The Rise of Roscoe Paine
l, for it enabled me to dodge Dorinda's questions as to my own adventures. I did not care to talk about the latter. My feelings concerning them were curiously mixed. Was I glad or sorry tha
be grateful to me for helping his daughter. But, after all, did I care for gratitude from that family? And what form would that gratitude take? Would Colton, like Victor Carver, of
ct. Of course there was no chance of our becoming friends. The difference in social position, as they reckoned it, made that too ridiculous to consider as a possibility, even if I wished it, which I distinctly did not. But something, an interview, awkward and disagreeable for both sides, or a patronizing note of thanks, was, at the very least, certain to follow the happeni
over his own good judgmen
ll me we was in for a turrible tempest. I was settin' talkin'
tarted for that festival. It cost you fifteen to get inside the gate, and Matildy Dean told me the church folks was cal'l
offee before replying. Then his reply
ess, come over me. I looked up at the sky and 'twas gettin' black, and then I looked to the west-ard and I see
sasser of berries?" repeat
ow, Do
er you ought to be ashamed of yoursel
ever know him to pay for
you get trusted for 'em? Ho
nd I didn't sponge 'em, neither. I paid ca
! Well then-MAN, where did the
ed. "I-I-"
t come from?
'other day after the brown sugar and-and number 50 spool cotton
your pocket and you lost the change. I ain't lik
talk to me. I never lost that change at all. I found it afterwards in my vest, so all you
me the trouble
mb as not to go through your vest myself. So THAT'S where the other fifteen cents co
spepsy spells. I don't feel real goo
olen berries hadn't ought to feel good. E
the back yard. There I left him, groaning befor
she lay anchored at the edge of the channel. For the want of something more importa
nstead of leaving the coachman, I had remained to help him with the frightened horse, I should have been better employed. Between us we could have subdued the animal and Miss Colton might have ridden home. I wondered what had become of Jenkins and t
r hair brushed my cheek as I bent over her. I was using a wad of cotton waste to polish the gun barrel, and I threw it into a corner, having the insane notion that, in some way, the association of ideas came from that bunch of waste. It-the waste-was grimy and anything but fragrant, as different from the dark lock which the wind had blown against my f
retense of further cleaning was ridiculous. I held i
voice from the doorw
ad and both hands in his pockets, exactly as he had appeared in that same doorway when he and I first met. The expec
red without waitin
ng," h
been fighting by proxy ever since. I was prepared for more trouble, for haughty condescension, for perfunctory apology, for almost anything
un you've got there," he
er. "Let's look at it," he r
he was used to such things, broke it, snapped it shut,
here?" he asked, pulling the a
ee how astonished I was at
. Plenty of coots, some black duck, a
but I wouldn't believe him under oath. I could shoot HIM with more or less pleas
but made no comment. I rose and put the gun in the rack. Then I r
in his eye, "the last time you and I chatt
ded that I was glad of it. But what wou
" he continued. "Came over
ry
I saw you last night. Have many suc
many.
anted the beast perfectly safe for an infant in arms to drive and not afraid of anything short of an earthquake. He is a lovel
st malice in his tone, but, if I had been the "fri
of the hors
der claps started more trouble. The horse ran four miles, more or less, and stopped only wh
he coa
alf the night trying to find a phone not out of commission but
es
t I've come here for. I
right. You
y for the help you gave Mabel-my daughter-last night,
mbering her last words, as I left her in
unt to anything,
bout the tides out here and, from what he said, I judge that being stuck on the shoals in
answer. He
e?" he asked. "From what I've seen of him he gen
ilent. He sm
at his family is one of the oldest on the list. Personally I don't gamble much on families; know a little about my own and that little is enough. But women are different. However, family or not, he won't do. I should tell him
h, nothing of
to his explanations last nig
red to pay me
e? How
t wait to
n't heard fro
sita
u?" he r
ived a note fro
ffering a
N
money, d
surprise. "Did he
not I have lost all my judgment of human nature since I st
Colto
ow! How
ent me fiv
he di
ling you
t that much judgment left. Sent you fiv
es
ssage w
nt to tell him anything. Now I decided to tell
at what I saved was
angry. Instead he slapped
I'd like to have seen his face when he got that mess
d disagreed with him, which I did not. I said nothing. He
time of the night?" he asked. "I'm mighty glad you
festival rat
ing up at the church.
ins that he sh
nd Carver were set on going; and it would be the treat of a lifetime, or words to that effect. I can't see it myself. Of all the w
may seem odd that I, of all persons, should have taken upon myself
re in theirs," I declared. "They resent being ordered about as if the
, h
untry it does not follow that he is a blockhead. No one in Denboro is rich, as you would count
n't
favors from men here you must
ngs to help the town. I should have enjoyed doing it. I told some of them so. Look at the money I've s
t some of them call you-'Emperor of New York'. I tell yo
u, you haven't associated with many of them. You've b
ness toward my fellow citizens had been misinterpreted, as it deserv
onsider myself any better than the people here-no, nor even the equal of some of the
him angry. He looked at
t in the world are you doin
do you
the class where you belonged when you and I first met. I can usually size up
it as such. I should have told him that what I was or was not was
for my daughter last night and the way, according to her story, you handled her and
n, I don't
hate to quit till I have the answer, and nobody around here se
N
public-spirited bunc
N
ve a good deal more than I do your judgment. You must understand t
ng and mine diffe
ee before I'm through. I a
hink
and ought to be closed. Second, because I make it a point to get what I go afte
n answer to a statement like t
n to stay here as long as I want to, but I haven't let go of my job by a good deal. I've got private wires-telegraph and telephone-in my house and I keep in touch with t
. I could not see how it appl
st that I was after. He beat me to it at first. He was a big toad in the puddle and I was a little one. But I didn't quit. I waited round the corner. By and by I saw my chance. He was in a hole and I had the cover to the hole. Before I let him out I owned that mine. It cost me more than it was worth; I lost money on it. But I had my way
his seems to me like wastin
o-between. I just wanted you to understand my position; that's why I've told you all this. Now we'll talk figures. I might go on bidding, and y
rply, "you had better not say any
ur being afraid? Don't get mad. I'm not-not now.
ien
nded to beat in a deal; there's nothing personal about it. When I get you so yo
ed. I said what Lu
ed. "Five thousand do
and itself. The other forty-five hundred is payment for the
t tremendously difficult to pronounce. Yet I did pronounce it, I am glad to say
ear surprised
s watch, "I must be going. My wife will think I've fallen into the bay, or been murdered by the hostile natives. Nerves are mean things to have in the house;
I recovered presence of mind suffic
well?" I stammered. "No ill effec
would have died probably, after such an upset, but she's as right as I am. Oh . . . er-Paine, next time y
. "Five thousand dollars!" . . . "Carver won't do." . . . "I will have the Lane some time or other." . . .
are! I must wake up b