“It it’s all
along o’ that there Mr. Micolo!” the woman
suddenly exclaimed, “Him an’ his rent-bill!
If he’d ha’ let me in, there, tonight,
I could ha’ got Ed’s things an’ then
started to my sister’s, out to Scottsville.
But he wouldn’t. He claimed they was two-seventy-five
still owin’, and I didn’t have but about
fifty cents, so I couldn’t pay it. So he
wouldn’t let me in. Natchally, anybody’d
feel bad, like that, ’specially when a man told
’em he’d hold their kid’s clothes
an’ things till they paid which they
couldn’t!”
“Naturally, of course,”
answered Gabriel, rather dazed by this sudden burst
of details, with which she seemed to think he should
already be quite familiar details all sordid
and commonplace, through which he seemed to perceive,
dimly as in a dark glass, some mean and ugly tragedy
of poverty and ignorance and sin.
“Are you hungry?” he asked,
all at once. “If so, come in here, where
we can talk quietly and get things straight.”
He pointed at a cheap restaurant, across the street.
“Hungry? Gord, yes!”
she exclaimed. Only I I wouldn’t
ask, if I fell on the sidewalk! Fifty cents yes,
I got that much, but I been tryin’ to get enough
to pay Mr. Micolo, an’ get hold of Ed’s
things, an’ ”
“All right, forget that, now,”
commanded Gabriel. He took her by the arm and
piloted her across the thoroughfare, then into the
dingy hash-house and to a table in a far corner.
A few minutes later, pretty much everything on the
bill of fare was before them on the greasy table.
“Not a word till you’re
satisfied,” directed Armstrong. “I’ll
just take a little bread and coffee, to keep you company.”
The woman adequately proved her statement
that she was hungry. Rarely had Gabriel seen
anybody eat with such ravenous appetite. He watched
her with satisfaction, and when she could consume
no more, smiled as he asked:
“Now, then, feel better?
If so, let’s tackle the next problem. What’s
your grief?”
The woman stared at him a long moment
before she made reply. Then she exclaimed suddenly:
“You ain’t no kind of
‘bull,’ are you? Nor plain-clothes
man?”
Gabriel shook his head.
“No,” said he, “nothing
of that kind. You can trust me. Let’s
have the story.”
“Hm! It ain’t
much, I s’pose,” she answered still half-suspiciously.
“Bill and me was livin’ together, that’s
all. No, not married, nor nothin’ but ”
“All right. Go on.”
“That was last winter.
When the kid happened Ed, you know Bill,
he got sore, an’ beat it. Then I I
went on the street, to keep Ed. Nothin’ else
to do, Mister, so help me, an’ ”
“Never mind, I understand,” said Gabriel.
“What next?”
“And after that, I gets sick.
You know. Almost right away. So I
has to go to St. Luke’s hospital. I leaves
Ed with Mrs. McCane, at the same house. That
place in the alley, you know. Well, when I gets
out, the boy’s dead. An’ they never
even tells me, till I goes back! An’ I
can’t even get his things. Because why?
Mrs. McCane’s gone, Gord knows where, an’
Mr. Micolo says I still owe two-seventy-five.
I want to get down there to Scottsville, to my sister’s;
but curse me if I’ll go till I pay that
devil an’ get them clothes!”
A sudden savage light in her blurred
eyes betrayed the passion of the mother-love, through
all the filth and soilure of her degradation.
Gabriel felt his heart deeply moved. He bent toward
her, across the table, touched her hand and asked:
“Will you accept five dollars,
to pay this man and get you down to Scottsville?”
“Huh?” she queried, gazing
at him with vacant, uncomprehending eyes.
He repeated his query. Then,
as he saw the slow tears start and roll down her wan
cheeks, he felt a greater joy within his breast than
if the world and all its treasures had been his.
“Will I take it?” she
whispered. “Gord, will I? You
bet I will! That is, if I can have your name,
an’ pay it back some time?”
He promised, and wrote it down for
her, giving as his address Socialist Headquarters
in Chicago. Then, without publicity, he slipped
a V into her trembling hand.
“Come on,” said he. “That’s
all settled!”
He paid the check, and they went out,
together. For a moment they stood together, undecided,
on the sidewalk.
“Couldn’t I get them things
to-night, an’ start?” asked she, eagerly.
“There’s a train at 11:08, on the B. R. & P.”
“All right,” he assented.
“Can you see this Micolo, now? It’s
after ten.”
“Oh, that don’t
make no difference,” she answered. “He
runs a pawnshop over here on Dexter Street, two blocks
east. He’ll be open till midnight, easy,
tomorrow bein’ the Fourth.”
“Come on, then,” said
Gabriel. “I’ll see you through the
whole business, and onto the train. Maybe I can
help you, all along.”
Without another word she started,
with Gabriel at her side. They traversed the
main street, two blocks, then turned to the left down
a narrower, darker one.
“Here’s Micolo’s,”
said she, pausing at a doorway. Gabriel nodded.
“All right,” he answered. He had
not noted, nor did he dream, that, at the corner behind
them, two slinking, sneaking figures were now watching
his every move.
The woman turned the knob, and entered. Gabriel
followed.
“It’s on the second floor,”
said she. Gabriel saw a sign, on the landing:
“S. L. Micolo, Pawn Broker,”
and motioned her to precede him.
In a minute they had reached the upper
hallway. The woman opened another door.
The room, inside, was dark.
“This way,” said she.
“He’s in the inside office, I guess.
The light must ha’ gone out here, some way or
other.”
Gabriel hesitated. Some inkling,
some vague intuition all at once had come upon him,
that all was not well. At his elbow some invisible
force seemed plucking. “Come away!
Come back, before it is too late!” some ghostly
voice seemed calling in his ear.
But still, he did not fully understand.
Still he remained there, his mind obsessed by the
plausibility of the woman’s story and by the
pity he so keenly felt.
And now he heard her voice again:
“Mr. Micolo! Oh, Mr. Micolo! Where
are you?”
Striking a match, he advanced into the room.
“Any gas here?” he asked, peering about
for a burner.
Suddenly he started with violent emotion.
Behind him, in some unaccountable way, the door had
been closed. He heard a key turn, softly.
“What what’s
this?” he exclaimed. He heard the woman
moving about, somewhere in the gloom. “See
here!” he cried. “What kind of a ?”
The match burned brightly, all at once. He peered
about him, wide-eyed.
“This is no office!” shouted
he. “Here, you! What’s the meaning
of this? This is a bed-room!”
Sudden realization of the trap stunned and sickened
him.
“God! They’ve got
me! Flint and Waldron they’ve
landed me, at last!” he choked. “But but
not till I’ve broken a few heads, by God!”
The match fell from his burnt fingers.
Whirling toward the door, he rained powerful kicks
upon it. He would get out, he must get out, at
all hazards!
Suddenly the woman began to scream,
with harsh and piercing cries that seemed to rip the
very atmosphere.
At the third scream, or the fourth,
the key was turned and the door jerked open.
In its aperture, three men stood the
two who had been so long trailing Gabriel, and a policeman,
burly, red-jowled, big-paunched.
Gabriel stared at them. His mouth
opened, then closed again without a word. As
well for a trapped animal to make explanations to the
Indian hunter, as for him to tell these men the truth.
The truth? They knew the truth; and they were
there to crucify him. He read it in their cruel,
eager eyes.
The woman had stopped screaming now,
and was weeping with abandon, pouring forth a tale
of insults and abuse and robbery, with hysterical
sobs.
Full in the faces of the three men Gabriel sneered.
“You’ve done a good job
of it, this time, you skunks!” he gibed.
“I’m on. You’ll get me, in
the end; but not just yet. The first man through
this door gets his head broken and that
goes, too!”
With a snarl of “You damned
white slaver!” the officer raised his night-stick
and hurled himself at Gabriel.
Gabriel ducked and planted a terrific
left-hander on the “bull’s” ear.
Roaring, the majesty of the law careened against the
bed, crashed the flimsy thing to wreckage and went
down.
Then, fighting back into the gloom
of the trap, Gabriel engaged the two detectives.
For a moment he held them. One went to the floor
with an uppercut under the chin; but came back.
The other landed hard on Gabriel’s jaw.
He turned to strike down, again, the
first of the two. He heard the bed creaking,
and saw the policeman struggling to arise. In
a whirlwind of blows, the second detective flailed
at him, striving to beat down his guard and floor
him with a vicious rib-jolt.
“All’s fair, here!”
thought Gabriel, snatching up a chair. For a moment
he brandished it on high. With this weapon, he
knew though final defeat was inevitable,
when reinforcements should arrive he could
sweep a clear space.
Perhaps he might even yet escape!
He heard feet trampling on the stairs, and his heart
died within him. Well, even though escape were
impossible, he would fight to a finish and die game,
if die he must!
Down swung the chair, and round, crashing
to ruin as it struck the policeman who was just getting
to his feet again. Oaths, cries, screams made
the place hideous. Dust rose, and blood began
to flow.
Armed now with one leg of the chair,
Gabriel retreated; and as he went, he hurled the bitterness
of all his scorn and hate upon these vile conspirators.
And as he flayed them with his tongue,
he struck; and like Samson against the Philistines,
he did great execution.
Like Samson, too, he lost his power
through a woman’s treachery. For, even
as the attackers seemed to fall back, shattered and
at a loss before such fury and tremendous strength,
behind Gabriel the woman rose, a laugh of malice on
her lips, the policeman’s long and heavy night-stick
in her hand.
A moment she poised it, crouching
as he seeing her not swung his
weapon and hurled his defiance at the baffled men in
front.
Then, aiming at the base of the skull, she struck.
Sudden bright lights spangled the
darkness, for Gabriel. Everything whirled about,
in dizzying confusion. A strange, far roaring
sounded in his ears.
Then he fell; and oblivion took him
to its blessed peace and rest; and all grew still
and black.