McGaw had watched the fire from his
upper window with mingled joy and fear joy
that Tom’s property was on fire, and fear that
it would be put out before she would be ruined.
He had been waiting all the evening for Crimmins,
who had failed to arrive. Billy had not been at
home since supper, so he could get no details as to
the amount of the damage from that source. In
this emergency he sent next morning for Quigg to make
a reconnaissance in the vicinity of the enemy’s
camp, ascertain how badly Tom had been crippled, and
learn whether her loss would prevent her signing the
contract the following night. Mr. Quigg accepted
the mission, the more willingly because he wanted
to settle certain affairs of his own. Jennie
had avoided him lately, why he could not
tell, and he determined, before communicating
to his employer the results of his inquiries about
Tom, to know exactly what his own chances were with
the girl. He could slip over to the house while
Tom was in the city, and leave before she returned.
On his way, the next day, he robbed
a garden fence of a mass of lilacs, breaking off the
leaves as he walked. When he reached the door
of the big stable he stopped for a moment, glanced
cautiously in to see if he could find any preparations
for the new work, and then, making a mental note of
the surroundings, followed the path to the porch.
Pop opened the door. He knew
Quigg only by sight an unpleasant sight,
he thought, as he looked into his hesitating, wavering
eyes.
“It’s a bad fire ye had,
Mr. Mullins,” said Quigg, seating himself in
the rocker, the blossoms half strangled in his grasp.
“Yis, purty bad, but small loss,
thank God,” said Pop quietly.
“That lets her out of the contract,
don’t it?” said Quigg. “She’ll
be short of horses now.”
Pop made no answer. He did not
intend to give Mr. Quigg any information that might
comfort him.
“Were ye insured?” asked
Quigg, in a cautious tone, his eyes on the lilacs.
“Oh, yis, ivery pinny on what
was burned, so Mary tells me.”
Quigg caught his breath; the rumor
in the village was the other way. Why didn’t
Crimmins make a clean sweep of it and burn ’em
all at once, he said to himself.
“I brought some flowers over
for Miss Jennie,” said Quigg, regaining his
composure. “Is she in?”
“Yis; I’ll call her.”
Gentle and apparently harmless as Gran’pop was,
men like Quigg somehow never looked him steadily in
the eye.
“I was tellin’ Mr. Mullins
I brought ye over some flowers,” said Quigg,
turning to Jennie as she entered, and handing her the
bunch without leaving his seat, as if it had been
a pair of shoes.
“You’re very kind, Mr.
Quigg,” said the girl, laying them on the table,
and still standing.
“I hear’d your brother
Patsy was near smothered till Dutchy got him out.
Was ye there?”
Jennie bit her lip and her heart quickened.
Carl’s sobriquet in the village, coming from
such lips, sent the hot blood to her cheeks.
“Yes, Mr. Nilsson saved his
life,” she answered slowly, with girlish dignity,
a backward rush filling her heart as she remembered
Carl staggering out of the burning stable, Patsy held
close to his breast.
“The fellers in Rockville say
ye think it was set afire. I see Justice Rowan
turned Billy McGaw loose. Do ye suspect anybody
else? Some says a tramp crawled in and upset
his pipe.”
This lie was coined on the spot and
issued immediately to see if it would pass.
“Mother says she knows who did
it, and it’ll all come out in time. Cully
found the can this morning,” said Jennie, leaning
against the table.
Quigg’s jaw fell and his brow
knit as Jennie spoke. That was just like the
fool, he said to himself. Why didn’t he
get the stuff in a bottle and then break it?
But the subject was too dangerous
to linger over, so he began talking of the dance down
at the Town Hall, and the meeting last Sunday after
church. He asked her if she would go with him
to the “sociable” they were going to have
at N Truck-house; and when she said she couldn’t, that
her mother didn’t want her to go out, etc., Quigg
moved his chair closer, with the remark that the old
woman was always putting her oar in and spoiling things;
the way she was going on with the Union would ruin
her; she’d better join in with the boys, and
be friendly; they’d “down her yet if she
didn’t.”
“I hope nothing will happen
to mother, Mr. Quigg,” said Jennie, in an anxious
tone, as she sank into a chair.
Quigg misunderstood the movement,
and moved his own closer.
“There won’t nothin’
happen any more, Jennie, if you’ll do as I say.”
It was the first time he had ever
called her by her name. She could not understand
how he dared. She wished Carl would come in.
“Will you do it?” asked
Quigg eagerly, his cunning face and mean eyes turned
toward her.
Jennie never raised her head.
Her cheeks were burning. Quigg went on,
“I’ve been keepin’
company with ye, Jennie, all winter, and the fellers
is guyin’ me about it. You know I’m
solid with the Union and can help yer mother, and
if ye’ll let me speak to Father McCluskey next
Sunday”
The girl sprang from her chair.
“I won’t have you talk
that way to me, Dennis Quigg! I never said a word
to you, and you know it.” Her mother’s
spirit was now flashing in her eyes. “You
ought to be ashamed of yourself to come here and”
Then she broke down.
Another woman would have managed it
differently, perhaps, by a laugh, a smile
of contempt, or a frigid refusal. This mere child,
stung to the quick by Quigg’s insult, had only
her tears in defense. The Walking Delegate turned
his head and looked out of the window. Then he
caught up his hat and without a word to the sobbing
girl hastily left the room.
Tom was just entering the lower gate.
Quigg saw her and tried to dodge behind the tool-house,
but it was too late, so he faced her. Tom’s
keen eye caught the sly movement and the quickly altered
expression. Some new trickery was in the air,
she knew; she detected it in every line of Quigg’s
face. What was McGaw up to now? she asked herself.
Was he after Carl and the men, or getting ready to
burn the other stable?
“Good-morning, Mr. Quigg.
Ain’t ye lost?” she asked coldly.
“Oh no,” said Quigg, with
a forced laugh. “I come over to see if I
could help about the fire.”
It was the first thing that came into
his head; he had hoped to pass with only a nod of
greeting.
“Did ye?” replied Tom
thoughtfully. She saw he had lied, but she led
him on. “What kind of help did ye think
of givin’? The insurance company will pay
the money, the two horses is buried, an’ we begin
diggin’ post-holes for a new stable in the mornin’.
Perhaps ye were thinkin’ of lendin’ a
hand yerself. If ye did, I can put ye alongside
of Carl; one shovel might do for both of ye.”
Quigg colored and laughed uneasily.
Somebody had told her, then, how Carl had threatened
him with uplifted shovel when he tried to coax the
Swede away.
“No, I’m not diggin’
these days; but I’ve got a pull wid the insurance
adjuster, and might git an extra allowance for yer.”
This was cut from whole cloth. He had never known
an adjuster in his life.
“What’s that?” asked
Tom, still looking square at him, Quigg squirming
under her glance like a worm on a pin.
“Well, the company can’t
tell how much feed was in the bins, and tools, and
sech like,” he said, with another laugh.
A laugh is always a safe parry when
a pair of clear gray search-light eyes are cutting
into one like a rapier.
“An’ yer idea is for me
to git paid for stuff that wasn’t burned up,
is it?”
“Well, that’s as how the
adjuster says. Sometimes he sees it an’
sometimes he don’t that’s where
the pull comes in.”
Tom put her arms akimbo, her favorite
attitude when her anger began to rise.
“Oh I see! The pull is
in bribin’ the adjuster, as ye call him, so he
can cheat the company.”
Quigg shrugged his shoulders; that
part of the transaction was a mere trifle. What
were companies made for but to be cheated?
Tom stood for a minute looking him all over.
“Dennis Quigg,” she said
slowly, weighing each word, her eyes riveted on his
face, “ye’re a very sharp young man; ye’re
so very sharp that I wonder ye’ve gone so long
without cuttin’ yerself, But one thing I tell
ye, an’ that is, if ye keep on the way ye’re
a-goin’ ye’ll land where you belong, and
that’s up the river in a potato-bug suit of clothes.
Turn yer head this way, Quigg. Did ye niver in
yer whole life think there was somethin’ worth
the havin’ in bein’ honest an’ clean
an’ square, an’ holdin’ yer head
up like a man, instead of skulkin’ round like
a thief? What ye’re up to this mornin’
I don’t know yet, but I want to tell ye it ‘s
the wrong time o’ day for ye to make calls, and
the night’s not much better, unless ye’re
particularly invited.”
Quigg smothered a curse and turned
on his heel toward the village. When he reached
O’Leary’s, Dempsey of the Executive Committee
met him at the door. He and McGaw had spent the
whole morning in devising plans to keep Tom out of
the board-room.
Quigg’s report was not reassuring.
She would be paid her insurance money, he said, and
would certainly be at the meeting that night.
The three adjourned to the room over
the bar. McGaw began pacing the floor, his long
arms hooked behind his back. He had passed a sleepless
night, and every hour now added to his anxiety.
His face was a dull gray yellow, and his eyes were
sunken. Now and then he would tug at his collar
nervously. As he walked he clutched his fingers,
burying the nails in the palms, the red hair on his
wrists bristling like spiders’ legs. Dempsey
sat at the table watching him calmly out of the corner
of his eye.
After a pause Quigg leaned over, his
lips close to Dempsey’s ear. Then he drew
a plan on the back of an old wine-list. It marked
the position of the door in Tom’s stable, and
that of a path which ran across lots and was concealed
from her house by a low fence. Dempsey studied
it a moment, nodding at Quigg’s whispered explanations,
and passed it to McGaw, repeating Quigg’s words.
McGaw stopped and bent his head. A dull gleam
flashed out of his smouldering eyes. The lines
of his face hardened and his jaw tightened. For
some minutes he stood irresolute, gazing vacantly
over the budding trees through the window. Then
he turned sharply, swallowed a brimming glass of raw
whiskey, and left the room.
When the sound of his footsteps had
died away, Dempsey looked at Quigg meaningly and gave
a low laugh.