Janice picked up Trimmins on the road
to town. The lanky Southerner, who lived as
a squatter with his ever-increasing family back in
the woods, was a soft-spoken man with much innate
politeness and a great distaste for regular work.
He said the elder had just offered him a job in the
woods that he was going to take if he could get a man
to help him.
“I heard you talking about it,
Mr. Trimmins,” the young girl said, with her
eyes on the road ahead and her foot on the gas pedal.
“I hope you will make a good thing out of it.”
“Not likely. The elder’s
too close for that,” responded the man, with
a twinkle in his eye.
“Yes. I suppose that Elder
Concannon considers a small profit sufficient.
He got his money that way by ’littles
and dribbles’ and I fancy he thinks
small pay is all right.”
“My glo-ree! You
bet he does!” said Trimmins. “But
the elder never had but one leastways,
two chillen to raise. He wouldn’t
ha’ got rich very fast with my family no,
sir!”
“Perhaps that is so,” Janice admitted.
“Tell ye what, Miss,”
the woodsman went on to say, “a man ought to
git paid accordin’ to the mouths there is to
home to feed. I was readin’ in a paper
t’other day that it took ten dollars a week to
take proper care of a man and his wife, and there
ought to be added to them ten dollars two dollars
a week ev’ry time they got a baby.”
“Why! wouldn’t that be fine?” cried
Janice, laughing.
“It sure would be a help,”
said Trimmins, the twinkle in his eye again.
“I reckon both me an’ Narnay would ’preciate
it.”
“Oh! you mean Jim Narnay?”
asked Janice, with sudden solemnity.
“Yes ma’am. I’m
goin’ to see him now. He’s a grand
feller with the axe and I want him to help me.”
Janice wondered how much work would
really be done by the two men if they were up in the
woods together. Yet Mrs. Narnay and the children
might get along better without Jim. Janice had
made some inquiries and learned that Mrs. Narnay was
an industrious woman, working steadily over her washtub,
and keeping the children in comparative comfort when
Jim was not at home to drink up a good share of her
earnings.
“Are you going down to the cove
to see Narnay now, Mr. Trimmins?” Janice asked,
as she turned the automobile into the head of High
Street.
“Yes, ma’am. That
is, if I don’t find him at Lem Parraday’s.”
“Oh, Mr. Trimmins!” exclaimed
Janice, earnestly. “Look for him at the
house first. And don’t you go near Lem
Parraday’s, either.”
“Wal!” drawled the man. “I
s’pose you air right, Miss.”
“I’ll drive you right
down to the cove,” Janice said. “I
want to see little Sophie, and and her
mother.”
“Whatever you say, Miss,” agreed the woodsman.
They followed a rather rough street
coveward, but arrived safely at the small collection
of cottages, in one of which the Narnays lived.
Jim Narnay was evidently without money, for he sat
on the front stoop, sober and rather neater than Janice
was used to seeing him. He was whittling a toy
of some kind for the little boys, both of whom were
hanging upon him.
Their attitude, as well as what Sophie
Narnay had told her, assured Janice that the husband
and father of the household was not a cruel man when
he was sober. The children still loved him, and
he evidently loved them.
“Got a job, Jim?” asked
Trimmins, after thanking Janice for the ride, and
getting out of the automobile.
“Not a smitch of work since
I come out of the woods,” admitted the bewhiskered
man, rising quickly from the stoop to make way for
Janice.
“Come on, old feller,”
said Trimmins. “I want to talk to you.
If you are favorable inclined, I reckon I got jest
the job you’ve been lookin’ for.”
The two went off behind the cottage.
Janice did not know then that there was a short cut
to High Street and the Lake View Inn.
Sophie came running to the door to
welcome the visitor, her thin little arms red and
soapy from dish-water.
“I knowed ’twas you,”
she said, smiling happily. “They told me
you was the only girl in town that owned one o’
them cars. And I told mom that you must be awful
rich and kind. Course, you must be, or you couldn’t
afford to give away ten cent pieces so easy.”
Mrs. Narnay came to the door, too,
her arms right out of the washtub; but Janice begged
her not to inconvenience herself. “Keep
right on with your work and I’ll come around
to the back and sit on that stoop,” said the
young girl.
“And you must see the baby,”
Sophie urged. “I can bring out the baby
if I wrap her up good, can’t I, Marm?”
“Have a care with the poor child,
Sophie,” said Mrs. Narnay, wearily. “Where’s
your pop gone?”
“He’s walked out with
Mr. Trimmins,” said the little girl.
The woman sighed, and Janice, all
through her visit, could see that she was anxious
about her absent husband. The baby was brought
out a pitifully thin, but pretty child and
Sophie nursed her little sister with much enjoyment.
“I wisht she was twins,”
confessed the little girl. “It must be
awful jolly to have twins in the family.”
“My soul, child!” groaned
Mrs. Narnay. “Don’t talk so reckless.
One baby at a time is affliction enough as
ye’ll find out for yourself some day.”
Janice, leaving a little gift to be
hidden from Jim Narnay and divided among the children,
went away finally, with the determination that Dr.
Poole should see the baby again and try to do something
for the poor, little, weakly thing. Trimmins
and Jim Narnay had disappeared, and Janice feared
that, after all, they had drifted over to the Inn,
there to celebrate the discovery of the job they both
professed to need so badly.
“That awful bar!” Janice
told herself. “If it were not here in
Polktown those two ne’er-do-wells would have
gone right about their work without any celebration
at all. I guess Mrs. Scattergood is right Mr.
Lem Parraday ought to be tarred and feathered for ever
taking out that license! And how about the councilmen
who voted to let him have it?”
As she wheeled into High Street once
more a tall, well groomed young man, with rosy cheeks
and the bluest of blue eyes, hailed her from the sidewalk.
“Oh, Janice Day!” he cried. “How’s
the going?”
“Mr. Bowman! I didn’t
know you had returned,” Janice said, smiling
and stopping the car. “The going is pretty
good.”
“Have you been around by the
Lower Road where my gang is working?”
“No,” Janice replied.
“But Marty says the turnout is being put in
and that the bridge over the creek is almost done.”
“Good! I’ll get
over there by and by to see for myself.”
He had set down a heavy suitcase and still held a
traveling bag. “Just now,” he added,
“I am hunting a lodging.”
“Hunting a lodging? Why!
I thought you were a fixture with Marm Parraday,”
Janice said.
“I thought so, too. But
it’s got too strong for me down there.
Besides, it is a rule of the Railroad Company that
we shall find board, if possible, where no liquor
is sold. I had a room over the bar and it is
too noisy for me at night.”
“Marm Parraday will be sorry
to lose you, Mr. Bowman,” Janice said.
“Isn’t it dreadful that they should have
taken up the selling of liquor there?”
“Bad thing,” the young
civil engineer replied, promptly. “I’m
sorry for Marm Parraday. Lem ought to be kicked
for ever getting the license,” he added vigorously.
“Dear me, Mr. Bowman,”
sighed Janice. “I wish everybody thought
as you do. Polktown needs reforming.”
“What! Again?” cried
the young man, laughing suddenly. Then he added:
“I expect, if that is so, you will have to start
the reform, Miss Janice. And and
you’d better start it with your friend, Hopewell
Drugg. Really, they are making a fool of him
around the Inn and he doesn’t even
know it.”
“Oh, Mr. Bowman! what do you
mean?” called Janice after him; but the young
man had picked up his bag and was marching away, so
that he did not hear her question. Before she
could start her engine he had turned into a side street.
She ran back up Hillside Avenue in
good season for dinner. The potato patch was
plowed and Marty had gone downtown on an errand.
Janice backed the car into the garage and went upstairs
to her room to change her dress for dinner.
She was there when Marty came boisterously into the
kitchen.
“My goodness! what’s the
matter with you, Marty Day?” asked his mother
shrilly. “What’s happened?”
“It’s Nelson Haley,”
the boy said, and Janice heard him plainly, for the
door at the foot of the stairs was ajar. “It’s
awful! They are going to arrest him!”
“What do you mean, Marty Day?
Be you crazy?” Mrs. Day demanded.
“What’s this? One
o’ your cheap jokes?” asked the boy’s
father, who chanced to be in the kitchen, too.
Guess Nelson Haley dont think its a joke, said the boy,
his voice still shaking. I just heard all about it. There aint
many folks know it yet
“Stop that!” cried his
mother. “You tell us plain what Mr. Haley’s
done.”
“Ain’t done nothin’,
of course. But they say he has,”
Marty stoutly maintained.
“Then what do they accuse him of?” queried
Mr. Day.
“They accuse him of stealin’!
Hi tunket! ain’t that the meanest thing ye
ever heard?” cried the boy. “Nelson
Haley, stealin’. It gets me for
fair!”
“Why why I can’t
believe it!” Aunt ’Mira gasped, and she
sat down with a thud on one of the kitchen chairs.
I got it straight, Marty went on to say. The School
Committees all in a row over it. Ye see, they had the coins
“Who had what coins?” cried
his mother.
“The School Committee.
That collection of gold coins some rich feller lent
the State Board of Education for exhibition at the
lecture next Friday. They only come over from
Middletown last night and Mr. Massey locked them in
his safe.”
“Wal!” murmured Uncle Jason.
“Massey brought ’em to
the school this morning where the committee held a
meeting. I hear the committee left the trays
of coins in their room while they went downstairs
to see something the matter with the heater.
When they come up the trays had been skinned clean ’for
a fac’!” exclaimed the excited Marty.
“What’s that got to do
with Mr. Haley?” demanded Uncle Jason, grimly.
“Why he’d been
in the room. I believe he don’t deny he
was there. Nobody else was in the buildin’
’cept the janitor, and he was with Massey and
the others in the basement.
“Then coins jest disappeared took
wings and flewed away,” declared Marty with
much earnestness.
“What was they wuth?” asked his father,
practically.
“Dunno. A lot of money.
Some says two thousand and some says five thousand.
Whichever it is, they’ll put him under big bail
if they arrest him.”
“Why, they wouldn’t dare!” gasped
Mrs. Day.
“Say! Massey and them
others has got to save their own hides, ain’t
they?” demanded the suspicious Marty.
Wal. Taint common sense that any of the School
Committee should have stolen the coins, Uncle Jason said slowly. Mr.
Massey, and Cross Moore, and Mr. Middler
“Mr. Middler warn’t there,”
said Marty, quickly. “He’d gone to
Middletown.”
“Joe Pellet and Crawford there?” asked
Uncle Jason.
“All the committee but the parson,” his
son admitted.
“And all good men,” Uncle
Jason said reflectively. “Schoolhouse
locked?”
“So they say,” Marty declared.
“That’s what set them on Nelson.
Only him and the janitor carry keys to the building.”
“Who’s the janitor?” asked Uncle
Jason.
“Benny Thread. You know,
the little crooked-backed feller lives on
Paige Street. And, anyway, there wasn’t
a chance for him to get at the coins. He was
with the committee all the time they was out of the
room.”
“And are they sure Mr. Haley
was in there?” asked Aunt ’Mira.
He admits it, Marty said gloomily. I dont know
whats going to come of it all
“Hush!” said Uncle Jason suddenly.
“Shut that door.”
But it was too late, Janice had heard
all. She came down into the kitchen, pale-faced
and with eyes that blazed with indignation. She
had not removed her hat.
“Come, Uncle Jason,” she
said, brokenly. “I want you to go downtown
with me. If Nelson is in trouble we must help
him.”
“Drat that boy!” growled
Uncle Jason, scowling at Marty. “He’s
a reg’lar big mouth! He has to tell ev’rything
he knows all over the shop.”