FEET UPON THE ROAD
“I always thought I’d
go out West, but somehow I never got around to it,”
Taterleg said. “How far do you aim to go,
Duke?”
“As far as the notion takes me, I guess.”
It was about a month after the race
that this talk between Taterleg and the Duke took
place, on a calm afternoon in a camp far from the site
of that one into which the peddler of cutlery had
trundled his disabled bicycle a year before.
The Duke had put off his calfskin vest, the weather
being too hot for it. Even Taterleg had made sacrifices
to appearance in favor of comfort, his piratical corduroys
being replaced by overalls.
The Duke had quit his job, moved by
the desire to travel on and see the world, he said.
He said no word to any man about the motive behind
that desire, very naturally, for he was not the kind
of a man who opened the door of his heart. But
to himself he confessed the hunger for an unknown
face, for the lure of an onward-beckoning hand which
he was no longer able to ignore.
Since that day she had strained over
the brass railing of the car to hold him in her sight
until the curtain of dust intervened, he had felt
her call urging him into the West, the strength of
her beckoning hand drawing him the way she had gone,
to search the world for her and find her on some full
and glorious day.
“Was you aimin’ to sell
Whetstone and go on the train, Duke?”
“No, I’m not goin’ to sell him yet
a while.”
The Duke was not a talkative man on
any occasion, and now he sat in silence watching the
cook kneading out a batch of bread, his thoughts a
thousand miles away.
Where, indeed, would the journey that
he was shaping in his intention that minute carry
him? Somewhere along the railroad between there
and Puget Sound the beckoning lady had left the train;
somewhere on that long road between mountain and sea
she was waiting for him to come.
Taterleg stood his loaves in the sun
to rise for the oven, making a considerable rattling
about the stove as he put in the fire. A silence
fell.
Lambert was waiting for his horse
to rest a few hours, and, waiting, he sent his dreams
ahead of him where his feet could not follow save by
weary roads and slow.
Between Misery and the end of that
railroad at the western sea there were many villages,
a few cities. A passenger might alight from the
Chicago flier at any of them, and be absorbed in the
vastness like a drop of water in the desert plain.
How was he to know where she had left the train, or
whither she had turned afterward, or journeyed, or
where she lodged now? It seemed beyond finding
out. Assuredly it was a task too great for the
life of youth, so evanescent in the score of time,
even though so long and heavy to those impatient dreamers
who draw themselves onward by its golden chain to
the cold, harsh facts of age.
It was a foolish quest, a hopeless
one. So reason said. Romance and youth,
and the longing that he could not define, rose to confute
this sober argument, flushed and eager, violet scent
blowing before.
Who could tell? and perhaps; rash
speculations, faint promises. The world was not
so broad that two might never meet in it whose ways
had touched for one heart-throb and sundered again
in a sigh. All his life he had been hearing that
it was a small place, after all was said. Perhaps,
and who can tell? And so, galloping onward in
the free leash of his ardent dreams.
“When was you aimin’ to
start, Duke?” Taterleg inquired, after a silence
so long that Lambert had forgotten he was there.
“In about another hour.”
“I wasn’t tryin’
to hurry you off, Duke. My reason for askin’
you was because I thought maybe I might be able to
go along with you a piece of the way, if you don’t
object to my kind of company.”
“Why, you’re not goin’ to jump the
job, are you?”
“Yes, I’ve been thinkin’
it over, and I’ve made up my mind to draw my
time tonight. If you’ll put off goin’
till mornin’, I’ll start with you.
We can travel together till our roads branch, anyhow.”
“I’ll be glad to wait
for you, old feller. I didn’t know which
way ”
“Wyoming,” said Taterleg,
sighing. “It’s come back on me ag’in.”
“Well, a feller has to rove and ramble, I guess.”
Taterleg sighed, looking off westward
with dreamy eyes. “Yes, if he’s got
a girl pullin’ on his heart,” said he.
The Duke started as if he had been
accused, his secret read, his soul laid bare; he felt
the blood burn in his face, and mount to his eyes
like a drift of smoke. But Taterleg was unconscious
of this sudden embarrassment, this flash of panic
for the thing which the Duke believed lay so deep
in his heart no man could ever find it out and laugh
at it or make gay over the scented romance. Taterleg
was still looking off in a general direction that
was westward, a little south of west.
“She’s in Wyoming,”
said Taterleg; “a lady I used to rush out in
Great Bend, Kansas, a long time ago.”
“Oh,” said the Duke, relieved
and interested. “How long ago was that?”
“Over four years,” sighed
Taterleg, as if it might have been a quarter of a
century.
“Not so very long, Taterleg.”
“Yes, but a lot of fellers can court a girl
in four years, Duke.”
The Duke thought it over a spell.
“Yes, I reckon they can,” he allowed.
“Don’t she ever write to you?”
“I guess I’m more to blame
than she is on that, Duke. She did write,
but I was kind of sour and dropped her. It’s
hard to git away from, though; it’s a-comin’
over me ag’in. I might ‘a’ been
married and settled down with that girl now, me and
her a-runnin’ a oyster parlor in some good little
railroad town, if it hadn’t ‘a’ been
for a Welshman name of Elwood. He was a stonecutter,
that Elwood feller was, Duke, workin’ on bridge
’butments on the Santa Fe. That feller told
her I was married and had four children; he come between
us and bust us up.”
“Wasn’t he onery!” said the Duke,
feelingly.
“I was chef in the hotel where
that girl worked waitin’ table, drawin’
down good money, and savin’ it, too. But
that derned Welshman got around her and she growed
cold. When she left Great Bend she went to Wyoming
to take a job Lander was the town she wrote
from, I can put my finger on it in the map with my
eyes shut. I met her when she was leavin’
for the depot, draggin’ along with her grip
and no Welshman in a mile of her to give her a hand.
I went up and tipped my hat, but I never smiled, Duke,
for I was sour over the way that girl she’d treated
me. I just took hold of that grip and carried
it to the depot for her and tipped my hat to her once
more. ’You’re a gentleman, whatever
they say of you, Mr. Wilson,’ she said.”
“She did?”
“She did, Duke. ’You’re
a gentleman, Mr. Wilson, whatever they say of you,’
she said. Them was her words, Duke. ‘Farewell
to you,’ I said, distant and high-mighty,
for I was hurt, Duke I was hurt right down
to the bone.”
“I bet you was, old feller.”
“‘Farewell to you,’
I says, and the tears come in her eyes, and she says
to me wipin’ ’em on a han’kerchief
I give her, nothing any Welshman ever done for her,
and you can bank on that Duke she says to
me: ‘I’ll always think of you as a
gentleman, Mr. Wilson.’ I wasn’t onto
what that Welshman told her then; I didn’t know
the straight of it till she wrote and told me after
she got to Wyoming.”
“It was too bad, old feller.”
“Wasn’t it hell?
I was so sore when she wrote, the way she’d believed
that little sawed-off snorter with rock dust in his
hair, I never answered that letter for a long time.
Well, I got another letter from her about a year after
that. She was still in the same place, doin’
well. Her name was Nettie Morrison.”
“Maybe it is yet, Taterleg.”
“Maybe. I’ve been
a-thinkin’ I’d go out there and look her
up, and if she ain’t married, me and her we
might let bygones be bygones and hitch.
I could open a oyster parlor out there on the dough
I’ve saved up; I’d dish ’em up and
she’d wait on the table and take in the money.
We’d do well, Duke.”
“I bet you would.”
“I got the last letter she wrote I’ll
let you see it, Duke.”
Taterleg made a rummaging in the chuck
wagon, coming out presently with the letter.
He stood contemplating it with tender eye.
“Some writer, ain’t she, Duke?”
“She sure is a fine writer, Taterleg writes
like a schoolma’am.”
“She can talk like one, too.
See ’Lander, Wyo.’ It’s
a little town about as big as my hat, from the looks
of it on the map, standin’ away off up there
alone. I could go to it with my eyes shut, straight
as a bee.”
“Why don’t you write to
her, Taterleg?” The Duke could scarcely keep
back a smile, so diverting he found this affair of
the Welshman, the waitress, and the cook. More
comedy than romance, he thought, Taterleg on one side
of the fence, that girl on the other.
“I’ve been a-squarin’
off to write,” Taterleg replied, “but I
don’t seem to git the time.” He opened
his vest to put the letter away close to his heart,
it seemed, that it might remind him of his intention
and square him quite around to the task. But
there was no pocket on the side covering his heart.
Taterleg put the letter next his lung as the nearest
approach to that sentimental portion of his anatomy,
and sighed long and loud as he buttoned his garment.
“You said you’d put off goin’ till
mornin’, Duke?”
“Sure I will.”
“I’ll throw my things
in a sack and be ready to hit the breeze with you
after breakfast. I can write back to the boss
for my time.”
Morning found them on the road together,
the sun at their backs. Taterleg was as brilliant
as a humming-bird, even to his belt and scabbard,
which had a great many silver tacks driven into them,
repeating the letters LW in great characters and small.
He said the letters were the initials of his name.
“Lawrence?” the Duke ventured to inquire.
Taterleg looked round him with great
caution before answering, although they were at least
fifteen miles from camp, and farther than that from
the next human habitation. He lowered his voice,
rubbing his hand reflectively along the glittering
ornaments of his belt.
“Lovelace,” he said.
“Not a bad name.”
“It ain’t no name for
a cook,” Taterleg said, almost vindictively.
“You’re the first man I ever told it to,
and I’ll ask you not to pass it on. I used
to go by the name of Larry before they called me Taterleg.
I got that name out here in the Bad Lands; it suits
me, all right.”
“It’s a queer kind of
a name to call a man by. How did they come to
give it to you?”
“Well, sir, I give myself that
name, you might say, when you come to figger it down
to cases. I was breakin’ a horse when I
first come out here four years ago, headin’
at that time for Wyoming. He throwed me.
When I didn’t hop him ag’in, the boys come
over to see if I was busted. When they asked
me if I was hurt, I says, ’He snapped my dern
old leg like a ‘tater.’ And from
that day on they called me Taterleg. Yes, and
I guess I’d ‘a’ been in Wyoming
now, maybe with a oyster parlor and a wife, if it
hadn’t been for that blame horse.”
He paused reminiscently; then he said:
“Where was you aimin’ to camp tonight,
Duke?”
“Where does the flier stop after it passes Misery,
going west?”
“It stops for water at Glendora,
about fifty or fifty-five miles west, sometimes.
I’ve heard ’em say if a feller buys a ticket
for there in Chicago, it’ll let him off.
But I don’t guess it stops there regular.
Why, Duke? Was you aimin’ to take the flier
there?”
“No. We’ll stop there tonight, then,
if your horse can make it.”
“Make it! If he can’t
I’ll eat him raw. He’s made seventy-five
many a time before today.”
So they fared on that first day, in
friendly converse. At sunset they drew up on
a mesa, high above the treeless, broken country through
which they had been riding all day, and saw Glendora
in the valley below them.
“There she is,” said Taterleg.
“I wonder what we’re goin’ to run
into down, there?”