Considering John’s relations
with David Harum, it was natural that he should wish
to think as well of him as possible, and he had not
(or thought he had not) allowed his mind to be influenced
by the disparaging remarks and insinuations which
had been made to him, or in his presence, concerning
his employer. He had made up his mind to form
his opinion upon his own experience with the man,
and so far it had not only been pleasant but favorable,
and far from justifying the half-jeering, half-malicious
talk that had come to his ears. It had been made
manifest to him, it was true, that David was capable
of a sharp bargain in certain lines, but it seemed
to him that it was more for the pleasure of matching
his wits against another’s than for any gain
involved. Mr. Harum was an experienced and expert
horseman, who delighted above all things in dealing
in and trading horses, and John soon discovered that,
in that community at least, to get the best of a “hoss-trade”
by almost any means was considered a venial sin, if
a sin at all, and the standards of ordinary business
probity were not expected to govern those transactions.
David had said to him once when he
suspected that John’s ideas might have sustained
something of a shock, “A hoss-trade ain’t
like anythin’ else. A feller may be straighter
‘n a string in ev’rythin’ else, an’
never tell the truth that is, the hull truth about
a hoss. I trade hosses with hoss-traders.
They all think they know as much as I do, an’
I dunno but what they do. They hain’t learnt
no diff’rent anyway, an’ they’ve
had chances enough. If a feller come to me that
didn’t think he knowed anythin’ about
a hoss, an’ wanted to buy on the square, he’d
git, fur’s I knew, square treatment. At
any rate I’d tell him all ’t I knew.
But when one o’ them smart Alecks comes along
an’ cal’lates to do up old Dave, why he’s
got to take his chances, that’s all. An’
mind ye,” asserted David, shaking his forefinger
impressively, “it ain’t only them fellers.
I’ve ben wuss stuck two three time by church
members in good standin’ than anybody I ever
dealed with. Take old Deakin Perkins. He’s
a terrible feller fer church bus’nes; c’n
pray an’ psalm-sing to beat the Jews, an’
in spiritual matters c’n read his title clear
the hull time, but when it comes to hoss-tradin’
you got to git up very early in the mornin’
or he’ll skin the eye-teeth out of ye. Yes,
sir! Scat my! I believe
the old critter makes hosses! But the deakin,”
added David, “he, he, he, he! the deakin hain’t
hardly spoke to me fer some consid’able
time, the deakin hain’t. He, he, he!
“Another thing,” he went
on, “the’ ain’t no gamble like a
hoss. You may think you know him through an’
through, an’ fust thing you know he’ll
be cuttin’ up a lot o’ didos right out
o’ nothin’. It stands to reason that
sometimes you let a hoss go all on the square as
you know him an’ the feller that
gits him don’t know how to hitch him or treat
him, an’ he acts like a diff’rent hoss,
an’ the feller allows you swindled him.
You see, hosses gits used to places an’ ways
to a certain extent, an’ when they’re
changed, why they’re apt to act diff’rent.
Hosses don’t know but dreadful little, really.
Talk about hoss sense wa’al, the’
ain’t no such thing.”
Thus spoke David on the subject of
his favorite pursuit and pastime, and John thought
then that he could understand and condone some things
he had seen and heard, at which at first he was inclined
to look askance. But this matter of the Widow
Cullom’s was a different thing, and as he realized
that he was expected to play a part, though a small
one, in it, his heart sank within him that he had so
far cast his fortunes upon the good will of a man
who could plan and carry out so heartless and cruel
an undertaking as that which had been revealed to
him that afternoon. He spent the evening in his
room trying to read, but the widow’s affairs
persistently thrust themselves upon his thoughts.
All the unpleasant stories he had heard of David came
to his mind, and he remembered with misgiving some
things which at the time had seemed regular and right
enough, but which took on a different color in the
light in which he found himself recalling them.
He debated with himself whether he should not decline
to send Mrs. Cullom the notice as he had been instructed,
and left it an open question when he went to bed.
He wakened somewhat earlier than usual
to find that the thermometer had gone up, and the
barometer down. The air was full of a steady downpour,
half snow, half rain, about the most disheartening
combination which the worst climate in the world that
of central New York can furnish. He
passed rather a busy day in the office in an atmosphere
redolent of the unsavory odors raised by the proximity
of wet boots and garments to the big cylinder stove
outside the counter, a compound of stale smells from
kitchen and stable.
After the bank closed he dispatched
Peleg Hopkins, the office boy, with the note for Mrs.
Cullom. He had abandoned his half-formed intention
to revolt, but had made the note not only as little
peremptory as was compatible with a clear intimation
of its purport as he understood it, but had yielded
to a natural impulse in beginning it with an expression
of personal regret a blunder which cost
him no little chagrin in the outcome.
Peleg Hopkins grumbled audibly when
he was requested to build the fires on Christmas day,
and expressed his opinion that “if there warn’t
Bible agin workin’ on Chris’mus, the’
’d ort ter be”; but when John opened the
door of the bank that morning he found the temperature
in comfortable contrast to the outside air. The
weather had changed again, and a blinding snowstorm,
accompanied by a buffeting gale from the northwest,
made it almost impossible to see a path and to keep
it. In the central part of the town some tentative
efforts had been made to open walks, but these were
apparent only as slight and tortuous depressions in
the depths of snow. In the outskirts the unfortunate
pedestrian had to wade to the knees.
As John went behind the counter his
eye was at once caught by a small parcel lying on
his desk, of white note paper, tied with a cotton
string, which he found to be addressed, “Mr.
John Lenox, Esq., Present,” and as he took it
up it seemed heavy for its size.
Opening it, he found a tiny stocking,
knit of white wool, to which was pinned a piece of
paper with the legend, “A Merry Christmas from
Aunt Polly.” Out of the stocking fell a
packet fastened with a rubber strap. Inside were
five ten-dollar gold pieces and a slip of paper on
which was written, “A Merry Christmas from Your
Friend David Harum.” For a moment John’s
face burned, and there was a curious smarting of the
eyelids as he held the little stocking and its contents
in his hand. Surely the hand that had written
“Your Friend” on that scrap of paper could
not be the hand of an oppressor of widows and orphans.
“This,” said John to himself, “is
what he meant when he ’supposed it wouldn’t
take me long to find out what was in my stocking.’”
The door opened and a blast and whirl
of wind and snow rushed in, ushering the tall, bent
form of the Widow Cullom. The drive of the wind
was so strong that John vaulted over the low cash counter
to push the door shut again. The poor woman was
white with snow from the front of her old worsted
hood to the bottom of her ragged skirt.
“You are Mrs. Cullom?”
said John. “Wait a moment till I brush off
the snow, and then come to the fire in the back room.
Mr. Harum will be in directly, I expect.”
“Be I much late?” she
asked. “I made ’s much haste ’s
I could. It don’t appear to me ’s
if I ever see a blusteriner day, ’n I ain’t
as strong as I used to be. Seemed as if I never
would git here.”
“Oh, no,” said John, as
he established her before the glowing grate of the
Franklin stove in the back parlor, “not at all.
Mr. Harum has not come in himself yet. Shall
you mind if I excuse myself a moment while you make
yourself as comfortable as possible?” She did
not apparently hear him. She was trembling from
head to foot with cold and fatigue and nervous excitement.
Her dress was soaked to the knees, and as she sat
down and put up her feet to the fire John saw a bit
of a thin cotton stocking and her deplorable shoes,
almost in a state of pulp. A snow-obliterated
path led from the back door of the office to David’s
house, and John snatched his hat and started for it
on a run. As he stamped off some of the snow
on the veranda the door was opened for him by Mrs.
Bixbee. “Lord sakes!” she exclaimed.
“What on earth be you cavortin’ ‘round
for such a mornin’ ‘s this without no overcoat,
an’ on a dead run? What’s the matter?”
“Nothing serious,” he
answered, “but I’m in a great hurry.
Old Mrs. Cullom has walked up from her house to the
office, and she is wet through and almost perished.
I thought you’d send her some dry shoes and
stockings, and an old shawl or blanket to keep her
wet skirt off her knees, and a drop of whisky or something.
She’s all of a tremble, and I’m afraid
she will have a chill.”
“Certain! certain!” said
the kind creature, and she bustled out of the room,
returning in a minute or two with an armful of comforts.
“There’s a pair of bedroom slips lined
with lamb’s wool, an’ a pair of woolen
stockin’s, an’ a blanket shawl. This
here petticut, ’t ain’t what ye’d
call bran’ new, but it’s warm and comf’table,
an’ I don’t believe she’s got much
of anythin’ on ‘ceptin’ her dress,
an’ I’ll git ye the whisky, but” here
she looked deprecatingly at John “it
ain’t gen’ally known ’t we keep
the stuff in the house. I don’t know as
it’s right, but though David don’t hardly
ever touch it he will have it in the house.”
“Oh,” said John, laughing,
“you may trust my discretion, and we’ll
swear Mrs. Cullom to secrecy.”
“Wa’al, all right,”
said Mrs. Bixbee, joining in the laugh as she brought
the bottle; “jest a minute till I make a passel
of the things to keep the snow out. There, now,
I guess you’re fixed, an’ you kin hurry
back ’fore she ketches a chill.”
“Thanks very much,” said
John as he started away. “I have something
to say to you besides ‘Merry Christmas,’
but I must wait till another time.”
When John got back to the office David
had just preceded him.
“Wa’al, wa’al,”
he was saying, “but you be in a putty consid’able
state. Hullo, John! what you got there? Wa’al,
you air the stuff! Slips, blanket-shawl, petticut,
stockin’s wa’al, you an’
Polly ben puttin’ your heads together,
I guess. What’s that? Whisky!
Wa’al, scat my! I didn’t
s’pose wild hosses would have drawed it out o’
Polly to let on the’ was any in the house, much
less to fetch it out. Jes’ the thing!
Oh, yes ye are, Mis’ Cullom jest a
mouthful with water,” taking the glass from
John, “jest a spoonful to git your blood a-goin’,
an’ then Mr. Lenox an’ me ’ll go
into the front room while you make yourself comf’table.”
“Consarn it all!” exclaimed
Mr. Harum as they stood leaning against the teller’s
counter, facing the street, “I didn’t cal’late
to have Mis’ Cullom hoof it up here the way
she done. When I see what kind of a day it was
I went out to the barn to have the cutter hitched an’
send for her, an’ I found ev’rythin’
topsy-turvy. That dum’d uneasy sorril colt
had got cast in the stall, an’ I ben fussin’
with him ever since. I clean forgot all ‘bout
Mis’ Cullom till jes’ now.”
“Is the colt much injured?” John asked.
“Wa’al, he won’t
trot a twenty gait in some time, I reckon,” replied
David. “He’s wrenched his shoulder
some, an’ mebbe strained his inside. Don’t
seem to take no int’rist in his feed, an’
that’s a bad sign. Consarn a hoss, anyhow!
If they’re wuth anythin’ they’re
more bother ’n a teethin’ baby. Alwus
some dum thing ailin’ ’em, an’
I took consid’able stock in that colt too,”
he added regretfully, “an’ I could ‘a’
got putty near what I was askin’ fer him
last week, an’ putty near what he was wuth,
an’ I’ve noticed that most gen’ally
alwus when I let a good offer go like that, some cussed
thing happens to the hoss. It ain’t a bad
idée, in the hoss bus’nis anyway, to be
willin’ to let the other feller make a dollar
once ’n a while.”
After that aphorism they waited in
silence for a few minutes, and then David called out
over his shoulder, “How be you gettin’
along, Mis’ Cullom?”
“I guess I’m fixed,”
she answered, and David walked slowly back into the
parlor, leaving John in the front office. He was
annoyed to realize that in the bustle over Mrs. Cullom
and what followed, he had forgotten to acknowledge
the Christmas gift; but, hoping that Mr. Harum had
been equally oblivious, promised himself to repair
the omission later on. He would have preferred
to go out and leave the two to settle their affair
without witness or hearer, but his employer, who, as
he had found, usually had a reason for his actions,
had explicitly requested him to remain, and he had
no choice. He perched himself upon one of the
office stools and composed himself to await the conclusion
of the affair.