THE SHOW
Jansen, the big Swede, was the first
to finish his meal in Drew’s dining-room.
For that matter, he was always first. He ate with
astonishing expedition, lowering his head till that
tremendous, shapeless mouth was close to the plate
and then working knife and fork alternately with an
unfaltering industry. To-night, spurred on by
a desire to pass through this mechanical effort and
be prepared for the coming action, his speed was something
truly marvellous. He did not appear to eat; the
food simply vanished from the plate; it was absorbed
like a mist before the wind. While the others
were barely growing settled in their places, Jansen
was already through.
He wiped his mouth on the back of
his hand, produced Durham and papers, and proceeded
to light up. Lawlor, struggling still to re-establish
himself in the eyes of Bard as the real William Drew,
seized the opportunity to exert a show of authority.
He smashed his big fist on the table.
“Jansen!” he roared.
“Eh?” grunted the Swede.
“Where was you raised?”
“Me?”
“You, square-head.”
“Elvaruheimarstadhaven.”
“Are you sneezin’ or talkin’ English?”
Jansen, irritated, bellowed:
“Elvaruheimarstadhaven! That’s where
I was born.”
“That’s where you was
born? Elvaru—damn such a language!
No wonder you Swedes don’t know nothin’.
It takes all your time learnin’ how to talk
your lingo. But if you ain’t never had no
special trainin’ in manners, I’m goin’
to make a late start with you now. Put out that
cigarette!”
The pale eyes of Jansen stared, fascinated; the vast
mouth fell agape.
“Maybe,” he began, and then finished weakly:
“I be damned!”
“There ain’t no reasonable
way of doubtin’ that unless you put out that
smoke. Hear me?”
Shorty Kilrain, coming from the kitchen,
grinned broadly. Having felt the lash of discipline
himself, he was glad to see it fall in another place.
He continued his gleeful course around that side of
the table.
And big Jansen slowly, imperturbably,
raised the cigarette and inhaled a mighty cloud of
smoke which issued at once in a rushing, fine blue
mist, impelled by a snort.
“Maybe,” he rumbled, completing
his thought, “maybe you’re one damn fool!”
“I’m going to learn you
who’s boss in these parts,” boomed Lawlor.
“Put out that cigarette! Don’t you
know no better than to smoke at the table?”
Jansen pushed back his chair and started
to rise. There was no doubt as to his intentions;
they were advertised in the dull and growing red which
flamed in his face. But Kilrain, as though he
had known such a moment would come, caught the Swede
by the shoulders and forced him back into the chair.
As he did so he whispered something in the ear of
Jansen.
“Let him go!” bellowed
Lawlor. “Let him come on. Don’t
hold him. I ain’t had work for my hands
for five years. I need exercise, I do.”
The mouth of Jansen stirred, but no
words came. A hopeless yearning was in his eyes.
But he dropped the cigarette and ground it under his
heel.
“I thought,” growled Lawlor,
“that you knew your master, but don’t make
no mistake again. Speakin’ personal, I don’t
think no more of knockin’ down a Swede than
I do of flickin’ the ashes off’n a cigar.”
He indulged in a side glance at Bard
to see if the latter were properly impressed, but
Anthony was staring blankly straight before him, unable,
to all appearances, to see anything of what was happening.
“Kilrain,” went on Lawlor,
“trot out some cigars. You know where they’re
kept.”
Kilrain falling to the temptation,
asked: “Where’s the key to the cabinet?”
For Drew kept his tobacco in a small
cabinet, locked because of long experience with tobacco-loving
employees. Lawlor started to speak, checked himself,
fumbled through his pockets, and then roared:
“Smash the door open. I misplaced the key.”
No semblance of a smile altered the
faces of the cowpunchers around the table, but glances
of vague meaning were interchanged. Kilrain reappeared
almost at once, bearing a large box of cigars under
each arm.
“The eats bein’ over,”
announced Lawlor, “we can now light up.
Open them boxes, Shorty. Am I goin’ to
work on you the rest of my life teachin’ you
how to serve cigars?”
Kilrain sighed deeply, but obeyed,
presenting the open boxes in turn to Bard, who thanked
him, and to Lawlor, who bit off the end of his smoke
continued: “A match, Kilrain.”
And he waited, swelling with pleasure,
his eyes fixed upon space. Kilrain lighted a
match and held it for the two in turn. Two rows
of waiting, expectant eyes were turned from the whole
length, of the table, toward the cigars.
“Shall I pass on the cigars?” suggested
Bard.
“These smokes?”
breathed Lawlor. “Waste ’em on common
hands? Partner, you ain’t serious, are
you?”
A breath like the faint sighing of
wind reached them; the cowpunchers were resigned,
and started now to roll their Durham. But it seemed
as if a chuckle came from above; it was only some
sound in the gasoline lamp, a big fixture which hung
suspended by a slender chain from the centre of the
ceiling and immediately above the table.
“Civilizin’ cowpunchers,”
went on Lawlor, tilting back in his chair and bracing
his feet against the edge of the table, “civilizin’
cowpunchers is worse’n breakin’ mustangs.
They’s some that say it can’t be done.
But look at this crew. Do they look like rough
uns?”
A stir had passed among the cowpunchers
and solemn stares of hate transfixed Lawlor, but he
went on: “I’m askin’ you, do
these look rough?”
“I should say,” answered
Bard courteously, “that you have a pretty experienced
lot of cattle-men.”
“Experienced? Well, they’ll
pass. They’ve had experience with bar whisky
and talkin’ to their cards at poker, but aside
from bein’ pretty much drunks and crookin’
the cards, they ain’t anything uncommon.
But when I got ’em they was wild, they was.
Why, if I’d talked like this in front of ’em
they’d of been guns pulled. But look at
’em now. I ask you: Look at ’em
now! Ain’t they tame? They hear me
call ’em what they are, but they don’t
even bat an eye. Yes, sir, I’ve tamed ’em.
They took a lot of lickin’, but now they’re
tamed. Hello!”
For through the door stalked a newcomer.
He paused and cast a curious eye up the table to Lawlor.
“What the hell!” he remarked
naively. “Where’s the chief?”
“Fired!” bellowed Lawlor without a moment
of hesitation.
“Who fired him?” asked
the new man, with an expectant smile, like one who
waits for the point of a joke, but he caught a series
of strange signals from men at the table and many
a broad wink.
“I fired him, Gregory,” answered Lawlor.
“I fired Nash!”
He turned to Bard.
“You see,” he said rather
weakly, “the boys is used to callin’ Nash
’the chief.’”
“Ah, yes,” said Bard, “I understand.”
And Lawlor felt that he did understand, and too well.
Gregory, in the meantime, silenced
by the mysterious signs from his fellow cowpunchers,
took his place and began eating without another word.
No one spoke to him, but as if he caught the tenseness
of the situation, his eyes finally turned and glanced
up the table to Bard.
It was easy for Anthony to understand
that glance. It is the sort of look which the
curious turn on the man accused of a great crime and
sitting in the court room guilty. His trial in
silence had continued until he was found guilty.
Apparently, he was now to be both judged and executed
at the same time.
There could not be long delay.
The entrance of Gregory had almost been the precipitant
of action, and though it had been smoothed over to
an extent, still the air was each moment more charged
with suspense. The men were lighting their second
cigarette. With each second it grew clearer that
they were waiting for something. And as if thoughtful
of the work before them, they no longer talked so
fluently.
Finally there was no talk at all,
save for sporadic outbursts, and the blue smoke and
the brown curled up slowly in undisturbed drifts toward
the ceiling until a bright halo formed around the gasoline
lamp. A childish thought came to Bard that where
the smoke was so thick the fire could not be long
delayed.
A second form appeared in the doorway,
lithe, graceful, and the light made her hair almost
golden.
“Ev’nin’, fellers,”
called Sally jauntily. “Hello, Lawlor; what
you doin’ at the head of the table?”