In a cellar-like house driven like
a stake into the hillside above Coal Creek lived Kate
Hartnet with her son Mike. Her man had died with
the others during the fire in the mine. Her son
like Beaut McGregor did not work in the mine.
He hurried through Main Street or went half running
among the trees on the hills. Miners seeing him
hurrying along with white intense face shook their
heads. “He’s cracked,” they
said. “He’ll hurt some one yet.”
Beaut saw Mike hurrying about the
streets. Once encountering him in the pine woods
above the town he walked with him and tried to get
him to talk. In his pockets Mike carried books
and pamphlets. He set traps in the woods and
brought home rabbits and squirrels. He got together
collections of birds’ eggs which he sold to women
in the trains that stopped at Coal Creek and when
he caught birds he stuffed them, put beads in their
eyesockets and sold them also. He proclaimed himself
an anarchist and like Cracked McGregor muttered to
himself as he hurried along.
One day Beaut came upon Mike Hartnet
reading a book as he sat on a log overlooking the
town. A shock ran through McGregor when he looked
over the shoulder of the man and saw what book he
read. “It is strange,” he thought,
“that this fellow should stick to the same book
that fat old Weeks makes his living by.”
Beaut sat on the log beside Hartnet
and watched him. The reading man looked up and
nodded nervously then slid along the log to the farther
end. Beaut laughed. He looked down at the
town and then at the frightened nervous book-reading
man on the log. An inspiration came to him.
“If you had the power, Mike,
what would you do to Coal Creek?” he asked.
The nervous man jumped and tears came
into his eyes. He stood before the log and spread
out his hands. “I would go among men like
Christ,” he cried, pitching his voice forward
like one addressing an audience. “Poor
and humble, I would go teaching them of love.”
Spreading out his hands like one pronouncing a benediction
he shouted, “Oh men of Coal Creek, I would teach
you love and the destruction of evil.”
Beaut jumped up from the log and strode
before the trembling figure. He was strangely
moved. Grasping the man he thrust him back upon
the log. His own voice rolled down the hillside
in a great roaring laugh. “Men of Coal
Creek,” he shouted, mimicking the earnestness
of Hartnet, “listen to the voice of McGregor.
I hate you. I hate you because you jeered at
my father and at me and because you cheated my mother,
Nance McGregor. I hate you because you are weak
and disorganised like cattle. I would like to
come among you teaching the power of force. I
would like to slay you one by one, not with weapons
but with my naked fists. If they have made you
work like rats buried in a hole they are right.
It is man’s right to do what he can. Get
up and fight. Fight and I’ll get on the
other side and you can fight me. I’ll help
drive you back into your holes.”
Beaut ceased speaking and jumping
over the logs ran down the road. Among the first
of the miner’s houses he stopped and laughed
awkwardly. “I am cracked also,” he
thought, “shouting at emptiness on a hillside.”
He went on in a reflective mood, wondering what power
had taken hold of him. “I would like a
fight—a fight against odds,” he thought.
“I will stir things up when I am a lawyer in
the city.”
Mike Hartnet came running down the
road at the heels of McGregor. “Don’t
tell,” he plead trembling. “Don’t
tell about me in the town. They will laugh and
call names after me. I want to be let alone.”
Beaut shook himself loose from the
detaining hand and went on down the hill. When
he had passed out of sight of Hartnet he sat down on
the ground. For an hour he looked at the town
in the valley and thought of himself. He was
half proud, half ashamed of the thing that had happened.
* * * *
In the blue eyes of McGregor anger
flashed quick and sudden. Upon the streets of
Coal Creek he walked, swinging along, his great body
inspiring fear. His mother grown grave and silent
worked in the offices of the mines. Again she
had a habit of silence in her own home and looked
at her son, half fearing him. All day she worked
in the mine offices and in the evening sat silently
in a chair on the porch before her house and looked
down into Main Street.
Beaut McGregor did nothing. He
sat in the dingy little pool room and talked with
the black-haired boy or walked over the hills swinging
a stick in his hand and thinking of the city to which
he would presently go to start his career. As
he walked in the streets women stopped to look at
him, thinking of the beauty and strength of his maturing
body. The miners passed him in silence hating
him and dreading his wrath. Walking among the
hills he thought much of himself. “I am
capable of anything,” he thought, lifting his
head and looking at the towering hills, “I wonder
why I stay on here.”
When he was eighteen Beaut’s
mother fell ill. All day she lay on her back
in bed in the room above the empty bakery. Beaut
shook himself out of his waking stupor and went about
seeking work. He had not felt that he was indolent.
He had been waiting. Now he bestirred himself.
“I’ll not go into the mines,” he
said, “nothing shall get me down there.”
He got work in a livery stable cleaning
and feeding the horses. His mother got out of
bed and began going again to the mine offices.
Having started to work Beaut stayed on, thinking it
but a way station to the position he would one day
achieve in the city.
In the stable worked two young boys,
sons of coal miners. They drove travelling men
from the trains to farming towns in valleys back among
the hills and in the evening with Beaut McGregor they
sat on a bench before the barn and shouted at people
going past the stable up the hill.
The livery stable in Coal Creek was
owned by a hunchback named Weller who lived in the
city and went home at night. During the day he
sat about the stable talking to red-haired McGregor.
“You’re a big beast,” he said laughing.
“You talk about going away to the city and making
something of yourself and still you stay on here doing
nothing. You want to quit this talking about
being a lawyer and become a prize fighter. Law
is a place for brains not muscles.” He walked
through the stables leaning his head to one side and
looking up at the big fellow who brushed the horses.
McGregor watched him and grinned. “I’ll
show you,” he said.
The hunchback was pleased when he
strutted before McGregor. He had heard men talk
of the strength and the evil temper of his stableman
and it pleased him to have so fierce a fellow cleaning
the horses. At night in the city he sat under
the lamp with his wife and boasted. “I
make him step about,” he said.
In the stable the hunchback kept at
the heels of McGregor. “And there’s
something else,” he said, putting his hand in
his pockets and raising himself on his toes.
“You look out for that undertaker’s daughter.
She wants you. If she gets you there will be no
law study but a place in the mines for you. You
let her alone and begin taking care of your mother.”
Beaut went on cleaning the horses
and thinking of what the hunchback had said.
He thought there was sense to it. He also was
afraid of the tall pale girl. Sometimes when
he looked at her a pain shot through him and a combination
of fear and desire gripped him. He walked away
from it and went free as he went free from the life
in the darkness down in the mine. “He has
a kind of genius for keeping away from the things
he don’t like,” said the liveryman, talking
to Uncle Charlie Wheeler in the sun before the door
of the post office.
One afternoon the two boys who worked
in the livery stable with McGregor got him drunk.
The affair was a rude joke, elaborately planned.
The hunchback had stayed in the city for the day and
no travelling men got off the trains to be driven
over the hills. In the afternoon hay brought
over the hill from the fruitful valley was being put
into the loft of the barn and between loads McGregor
and the two boys sat on the bench by the stable door.
The two boys went to the saloon and brought back beer,
paying for it from a fund kept for that purpose.
The fund was the result of a system worked out by the
two drivers. When a passenger gave one of them
a coin at the end of a day of driving he put it into
the common fund. When the fund had grown to some
size the two went to the saloon and stood before the
bar drinking until it was spent and then came back
to sleep off their stupor on the hay in the barn.
After a prosperous week the hunchback occasionally
gave them a dollar for the fund.
Of the beer McGregor drank but one
foaming glass. For all his idling about Coal
Creek he had never before tasted beer and it was strong
and bitter in his mouth. He threw up his head
and gulped it then turned and walked toward the rear
of the stable to conceal the tears that the taste
of the stuff had forced into his eyes.
The two drivers sat on the bench and
laughed. The drink they had given Beaut was a
horrible mess concocted by the laughing bartender at
their suggestion. “We will get the big
fellow drunk and hear him roar,” the bartender
had said.
As he walked toward the back of the
stable a convulsive nausea seized Beaut. He stumbled
and pitched forward, cutting his face on the floor.
Then he rolled over on his back and groaned and a little
stream of blood ran down his cheek.
The two boys jumped up from the bench
and ran toward him. They stood looking at his
pale lips. Fear seized them. They tried to
lift him but he fell from their arms and lay again
on the stable floor, white and motionless. Filled
with fright they ran from the stable and through Main
Street. “We must get a doctor,” they
said as they hurried along, “He is mighty sick—that
fellow.”
In the doorway leading to the rooms
over the undertaker’s shop stood the tall pale
girl. One of the running boys stopped and addressed
her, “Your red-head,” he shouted, “is
blind drunk lying on the stable floor. He has
cut his head and is bleeding.”
The tall girl ran down the street
to the offices of the mine. With Nance McGregor
she hurried to the stable. The store keepers along
Main Street looked out of their doors and saw the
two women pale and with set faces half-carrying the
huge form of Beaut McGregor along the street and in
at the door of the bakery.
* * *
*
At eight o’clock that evening
Beaut McGregor, his legs still unsteady, his face
white, climbed aboard a passenger train and passed
out of the life of Coal Creek. On the seat beside
him a bag contained all his clothes. In his pocket
lay a ticket to Chicago and eighty-five dollars, the
last of Cracked McGregor’s savings. He looked
out of the car window at the little woman thin and
worn standing alone on the station platform and a
great wave of anger passed through him. “I’ll
show them,” he muttered. The woman looked
at him and forced a smile to her lips. The train
began to move into the west. Beaut looked at his
mother and at the deserted streets of Coal Creek and
put his head down upon his hands and in the crowded
car before the gaping people wept with joy that he
had seen the last of youth. He looked back at
Coal Creek, full of hate. Like Nero he might
have wished that all of the people of the town had
but one head so that he might have cut it off with
a sweep of a sword or knocked it into the gutter with
one swinging blow.