole shootin’ match’ll stand up on their hind legs.”</p>
-
-<p>“Youse might be right; I only hope ye are,” said
-Jerry. “Anyhow let’s go down the line; we ain’t doin’
-no good holdin’ down chairs around here. I want to
-see old man Hoffer and a lot more guys; they’re
-friends o’ the old man’s and I want to sling ’em a
-breeze.”</p>
-
-<p>When seven o’clock drew on the division houses
-were wide open; the special policemen and ward workers
-were clustered in the doorways and were aghast
-at the magnitude of the vote called out by the conflicting
-efforts of Kelly and his opponents; it was as heavy as
-that of a general election and stood unprecedented in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-their experience. McQuirk, in a silk hat and with a
-cigar between his teeth, was going from division to
-division, in one of McGrath’s hacks; his subordinates
-worked zealously with the vote, feeling that their future
-weal depended upon the impression that they
-made.</p>
-
-<p>Clancy came through McGarragles’ Alley and turned
-down the avenue toward the polling place of his division;
-his white apron was tucked up about his waist
-and he carried a ballot fluttering between his fingers.
-Murphy who stood by the curb, watching things, and
-sending out his aids to drag voters from their suppers,
-at once pounced upon the grocer.</p>
-
-<p>“Just a second, Clancy!” besought he.</p>
-
-<p>A stout man with a red face protested.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, let the man be!” requested he. “The polls’ll
-be closed in a little while. Go ahead and vote,
-Clancy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Close yer face, will youse? I’m doin’ this.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ yer makin’ a mess of it, too. Youse people’ll
-split the ticket, and we’ll get it good and hard, like last
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>“I take notice youse have all turned in for de guy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>
-what licked youse; youse fellas would cap for McQuirk
-to beat yer own gran’father.”</p>
-
-<p>Murphy was about to unmask his batteries and
-wither the red-faced man with sarcasm when Clancy
-interrupted him.</p>
-
-<p>“What d’yez want av me?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“Yer got a pink ticket there. Just open it and paste
-this sticker over Pete Slattery’s name.”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil the bit! Sure, Slattery’s a friend av mine,
-an’ a customer.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, say, he’s for Kelly! Ye ain’t goin’ to help
-that slob to lick us, are ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“For Kelly! Begorry, they niver towld me that.
-Where’s yez sticker? Divil a boost’ll I give a man
-that’s for James Kelly.”</p>
-
-<p>A deep murmur that swelled into a smothered roar
-came from the cigar store where the balloting was being
-held. A dense group of excited, gesticulating
-workers were gathered about the table; in their midst
-stood two men, their noses almost together, their faces
-pale, their voices high-pitched and angry.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye don’t vote, see,” declared one. “Ye ain’t got
-no vote, here, and that goes.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>“I’m as good a Democrat as youse,” maintained the
-other, “you’re a mugwump, ye stiff!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a liar!”</p>
-
-<p>In an instant they had clinched and were making
-maddened efforts to strike. A policeman rushed in,
-tore them apart and hustled one out upon the sidewalk.
-Murphy desperately forced his way through the crowd;
-he saw a vote being lost to his faction, and the sight
-aroused all his combativeness.</p>
-
-<p>“Let him go,” commanded he. “He didn’t do
-nothin’, Callahan!”</p>
-
-<p>Officer Callahan turned with upraised club. “I’ll
-break your face!” growled he, “I’m dead onto you,
-anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>There was no telling to what extreme the young man
-would have gone, had not McGonagle and some others
-pulled him away.</p>
-
-<p>“Youse must be daffy!” exclaimed Goose, “D’ye
-want to play right into their hands? Every copper
-around the booth’s a Kelly man and they’ll rope in us
-people if we look cross-eyed; and then we’ll get the
-wrong end of it, sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“The wagon’s been out t’ree times in Tom Hogan’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-precinct,” said another, “they’re challengin’ all our
-people and t’rowin’ ’em down—an’ givin’ ’em a ride if
-they kick.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know’d Hogan’d get the goose if he’d go against
-Daily alone. Somebody go down and help him out”;
-continued Murphy. “Hully Gee, we gotta’ hold ’em
-safe down there, it’s our strongest graft, and we can’t
-afford to be gold-bricked, gents.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s too late,” spoke McGonagle, looking at his
-open-faced watch; “the polls’ll be closed in a quarter
-of an hour.”</p>
-
-<p>Jerry McGlory dashed up in his father’s falling-top
-buggy.</p>
-
-<p>“Anything doing?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all done,” answered Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“How’s the vote?”</p>
-
-<p>“Heavy as lead.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re doin’ us dirt,” said McGlory, bitterly.
-“They’re pullin’ our vote, an’ holdin’ ’em for a hearin’
-in the mornin’. They took twelve out o’ Mason’s precinct
-since seven o’clock!”</p>
-
-<p>“Move over,” said Larry. He and McGonagle
-jumped into the carriage beside Jerry, as he continued:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-“Now throw it into that old skate o’ yourn for all yer
-worth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?” asked McGlory.</p>
-
-<p>“Up to Moran’s,” answered his friend. “He’s
-goin’ to do somethin’ damned quick, or the next guy he
-holds for a hearin’ ’ll have done somethin’ to be held
-for!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">“<i>The iron tongue of midnight hath told twelve.</i>”</p>
-<p class="center"><span class="indentleft"><span class="smcap">Shakespeare.</span></span></p>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">BUT Moran was not to be found. After the
-horse had been put up, Jerry started for the
-club. Larry and McGonagle began a round
-of the divisions; but finding the polling places
-closed, followed Jerry’s footsteps. The hour was
-midnight; the moon was pushing its red rim above
-the housetops; and the great heart of the city throbbed
-but slowly. The streets were silent, deserted, save for
-a single pedestrian who now and then loomed up,
-ghost-like, from the shadows and as suddenly vanished
-from view.</p>
-
-<p>“So youse t’ink we’ve got the bulge, eh?” asked
-Goose, as they hurried along.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! We copped votes in places where I t’ought
-we’d get the dinky-dink. If the other end o’ the ward’s
-as much to the good, we’re all right.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>An engine pulled out of the freight yard as they
-were about to pass and stood coughing and panting
-upon the path, blocking their passage. A shower of cinders
-dropped through the grate bars, turned a dull red
-and then expired; a man ran along the top of the cars
-swinging his lamp in frantic signals; the moist, grimy
-face of the fireman peered through the cab window, his
-inflamed eyes blinking at the fluttering red spark; then
-the lever was reversed with a jerk, and back they go
-until a sudden crash and a shrill “Why-OO!” tells
-the engineer that another car has been added to his
-string.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on,” said Goose, “here comes the ‘loco’
-again. What are youse lookin’ at?”</p>
-
-<p>Murphy was gazing over his shoulder into the
-shadow and did not take advantage of the shifting
-engine’s retreat. Two men were swiftly crossing the
-street toward them.</p>
-
-<p>“Here comes a couple o’ gents what wants to sling
-us a breeze,” said Larry. “It’s either the price of a
-bed they’re chasin’ up, or they want to give us a piece
-o’ lead pipe.”</p>
-
-<p>“The fat one looks like old Kelly,” observed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
-McGonagle. “Say, <i>he</i> can’t be on the fight, kin
-he?”</p>
-
-<p>They waited for the men to come up; and once more
-the signal lamp swayed up and down, once more the
-engine wheezed out upon the path, groaning and hissing
-as though in protest. A man rushed down the
-track, paused under the flaring head-light to look at
-some papers, and then began swearing at someone in
-the darkness. He had lost one hand and the stump
-was armed with an iron hook; this he waved frantically.</p>
-
-<p>“Drop them last cars! Go down the next siding and
-pick up the flats! You know better than this,
-Conroy!”</p>
-
-<p>The engine seemed to have caught his humour for it
-snorted angrily; the crew began twisting madly at the
-brakes, the lamps were set swinging down the track;
-a shadowy form darted out of the gloom, threw open a
-switch and was immediately swallowed up again. The
-panting of the locomotive grew fainter; from far down
-the yard its head-light burned like a dim, red spark.
-The man with the hook entered a watch box and angrily
-slammed the door. Silence!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>“We heard that yez had come this way,” remarked
-Kelly, as he came up. “McQuirk an’ mesilf were
-passin’ Phil Burk’s place as he wur shuttin’ up an’ he
-towld us yez had started for the club.”</p>
-
-<p>“We want to have a little talk,” said the boss, as
-they walked along. “A little confabulation, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry nudged his friend, and received a like signal
-in return.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said he, cheerfully, “sing your song,
-Mac. What’s on yer mind?”</p>
-
-<p>“We want till ax yez—” Kelly began, hurriedly;
-but McQuirk stopped him.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me tend to this,” requested he, coolly. He
-turned to Larry and in a fatherly fashion laid his hand
-upon his shoulder. They were under an arc lamp and
-in the blue-white light, Larry saw that his face was
-wrinkling with smiles.</p>
-
-<p>“You boys put up a good fight,” said McQuirk. “I
-like the way you run things. Me an’ Moran was
-talkin’ about an hour ago; he’s feelin’ obliged to the
-club for turnin’ in for Rhinehardt for common council,
-and told me to tell you so.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>“Don’t mention it,” murmured Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s bigger lobsters than Rhinehardt kickin’
-around loose,” put in McGonagle. “He kin get a
-lamp-post put on the corner if youse want one bad; an’
-he kin have one took away if youse kick. That’s
-more’n some o’ the other guys kin do for the ward.”</p>
-
-<p>McQuirk nodded and smiled approvingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Haley’s got a safe majority in the convention,”
-said he; “the present member’ll go back on the ticket
-for Congress; Abrams has won in a canter; and the
-only man that’s been back-heeled is Kelly, here. You
-boys fought him so hard that he could only split even.”</p>
-
-<p>“Much obliged for puttin’ us on,” said Larry. “So
-we made it a draw, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s just what you done,” laughed the boss; “an
-even draw! I like to see young roosters make a game
-fight; it shows that they’re made of good stuff. But,
-look here; now that you’ve showed your spurs, what
-are ye goin’ to do? Kelly’s the choice of the regular
-crowd.”</p>
-
-<p>Facing them was Kerrigan’s saloon, ablaze with incandescent
-lamps. A number of men came noisily
-forth and went wrangling up the street; the white-jacketed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-barkeeper came out and looked after them;
-then he went in, banged the door and turned off the
-lights.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn it!” exclaimed Kelly; “he’s shut up. I wur
-just goin’ till ax yez in till have a sup av somethin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Much obliged,” returned Larry. “We ain’t hittin’
-the booze to-night. We’re in trainin’, see?”</p>
-
-<p>“The regulars all want Kelly,” persisted McQuirk,
-“and we want to hear from you people. Who are ye
-goin’ to throw the vote for?”</p>
-
-<p>Larry looked at him sourly.</p>
-
-<p>“The reg’lar crowd, eh?” sneered he. “That’s a
-good t’ing, ain’t it?” to McGonagle, “that’s a real
-good t’ing.” He turned once more to McQuirk and
-demanded: “Say who is the regulars, eh? Ain’t it
-the majority o’ the party? And if none o’ us ain’t got
-the big end o’ it, who d’youse call the reg’lar push, eh?
-Ain’t us guys, what’s workin’ agin Kelly, inside the
-lines? Don’t we say our say? And don’t we win if
-we hold the people?”</p>
-
-<p>“Keep yer shirt on,” soothed McQuirk.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right, see?” Larry was speaking in a
-loud, sharp tone, working his arms like flails. They<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-had paused upon the sidewalk, before the door of the
-club. The piano was being thumped joyously and a
-thundering chorus came through the partly opened
-windows:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“<i>I’m candidate,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>For magistrate,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>An’ believe me what I say,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>So, pull off your coat,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>An’ cast yer vote,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>For me on ’lection day.</i>”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The singing ceased suddenly and a voice shouted:</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter wit’ Kelly?”</p>
-
-<p>A cyclone of groans, hisses and profanity came
-whirling out into the night. The execrated one looked
-at McQuirk; and McQuirk shrugged his shoulders and
-laughed. A man got between the light and one of the
-club windows; his body, silhouetted upon the blind,
-writhed and swayed; his right hand flourished a beer
-glass above his head, apparently demanding silence.
-At last his voice was heard.</p>
-
-<p>“Gents,” cried he, “we have slammed it into ’em,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
-ain’t that right? We’ve got the t’ing cinched! We
-don’t want that lobster Kelly, and we’ll sit on the mugs
-what trys to ring him in. We got a man of our own.”
-He flourished the glass, seeming to defy contradiction.
-“We got a man of our own,” repeated he; “and he’s
-a winner in a walk! Gents, I’ll ask you for t’ree rips
-for old man McGlory!”</p>
-
-<p>The yell that followed split the silence like a knife;
-the man with the glass vanished from the blind; the
-piano resumed its measured beat; the triumphant
-chorus once more began.</p>
-
-<p>“Youse just asked me what us people was agoin’ to
-do,” said Larry. “Well the gang just saved me the
-trouble o’ tellin’ yez.”</p>
-
-<p>“So McGlory will go afore the convention, Murphy?”
-asked Kelly.</p>
-
-<p>“It looks like it,” admitted Larry.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>We were batting the town, from the sun went down,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Till the morning grew grey in the sky;</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And we heard the cocks crow, as we homeward did go,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>With our skins full of mellow old rye.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Songs of the Curb.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">WHEN the two young men pushed open the
-door leading to the club’s parlour, they
-found themselves in a vortex of wild enthusiasm.
-The congregated members, for the most
-part, were coatless; and with cigars clinched
-between their teeth they madly gyrated about the room
-to the tune of:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“<i>Oh Murphy he was paralyzed,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>McCarty couldn’t see,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>I was drunk, but Ferguson,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Was a damn sight worse than me!</i>”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>Danny Casey, his suspenders slipped from his shoulders
-and his derby hat tipped back upon his head, presided
-at the piano; McGlory, standing upon the pool
-table waved his arms like a bandmaster.</p>
-
-<p>Mike McCarty appeared to be the only sane person
-in the place; he stood in the doorway that led to the
-adjoining room, as self-possessed, as well-dressed as
-ever, a smile upon his face. Though he was born in an
-alley and of a woman who took in washing, Mike, in
-instinct, taste and deportment, was a gentleman.
-Seeing Larry and McGonagle enter, he beckoned them
-into the other room and closed the door.</p>
-
-<p>“The push is havin’ a good time,” remarked Larry.
-“That’s a lovely skate McGlory’s got.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re all about half lit up,” returned McCarty;
-“and they are plumb daffy, too. It’s best to save yer
-sky-rockets till after the game’s won; ain’t that
-right?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll take it from youse,” agreed Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“How did youse make out?” asked Mike.</p>
-
-<p>“Knocked ’em cold! We both go to the convention,
-all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was a cinch,” put in Goose. “There’s about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-forty o’ McGlory’s drivers boardin’ in my division, and
-when the old man cut ’em loose, the Kelly push wilted
-like wet rags.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then we got ’em,” declared Mike, exultantly. “I
-knowed youse’d win out; that gives us two more.”
-He nodded toward a sheet of foolscap upon the table,
-covered with names and figures. “Kerrigan made
-that,” added he. “It’s all right, I guess.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry and McGonagle bent over the paper attentively;
-the uproar in the other room continued; but the
-tune was changed; the dancing had ceased and the
-voices of the overjoyed members were raised in the
-ditty:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“<i>I’m goin’ down to Kerrigan’s,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>On purpose to get tight,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>An’ when I get home again,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>There’s goin’ to be a fight,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>I’ll smash up all the furniture,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And all the dishes, too,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Upset the stove when I go in,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Is the first t’ing I will do.</i>”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>The reasons for these acts of domestic vandalism
-were not inquired into by Murphy or McGonagle;
-each had his finger upon a name and they were looking
-at each other with something like dismay.</p>
-
-<p>“Tim Daily,” Larry straightened up and fairly
-glared.</p>
-
-<p>“And Levitsky,” moaned Goose. “Elected by our
-people, too! Oh, I kin see our finish, right here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hully Gee!” murmured McCarty, “is them people
-been worked in? Then they’re got the bulge.”</p>
-
-<p>There ensued a silence as sulphurous as any profanity
-ever conceived by mortal man. Then McGonagle
-spoke. “Well,” demanded he, of Larry, “what
-next?”</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve put us up against it, hard,” mourned
-Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“Got anyt’ing to say Murphy?”</p>
-
-<p>Larry glowered at them in bovine fury. “I went
-into this mix,” declared he, his right hand beating upon
-his left, “to win! And we’re goin’ to win if we have
-to tear up the ward be the roots! McQuirk’s played a
-foxy game, and worked some of our people for rank<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-suckers, see? But we’ll kick the props from under him
-and do him brown, d’ye hear? We’ll do him brown!”</p>
-
-<p>“How?” ventured McGonagle.</p>
-
-<p>“How? I don’t care a damn how we do it! We
-ain’t a’goin’ to let him play us for good t’ings,
-are we?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s go see Daily,” suggested Goose.</p>
-
-<p>McCarty looked at his watch. “It only wants a
-couple o’ minutes o’ one,” said he, “Daily’s snorin’ t’
-beat the band by this time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not on yer life! He’s on the night shift this
-week,” said Larry. “We kin see him, all right. Come
-on, Goose.”</p>
-
-<p>The two repassed through the parlour, almost unnoticed
-in the excitement, and down the stairs to the
-street. They headed eastward over Girard Avenue,
-their objective point being one of the iron mills that
-line the river front in Kensington.</p>
-
-<p>Down a narrow street, under the light of the lamps,
-a dozen or more of men were swinging long-handled
-brooms; a pair of bony, dispirited horses followed in
-their track, their driver shovelling the heaps of rubbish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-into the cart. The scavengers droned a strange-sounding
-song as they worked; the watching overseer talked
-constantly, in a sharp, high tone; the horses hung their
-heads dejectedly and rattled at the chains of their
-harness.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s some of McGlory’s night gang,” remarked
-Larry. “They start ’em out early since the loot reported
-dirty streets in the old man’s district.”</p>
-
-<p>They turned into a quiet street leading toward the
-river. A cellar door opened, and a broad barb of light
-shot across the sidewalk; from the midst of this rose
-a pallid, spectral form, and stood looking calmly into
-the night. But it was only a baker, clad in his spotless
-working dress, popping out of his overheated basement
-for a breath of air. A great stack, towering skyward,
-and vomiting a blazing shower of sparks into the night,
-showed that they were nearing the mill. The huge,
-low, shed-like buildings lifted their corrugated walls,
-like the beginnings of greater structures; a knot of
-men were gathered about the wide doorway; they had
-limp, damp towels twisted about their necks and all
-smoked short pipes. Rows of puddlers, naked to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-waist, their bodies glistening with perspiration, stood
-before the furnaces “balling” the molten metal; from
-time to time one would drench himself with water, and
-once more face the Cyclopean eye glaring so angrily
-upon him.</p>
-
-<p>Daily was among the crowd at the door, and he
-smiled and winked at his fellows, as the two young
-men approached.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll on’y keep youse a second,” said Larry. He
-gathered from Daily’s expression that he knew the nature
-of their errand. “Come on in here.”</p>
-
-<p>The three entered the building. The vast mill was
-in almost complete darkness, save for the far end
-where, sweltering, the puddlers toiled; here and there
-an incandescent light threw a thin gleam over the ponderous
-machines which crouched close to the floor like
-squat black monsters. Huge cogs, a-glitter with grease
-ground together with metallic growls.</p>
-
-<p>“Cut it out,” said Daily; “this heat’ll be on in a
-minute or so.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve heard that yous’re got the papers in your
-division to vote in the convention t’morrow,” said
-Larry.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>“That’s what,” grinned Daily. “I’m the delegate,
-all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are youse for?” asked Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“Why Kelly, of course! I’m a regular, see? I don’t
-get dead sore because t’ings ain’t batted my way; ain’t
-that right? I didn’t start to work to-night till I got
-out the vote,” continued Daily, with a laugh, “an’ the
-way your people shoved their little old votes in for me
-when Foley slung ’em a breeze that I was against
-Kelly, would make youse hit yer mother. Say, it was
-the real t’ing!”</p>
-
-<p>“I knowed youse done us dirt!” exclaimed Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“None o’ youse could a-squeezed in any other way
-in that division,” put in McGonagle, angrily.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, git out! If they was fools enough, whose
-fault is it? If you was dead set on carryin’ the precinct,
-why didn’t youse watch your end o’ the game,
-eh? But I got the vote, and I’m for Kelly!”</p>
-
-<p>From far away in the dimness of the mill, a hammer
-rang upon an iron plate with a tumultuous clangour.
-A voice vociferated:</p>
-
-<p>“Heat! Heat! Heat-oo!”</p>
-
-<p>Pipes were laid aside; heavy shoes rattled along the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>
-plated floor; the rolls began to rumble slowly as the
-belts were shifted from the loose pulleys; the men
-seized their tools and stood ready.</p>
-
-<p>“So long,” said Daily. “The heat’s up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on!” Murphy held him by the arm and
-spoke rapidly. “Listen to me. A delegate sits in a
-pow-wow to talk for the people what sends him; ain’t
-that right? An’ if they sends him to salt a man, and
-he supports him, why he’s playin’ ’em all for good
-t’ings!”</p>
-
-<p>Daily turned away. “Youse give me a pain,”
-sneered he, over his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>They watched him as he took his place at the rolls.
-Huge tongs running upon trolleys, were shoved into
-the gaping maws of the furnaces and each emerged
-gripping a white-hot mass of metal. A jarring concussion
-rang through the building; it was the first of these
-being passed through the rolls, and its scattering scales
-made even the hardened “passers” flinch. Report followed
-report; the darkness had vanished before the
-lurid glare; the heat of the place became blistering.
-Amid the blinding flashes and the serpentlike bars that
-crawled about the floor, the men worked furiously, like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-heat-maddened demons, engaged in some dread incantation.</p>
-
-<p>Then they turned and walked away. Larry’s face
-worked with rage; McGonagle walked gloomily along
-at his side, his hands stuffed into his pockets, his head
-bent dejectedly.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got it where we live,” said the latter. “It
-was all serene till we heard o’ this, and if he’s goin’ to
-vote for Kelly, why we can’t stop him, that’s all; we
-can’t do nawthin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“T’ell we can’t!” cried the enraged Murphy. “Say,
-look’et here, Goose; one hour after Tim Daily says
-‘yea’ for Kelly he’ll be in St. Mary’s done up in
-splints! He’s played crooked with us people, ain’t
-that right? And we’ll git even if we have to t’ump
-him. Ah!”</p>
-
-<p>They walked along for a time, in silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Are ye goin’ to see the other lobster?” questioned
-Goose.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s go over to the Dutchman’s, hit a bracer and
-talk t’ings over, first. I’ve got cobwebs in me head
-an’ I want to brush ’em away. The motzer kin wait
-till daylight.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>The saloon was the only all-night establishment in
-the neighbourhood. It glittered with clusters of electric
-lamps and broad, gilt-framed mirrors; a marble-topped
-bar backed by pyramids of glasses and bottles
-stood upon one side.</p>
-
-<p>They talked in a desultory way for some time, consuming
-much beer and many plates of sandwiches.
-Dawn stretched a grey hand through the window and
-dimmed the clusters of lights; and when they ranged
-along the bar for the last drink, the streets were filling
-with people hurrying toward their work.</p>
-
-<p>Then they tramped off toward the spreading Hebrew
-settlement on North Second Street. Levitsky,
-the man whom they sought, while he claimed a voting
-place in the ward, really lived south of the line, in one
-of the row of houses that face the old market sheds.
-These teem with long-coated, huge-bearded Russian
-Jews, who drag their stock in trade upon the sidewalk
-each morning and prowl up and down before it watching
-for customers, and hoarsely shouting in a mixture
-of English and Yiddish.</p>
-
-<p>Larry and his chum paused before a dirty bulk window
-heaped with odds and ends of merchandise; on a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>
-stand upon the sidewalk lay little stacks of Yiddish
-newspapers and pamphlets; a thin, yellow-faced man,
-in a round, high-crowned cap, and with a beard of
-patriarchal length, sat in the doorway twisting a
-cigarette out of some damp tobacco. He was a wise
-man in the Ghetto, learned in the law and a public
-reader of the scrolls; he knew the ways of Gentile
-youth when it was half drunken, for he drew his long
-coat about his gaunt frame as they approached, and
-raised his hand to prevent the expected plucking at his
-beard.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Levitsky?” asked Larry.</p>
-
-<p>The man in the velvet cap gestured his relief and
-called shrilly to someone within. A girl came out; a
-dark-eyed, deep-breasted girl, the perfect type of
-Jewess.</p>
-
-<p>“Levitsky’s gone down to get his breakfast at
-Sam’s,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“Much obliged,” said Larry. “Come on, Goose.”</p>
-
-<p>Down the street a scarlet lettered sign flamed conspicuously
-among a wilderness of others, and thither
-they hurried and entered at the door over which it
-hung. The revolving fans drove the hot, strong-odoured<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
-breath of the place into their faces; waiters,
-greasy aproned and perspiring, rushed about dexterously
-balancing pyramids of food-filled crockery; the
-room resounded with shouted orders and the incessant
-ringing of the cash register.</p>
-
-<p>“There he is,” said Larry.</p>
-
-<p>A stocky young man, in a collarless shirt, was just
-about to seat himself at a table; he greeted them surprisedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Vy cert’ny,” answered he, “ye kin see me. But
-I cand sell no bolicy here, chends; there ish doo many
-beoble.”</p>
-
-<p>“We ain’t lookin’ for policy. We want to see youse
-about yer little old vote in the convention.”</p>
-
-<p>Levitsky grinned. “Oh!” said he, “vell, sit down.
-Vill you have anyding to eat?”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” said Larry. “We’ll on’y stay in here a
-second.”</p>
-
-<p>The policy-writer did not urge them, but turned to
-the waiter.</p>
-
-<p>“Two fried eggs; a rare steak ant onions, ant a
-cup of coffee.”</p>
-
-<p>And then Larry proceeded to state his views;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
-Levitsky listened, never volunteering a word, until he
-had finished his excited remarks, then he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Youse chends alvays treaded me right,” said he,
-“and I wud like to do someding for you, an’d dot ride?
-But McQuirk jusd god me oudt of drouble and I cand
-go pack on him, can I?” He flourished his arms
-wildly as though protesting against the mere thought.
-“I vill leave id to you fellas!” exclaimed he, “vould id
-be ride?”</p>
-
-<p>This involved a question of ethics with which neither
-Larry nor McGonagle felt themselves capable of
-grappling.</p>
-
-<p>“But say,” demanded Murphy, “do youse t’ink us
-people’s goin’ to make good to McQuirk because he got
-youse out o’ hock? If ye want’s to square yerself,
-don’t make us stand for that. Ye’ve copped a sneak
-on us, Levitsky, ye know ye have.”</p>
-
-<p>They argued the question until the ordered breakfast
-appeared. Levitsky attacked it, apparently unmoved
-in his determination to remain faithful to the
-boss; the others got up angry and despairing.</p>
-
-<p>“Just now,” said Larry, “it looks as if youse had
-us skinned to death; but, say, there’s a block for every<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-punch, and if Daily and youse try to double bank us,
-we’ll git even in the convention if we have to pull the
-shack!”</p>
-
-<p>And they left the place.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>Come all ye sons of Erin an’ listen to my lay,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>An’ I’ll tell the story av the wise man av Galway,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>A credit to his country—a credit to his name,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Three provinces a-ringin’ wid the echoes av his fame.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">An old Come-all-ye.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THERE were but few at the six o’clock service,
-and these were so scattered about the
-church as to create the impression of vacancy.
-The priest, glittering in gold-embroidered
-vestments intoned the mass at the high altar;
-the acolytes drowsily made the responses; the worshippers
-followed the sacrifice with devout attention;
-a restless child now and then broke the silence
-that pervaded.</p>
-
-<p>A light stole through a long, stained window, throwing
-shafts of crimson and purple radiance across the
-side altar, where stood a carven image of the Holy
-Virgin. A girl knelt at the altar rail, her head bowed,
-her hands clasped. Even the black-robed sisters, who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-taught in the parochial school, now and then raised
-their eyes to look at her, for she was so white, her
-attitude was so supplicating.</p>
-
-<p>Larry Murphy who was very regular at church since
-Mary died, often glanced up from his book to look at
-the pleading figure; but he did not recognize her, he
-was too far off, or the light was too dim. It was Rosie
-O’Hara.</p>
-
-<p>With all her pure young heart Rosie was pleading
-for her love. Right or wrong she had been taught to
-carry her griefs to her who had been born into the
-world to crush the serpent’s head; and with an intensity
-for which her mind could find no words, she
-prayed mutely.</p>
-
-<p>The gleaming, richly-wrought vessels had been
-taken from the tabernacle and stood upon the pure
-white altar cloth; the good father bent his knee, and
-every head sank in adoration. Rosie, awed to the very
-soul at the proximity of the unveiled host, found words—the
-words of the angel:</p>
-
-<p>“Hail Mary, full of grace,” she breathed, “blessed
-art thou among women; and blessed is the fruit of thy
-womb, Jesus.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>At intervals the bell continued to ring softly, the
-people beat their breasts; all bent before the uplifted
-host, save the child, who looked on, open-eyed, wondering.</p>
-
-<p>“Holy Mary, mother of God,” pleaded the girl.
-“Pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our
-death!”</p>
-
-<p>When the services were ended, Rosie lingered until
-the priest had left the altar and the people had gone.
-Upon her way out she paused. In a far corner, where
-the light scarcely fell, hung a pale, white Christ upon
-a cross; she knelt and pressed her lips to the wounded
-feet, her eyes bright with tears, and then she passed
-out through the great swinging doors.</p>
-
-<p>Larry had been one of the first to leave the church;
-Jimmie Larkin, who was standing upon Kerrigan’s
-corner, saw him, instantly crossed the street and advanced
-to meet him.</p>
-
-<p>“Larkin!” young Murphy’s voice showed his surprise;
-and he held out his hand in a hearty, full-blooded
-fashion. But Jimmie stuffed his hands into his
-pockets, and stared at him, with a sneer.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t youse forgot somethin’?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>Larry looked his astonishment: “What’s hurtin’
-ye?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye know well enough! I’ve bin put next to the
-cross game yer workin’, Murphy; I’m dead on, I tell
-ye, and I’m rotten sorry! I trusted ye, I did; I trusted
-youse like I would me brother.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, what’s the matter with youse, Larkin? Don’t
-stand there like a stuffed shirt! Put me on to the
-trouble. What are youse jumpin’ me for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Don’t try that; it won’t work. I ain’t sore
-because I got the dinky-dink, but on’y because youse
-had a hand in it! You was me pal, wasn’t youse?
-Didn’t I usta sleep with youse? And didn’t we eat
-together? I borried yer coin when I was strapped,
-and lent youse mine when I had any. You knowed all
-about how it was with me and her, ye knowed it and
-done me dirt when me back was turned. That’s the
-part what hurts, an I’ve broke trainin’ to come here
-and lick youse, Murphy—to lick youse till ye beg!”</p>
-
-<p>Larry drew back, frowning into the other’s flushed
-face.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what ye mean,” said he, sharply.
-“Youse’re a friend o’ mine, Larkin, and I’ll stand for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-all kinds o’ talk from ye, but, say, if ye go t’rowin’
-any punches my way, I’ll try to give ye a run for yer
-trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>It was then that Rosie came out of the church. She
-saw, with frightened eyes, the angry and threatening
-gestures, and caught the high, sharp tones of their
-voices. She hurried forward, her heart palpitating,
-realizing at once the cause of the quarrel.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Jimmie,” she exclaimed. “Have you got back
-home!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes,” said he mockingly: “I’ve come back.
-I just wanted to see Larry, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t ask Larry about it,” she pleaded, eagerly.
-“He don’t know a thing. Let’s walk down toward
-McTurpin’s, and I’ll tell you—”</p>
-
-<p>Larkin laughed and interrupted her. “Gee!” exclaimed
-he, “is it that bad, eh? Is he a-goin’ to hide
-behind yer skirts?”</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t a-goin to hide, and I ain’t got no reason
-to hide,” stormed Murphy. “Come on, whatever it
-is! We’ll settle this right here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t fight,” said Rosie, frightened more than
-ever. “Look you’re a-most in front of the church.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-Honest to God, Larry, I couldn’t help it! Me father
-got it around: He told everybody.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh! Told what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you know that, what Mary said; you ain’t
-forgot about that? When she was dyin’, I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! No! But what’s he gotta do with that?
-That’s what I want to know; where’s his kick
-a-comin?”</p>
-
-<p>“Me and him was engaged, ye know, an’ Pop made
-me write to him that me and you—”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” Murphy fairly gasped as he caught her
-meaning. “Say, did youse do that?”</p>
-
-<p>Rosie began to choke and sob.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Larry, I couldn’t help it; they frightened me
-so; and I was willing to do anything.”</p>
-
-<p>Larkin was looking from one to the other, puzzled,
-glowering and suspicious. Murphy turned to him.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right,” said he. “If ye t’ought I was doin’
-that, I don’t blame youse for wantin’ to start t’ings my
-way. But, say, we kin fix this up to suit. Les’ go
-in here,” nodding to the open iron gate that led to the
-little burial ground behind the church. “We kin talk
-all we want and nobody’ll hear us.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>They walked about the tiny inclosure where lay the
-parish dead, under the rank tufts of grass and the
-weather-beaten stones; and there they told Jimmie of
-Mary’s request, and Rosie narrated the story of her
-father’s crafty handling of her to break one promise
-and keep the other.</p>
-
-<p>Young Larkin drew his breath, slowly, after all had
-been said, and then expelled it with great force. He
-held out his hand to Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s up to me,” said he. “I might a-knowed, old
-pal; but youse know how it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all right,” said Murphy, shaking his hand;
-“on’y ye might a-looked at it that way before ye
-jumped me. But let it go at that, it’s all to the good
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the promise,” said Rosie. “That’ll always be
-there; I can’t break it; I’d be frightened to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee!” cried Larkin, impatiently. “Don’t mind
-that; Mary was outa her head, see? And the old ones
-was a-workin’ youse; they was after Murphy’s money,
-see?”</p>
-
-<p>But the fear was implanted too deeply in her
-breast to be moved by this. Larry understood and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-pondered the matter, while Jimmie argued and Rosie
-sobbed.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, it’s easy,” said he, suddenly. “You needn’t
-break your promise, Rosie, if youse’re afraid.”</p>
-
-<p>The others looked at him, hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>“It was you what promised,” said Larry. “I
-didn’t say a word, see? I’ll lay down! I won’t marry
-youse; and if I won’t, how kin youse go ahead, eh?
-It lets youse out! That’s what it does—it lets youse
-out!”</p>
-
-<p>The simplicity of this made Larkin stare, and caused
-Rosie hopefully to dry her eyes. Larry was vociferously
-triumphant; he saw all made clear, and was as
-happy as he desired them to be.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go round and bruise up yer father,” said he.
-“I’ll talk to him like a Dutch uncle, I will. Him and
-the two old ones’ll play light on the ghost game when
-I get through. They’ll see it ain’t no use. Take a
-walk with Jimmie, Rosie; don’t go home till youse
-t’ink I’ve left. I’ll make it right, all right!”</p>
-
-<p>But this was not the only incident of the morning.
-Annie Clancy stood in the door of the grocery store;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>
-and as Goose McGonagle came along he naturally
-stopped for a chat. The voice of Clancy could be
-heard grumbling from the interior.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with yer father?” asked Goose.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t talk too loud,” warned Annie, with uplifted
-finger, “he might hear ye. He’s been in an awful
-temper ever since his half sister, old Miss Cassidy,
-died. They say she left her money to the Church. He
-thought he’d git it, and then he’d be able to pay—you
-know what.”</p>
-
-<p>The milkman nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“I ought to,” answered he, “I can’t t’ink o’ the mess
-I’m in meself without t’inkin’ o’ that. But his temper
-don’t cut no ice with me, Annie, I’m goin’ to talk to
-him to-day if I git t’run down or not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Annie!” called Clancy, angrily. “Sure, what
-keeps yez glosterin’ be the dure? Come in at wanst,
-an’ tind till yez bit av wurk.”</p>
-
-<p>“He knows I’m here,” smiled Goose.</p>
-
-<p>“I must go in,” whispered Annie, “good-by.”</p>
-
-<p>Goose started up the street upon his round, muttering:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>“Clancy ain’t so many, if he does run a grocery
-store. Annie’s willin’ to call it a go, an’ I don’t see—Gee!
-Here comes O’Hara.”</p>
-
-<p>The second-hand dealer had just come out of his
-shop; he wore his narrow-rimmed high hat and carried
-his thick black-thorn cane.</p>
-
-<p>“Good mornin’ till yez, McGonagle,” saluted he.</p>
-
-<p>“How are youse?” responded Goose.</p>
-
-<p>“I have no rayson till complain,” said O’Hara.
-Then he tapped his stick once or twice upon the pavement,
-and cleared his throat. “McGonagle,” said he,
-“yez will be after havin’ the troifle av money that’s
-due me nixt week?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, say, O’Hara, t’tell youse the trut’ I don’t
-see how I kin git it. Bizness is so rotten bad, ye
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that? Bad luck till ye, McGonagle, what
-talk have yez?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t git hot! Youse heard me speak me piece,
-didn’t ye? Well, that’s jist what I mean. An’ I can’t
-stand chewin’ it with youse all day, O’Hara; me customers’ll
-be waitin’ for their milk. So long.”</p>
-
-<p>And with this he hurried off while O’Hara gazed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>
-angrily after him for a moment, then started off toward
-Clancy’s.</p>
-
-<p>“The bla’gard!” muttered O’Hara. “The thafe av
-the world till keep a daysint man out av his bit av
-money!”</p>
-
-<p>He entered Clancy’s and found the grocer alone,
-seated astride a crate, sorting eggs.</p>
-
-<p>“The top av the mornin’ till yez, Clancy,” said
-O’Hara, politely.</p>
-
-<p>“The same till yezsilf,” responded Clancy. “Sure,
-an’ it’s glad till see yez I am, this foine mornin’.”
-Then under his breath he added: “God forgi’me for
-the lie I’m tellin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve jist luked in till ask if yez have the troifle av
-money that’s due me,” said O’Hara.</p>
-
-<p>“I have not the price av a can av beer in the house.
-Faix an’ I’ve jist paid me butter man who shud have
-had his money last Chuesday, an’ it’s claned out I am,
-entirely.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ might I ax yez, Mister Clancy, what’s till become
-av me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Scure till the wan av me knows. Can’t ye extind
-the time?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>“Divil raysave the day!” And O’Hara turned
-abruptly toward the door. “Mister Clancy, I will
-have me money, principal an’ intrust, or I will sell yez
-out!” He paused upon the threshold. “Iv ye are not
-at me store t’morry at twelve be the day, I will have
-Haggerty, the constable, down on yez. Mister Clancy,
-good day till yez, sir!” And he slammed the door
-behind him.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ the divil go wid ye,” exclaimed Clancy, savagely,
-as he resumed his work upon the crate of eggs.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t ye goin’ to church this mornin’, Pop?” called
-Annie, from an inner room.</p>
-
-<p>“Faith an’ I am,” answered her father, rising hurriedly,
-and slipping off his apron. “It’s bad luck
-enough I’m havin’ widout missin’ me juty. What time
-is it, asthore?”</p>
-
-<p>“It wants on’y a few minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>Clancy put on his coat. “It wur a black day,” he
-muttered, as he started off, “when I borryed that
-money av Malachi O’Hara. The owld villyan’ll keep
-his word, bad luck till him; it’s in a trench wid a pick
-I’ll be, afore the week’s out.”</p>
-
-<p>After leaving Rosie and Larkin, Larry Murphy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
-headed straight for O’Hara’s; but he had scarce gone
-a half block when he encountered Kerrigan and Mason,
-who had just paused before Owen Dwyer’s door.
-Mason grasped the young man’s hand and shook it
-warmly.</p>
-
-<p>“I am delighted that you have made such a splendid
-fight against McQuirk,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t McQuirk, so much,” said Larry. “Kelly’s
-the man I’m after.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re just going in to see Owen Dwyer, about the
-delegates for his division,” said Kerrigan. “Won’t
-you come in? He’ll want to see you, I know.”</p>
-
-<p>Owen had seen the trio from the window and had
-opened the door in time to catch these words.</p>
-
-<p>“Come in, Larry,” said he cordially. “It’s a stranger
-ye’ve made av yezsilf long enough.”</p>
-
-<p>Owen had asked him to visit them many times before,
-but Larry had never done so because of the fear
-that Maggie would think he was forcing himself upon
-her, and this his pride would not permit. He was
-reluctant to enter even now, but somehow there was
-also a feeling of gladness in his being unable to refuse.</p>
-
-<p>He sat upon the edge of the chair that Owen offered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-him, stole covert glances about the parlour and earnestly
-hoped that Maggie was not at home. A glance at the
-clock showed him that it was but shortly after eight,
-and he wonderingly confessed to a sense of satisfaction
-in the knowledge that school did not begin until
-nine. Owen settled his doubts by poking his head
-through the hangings of a doorway, and calling:</p>
-
-<p>“Maggie, asthore; can ye come here for a minyute?
-Sure, it’s company we’re after havin’ so airly in the
-mornin’.”</p>
-
-<p>Maggie entered the room, obediently; she flushed a
-little at sight of Larry, but managed to greet him in a
-calm, even voice that betrayed nothing of what she
-might feel.</p>
-
-<p>She talked to him of neighbourhood events, he answering
-awkwardly and distantly, as he always did
-with her. Her father had plunged into an earnest discussion,
-with the others, of the coming convention,
-and finally swept them out of the room to look at some
-figures which he had compiled, bearing upon the comparative
-strength of the opposing factions.</p>
-
-<p>There was a short silence after this; and, at length
-Maggie said:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>“I have wanted so to speak to you lately, but you
-are such a stranger!”</p>
-
-<p>A little thrill ran through Larry at these words.
-She had thought of <i>him</i>, then; and he fancied that he
-caught a note of vexation in her voice. He pondered
-this, confusedly, and did not reply. She continued:</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted to tell you how sorry I was at your great
-loss. Mary was a sweet and good girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right,” said he, eagerly. “There ain’t
-many like her, is there?”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” answered Maggie, gently.</p>
-
-<p>“She was too good for me,” said he, soberly.</p>
-
-<p>Though Maggie did not agree with him in this, she
-did not say so. And this is why: She had been a
-constant visitor during Mary’s illness, and the sorrow
-that had grown so upon the sick girl toward the end
-had not escaped her. Little by little she grasped the
-causes of this and realized why Larry had asked Mary
-to be his wife. She had laboured strenuously to persuade
-the gentle girl that love alone had been his motive,
-but without success. Though she had loved
-Larry from the days of her girlhood—and this Maggie<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-had confessed to herself long before—still her heart
-was great enough to appreciate what he had endeavoured
-to do; and all the more because it proved him
-to be as noble as she had always believed him.</p>
-
-<p>“I also wanted to thank you,” said Maggie, “for
-what you did last night. Daddy has a great deal of
-money—for him, you know—invested in the City Railway
-Company’s stock, and the loss of his savings, now
-that he is old, would be bitter enough.”</p>
-
-<p>This was news to Larry and it startled him. The
-proposed steal of the Motor Traction Company had
-had very little to do with the fight he and his friends
-had made. As he had informed Mason, Kelly’s defeat
-was his object and so long as he accomplished this he
-had cared little for anything else.</p>
-
-<p>But Kelly and his hate of Kelly suddenly shrunk
-into insignificance, and the Traction Company began
-to loom up dragon-like with Maggie as its prospective
-victim.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know that yer father stood to lose anyt’ing,”
-said he. Maggie’s face fell; she had thought
-that perhaps he had made the fight partly for her sake.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
-He saw the change in her countenance and hastened
-to add: “He’ll come out all right, though; McGlory’s
-against that job they’re tryin’ t’work.”</p>
-
-<p>“And do you think Mr. McGlory will secure the
-nomination?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. They’ve worked a couple o’ ringers on us,
-but we’ll win out in spite o’ them.”</p>
-
-<p>The others re-entered the room at this point.</p>
-
-<p>“The thing is as plain as day,” said Kerrigan.
-“There were only three votes in the past session that
-held them down; the figures show that they have defeated
-two of these, and if this is the case and Kelly
-is not beaten, they have a majority of one.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ that,” said Owen, “is as good as a hundred
-till do their darty wurk.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it that close?” asked Larry. “Gee! we’ll have
-to hustle.”</p>
-
-<p>“They will seat these men, Daily and Levitsky, in
-the convention, by hook or by crook,” remarked Kerrigan.
-“And in that case they will have a majority of
-two.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the two-thirds rule,” Mason interrupted.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-“They must have two-thirds of the delegates to nominate.”</p>
-
-<p>“The bunch with the most tallies always wins out,”
-said Larry. “If they show a lead in the runnin’,
-enough’ll flop over to make good for them.”</p>
-
-<p>After a time Larry and Kerrigan arose to go, while
-Mason remained to talk with Owen.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t forget, Mason,” said Kerrigan, “that I’ll
-want to see you to-morrow about old Miss Cassidy’s
-will.”</p>
-
-<p>“God help uz all”; said Owen. “All av the owld
-neighbours is dyin’ off. She wur a kind body, too, wur
-Miss Cassidy, for all she wur an owld maid.”</p>
-
-<p>Maggie opened the door for the two young men
-as they departed. She smiled as she said:</p>
-
-<p>“You must come again, Larry,” and then as an
-after-thought, “And you too, Mr. Kerrigan.”</p>
-
-<p>Kerrigan looked at Murphy quizzically, as they
-walked down the street.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re ace high there, Larry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, cut it out,” said Larry, impatiently. But he
-was glad to hear it said, nevertheless.</p>
-
-<p>Goose McGonagle had covered his route quickly that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-morning and by the time service was finished in the
-church and the thin stream of people began to flow into
-the street, he was standing on the step of Regan’s cigar
-store anxiously awaiting Clancy.</p>
-
-<p>The grocer had stopped to discuss the primaries
-upon the sidewalk in front of the church, and some
-little time elapsed before he arrived at the point where
-Goose was awaiting him.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Clancy,” saluted the latter, cordially.
-“How’s t’ings?” But without pausing for a reply he
-took the elder man by the sleeve and led him out to
-the curb. “Say,” inquired he, “have youse noticed
-that I’ve been hangin’ around your place a good bit in
-the last two or t’ree mont’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have,” answered Clancy, bracing himself stiffly.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I guess youse’re onto the reason.”</p>
-
-<p>The grocer’s looks were not encouraging and Goose
-began to waver. But he pulled himself together, and
-blurted out. “Say, do youse mind if me and Annie
-gits Father Dawson to tie the knot?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it yezsilf would take Annie till Father Dawson?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>“Well, the divil himself niver witnessed sich a
-cheek. An’ might I ax what yez have till kape a wife
-on?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I ain’t got much dough,” admitted Goose,
-ruefully. “But there’s me milk route and—”</p>
-
-<p>“Arrah, go long wid ye! There’s a dale av money
-in the milk business, Goose, me b’y, bud yez route’ll
-niver make ye rich. An’ as for Annie, she’ll stay at
-home, an’ help her mother wid the wurk, as she hav
-always done. Now don’t be after vexin’ me!” Goose
-was about to protest; “’twill do ye no good.”</p>
-
-<p>And the grocer went on his way down the street
-leaving the young man gazing despondently after him.
-He did not notice the approach of Larry and Kerrigan
-who had just emerged from Dwyer’s; and Larry
-slapped him on the back, remarking:</p>
-
-<p>“Yer lookin’ green around the gills. What’s
-wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m gittin’ it in the neck, all around,” answered
-Goose, savagely. “They’re all givin’ me the dinky-dink
-for further orders. I just now went against
-Annie’s old man, and he flagged me, cold!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>“Oh, was that Clancy you were speaking to?”
-asked Kerrigan looking interestedly after the retreating
-figure. “I’ve got something to tell him, but I’ll
-see him again. Say, you knew old Miss Cassidy,
-Annie’s aunt, didn’t you, Goose?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” answered the milkman. “She was me star
-customer, up till she died the other day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, she left a queer kind of a will.” Kerrigan
-hesitated a moment, and then continued: “Say, I know
-how it is between you and Annie; walk down the
-street with us and I’ll tell you about it. It might help
-you somehow.”</p>
-
-<p>As they went along, Kerrigan, with a wealth of
-technical phrases, explained the peculiarities of the
-document. A great part of the explanation was Greek
-to McGonagle; but Larry grasped the points of the
-matter, and by the time Kerrigan had finished, his face
-was lighted with suppressed excitement. They paused
-before the door of the Aurora Borealis Club in the
-midst of a rapid debate between the two latter gentlemen;
-finally Larry said:</p>
-
-<p>“Then youse’ll keep it quiet for a while?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>“Only until to-morrow afternoon,” said Kerrigan,
-decisively. “You’ll have to work quick.”</p>
-
-<p>After the attorney left them, Goose turned to his
-friend, and inquired bewilderingly:</p>
-
-<p>“Say, Murphy, put me next, will youse. What kind
-o’ a graft have youse got? Hit it out, quick!”</p>
-
-<p>Larry leaned against the frame of Riley’s show window
-and laughed exultantly; McGonagle frowned
-vexedly at his mirth, snapping his fingers with impatience.</p>
-
-<p>“Say!” exclaimed the latter, as Larry continued
-to laugh, “youse must be crazy. What’s the matter,
-anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>Larry smothered his laughing, and took Goose
-rapturously by the lapel of his coat, proceeding to put
-into words the idea which he had conceived while Kerrigan
-was speaking. When he had finished, Goose tore
-himself away and executed a mad acrobatic dance
-about the sidewalk, and wound it up by throwing his
-arms about Larry and hugging him until his ribs
-cracked.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the slickest t’ing I ever run against,” declared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-he, with enthusiasm. “I always said you was foxy,
-Murphy; and if youse work this right, ye kin take the
-front seat, and I’ll never say a word!”</p>
-
-<p>After a few moments’ consultation they separated
-and Larry made his way toward O’Hara’s. The freight
-engines, as usual, were coughing up and down the
-tracks, hissing and straining at their trailing loads.
-O’Hara was repairing the fire brick in an old stove
-outside; his sleeves were turned up and he was soot
-to the elbows.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to talk to youse,” said Larry, as he paused.</p>
-
-<p>“Yez are an early caller!” exclaimed O’Hara, delightedly.
-“But, faith,” poking him in the ribs, “I
-t’ought yez’ed called long afore this, b’y. She’s a
-smart slip av a girl, Larry.”</p>
-
-<p>He led the young man through the store and back
-into the kitchen. The sisters sprang up tumultuously.</p>
-
-<p>“Larry, asthore,” piped Ellen, “sure an’ it’s a glad
-heart I have this day. Glory be! bud yez are fitted for
-wan another. Sit down; she’ll be here this minyute;
-she do be only gone as far as the church.”</p>
-
-<p>“I seen her,” said Larry. “I was talkin’ to her.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>Bridget shrieked with mirth. “Lave the young
-wans alone!” cried she. “They’ll see each other, niver
-fear. Arrah, avic, it’s the great b’y yez are.”</p>
-
-<p>“She told me,” went on Larry, “all about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“About how foolish she wur?” questioned O’Hara.
-“She’s seen it, have she. Bud, niver fear b’y, niver
-fear.”</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t Rosie what was foolish, O’Hara, it was
-youse. Didn’t ye see that there was two ends to this
-t’ing. Ye scared her, and then t’ought youse was all
-to the good, didn’t ye? But yer out o’ line: ye can’t
-play me; I won’t have it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What talk have ye, Larry?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, ye know damn well what I mean! Youse
-t’ink yer a hot guy, O’Hara, but ye’ll buy a gold brick
-some day, le’me tell youse that. Ye’ll go flat on yer
-back wit’out a cent in yer pants.”</p>
-
-<p>“Divil take ye, have yez gone crazy!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m tellin’ ye what’s right, ain’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“Shame on ye, Larry Murphy!” exclaimed Bridget,
-“is poor Mary’s dyin’ words—”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, cut that out! I won’t’ stand for any o’ youse
-draggin’ <i>her</i> into yer little game.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>“God forgi’ yez!” cried Ellen. “Oh, God forgi’
-yez.”</p>
-
-<p>O’Hara strove to look impressive. “Iv any wan
-had towld me,” said he, “that yez had no rayspect
-for Mary, I would’ve towld him that he lied!”</p>
-
-<p>Larry laughed. “That’s a slashin’ good jolly,” remarked
-he. “It might have worked, too; on’y I’m
-next to yer little scheme,” he paused a moment, regarding
-O’Hara, soberly. “Say,” he resumed “I didn’t
-come to see youse on’y about that, but to do youse a
-good turn if ye’ll on’y let me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What have ye till say?” inquired O’Hara.</p>
-
-<p>“Come into the store,” said Larry, with a glance
-at the two old women. “This t’ing’s private.”</p>
-
-<p>They re-entered the store. O’Hara closed the door,
-while Larry seated himself upon the end of the counter.</p>
-
-<p>“Clancy,” began the latter, “owes youse money.”</p>
-
-<p>“He do,” admitted O’Hara. “Six hundred dollars,
-an’ ’tis due the day.”</p>
-
-<p>“What d’youse t’ink his grocery’ed bring if ye sold
-him out?”</p>
-
-<p>“About half av it, bad scram till him,” said O’Hara,
-viciously.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>“McGonagle owes youse somethin’, too, don’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yis; I loaned him enough till buy his milk route, a
-year since, an’ divil the cint do I iver expect till see
-av it again!”</p>
-
-<p>Larry crossed one leg over the other, and clasped
-his hands comfortably about his knee.</p>
-
-<p>“I kin put youse next to a way to collect every
-cent, interest and all,” he informed O’Hara.</p>
-
-<p>The second-hand dealer’s eyes snapped with interest.
-But he said, doubtfully:</p>
-
-<p>“How can yez do that? Sure, nayther av thim have
-a cint till bless thimselves wid!”</p>
-
-<p>Larry leaned forward and began to explain away
-the other’s doubts. He talked straight to the point
-and in a few moments O’Hara brightened up wonderfully.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll see Clancy at wanst!” exclaimed he.</p>
-
-<p>“But there’s somethin’ else,” said Larry. “There’s
-Rosie and Larkin; what about them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Arrah, what have they till do wid it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just as much as the others. Youse’re got to say
-‘yes’ to them or you’ll slip yer trolley.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>“Hell till yez sowl!” cried O’Hara. “Is it a girl av
-mine marry that dirty Derry spawn av the divil!”</p>
-
-<p>“Keep yer shirt on,” advised Larry, evenly. “Don’t
-make any wild swings. Money’s money, O’Hara;
-and ye must make good or youse don’t see a dollar.”</p>
-
-<p>O’Hara spluttered with rapidly evaporating wrath;
-and at length he cooled down sufficiently to say:</p>
-
-<p>“Yez are in the Church yezsilf, Larry; an’ ye know
-that the clargy do be down on mixed marriages.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say,” said Larry, getting down from the counter
-and buttoning up his coat, “youse might as well git
-yer money back by doin’ what I ask ye to do. Rosie’s
-twenty-one, and she’ll marry Larkin some o’ these days,
-anyhow. Speak quick; is it yes or no; I’ve got to see
-the delegates afore the convention opens.”</p>
-
-<p>O’Hara hesitated for a moment; then he burst out.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll not lose me bit av hard arned money till save
-the trollop! Iv she wants till make her bed so, why
-lave her lie in it, an’ divil do her good wid it!”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>He stood for Dooley, and for Dooley cast his vote,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>I stood for Conroy, as did Hooly,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>There was Fagan and O’Ragan, Flannigan and Hagan,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>All bound to kick the pants off Michael Dooley.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Ballads of Back Streets.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN the parlour of the Precinct Club, McQuirk was
-just concluding an interview with the political
-manager and lobbyist of the Motor Traction
-Company.</p>
-
-<p>“McGlory,” said the lobbyist, “mus’n’t think he’s
-too big a fish. Some other people that I know of will
-give the administration as good a rake-off, and be
-glad of the chance.” He got upon his feet, as their
-conference was over and shook McQuirk encouragingly
-by the hand. “Just send for him, and talk things
-over. Alex’s got good sense; he’ll see the point.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think he’d come,” said McQuirk, “so I’ll
-go over and see <i>him</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>“All right,” said the other, “do as you think best.
-And, say, how’s Conlin doing with the vote in his division?”</p>
-
-<p>McQuirk compressed his lips. “Bad,” returned
-he. “They separated him from it, clean.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think,” mused the other, “that Conlin’s too short
-for the police force. The examining board’s mighty
-strict just now, Mac.”</p>
-
-<p>The ward boss grinned. “He won’t like it much,”
-said he. “It’s funny,” he went on, humorously, “how
-much better tall men are at gittin’ out the vote than
-short ones.”</p>
-
-<p>The other laughed. “You’re right, Mac,” said he;
-“but let me say this, again, before I go: Whatever you
-do, don’t have a fight in your ward. Go into your
-convention and find the man that’s goin’ to win—and
-stand good with him <i>if we can handle him</i>. The
-administration wants lots of friends next session.”</p>
-
-<p>McQuirk found McGlory, dressed in his best, at the
-stables in Murphy’s Court, superintending the doctoring
-of a worn-looking horse. The contractor’s greeting
-was stiff and formal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>“Anyone got your proxy, Alex?” asked the boss,
-after they had exchanged some general remarks.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go till the convintion mesilf,” answered McGlory.
-“There do be too damn much of this proxy
-business.”</p>
-
-<p>McQuirk brushed a fly or two from a raw saddle
-gall on the horse’s back, and reflected.</p>
-
-<p>“I understand,” he said finally, “that you’re out
-for the nomination.”</p>
-
-<p>“The young fellys want someone till stan’ for it, an’
-sure I’m willin’ till try an’ bate Kelly. I don’t forget
-what he done last illection, an’ at the time, McQuirk,
-yez said yezself that he played ye a bla’gard trick, an’
-that yez’ed git even.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, hell!” McQuirk waved his hand, deprecatingly.
-“It don’t do to hold grudges, Alex; Kelly’s a
-good fellow.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s not good enough for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re makin’ a mistake,” said the boss.</p>
-
-<p>The horse stretched his stiff old limbs in the sunlight
-at the stable door; McQuirk whistled softly; a
-couple of dirty children from across the narrow court
-stared at him, curiously.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>“Say,” said the boss at length, “when’s your contract
-out, Alex?”</p>
-
-<p>“It have a few mont’s yet till go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Think you’ll get it again?”</p>
-
-<p>McGlory stiffened up and bent his brows at him.</p>
-
-<p>“I have hopes av it,” said he, soberly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, don’t be foolish. Things happen, sometimes,
-you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Tom McQuirk, is it threatenin’ me yez
-are?”</p>
-
-<p>“I never threaten anybody, I <i>do</i> things, you know
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye threatened Kelly, an’ ye done nawthin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right. You’re not inside, Alex; ye
-don’t know everything. Now think the thing over, as
-ye go down to the hall; and take my advice—keep
-your eye on your bread and butter! That’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>The crowd on Girard Avenue had been waiting for
-over an hour for some sign of a stir, when a sudden
-blare of brass instruments and a thundering drubbing
-of drums broke forth, and into the avenue wheeled
-the Emmet Band, Eddie Brennen at its head, splendid
-in a scarlet coat and towering shako, his drum-major’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>
-staff whirling about his head like a metallic circle.
-Hogan, the policeman, darted into the street with uplifted
-club, to hold back the teams from the cross
-streets. The throng ranged quickly along the curb;
-from the adjacent alleys poured a horde of whooping
-children; draymen pulled up their nags in order to
-watch the passing cohorts. Everyone knew that the
-gathering of the clans had begun.</p>
-
-<p>It was the anti-Kelly faction, and they swung along
-behind the drums like veterans. Those of them who
-were to sit in the convention wore huge scarlet badges
-upon their breasts. Larry Murphy, in all the glory of
-a high silk hat, borrowed from one of McGrath’s hack
-drivers, marched at the head of the column, and his
-aids, Nolan and Ferguson, were immediately behind
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Be me soul!” ejaculated the grocer, “bud young
-Brennen kin twirl his bit av a stick, so he kin. An’
-luk at the walk av Murphy; sure yez’ed t’ink he had
-a mortgage on the City Hall!”</p>
-
-<p>“It puts me in mind,” remarked Tim Burns; “av
-the owld days whin we stepped till the music oursilves,
-Clancy, on Paddy’s day, beyant on Broad Street.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>“True for ye, Tim, an’ we wid the axes on the
-shoulders av uz, an’ the bokays, an’ the strings av
-doughnuts till ate on the march. Faith an’ the young
-fellys know nawthin’ av the harp an’ the sunburst; an’
-it’s withered in the hearts av most av the owld wans too,
-I’m thinkin’. God luk down on uz! Till think av all the
-talk there wur av the owld land, then, an’ the little
-we hear av it now. Divil a green flag d’yez see hangin’
-out av the windys on the siventeenth av March; an’
-the Land League do be forgotten. The owld blood’s
-growin’ thin, Tim—thin as water!”</p>
-
-<p>About the doors of the convention hall, the same
-hall where the Aurora Borealis Club had held their
-ball, the scene was one of extreme animation. The
-groups of high-hatted, tobacco-chewing men, seemed
-possessed by demons of movement and noise. They
-laughed with the full strength of their chests, waved
-their arms wildly and swore joyously, with the unconscious
-finish of experts. Kelly and his henchmen
-had already arrived; he had been greeted as a hero
-by his own faction and now stood in the hallway surrounded
-by a solid circle of supporters. Gratten Haley
-who had been named for school director the night before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>
-in a convention held in a back kitchen on Second
-Street, approached Owen Dwyer.</p>
-
-<p>“Has McQuirk got here yet?” asked Haley.</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t seen him. Sure, Gratten, it’s not at a
-side issue like this he’d be, whin there’s McAteer’s
-nomination for Congress till be looked after.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s where you make your little old mistake,”
-smiled Mr. Haley. “This is the only fight in town;
-all the others is cinched; and Mac’ll be on the ground
-to keep the gang in line.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ tell me, Gratten; d’yez t’ink Kelly will win?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye can search me! McQuirk says yes; but I
-wouldn’t put me roll on it, at that. It runs t’rough
-me that there’ll be doin’s this mornin’, and if Jim
-Kelly wins, it’ll be a mix for yer life. And if he goes
-under, he’ll fall like a rotten wall!”</p>
-
-<p>“I hear the young fellys’ll be contestin’ Tim Daily
-an’ what’s-his-name that kapes the policy shop. Young
-Kerrigan do be after tellin’ me that they got the papers
-by a trick.”</p>
-
-<p>Owen was innocence personified; he knew that
-Haley possessed information that would be of use.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they’ll contest ’em, all right,” laughed Haley.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>“Here comes the kickers!” shouted Martin Kelly.
-“The marks is gotta band, too. Don’t they look
-gay?”</p>
-
-<p>The anti-Kellyites had swept around the corner with
-their band playing a “cake-walk” march, their flags
-waving and themselves cheering lustily. O’Connor,
-the undertaker, had just arrived in one of his own
-hacks and now shook hands with his friends.</p>
-
-<p>“The young fellas,” smiled O’Connor, “bate the
-divil whin they cut loose. Sure, here they are with the
-Emmet Band till the fore, ready till nail Kelly’s hide
-on the back dure. Well, well, an’ so Alex McGlory’ll
-go afore the convention?”</p>
-
-<p>“So I’ve heard,” said one of his friends. “Just
-to t’ink av ‘McGlory an’ clane streets’ as a campaign
-cry.” The speaker paused, delighted with the shout
-that greeted his sally; then he added “Here comes
-Gartenheim, O’Connor; sure this time a few years ago
-yezsilf an’ him wur at it, hard enough.”</p>
-
-<p>O’Connor smiled patronizingly, and reared his head
-in his most dignified fashion; Gartenheim, stout, rosy
-and smiling was advancing toward him through a lane
-of outstretched hands.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>“Gartenheim, how are ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“O’Connor, I’m glad to see you!”</p>
-
-<p>And the ancient foes grasped each other by the
-hand, while the gaping spectators swore soft oaths of
-wonder.</p>
-
-<p>The band had ceased playing; the marchers were
-halted in the street and this reconciliation was in plain
-view. Roddy Ferguson swung his derby hat above his
-head, shouting:</p>
-
-<p>“Gents, t’ree cheers for Gartenheim and O’Connor!”</p>
-
-<p>A whirlwind of shrieks swept over the crowd, sustained
-until the veins of their necks swelled to bursting
-and their faces turned purple; sticks, hats and
-flags were tossed wildly in the air.</p>
-
-<p>The two gentlemen whose public burial of the
-hatchet occasioned this outburst, bowed and smiled
-genially and once more shook hands, which had the
-effect of renewing the tumult. James Kelly and his
-supporters gazed glumly on; the delirious display was
-not pleasant to them.</p>
-
-<p>“Bloody wars,” breathed Owen in Haley’s ear,
-“d’yez see that, Gratten? They’ve made up.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>“It looks bad for Kelly,” admitted Mr. Haley; “and
-he don’t like it for a cent.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s them two old guys doin’ the love feast
-stunt,” sneered young Kelly, “right out in the open.
-It’s bin fixed to cop votes with; a blind man kin see
-that. It makes me sick!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll do that all right,” said Goose McGonagle;
-“youse’ll all be a sick lot o’ ducks after we slam
-youse a few.”</p>
-
-<p>The procession had broken ranks; the members of
-the band had blown themselves breathless and beaten
-their arms helpless, and now dispersed into saloons adjacent
-to the hall to seek refreshment. The delegates,
-by degrees, began to drift upstairs to the room where
-the convention was to be held. Here a band, perched
-in a little gallery at the back, discoursed music; a flag
-hung from every point where it was possible to drive
-a nail; the platform stood at the far end holding an
-array of chairs and tables.</p>
-
-<p>Dick Nolan and Roddy Ferguson, who formed the
-connecting links between the formerly hostile factions
-of Gartenheim and O’Connor, were working desperately
-with delegates; they felt that it depended upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-them to secure a solid vote from these two bodies, and
-they spared themselves no effort. Neither the undertaker
-nor the contractor had been active in the canvass,
-so their personal followings were not heavy in the
-convention; but it served to give the anti-Kelly faction
-a slight advantage that they were compelled to exert
-themselves to the utmost to sustain. Each man in the
-hall with a ballot to cast was under pressure to vote
-against them, and the pressure would be increased a
-hundred-fold when McQuirk got upon the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Gartenheim had Larry Murphy in a corner giving
-him some fatherly advice; O’Connor stood listening,
-with approving nods; Kerrigan, red-faced and perspiring,
-came bustling up.</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen,” asked he, “who are you for, for chairman?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who do you want?” asked Gartenheim.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’d like to see Pete Comisky hold the office.
-He’s a straight man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Peter’s all right,” said O’Connor.</p>
-
-<p>“Who do you say, Larry?” inquired Kerrigan.</p>
-
-<p>“Grat Haley.”</p>
-
-<p>“Haley!” Kerrigan stared at him amazedly.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>
-“Haley! Why you’re mad. Haley would rule
-against us every time.”</p>
-
-<p>“He might—if we let him. It’s just like this.
-Haley’s got the chairmanship cinched; no one else can
-win against him; I’ve been over the bunch, and I
-know.” Larry took his cigar from his mouth and
-pointed it at Kerrigan, impressively. “The chairmanship’s
-the first test o’ strength. Make a fight on that
-and lose, and youse might as well chuck up the
-sponge, on the spot. We’ve got grafters on our side,
-Johnnie, and you know it; if they see us shake they’ll
-fly the coop.”</p>
-
-<p>“That sounds good,” admitted Kerrigan. “What
-do you suggest?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll t’row our vote to Haley; they can’t see our
-hand then; and we’ll hold all our people for the real
-work.”</p>
-
-<p>“But Daily and Levitsky!” remonstrated Kerrigan.
-“He’ll seat them, they’ll vote and they have no right!”</p>
-
-<p>“They kin seat all they want,” determinedly, “but
-they don’t vote for Kelly.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a bolitician, Larry,” said Gartenheim, admiringly.
-“Dot’s a good scheme, ain’d it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>“Say, Larry,” said Roddy Ferguson, allowing a
-crowd of delegates to precede him to the stairs, “I’m
-goin’ out to t’row a couple o’ beers into this gang.
-Look out for Nolan while I’m out, will ye? Don’t let
-him get near Mart Kelly.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s on the hooks?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right; just keep an eye on him; we don’t
-want no trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s McQuirk,” said Kerrigan, as that gentleman
-entered and shook old Kelly’s hand with theatrical
-warmth. A crush of delegates gathered about the boss,
-who seemed in high good humour. He stooped over
-and whispered something in Kelly’s ear, and the saloonkeeper
-laughed uproariously, his face growing mottled
-with excitement, his hands gesticulating madly.</p>
-
-<p>“We have thim!” vociferated the candidate, glowing
-upon his supporters like a spotted sun; “we have
-thim on the run, so we have. Begorry, McQuirk, it’s
-at school they shud be instead av playin’ at
-politics!”</p>
-
-<p>“Keep it quiet,” advised McQuirk; “keep it quiet,
-and let’s get down to business.” He took Haley aside.
-“How is it goin’?” questioned he.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>“All to the good,” answered Mr. Haley. “The
-chairmanship’s ourn. There ain’t no one else but me
-in sight!”</p>
-
-<p>The boss laughed: “The old man’ll show ’em a few
-tricks,” said he complacently. “I think they expected
-me to lay down, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>After a time everything was in readiness; the temporary
-chairman mounted the platform; the scribes of
-the gathering took their seats and the convention came
-to order.</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen,” said the temporary chairman, advancing
-to the edge of the platform, “we are called together
-this morning to name a man for the important
-office of selectman. I feel that—”</p>
-
-<p>“Chop it off,” advised McGonagle.</p>
-
-<p>“Order! Order!” came from different parts of the
-house.</p>
-
-<p>The temporary chairman was an elderly man, little
-known and with a colourless manner. He endeavoured
-to go on with his remarks but the volume of interruption
-steadily increased.</p>
-
-<p>“We will proceed with the business of electing a
-chairman,” said he at length.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>McQuirk was on his feet in an instant; Larry followed,
-also demanding recognition.</p>
-
-<p>“McQuirk,” said the chairman.</p>
-
-<p>“I give you,” said the boss, “the name of Gratten
-Haley, of the nineteenth division, for chairman.”</p>
-
-<p>The supporters of Kelly leaped to their feet with
-shrieking acclaim; it was some moments before Larry
-could be heard.</p>
-
-<p>“I second the nomination of Mr. Haley,” said he,
-“and move that his ’lection to the chair be made unanimous!”</p>
-
-<p>Dead silence followed. McQuirk looked dumbfounded;
-Larry smiled sweetly at him over the heads
-of the intervening delegates. The vote was a rising
-one, and the temporary chairman surrendered the gavel
-to Haley.</p>
-
-<p>McQuirk was dazed, but respectful; old Kelly smiled
-broadly and rubbed his hands gleefully; young Murphy
-moved among the opposition like a spirit of wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>McQuirk once more arose. “Let’s keep things moving,”
-said he. “There has been no protest against anyone
-sitting in the convention, with the exception of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-Mr. Daily and Mr. Levitsky. We will now look into
-their cases.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t,” sneered McGonagle, “take too much
-work on me shoulders, if I was youse. I’d let the chairman
-do a little.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fire him out!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like,” growled Goose, “to see any of youse try
-to fire me out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cheese it; sit down, and keep yer shirt on!”
-warned Larry, leaning forward, “if youse make
-trouble now, I’ll put a muzzle on ye.”</p>
-
-<p>Johnnie Kerrigan was entrusted with the business of
-protesting against the seating of Levitsky and Daily;
-but Haley, as was expected, carried matters with a
-high hand, and overruled him at all points.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Kerrigan, “you can let ’em vote
-if you want to, and I know you want to; you can use
-’em in your business.”</p>
-
-<p>The Kellyites were triumphant and voiced it until
-the hall was filled with their clamour.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got ’em burnt to the ground!” declared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-Martin Kelly. “Why, the mugs capped the game for
-us! They must be rank suckers.”</p>
-
-<p>The roll was called amid much tumult; then Chairman
-Haley hammered with his gavel for order; when
-something like silence had been obtained, he said:</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen, our object is to get done with the
-business in hand as soon as we can. We will, therefore,
-pass over all unnecessary forms and go into the
-matter of nominating our candidate at once.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Haley had carefully rehearsed this little speech
-during those moments when there was nothing doing
-behind the bar over which he presided, and was much
-pleased with the applause which it provoked. He
-added:</p>
-
-<p>“The chair recognizes Mr. Shulze.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Shulze arose amid much disorder on the part
-of the insurgents. By virtue of his ability to deliver
-a certain amount of goods each election Mr. Shulze
-held a position in the post-office; he had a voice like
-a megaphone, and a fixed set of gestures that resembled
-the jerkings of an automatic doll. In tones that shook
-the windows he placed the elder Kelly in nomination,
-and sat down amid a whirlwind of cheers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>Johnnie Kerrigan got up to name McGlory; he had
-not spoken a dozen words before the contractor and
-his son Jerry, rushed into the hall and beckoned the
-speaker and Larry into an anteroom. The old man
-was pale and agitated; Jerry acted like a man
-dazed.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the graft?” asked Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s quit at the post!” exclaimed Jerry. “He’s
-laid down like a dub.”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” cried the two young men, aghast.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m tellin’ youse, ain’t I. From a kid up,” added
-Jerry, bitterly, “I t’ought the old gent was an ace,
-but now I find he’s on’y a two-spot! Say, I t’row up
-the towel; I’ll never stack against the bunch again.”</p>
-
-<p>Kerrigan grasped the elder man’s arm. “Why, McGlory,”
-protested he, “you’re not going to shirk at the
-last moment, are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry,” said the contractor, “but I can’t allow
-me name till be used.” He was trembling under the
-stress of the moment and looked appealingly from
-one to the other. “Don’t blame me too much,” implored
-he. “I have too much at stake, b’ys. Sure iv I
-make the fight, it’s a ruint man I’d be.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>There was a pause; Jerry was viciously biting at his
-nails; Larry was fighting visibly to keep down his
-anger; from the main hall came the subdued roar of
-many voices.</p>
-
-<p>“Afore God!” exclaimed the contractor, “I niver
-t’ought till do the like av this! But they have me on
-the hip, divil take thim, and I can do no better.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let ’em do youse outa the contract,” rapped out his
-son. “Let the whole shootin’ match go t’ell! Youse
-can do better’n scratch streets.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut yer mouth,” roared McGlory. “Don’t be
-stanin’ there talkin’ till me like that. Lose the contract
-is it, with Matthew Fitzmaurice holdin’ a paper
-agin me beyant in his rale estate office? Divil a long
-it’s stay in his safe iv he knowed I’d no contract. Gawd
-help yez for a fool! Is it till the La Salle College yez
-cud have gone, iv it hadn’t been for the contract? An’
-how many av thim young fellys wid the flowers in
-their coats ’ed call till see yez sister av a Sunday night,
-widout it? Tell me that, ye igit!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ease up,” soothed Kerrigan; “I wouldn’t make
-any trouble between you for the world.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>“Then this goes?” said Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“I have sorra another word till say,” answered McGlory.</p>
-
-<p>Larry turned to Kerrigan. “D’youse see anyt’ing?”
-asked he. “Is it our finish?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not in a thousand years!” retorted the young
-attorney. “Find another man for the running; I’ll go
-in there an’ do some spell-binding while you canvass
-the crowd. If Gartenheim’ll swing in line for O’Connor,
-give me the word and I’ll name him.”</p>
-
-<p>They left the McGlorys engaged in a wordy duel,
-and rushed back into the main hall. McQuirk, the
-Kellys and some others of their adherents were gathered
-in the doorway leading into the entry; they greeted
-the young men with a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“All to the bad, eh?” sneered Martin. “Yer star
-nag’s on’y a sellin’ plater.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’d I tell ye, boys,” said McQuirk with the
-easy assurance of a man who has won his fight.
-“There’s only one man. We’ve got the nomination
-safe, ye can see that. Now don’t be sore-heads; be
-nice, clean boys, an’ ye won’t miss anything.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>Kerrigan hurried into the convention hall without
-replying; but Larry turned on the boss like a sullen
-bear.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t josh us, McQuirk,” warned he, “because we
-won’t stand for it. Youse people ain’t scooped the
-pot yet, so don’t give yerself the glad hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come,” smiled McQuirk, winking at his co-labourers,
-“don’t take it so hard. Alex McGlory
-knows where he stands, and he shows good sense
-when he gets out from under.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t take me for a mark!” flared Murphy, shoving
-his head forward, his jaw protruding, wickedly.
-“We kin split the shootin’ match wide open, McQuirk,
-and afore we let youse git the bulge with Kelly, we’ll
-do it. If youse are wise, ye’ll write that on yer cuff.”</p>
-
-<p>He rushed into the convention hall, hot with anger;
-Nolan, Ferguson and others of his lieutenants were
-quickly enlightened as to the state of affairs, and they
-passed the word among the others that someone other
-than McGlory would be named, at the same time working
-zealously to allay the feeling of insecurity that these
-tidings naturally aroused.</p>
-
-<p>Kerrigan was speaking and the convention was giving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
-him its undivided attention. The youthful attorney
-possessed that self-assured poise and explosive style
-that captures such gatherings; and then he was easily
-the most popular young man in the ward, and his father’s
-saloon was a well-known place of resort. Most of
-the younger men among the delegates had gone to
-school with him, and though they, for the most part,
-were day-labourers and Johnnie had his name painted
-upon a ground-glass door in a down-town office building,
-he had always kept up old friendships and clung to
-old surroundings. As one of his friends said:</p>
-
-<p>“Johnnie’s a high guy, but he’s as common as dirt;
-he don’t have to put ice in his hat to keep his head
-from swellin’. When youse stack up against him on
-the street, he’s always got the glad hand for youse,
-and a cigar what ain’t workin’.”</p>
-
-<p>It was this democratic quality that made him liked
-and secured him attention from the delegates when he
-arose to deliver the address that was to give Larry an
-opportunity to select a new candidate.</p>
-
-<p>These facts came to Larry as he paused for a moment
-to listen; and like one inspired he proceeded to
-consult Ferguson and Nolan.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>“Somethin’s gotta be done, and done quick,” said
-he. “Now look here, if I go against Gartenheim and
-ask him to turn in for O’Connor, what’ll he say?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll say, ‘nay, nay, Pauline!’” exclaimed Ferguson.</p>
-
-<p>“Youse’ll queer the game if youse do that,” protested
-Nolan.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I t’ought. And how about O’Connor
-for Gartenheim?”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no difference,” said Nolan. “If one was
-ast to work for the other he’d git dead wise all of a
-sudden and t’ink he was bein’ worked for a good t’ing,
-and havin’ a con game slung into him from the start!
-It won’t do; take it from me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ve gotta bran’ new graft!” exclaimed
-Larry starting up the aisle.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” asked Ferguson, following him, his
-hand upon his sleeve.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit down and hold yer breath; youse’ll be wise
-in a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry said something to Kerrigan in a low tone.
-Johnnie looked surprised; he closed his remarks<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
-abruptly and sat down, while Larry nodded to the chair
-for recognition. Upon obtaining this he wasted no
-words.</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen,” said he, “I’m goin’ to put in nomination
-a man that youse can all vote for.” He paused a
-moment and glanced around at the expectant faces; he
-raised both arms, with a sweep and shouted: “Mr.
-John Kerrigan, of the 12th Division!”</p>
-
-<p>For an instant there was dead silence; then the
-anti-Kellyites came to their feet with an ear-splitting
-scream of delight. Kerrigan sprang to Larry’s side
-protesting excitedly; men stood upon chairs and beat
-the backs of their neighbours; pandemonium reigned.
-Kerrigan was ringed in by dozens of outstretched
-hands; his appeals for a hearing were drowned by the
-clamour of his partisans.</p>
-
-<p>James Kelly was stricken mute; a moment before he
-had seen victory in his grasp; now it had eluded him
-and was dancing away in the distance. McQuirk
-looked on at the scene of disorder, astonished at
-Larry’s act. He had expected to hear the name of a
-man steeped in the factional differences of the ward—a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
-man easily beaten—and now he was at a loss, for
-here was one not only without political enemies but
-with fast friends in every faction of the party.</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t a half-bad move,” said the boss to himself,
-angry, but forced to admiration. “If I wasn’t sure
-about McGlory, I’d say the thing was fixed.”</p>
-
-<p>Haley hammered vigorously for order; old Kelly and
-his friends were gathered in a clump, shouting their
-observations in each other’s ears; Larry stood near
-the platform, frantically endeavouring to attract the
-chairman’s attention, and turning every moment to
-swear at his friends for their uproar. He saw that the
-moment for action was at hand; the surprise had been
-sprung and had given his faction heart, and he determined
-to strike again while they were white hot.
-Gradually the noise began to settle; and, though now
-and then a cheer volleyed across the hall, his voice
-could be heard:</p>
-
-<p>“A vote,” stormed he, “a vote.”</p>
-
-<p>The cry was taken up by a dozen voices.</p>
-
-<p>“Vote! Vote!” vociferated the insurgents. “Take
-the vote!”</p>
-
-<p>This, at a nod from McQuirk, Haley proceeded to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-do; the secretary began to read off the names, and the
-delegates answered “Kelly” or “Kerrigan” as the
-case might be. As the vote began, a concerted movement
-of a dozen young men, led by Larry and McGonagle,
-was made toward the point where Daily and
-Levitsky were sitting.</p>
-
-<p>“Changed yer mind, Daily?” questioned Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“Not on yer life,” answered Daily, but with an uneasy
-glance about him. He saw in their faces that they
-were ready for anything; and that they were awkward
-men to handle, he knew, partly from experience, partly
-by hearsay.</p>
-
-<p>“I t’ink youse’ll turn in for Kerrigan when they
-hand out yer name.” Larry leaned carelessly upon the
-back of Daily’s chair, and spoke very quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s just as easy to say Kerrigan as Kelly,” put in
-McGonagle, “an’ I guess Levitsky’ll say it, too, when
-it’s up to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wut like to oblitch your—” began the policy-writer.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, rats!” returned McGonagle, savagely.
-“Youse’ll chirp for Kerrigan, or the next stunt youse’ll
-do’ll be at the morgue, stretchin’ slabs!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>“Play light, Goose,” advised Larry, “I t’ink they’ll
-be in line.”</p>
-
-<p>News of the state of affairs reached the elder Kelly
-as he stood talking to McQuirk at the far side of the
-room; and they hurried toward the storm centre to
-prevent the coercion of their vote. Because of some
-trifling hitch the polling of the delegates had stopped
-for the time being, and Haley and the secretary
-were wrangling with a cluster of men about the
-platform.</p>
-
-<p>A man rushed up the aisle and stopped McQuirk, at
-the same time handing him a card.</p>
-
-<p>“He wants to see youse right away,” said the
-stranger.</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead over and talk to them, Kelly,” said McQuirk.
-“I’ve got to go out for a second.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s this,” asked Kelly, upon reaching the spot
-where Larry and his friends were gathered behind the
-chairs of the two protested delegates. “What call have
-yez till be threatenin’ these two min?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s threatenin’ ’em?” asked McGonagle, innocently.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>“You are, ye bla’gard!” exclaimed the saloonkeeper,
-hotly. “You an’ the likes av yez. Divil take me, bud
-youse’ll sup sorra for it, ye thaves av the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, go scratch yer head,” elegantly advised Larry.
-“Don’t cut loose with any o’ yer fireworks, Kelly;
-youse’re carryin’ weight for age and don’t work fast
-enough to mix it with this bunch.”</p>
-
-<p>“Youse’d t’ink,” said Martin Kelly, coming to the
-aid of his father, “that youse people run the shack,
-and no other body has a look in.”</p>
-
-<p>His proximity and the sound of his voice had an immediate
-effect upon Dick Nolan; his sister’s shame and
-young Kelly’s brutality on the night of the ball had
-burned themselves into his brain.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me plug him,” gasped Nolan, his face as white
-as death, his whole frame shaking with an overwhelming
-desire for revenge. He was struggling as he
-spoke in the arms of Roddy Ferguson; but Roddy
-dragged him away.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t make a mess of it,” implored Roddy. “If
-youse jump him now ye’ll put the whole snap on the
-bum, maybe.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>“What’s eatin’ Nolan?” asked McGonagle, wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s leary on Kelly, youse can bank on that,”
-answered Casey. “From the cracks he made to me a
-while ago, he’s goin’ to put him out o’ business. I
-don’t know what he’s sore for.”</p>
-
-<p>The commotion attracted Haley’s attention and he
-commenced to sound his gavel and cry for order. The
-roll-call recommenced and just as Kelly turned to acquaint
-the chairman with the attempt being made upon
-Daily, that gentleman’s name was reached.</p>
-
-<p>“Now then!” grated Larry. The circle narrowed
-about Daily as he arose to his feet. Martin Kelly attempted
-to rally his friends; but the determined looks
-of the cordon of young men and Daily’s unpopularity
-caused it to result in nothing more than a scattering
-fire of protest.</p>
-
-<p>Daily swallowed several times, and his voice was
-somewhat husky, as he said:</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got this to say: As I was ’lected by the parties
-against Mr. Kelly, I t’ink it’s best for me to save me
-reputation by votin’ for Kerrigan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Youse saved a damn sight more’n your reputation,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
-observed Murphy, as they turned away to give their
-attention to Levitsky.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime McQuirk had hurried out into the
-entry to see the person who had sent in the card. It
-was he with whom he had had the conversation in the
-Precinct Club a few hours before.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the gentleman, “what do ye know?
-Did McGlory do the right thing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and almost put them in the ditch. But they’ve
-got their second wind, now, and I don’t like the looks
-of things.”</p>
-
-<p>“No?” The politician looked questioningly at McQuirk,
-and then added: “They’ve fixed upon a new
-man? Who is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Young John Kerrigan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Humph! He’s well liked, too, isn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s about the last man I’d want them to push
-forward.”</p>
-
-<p>The other reflected a moment, then said:</p>
-
-<p>“You can win, though, can’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>A henchman of McQuirk’s rushed into the entry
-and looked anxiously up and down.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” said McQuirk.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>“Tom!” exclaimed the supporter, hurrying up.
-“Daily’s just voted for Kerrigan, and Levitsky’s goin’
-to do the same!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take it back,” said McQuirk, coolly. “They’ve
-got me hung up.”</p>
-
-<p>“For heaven’s sake, don’t let that happen!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s bound to unless—”</p>
-
-<p>“Unless what?”</p>
-
-<p>“We drop Kelly and turn in for Kerrigan.”</p>
-
-<p>“How does he stand on the franchise business?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s against it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then fight it out with them! If they split the
-party we can elect Kelly on the opposing ticket as was
-done last time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not if I know it!” said McQuirk, frowning at
-the lobbyist.</p>
-
-<p>“What! I say, Mac, you’re not gitting weak-kneed
-at the last moment, are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m ready to stand in and help your company out
-as long as I can do it regularly. This is <i>my</i> ward and
-the only way to keep it my ward is to be a regular.
-I’m against split tickets, you know that. If young
-Kerrigan can swing the convention, I’m for Kerrigan.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>“But think of what this means? This vote must
-be had or we will fall flat.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I must carry my ward,” said McQuirk. “If
-I lose twice in succession you’ll be makin’ deals
-with another man next election; I’ll have lost my
-grip.”</p>
-
-<p>Upon McQuirk’s return to the convention hall his
-adherents gathered about him; he paid no attention to
-them, but at once buttonholed the elder Kelly and drew
-him aside. The first ballot had resulted in a tie and
-the second had not yet begun; Kerrigan, reconciled to
-the situation, was receiving the noisy congratulations
-of his friends; the band in the gallery brayed and
-throbbed through a popular air. Suddenly a volley
-of incoherent adjectives came from James Kelly; his
-face was purple with wrath and he gesticulated with
-the fury of one demented. No one caught the words,
-but all saw that McQuirk was the object of his vituperations.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a plank loose,” prophesied McGonagle.
-“It must be a come-back, he’s makin’ it so strong.”</p>
-
-<p>McQuirk broke away from Kelly’s detaining clutch
-and approached the group surrounding Kerrigan; the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>
-delegates, clearly seeing that something important was
-about to occur, pressed about him.</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen,” said the boss, “above everything else
-we must preserve unity. As things stand, I would
-advise you all to turn in for Mr. Kerrigan.”</p>
-
-<p>The compact mass of delegates was torn as by a
-tempest; personal friends of Kelly stormed about McQuirk
-with clamorous denunciations; the opposition
-in a frenzy of rapture, hoisted their candidate upon
-their shoulders and began a march of victory about the
-hall, while the band blared brazenly through the noise.</p>
-
-<p>When at length comparative silence had been restored,
-the poll recommenced. McQuirk’s “advice”
-to his followers had been rightly interpreted as an
-order, and the name of Kerrigan seemed to be on
-every lip as man after man responded to his name.
-Upon its conclusion and Haley’s announcing that Kerrigan
-had won by more than two-thirds of the vote, the
-uproar broke out afresh. Suddenly, however, it
-hushed and all crowded toward the rear end of the
-hall. There was a quick grinding of feet upon the
-floor, a heaving of straining bodies, a growling of
-curses between tight-shut teeth. In the centre of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
-crowd, his face smeared with blood, fighting viciously,
-was Martin Kelly. With the full, swinging strength
-of their arms Nolan and Ferguson were battering at
-him and all who sought to interfere; upon the outskirts
-of the crowd the elder Kelly, white-faced, blue-lipped,
-and gasping, desperately sought to break
-through to the aid of his son.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s down!” shouted a voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Let him up!” protested a second.</p>
-
-<p>“Give him the leather!” advised still another.</p>
-
-<p>Larry and McGonagle and some others fought their
-way through the press and tore Nolan and Ferguson
-away.</p>
-
-<p>A half hour later a patrol wagon dashed away from
-the hall toward the nearest hospital bearing the bleeding,
-broken form of young Kelly. Upon the steps
-stood his assailants in the custody of two policemen,
-and with their friends gathered about them.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t make no kick,” said Larry. “The cops
-game is too strong for youse. Go ahead with ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Make no resistance,” advised O’Connor. “I’ll try
-if they’ll take bail for yez in the mornin’.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">Chapter XXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot2">
-
-<p>“<i>Some people’s born with the notion that for sharpness
-they’ve got the rest o’ the world tied hand an’
-foot; and they are sharp, in their way—but they don’t
-weigh much.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Chip Nolan’s Remarks.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“<i>The cool shades of evening their mantles were spreading,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And Maggie, all smiling, was listening to me,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>The moon through the valley her pale light was shedding,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>When I won the heart of the rose of Tralee.</i>”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><span class="smcap">Old Song.</span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CLANCY was reading the news of the convention
-in the evening paper behind his counter;
-the rush was over for the night, and he pulled
-at his pipe contentedly, for O’Hara had failed to keep
-his threat, and Clancy fancied that his creditor had
-thought better of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, Young Murphy is the b’y for thim,” said
-Clancy, as he finished the account. It was a McQuirk<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
-sheet and lauded that gentleman’s action to the skies.
-Its story of the convention teemed with such phrases
-as “Magnificent battle against organized greed,”
-“Opponent of municipal corruption,” “Able friend of
-the working class,” etc. “But, divil take thim,” continued
-the grocer, “yez’d t’ink, from this, that McQuirk
-done it all.”</p>
-
-<p>He adjusted his steel-rimmed glasses and was about
-to resume his reading when a step sounded upon the
-floor and a shadow fell across the newspaper; looking
-up he saw O’Hara.</p>
-
-<p>“Good avenin’,” said the visitor. “I wur passin’ an’
-t’ought I’d drop in on yez.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ welcome,” said Clancy, but his looks belied
-his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“Yez towld me this mornin’, Mr. Clancy,” said
-O’Hara, “that yez could not pay me the troifle av
-money yez owe me.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ I towld yez the truth.”</p>
-
-<p>“On con-sider-rayshun av yez bein’ an ’owld frind
-av mine,” said O’Hara, “I have daysided till give yez
-back the note, widout the payin’ av a cint—upon wan
-condition.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>“Give me back me note!” Clancy could not believe
-his ears.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon wan condition,” repeated O’Hara.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ wat’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“That yez give yez consint till Annie’s marriage wid
-young McGonagle.”</p>
-
-<p>Clancy looked thunderstruck; he gazed at the other
-with mingled wonder and anger.</p>
-
-<p>“What call have yez till meddle wid me family affairs?”
-demanded he, indignantly. “An’ what rayson
-have ye till be pullin’ wid McGonagle?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorra the t’ing hav that till do wid it. Give yez
-consint, an’ I will give ye a raysate for the money ye
-owe me the minyute the marriage lines are wrote.”</p>
-
-<p>Clancy’s objection to Goose was solely because of his
-poverty, but a son-in-law with money could do no more
-than pay off his debt, so the grocer figured it out, and
-the reluctance with which he at last consented to
-O’Hara’s proposition was more assumed than real.</p>
-
-<p>“The ceremony must take place t’morry,” said
-O’Hara.</p>
-
-<p>“I have no objection till offer,” said Clancy, resignedly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE door bell of Larry’s home at the end of Murphy’s
-Court kept up an almost constant ringing
-next morning, and old Mrs. Coogan’s breath grew short
-through answering the calls.</p>
-
-<p>First it was McGonagle and Larkin, dressed in their
-best, with beaming faces and movements of suppressed
-excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“Everyt’ing’s all to the velvet,” said Goose airily.
-“The girls have been up and dressed since five o’clock,
-and Father Dawson’ll do his turn at eleven, sharp.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, Larry,” put in Jimmie, “one bridesmaid’s
-goin’ to do for both; who d’youse t’ink it is?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” replied Larry.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Maggie Dwyer,” said Jimmie. “Say, there’s
-a girl for yer life! She’s got ’em all tied hand an’
-foot.”</p>
-
-<p>“If there was no Annie,” remarked Goose, “and I
-had the drag with Maggie that youse have, why her
-name’d be McGonagle in short order, le’me tell ye
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“G’way,” said Larry. “Quit yer stringin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“This is on the level,” insisted McGonagle. “I’ve
-heard it talked about for years. Everybody in the ward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>
-knowed that she wanted ye,—everybody but yerself.
-But, say, youse seemed so dead leary about the t’ing
-that nobody had the nerve to say anyt’ing to youse.”</p>
-
-<p>After the two young men departed, a perfect stream
-of reporters began to call, all anxious to get Larry’s
-views upon the political situation; and when this had
-subsided, Mason and Kerrigan came in, to talk over
-yesterday and confer about to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p>“Did youse see McQuirk since yesterday?” asked
-Larry, after some time spent in this fashion.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” answered Kerrigan, “but I received a note
-from him late last night, asking me to call upon him
-this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry nodded. “I was at his house when he wrote
-it,” said he. “Youse don’t need to worry any about
-him; he’s right in line. He kin carry the ward, with
-youse on the ticket, hands down. And that’s McQuirk’s
-game, every time. As long as he’s on the side that
-wins he can make good, ye know, and any time they
-need the ward in a deal they have to come to him with
-the money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Owen Dwyer seems to think,” said Mason, “that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>
-the election is only a matter of the size of Kerrigan’s
-majority.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right,” said Larry. “In this ward, and in
-all the others for that matter, the fightin’s done at the
-primaries; the guy what’s named in the regular way
-by the party what runs the ward, has got the election
-cinched.”</p>
-
-<p>When he and Mason were ready to go, Kerrigan
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“I am glad that Nolan and Ferguson came out of
-their matter all right. I know Cullen, one of the doctors
-at St. Mary’s, and he told me that Mart Kelly’s
-condition, while painful, is not necessarily serious.”</p>
-
-<p>“O’Connor an’ Gartenheim talked to McQuirk,” said
-Larry; “and McQuirk squared it all right at the front
-office. They had to give bail but the case’ll never come
-to trial, because Jim Kelly won’t push it; he knows
-what Mart was done up for, and he dasn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“McGonagle tells me that things are all O. K. in
-his matter,” remarked Kerrigan, as they stood upon the
-steps, Larry in the doorway. “I’ll be on hand promptly
-at noon to attend to my end of it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>Larry closed the door after they had departed and
-returned to the sitting room. He was glad that matters
-political had turned out as they did—but only because
-it would prevent the loss of Owen Dwyer’s savings,
-and thereby please Maggie—outside of that he
-seemed to have lost all zest of the battle, all exultation
-in the victory.</p>
-
-<p>Maggie was in his thoughts, Maggie and Maggie
-only. Since his talk with her the morning before, she
-seemed to have grown nearer to him. He did not
-dream that this was caused by a lessening of his sense
-of inferiority—by a gradual growth of faith in himself,
-which had its conception in the hardly realized
-fact that he had been the dominant spirit in a matching
-of wits which, in result, meant not a little to her.</p>
-
-<p>He only thought of her kind manner, her smile and
-invitation to call again; he only remembered Kerrigan’s
-half-jesting remark after they had left the house.
-And then there were McGonagle’s words; Goose was
-a friend of his and would not deceive him. He had
-said that Maggie was not indifferent! Could this be
-so? Had he been so blind, so full of self-pride as to
-not see it? Could it be that the aloofness with which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>
-he had long secretly charged her had all been of his
-own doing? It is not often that a man wishes himself
-in the wrong; but that, at this moment, was Larry’s
-most earnest desire.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll settle it to-night,” he said to himself. “I’ll
-brace up and give her a chance to flag me.”</p>
-
-<p>Half past eleven saw Larry hurrying toward Clancy’s.
-Two of O’Connor’s hacks were drawn up at the
-curb before the grocery, from one of which McGonagle
-and Larkin were assisting Rosie, Annie and Maggie.
-Clancy and O’Hara were alighting from the second,
-which they had shared with the two bridegrooms;
-a flock of marvelling children were gathered upon the
-sidewalk; and the heads of their elders were popping
-out of windows and doorways full of wonder and surprise.</p>
-
-<p>Larry raised his hat and took the hand which Maggie
-offered him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry,” said she, “that I can’t remain to see
-the result of your planning. It is very clever!” Larry
-caught the look in her eyes and it said as plainly as
-words that it was no more than she had expected of
-him. A sudden tumult was raised in his breast and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>
-perhaps he pressed her hand a little; at any rate she
-flushed and withdrew it quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“I must get back to my class before the morning
-session is over,” she continued. “The principal would
-only give me an hour’s leave of absence.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m comin’ to see you to-night,” said he, courageously.</p>
-
-<p>He did not even ask her permission! She gasped
-a little, in surprise, but laughed as though she
-liked it.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be at home,” said she. Then she kissed the
-two girls. “Good-by, I shall run around this afternoon
-to see you both, and,” with a sly glance at
-O’Hara, “to hear of the fun.”</p>
-
-<p>When she had gone, Larry followed the others into
-the house, Mrs. Clancy embraced Annie and sobbed;
-then Annie and Rosie began to sob also, while Goose
-and Jimmie looked uncomfortably at one another, each
-with a feeling of guilt heavy upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“Here is yez raysate, Mister Clancy,” said O’Hara,
-handing the grocer a slip of paper. “It’s a man av me
-word I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“Youse’ll get your cash, as soon as the fortune<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>
-comes along, O’Hara,” McGonagle informed him reassuringly.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this point that Kerrigan walked into the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a queer thing to do right after a wedding,”
-said the young attorney, after he had congratulated
-the happy couples, “but the fact is, Mr. Clancy, I am
-here to read a will. And as all the persons spoken of
-in the document are present, I will, with your permission,
-get down to business.”</p>
-
-<p>He took a neatly folded paper from his breast
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“The will,” he continued, “is that of the late Honora
-Cassidy, spinster.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Ah!” exclaimed Clancy, striking the table
-with his fist; “Now we’ll know the rights av it. Faith
-an’ I knew Honora had money.”</p>
-
-<p>“So it’s Honora Cassidy that yez meant?” said
-O’Hara looking at Larry. Then he turned to Kerrigan.
-“Sure, I wur acquainted wid her in Skibereen
-whin I wur a young felly.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am aware of the fact,” returned Kerrigan, dryly.
-“The document reads this way:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>“I, Honora Cassidy, being in sound physical and
-mental health, do make this my last will and testament.
-Having remained a spinster up to this date and recognizing
-the emptiness and loneliness of such a state, I,
-in this instrument, do all in my power to prevent my
-half-brother’s child, Annie Clancy, from following my
-example.</p>
-
-<p>“With this end in view I bequeath all my estate,
-both real and personal, with Charles Mason as Trustee,
-to the man who marries the said Annie Clancy, on
-the condition that the ceremony is performed within
-thirty (30) days after my decease.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! An’ so yez knew av this, O’Hara!” exclaimed
-Clancy. “Yez knew av it an’ played me the darty
-trick till git yez money out av McGonagle!”</p>
-
-<p>“A stroke av business, Clancy,” murmured O’Hara
-soothingly, “A mere stroke av business, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“But say, Kerrigan,” put in Larry, with great innocence,
-“if Annie hadn’t got married within the thirty
-days?—what then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then,” replied the attorney, referring to the will,
-“the estate would have gone to the only man who ever<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>
-made a proposal of marriage to the deceased—and
-whom she refused.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry had his eyes fixed upon O’Hara, who at these
-words, started suddenly, and sat bolt upright.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ who wur that, Johnnie?” asked Mrs. Clancy,
-who, womanlike, felt a great curiosity upon this point.</p>
-
-<p>“Our esteemed friend, Malachi O’Hara.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” shrieked Clancy, leaping to his feet.
-“D’yez mane till say, Goose, me b’y, that yez made the
-owld harp do himself out av a fort’in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me,” said McGonagle, modestly; “it was
-Murphy.”</p>
-
-<p>O’Hara had slowly arisen, his dumpy form quivering,
-his face crimson with wrath.</p>
-
-<p>“It wur a conspiracy!” exclaimed he, thumping the
-floor with his cane; “a conspiracy to defraud me out
-av me possible roights!”</p>
-
-<p>“’Twur a nate bit av wurk,” cried Clancy, enthusiastically
-shaking his son-in-law by the hand. “An’ I
-forgi’ yez for my part av it. Sure, yez are all great
-b’ys together!”</p>
-
-<p>O’Hara continued to stamp about the room; Rosie<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span>
-wept on Jimmie’s shoulder, frightened at her father’s
-anger. At last the second-hand dealer grabbed up his
-hat and made for the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Come home wid me, Rosie!” commanded he.
-“Don’t be stayin’ here till see yez father chated an’
-robbed.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll go home with me, after this,” said Jimmie
-Larkin, as he fondly kissed the tears from her cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“Thin, the divil do her good av ye!” O’Hara swept
-the room with a stormy glance. “It’s the law I’ll have
-on yez,” foamed he, “Ivery wan av yez’ll sup sorra
-for yez divilment, raymimber that!”</p>
-
-<p>And he banged the door after him and was gone.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IT was a beautiful night; the moon was sailing
-through the heavens attended by countless
-myriads of jewel-like stars; the breeze rustled gently
-through the street, and as Larry neared Maggie’s home
-he caught the soft notes of an old, old song.</p>
-
-<p>Owen sat upon the step, enjoying the fineness of the
-night, and as the young man came up he arose and
-gripped him by the hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span>“God bless ye, Larry,” said he, with a subdued emotion
-rare in the Celt. “God bless ye for what yez done
-for me and mine! I niver towld Maggie till the day,
-but iv Kelly had won, it’s find another home we’d had
-till do, for ivery dollar I could rake an’ scrape were in
-that stock. I took a great risk, b’y, I see it now; but
-it wur all for her sake, Larry, all for her sake.”</p>
-
-<p>Larry entered, leaving the old man smoking peacefully
-upon the steps. The hallway was dim, and he
-walked softly to avoid knocking against things. But
-a shaded lamp threw a soft light about the parlour, and
-he paused in the doorway to listen to the faint music
-and the words of the song. Maggie sat at the piano,
-her back toward him; she was dressed in white, clinging
-stuff that displayed the full charm of her fine figure;
-her fingers touched the keyboard lightly, caressingly
-and she sang in a subdued, brooding way:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“<i>Oh promise to meet me when twilight is falling,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Beside the blue waters that slumber so fair,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>Each bird in the meadow your name will be calling,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>And every sweet rose-bud will look for you there.</i>”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span>She paused, her fingers still straying over the keys,
-and Larry took up the song:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“<i>In morning and evening for you I am sighing,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>The heart in my bosom is yours evermore,</i></div>
-<div class="verse"><i>I’ll watch for you, darling, when daylight is dying,</i></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Sweet rose of Killarney, Mavourneen asthore.</i>”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>She arose and slowly turned toward him. Her face
-was rosy, her eyes shining with a light that was good to
-see.</p>
-
-<p>He advanced half way, then paused, his arms outstretched.
-She understood, on the instant, and came
-the remainder of the way; then the strong arms were
-around her and he had kissed her upon the lips.</p>
-
-<p>“When shall it be?” he asked, in a masterful way.</p>
-
-<p>“Not for a long, long time,” she answered. “Remember
-Mary!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll never forget her.” His eyes were dim with
-feeling.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor Mary,” whispered Maggie, softly. “Dear,
-sweet, gentle Mary!”</p>
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="bbox">
-<p class="ph1">RECENT<br>
-PUBLICATIONS<br>
-<i>of</i><br>
-<span class="large"><span class="antiqua">McClure, Phillips<br>
-&amp; Co.</span></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_dongle.jpg" alt=""></div>
-
-<p class="ph1"><i>New York</i><br>
-1901-1902</p>
-</div></div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph3"><span class="antiqua">By Joel Chandler Harris</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="ph1">GABRIEL TOLLIVER</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_dongle.jpg" alt=""></div>
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">T</span>HIS is by far the most mature and important
-work that Mr. Harris has yet given us. Like
-<i>David Copperfield</i>, <i>Gabriel Tolliver</i> is intensely
-personal, and is practically the story
-of Mr. Harris’ own boyhood experiences. In
-so far as its setting is concerned it is a novel of
-Reconstruction in the South. It is the most
-perfect picture in fiction of those disheartening
-days following the war, when the Southern
-States seemed likely to sink into anarchy through
-the corruption of the carpet-baggers. In the
-midst of such conditions, and the quaint, unprogressive
-life of the little Georgia community,
-Shady Dale, a beautiful study of boy and girl
-love is developed and carried to a happy conclusion
-after exciting adventures on the part of
-the hero, who is falsely accused of the murder
-of a Government agent engaged in inciting the
-negro population to violence against the whites.</p>
-
-<p class="center">$1.50</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="ph3"><span class="antiqua">By S. R. Crockett</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Author of “The Stickit Minister,” “The Black Douglas,”
-“The Firebrand,” etc.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="ph1">THE BANNER OF BLUE</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_dongle.jpg" alt=""></div>
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">I</span>N <i>The Banner of Blue</i> Mr. Crockett offers a
-new version of that most wonderful of parables,
-the prodigal son. Against the sombre background
-of the Disruption Period in Scotland he
-draws with a master hand two brilliantly colored
-love-stories, the one intense to its tragic end,
-the other delightful in its quaint Scotch humor.
-The character-drawing possesses in particular
-the quality of nearness and reality, and he who
-reads must suffer with the proud Lord of Gower
-in the downfall of his idolized son, laugh with
-Veronica Cæsar in her philosophical bearing of
-domestic burdens and tyranny, and share with
-John Glendonwyn his love for the will-o’-the-wisp
-sweetheart, Faerlie Glendenning. That
-part of the story dealing with the separation
-of church and state calls forth not only the
-strongest but the most picturesque traits of the
-Scottish people.</p>
-
-<p class="center">$1.50</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="ph3"><span class="antiqua">By Mary Stewart Cutting</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph1">LITTLE STORIES OF
-MARRIED LIFE</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_dongle.jpg" alt=""></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p><span class="xlarge">M</span>RS. CUTTING begins where other storytellers
-leave off. Marriage is a very general
-experience, and the married in actual life seem
-as much alive as other people; but in literature
-they generally pass out of any existence worth
-the name when the ceremony is performed. In
-the very heart of domesticity Mrs. Cutting finds
-moving crises and climaxes, perils and triumphs.
-Why not? Domestic affairs make or break
-the daily existence of most of us. Her book
-has a peculiarly American quality, for the American
-home is its field; at the same time its
-pages are especially rich in those touches of
-nature, humorous or pathetic—often humorous
-and pathetic—that make the whole world kin.</p>
-
-<p class="center">$1.25</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="ph3">GOLDEN NUMBERS</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>A Book of Verse for Youth</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Edited by</i><br>
-
-KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN AND NORA
-ARCHIBALD SMITH<br>
-
-<i>with an<br>
-<span class="large">Introduction and Little Letters on Poetry</span><br>
-by</i><br>
-
-KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">F</span>OR the purpose of compiling this book Mrs. Riggs
-[Kate Douglas Wiggin] and her sister, Miss Smith, have
-explored practically the entire body of English poetry, and
-have spent two years in the work of selection and arrangement.
-The result, it is hardly necessary to say, in view of
-Mrs. Riggs’ well-known sympathy with the needs and
-interests of young life, is the greatest work ever planned to
-put the boys and girls of America and England in possession
-of the poetic heritage of their literature. The volume
-may well serve as a general anthology for all ages, so
-representative is it and so complete. And yet so skillfully
-has the work been done that nothing is introduced which
-might not serve immediately to win the attention of the
-young reader and to stimulate his curiosity to make independent
-discoveries in the broad fields that lie beyond the
-covers of his book. A second volume is in preparation. It
-will be entitled <i>The Posy Ring</i>, and will aim to interest still
-younger readers than those to which <i>Golden Numbers</i> will
-make an appeal.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="ph3"><span class="antiqua">By A. Conan Doyle</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph1">THE HOUND OF THE
-BASKERVILLES</p>
-
-<p class="center">A Sherlock Holmes Novel</p>
-
-<p class="center">Illustrated by Sidney Paget</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_dongle.jpg" alt=""></div>
-
-<p class="center"><i>The London Chronicle</i>, in a review headed</p>
-
-<p class="center">“THE ZENITH OF SHERLOCK HOLMES,”</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>says:</p>
-
-<p>“We should like to pay Dr. Doyle the
-highest compliment at our command. It is not
-simply that this book is superior in originality
-and construction to the earlier adventures of
-the great detective. Dr. Doyle has provided a
-criminal who, as Mr. Holmes admits, is indeed
-a foeman worthy of his steel.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> Hitherto he
-has found it comparatively easy to unmask his
-antagonists. But in the present case he finds
-himself checkmated again and again. There is
-pitted against him a skill nearly equal to his
-own, and he wins the game almost by a hair.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[A]</a> “I tell you, Watson, this time we have a foeman
-who is worthy of our steel.”—<i>Sherlock Holmes.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">$1.25</p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="ph3"><span class="antiqua">By George Douglas</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph1">THE HOUSE WITH THE
-GREEN SHUTTERS</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_dongle.jpg" alt=""></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p><span class="xlarge">T</span>HE first novel of a new master. The work
-has gained wide-spread recognition on both
-sides of the water. Three of the most conservative
-and authoritative publications in England
-include it among the first twelve of the
-year. In this country <i>Harper’s Weekly</i> gives
-it as one of the two most interesting novels of
-the year.</p>
-
-<p><i>The critics differ as to with what other master
-George Douglas should be compared</i>:</p>
-
-<p><i>The London Times</i> says: “Worthy of the hand that
-drew ‘Weir of Hermiston,’” and that “Balzac and
-Flaubert, had they been Scotch, would have written
-such a book.”</p>
-
-<p><i>The Spectator</i>: “His masters are Zola and Balzac, but
-there are few traces of the novice and none of the imitator.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Vanity Fair</i>: “It moves to its end with all the terrible
-unity of an Æschylean tragedy.”</p>
-
-<p><i>Harper’s Weekly</i>: “If Thomas Hardy had written of
-Scotland, instead of Wessex, it would have been something
-like ‘The House with the Green Shutters’.... If
-any man is his (Douglas’) master it is Thomas Hardy.”</p>
-
-<p>Hardy, Stevenson, Zola, Flaubert, Balzac, and Æschylus.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">Eighth Edition. <span class="gap"> $1.50.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb">
-
-<p class="ph3"><span class="antiqua">By Henry Wallace Phillips</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph1">RED SAUNDERS</p>
-
-<p class="center">His Adventures, West and East</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_dongle.jpg" alt=""></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p><span class="xlarge">T</span>HERE is plenty of dash and adventure in
-this book, told with a humor whose most delightful
-quality is its unstudied naturalness.
-The critics are all laughing, not at the book,
-but with it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny">
-
-<p>“Chantay Seechee Red is the sort of cowpuncher
-it benefits one to meet even between
-the covers of a book.”—<i>N. Y. Evening Post.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Mark Twain has written no more delicious
-stories.”—<i>Philadelphia Inquirer.</i></p>
-
-<p>“A delightful study of life in the West.”—<i>Newark Call.</i></p>
-
-<p>“The wind blows through it, and the meaning
-of it is health and joy.”—<i>N. Y. Sun.</i></p>
-
-<p>“The creator of Red Saunders has an exuberant
-sense of humor.”—<i>N. Y. Evening Telegram.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center">Second Edition <span class="gap"> $1.25</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ph3"><span class="antiqua">McClure, Phillips &amp; Co.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.</p>
-
-<p>No attempt has been made to regularize dialect and brogue.</p>
-
-<p>There was a typesetting error that occurred at the beginning of Chapter VIII, and the affected chapter numbers have been corrected.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RAGGED EDGE ***</div>
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