By the terms of Joe’s contract
with Wismer & Holden, these astute millmen had agreed
to pay cash for the logs on delivery. Joe held
them to this, refusing acceptances at thirty and sixty
days. He was thus at once in a position to reduce
his liabilities and sustain his credit, which had
been seriously strained, with his own bank.
His mill was running at capacity.
All day the air was vibrant with the hum of it, the
thunder of the log carriages, the deep raucous drone
of the big saws, the higher pitched voices of the
smaller. All day a stream of shaggy, brown logs,
prodded by pike poles, was swept upward in dripping
procession on an endless chain, tossed on iron beds,
flung against the saws, rolled on carriers as rough
boards to other saws to edgers, trimmers
and planers and disgorged from the farther
end of the mill in a dozen grades of product to be
carried to the piling yards and drying sheds.
Day and night the smoke from burning sawdust in the
huge, stack-like consumer poured upward to the sky.
Thus the producing end of his business
was satisfactory. Not less so were the sales.
In addition to a particularly brisk local demand,
Wright’s activities had resulted in some excellent
contracts not only for immediate, but for future delivery.
There would be no lack of a market for every foot
the mill could turn out. Also there was no car
shortage. The tacit agreement which Locke had
been able to obtain as part of the price of withdrawing
his action was being held to rigidly. The firm
could sell all its mills could cut and deliver all
it could sell. Naturally Wright and Joe were
pleased and congratulated each other upon the rosy
outlook.
“It looks as if we were over
the hump,” said Joe one afternoon. “Those
are good contracts you landed. I want to show
you that I appreciate all you have done. Left
to myself I’d have been as helpless as a baby
in this business.”
“Oh, I don’t know,”
said Wright. “You pick up things pretty
fast. I’ve been paid for whatever I’ve
done. But apart from that I’ve been with
this concern a good many years and your father always
treated me well. Funny if I wouldn’t do
all I could for you. You’ve come pretty
near making good so far. You made the big cut
that your father planned to make and you brought the
logs down. That’s all he could have done,
and I tell you not even Crooks knows the logging business
better than he did. So far as showing your appreciation
goes it isn’t necessary or, anyway,
that can wait till you are in better shape. I’m
not shouting for money the minute I see your head
above water.”
“I know you’re not, but
at the end of the year we’ll fix things up on
a better basis,” said Joe.
While Joe was occupied with his business,
Jack was busy, too. Mysterious packages were
constantly arriving at Bill Crooks’s home.
As the wedding day drew near the patter of these became
a downpour. Jack’s friends gave luncheons
in her honour, and she was “showered” with
articles of alleged usefulness or ornament.
She and Joe, sitting chatting one
night in her den, heard the heavy, decided tread of
the old lumber baron in the darkened hall. Suddenly
there was a stumble, a wrathful bellow, and Bill Crooks’s
voice raised in insistent demand for the name of the
thus-and-so-forth wretch who left boxes in the hall,
mingled with a prophecy as to his ultimate fate.
“What kind of ‘fire’
and ‘nation’ were you speaking of, dad?”
asked Jack as he appeared in the door.
“Never mind,” growled
Crooks, who was under the impression that his remarks
had been sotto voce. “This house
is being cluttered up with a bunch of junk. I’ve
peeled a six-inch strip of hide clean off my shin.
Who left that box out there?”
“I think you did.”
“Hey?”
“I think you did. You took it from the
expressman.”
“Huh?” snorted Crooks.
“If I did I didn’t leave it in the middle
of the hall. I put it out of the way behind the
hatrack. Somebody moved it out. That’s
only one thing. There’s a hundred others.
You’ve got enough truck to start a china shop
or a jewellery store or a whitewear sale!”
“I don’t get married every
summer,” his daughter returned placidly.
“We have to have things. And then our friends
are good to us. I know one darling old grouch
who gave me a big cheque. Remember what he told
me to do with it?”
“I didn’t need to tell
you. You can get away with a cheque without instructions.
Never knew a woman who couldn’t.”
“You told me to ‘blow
it’ on myself not to put a dollar
of it into house furnishings.”
“Suppose I did! You don’t
need house furnishings. There’s two houses
ready furnished for you this one and Kent’s.
How many blamed houses do you want to live in, anyway?”
“Oh, Heavens, Joe, give him
a cigar!” exclaimed Jack at the end of her patience.
“He’s going to be an awful crank of a father-in-law.”
Crooks took Joe’s cigar and
dropped into a chair, while Jack departed in search
of refreshment; men being, as she declared, invariably
hungry when they were not thirsty.
“I’ve been thinking, Joe,”
said the old lumberman, “quite a bit about my
business lately.”
“Why, what’s the matter
with it?” asked Joe in surprise, for Crooks’s
business, like his own, had been very good indeed.
“Nothing’s the matter
with it,” Crooks replied. “It’s
good it’s too good. I’ve
run it for a long time, and now it’s beginning
to run me.”
“I don’t quite understand.”
“It’s this way,”
Crooks explained: “I’m getting on,
and outside of Jack I’ve nobody. Now you’re
going to marry her. It had to be somebody, I
suppose, and I’m glad it’s you. Still,
there’s the business. It’s mine,
I made it and I like it but it’s beginning
to drive me too much. I can’t go away for
a month or a week without being afraid things will
be tied up in hard knots before I get back. If
I had a man as good as Wright it might be different,
but I haven’t. I have to be on the job
myself all the time, and I’m getting too old
for that. I want to take it easy a little and
get the most out of the years that are left me.”
“I see,” said Joe as Crooks paused.
“You’ll know better how
it is yourself thirty years from now,” Crooks
continued. “I’ve nobody but Jack.
If the boys had lived they’d have been able
to run the business and let me sit back and just give
them a hand now and then. But they died.”
He was silent for a long moment. “I’ll
tell you something, Joe, you were the one thing I envied
your father. I saw you growing up, a good, clean,
healthy young fellow, with no bad habits to speak
of oh, I don’t mean that you were
any saint; I suppose you kicked up once in a while,
same as any healthy young colt, but there was nothing
vicious about you and it seemed hard luck
that out of my three boys one wasn’t left me.
Well, never mind that. Now all I’ve got
will be Jack’s when I get my time. And so
I was thinking of making you a little proposition.”
“Yes,” said Joe wondering
what this was leading up to. “What is it,
Mr. Crooks?”
“I was wondering,” Crooks
pursued, “whether you’d care to combine
our businesses?”
Joe was thoughtful for a moment.
His eyes narrowed a little, and his brows drew down
in a slight frown. He looked at Crooks steadily.
The old lumberman returned his gaze.
“Is there anything behind this, sir?”
Joe asked.
“Behind it how?
You don’t think I’m putting up a job to
freeze you out, do you?”
“No, not that. But are
you making this proposition for Jack’s sake?
I mean, do you think I’d make a mess of my business
if I ran it alone? Because if that’s really
the reason I’d like to show you.”
“If I thought you couldn’t
run your own business I wouldn’t want your help
to run mine,” Crooks replied. “Mind
you, I consider myself able to give you a few pointers.
You’ve a lot to learn, but you’re one of
the young fellows who will learn. Some can’t;
others won’t. I’d hate to see Jack
marry a man I didn’t think would make good.
I’d tell him so mighty quick. No, I gave
you my real reason.”
“It’s a good proposition
for me, Mr. Crooks,” said Joe. “I’m
for it, if we can arrange details. Were you thinking
of forming a company?”
“No, I wasn’t,”
said Crooks. “I don’t like companies too
much shenanigan about stock and directors and meetings.
A company can’t do a blamed thing without seeing
a lawyer first. I own one business which will
be Jack’s and yours some day, and you own another.
We just make a little ’gréement to run
’em together and divide the profits; and we
arrange who’s to do what work and
there you are. Any time things don’t run
to suit us we split the blanket. If we tell Locke
what we want he’ll put it in shape in half an
hour.”
“I’ll do it,” Joe
agreed; “but I feel that I’m getting the
best of the bargain in your experience.”
“My experience is all right,”
said Crooks, “but I can’t hustle like I
used to or else I won’t. You
will, and I’ll be able to tell you how.
That makes it an even break. And then you’ve
got Wright. I’ve wanted him or some one
like him for years.”
“I feel that I owe Wright a
good deal,” said Joe. “He has really
run the business end of the concern. I was thinking
of giving him a share in it. Seems to me something
like that is coming to him.”
“I’m glad to hear you
say so. We’ll take him in with us and give
him an interest.”
“I want it to come out of my share.”
“No. He’s going to
work for me as much as for you. Wright is a part
of your equipment and a big asset. Whatever interest
he gets must come out of the whole business and not
out of one end of it.”
They took their proposition in the
rough to Locke, and that experienced adjuster of other
men’s perplexities proceeded to hammer it into
working shape, finally producing an agreement, clear,
concise and satisfactory. Thus the lumber firm
of Crooks & Kent was born.
A couple of days before the wedding,
certain quarters of the town and also those
charged with the duty of enforcing a fair imitation
of law and order therein began to notice
a sudden influx of strangers. They were for the
most part big and very brown, and they walked with
a truculent swagger and regarded the world through
humorously insolent eyes. Also they held together
clannishly, and for the most part to the
relief of the authorities maintained themselves
in a condition of near sobriety.
“For if ye get too full,”
big Cooley explained to the bibulously inclined Chartrand,
“ye miss the weddin’. An’ it’s
not the likes of you is axed to one every day.”
“I’ll be mos’ awful
dry, me!” Chartrand complained. He hailed
little Narcisse Laviolette. “Hola, Narcisse,
mon vieux! Come on, tak leetle drink wit me. Come on, you beeg
Cooley. We dont get dronk pas du tout.
We jus’ feex ourself so we lak for sing leetle
chanson.”
He hammered the bar with the heavy-bottomed
little glass constructed in the interests of the house
to hold one man’s size drink and no more, and
burst into alleged melody:
“Dat square-face-gin,
she’ll be ver’ fine,
Some feller lak dat champagne wine
But de bes’
dam’ drink w’hat I never saw
Come out of a
bottle of whiskey blanc.
(O listen to me now, while
I’ll tol’ you how!)
Dere was Joe Leduc an’
me, Larry Frost an’ Savigny,
Chevrier an’
Prevost, Jimmy Judge an’ Larribee,
Lamontagne an’ Lajeunesse mebbe
fifty mans, I guess;
You would know de whole kaboodle
if I ain’t forget de res’.
We was drive upon dat reever
an’ we ron heem down les Chats,
An’ den we hit dat Quyon
where we buy dat whiskey blanc!”
“Yell her out, mes amis! Bus’ dat
roof!”
“Hooraw! hooraw! pour
lé good ol’ whiskey blanc!
She’s gran’
for mak love on, she’s bully for fight,
She’ll
keep out dat col’, an’
“Shut up!” roared Cooley.
“Now you listen here you ain’t
goin’ to show up drunk at the boss’s weddin’,
puttin’ the whole crew on the hog. Savvy?
You’re three parts full now. I’ll
sober ye, me buck, if it’s wid me feet in yer
face!”
And the threat of Cooley, combined
with the eloquent profanity of a self-constituted
temperance committee, caused Chartrand to postpone
his celebration. It was Cooley also who constituted
himself an authority on social usage.
“Bein’ asked to this weddin’,”
said he, “the c’rect thing is to put up
a present.”
“Sure!”
“That’s right, Cooley.”
“You bet!”
“We’ll do it right while
we’re about it,” said the big man.
“Here’s ten dollars in me hat. Sweeten
as she goes ’round, boys. Let’s buy
the boss an’ his girl somethin’ good somethin’
they won’t be ashamed to keep in the front room
an’ tell their friends it come from the boys
of Kent’s big drive!”
An hour later the proprietor of Falls
City’s leading jewelry store was somewhat startled
by an invasion of half a dozen weather-beaten, rough-looking
customers quite different from his ordinary patrons;
and he nearly fainted when the spokesman told him
that they were in search of a wedding present on which
they were prepared to expend between three and four
hundred dollars.
In the end they chose a cabinet filled
with silver, eying respectfully the dainty knives,
forks, and spoons, and other articles of whose use
they had small conception.
“We want a name plate put on
her,” said Cooley, “showing a lad in river
clothes standin’ on a log wid a peavey in his
fist; an’ above that we want the date; an’
underneath it, ‘From Kent’s River Crew.’”
It is safe to say that never had the
church, to whose support old Bill Crooks contributed
more often than he attended it, held as motley a gathering
as on the morning of the wedding of his daughter and
Joe Kent. Big, brown men, painfully shaven, in
aggressively new garments which cramped their strong
muscles and rendered them awkward and ill at ease,
occupied seats beside the members of Falls City’s
leading families, who eyed the intruders askance.
And here and there, also ill at ease, were old men
and women, dependents of William Crooks and friends
of his daughter, whom they loved.
Joe and his best man entered from
the vestry; but there was a slight delay. They
stood before the chancel waiting for the bride and
her father.
“The boss is nervous,”
Cooley commented to Haggarty in a low whisper.
“Look at him shift on his feet. An’
see the ears of him. Red!”
“Small blame to him,”
Haggarty responded sympathetically. “I’ll
bet he’d rather be swappin’ punches wid
a man twice his own weight.”
But Jack entered on her father’s
arm a dainty, queenly Jack, clad in bride-white,
her eyes demurely downcast but the small head with
the crown of glossy brown hair carried as proudly
as ever.
“An’ I used to give her
lumps out of the sugar bar’l!” said Jimmy
Bowes, the fat old bull-cook, in sentimental reminiscence.
“Purty as a little red wagon,”
said Haggarty with approval.
“Mo’ Gee! I leave
home for dat myself!” commented little Narcisse
Laviolette, who possessed a wife of double his own
fighting weight and offspring of about the same combined
avoirdupois. And Cooley, who overheard this tribute
from the little teamster, took offence thereat.
“Shut up, ye blasted little
pea-soup!” he growled. “She’s
the boss’s wife or as good as.
You remember that, and don’t try to be funny!”
“Who’s try for be fonnee?”
demanded Laviolette with indignation at this unjust
interpretation of his well-meant speech. “You
give me de swif’ pain, you. Sacre dam!
Some tam, bagosh, I ponch your beeg Irish mug!”
“Sh!” rumbled Haggarty.
“Can’t ye quit yer dam’ swearin’
in a church? Shut up, the both of ye!”
The ceremony, which was rapidly changing
Jack Crooks into Mrs. Joe Kent, proceeded, finished.
Kisses were showered on her, handshakes and slaps
on the back on Joe. In the midst of these the
latter caught sight of a group of weather-tanned faces
in the centre of the church. Their owners were
standing uncertainly, diffident, not caring to mingle
with the more fashionably clad throng that clustered
about the principals. Joe turned to his bride.
“There’s Cooley and Haggarty
and a bunch of the boys of my river crew, Jack,”
he said. “They want to wish us luck, and
they’re too bashful to mix. Come on down
and shake hands.”
“Of course,” said Jack.
With his bride on his arm Joe went
down the aisle to the men of his drive, to have his
right hand almost permanently disabled in the grips
he received; but the pressure of the big hands that
closed bashfully around Jack’s slim fingers
would not have crushed a butterfly. “Wishin’
ye good luck an’ happiness, ma’am,”
was the formula, but little varied.
Into the midst of them came old Bill
Crooks. “Come on, boys!” he exclaimed.
“There’s a wedding spread up at my house,
and I want every man of you there to drink good luck
to the bride and to the new firm of Crooks
& Kent. No holding back, now. Come along,
everybody!”
They came along, though most of them
would have preferred to go down a bad piece of water
on a single stick of pine, and their coming taxed the
space of Crooks’s dining-room to say
nothing of the commissariat and canteen to
the limit. They ate and drank solemnly, on their
best behaviour and conscious of it, sipping the unaccustomed
wines with reserved judgment.
“What’ll be a dose of
this?” whispered Regan, eying his champagne glass
with suspicion. “The waitin’ gyurls
fill it up whenever I empty it. This makes five
I’ve had and I can’t feel it yet.
Belike it acts suddint. I wouldn’t want
to get full here.”
“Nor me,” Cooley agreed.
“They’re all drinkin’ it, an’
none the worse. If they can stand it we can.”
He gulped down half a glass and thrust his tongue
back and forth experimentally. “Champagne,
hey? It has a puckery taste till it, but no rasp.
It might be hard cider wid more fizz. There’s
no harm in it. I cud drink enough of it to float
a log. Here’s some lad speakin’.
Listen to what he says.”
They heard the health of the bride
proposed in customary language; Joe’s reply,
embarrassed, jerky, brief.
“Speaking isn’t Kent’s
strong point,” a guest commented. Cooley
glowered at him, resentful of the just criticism.
“He can talk when he has anything
to say, and he can curse fine!” he affirmed.
He led vociferous cheers as Joe sat down, and cheered
almost equally hard when Crooks concluded five minutes
of pointed remarks in which he announced the formation
of the new firm.
But these cheers were as nothing to
the leather-lunged roars that bade Jack and Joe farewell
as they stepped into the carriage. With the cheers
came showers of rice. Joe turned up his coat collar;
but Jack laughed back through the fusillade of it,
blowing kisses to her father, her girl friends, and
the rivermen, impartially. And the memory of them
stayed with the rough shantymen for years.
The train which bore Joe and his bride
on their wedding journey clanked slowly through the
yards following the line of the river. As it looped
around a curve they could see, looking backward from
the rear platform of the last coach which they had
to themselves, the mills of Bill Crooks and of Joe
Kent each flying a flag from the topmost point, the
silver of the flowing water checkered with the black
lines of the long booms and the herds of brown logs
inside them. In the mills not a wheel turned
that day. But steam was in the boilers, for as
they looked it poured white from the roofs of the
engine houses and the bellowing howls of two fire
sirens bade them a joyous farewell.
Jack slipped her hand in Joe’s.
“Are you glad?”
“Glad it’s over? You bet I am!”
“No glad we’re married?”
“That’s a nice question. And you
know the answer.”
“Of course I do,” she
admitted happily. “I suppose a wedding trip
is a fine thing. Anyway, it’s conventional.
But I’ll be glad to come back home.”
“Same here,” he agreed.
“There’s lot to be done a holy
lot. I have to get right down to work. I
want to take all the weight I can off your father’s
shoulders. That’s up to me. Then, when
you come to running two mills under one management,
there must be all sorts of economies possible, if
a fellow could only find out what they are. I
don’t want to let Wright do all the finding
out for me. Yes, I’ll be pretty busy.”
“Well, you like the work. That’s
the main thing.”
“That’s so,” he
admitted. “I like it better all the time.
I never knew what real fun was till I had to hustle
for myself. A year ago I was no better than a
big kid. I could feed myself and dress myself
if somebody handed me the price, and that just about
let me out. And at that I thought I was having
a good time. A good time? Huh! Why,
I didn’t know I was alive. Oh, well ...
we’ll cut out business on this trip not
talk of it or think of it at all. Shall we?”
“No o. I like
to talk about it. It makes me think I’m
helping. If I were a man
“I’m mighty glad you’re
not. Remember the time you wished you were a
boy?”
“That was before
“Before what?”
“You know very well. Before I knew you
thought anything of me.”
“You are absolutely the best
little girl in the world,” he said with conviction.
“I always loved you, Jack ever since
we were kids only I didn’t know it.”
She gave his arm a quick little understanding
hug, with a new womanly pride in the hard, swelling
muscles that met the pressure. They stood close
together, watching the last silvery reach of the river,
burnished, mirror-like, lustrous beneath the sloping
afternoon sun. They had been born beside it;
as children they had played on it, in it; and they
loved it as a part of their lives. It was a treasure
stream, bearing to them year after year the loot of
the northern forests the great, brown sticks
of pine. Changeless and yet ever changing it never
failed to charm. Ages old but ever young it held
its children in the spell of its eternal life.
And so as it vanished, shut out by a landscape that
seemed to rush backward as the train gathered speed,
their eyes and their thoughts clung to it; for by
the river and with the pine their lifework lay.