With the last morsel of bread Tom
King wiped his plate clean of the last particle of
flour gravy and chewed the resulting mouthful in a
slow and meditative way. When he arose from the
table, he was oppressed by the feeling that he was
distinctly hungry. Yet he alone had eaten.
The two children in the other room had been sent early
to bed in order that in sleep they might forget they
had gone supperless. His wife had touched nothing,
and had sat silently and watched him with solicitous
eyes. She was a thin, worn woman of the working-class,
though signs of an earlier prettiness were not wanting
in her face. The flour for the gravy she had
borrowed from the neighbour across the hall The last
two ha’pennies had gone to buy the bread.
He sat down by the window on a rickety
chair that protested under his weight, and quite mechanically
he put his pipe in his mouth and dipped into the side
pocket of his coat. The absence of any tobacco
made him aware of his action, and, with a scowl for
his forgetfulness, he put the pipe away. His
movements were slow, almost hulking, as though he were
burdened by the heavy weight of his muscles. He
was a solid-bodied, stolid-looking man, and his appearance
did not suffer from being overprepossessing.
His rough clothes were old and slouchy. The uppers
of his shoes were too weak to carry the heavy re-soling
that was itself of no recent date. And his cotton
shirt, a cheap, two shilling affair, showed a frayed
collar and ineradicable paint stains.
But it was Tom King’s face that
advertised him unmistakably for what he was.
It was the face of a typical prize-fighter; of one
who had put in long years of service in the squared
ring and, by that means, developed and emphasized
all the marks of the fighting beast. It was distinctly
a lowering countenance, and, that no feature of it
might escape notice, it was clean-shaven. The
lips were shapeless and constituted a mouth harsh
to excess, that was like a gash in his face. The
jaw was aggressive, brutal, heavy. The eyes,
slow of movement and heavy-lidded, were almost expressionless
under the shaggy, indrawn brows. Sheer animal
that he was, the eyes were the most animal-like feature
about him. They were sleepy, lion-like the
eyes of a fighting animal. The forehead slanted
quickly back to the hair, which, clipped close, showed
every bump of a villainous-looking head. A nose
twice broken and moulded variously by countless blows,
and a cauliflower ear, permanently swollen and distorted
to twice its size, completed his adornment, while the
beard, fresh-shaven as it was, sprouted in the skin
and gave the face a blue-black stain.
Altogether, it was the face of a man
to be afraid of in a dark alley or lonely place.
And yet Tom King was not a criminal, nor had he ever
done anything criminal. Outside of brawls, common
to his walk in life, he had harmed no one. Nor
had he ever been known to pick a quarrel. He was
a professional, and all the fighting brutishness of
him was reserved for his professional appearances.
Outside the ring he was slow-going, easy-natured,
and, in his younger days, when money was flush, too
open-handed for his own good. He bore no grudges
and had few enemies. Fighting was a business
with him. In the ring he struck to hurt, struck
to maim, struck to destroy; but there was no animus
in it. It was a plain business proposition.
Audiences assembled and paid for the spectacle of
men knocking each other out. The winner took the
big end of the purse. When Tom King faced the
Woolloomoolloo Gouger, twenty years before, he knew
that the Gouger’s jaw was only four months healed
after having been broken in a Newcastle bout.
And he had played for that jaw and broken it again
in the ninth round, not because he bore the Gouger
any ill-will, but because that was the surest way to
put the Gouger out and win the big end of the purse.
Nor had the Gouger borne him any ill-will for it.
It was the game, and both knew the game and played
it.
Tom King had never been a talker,
and he sat by the window, morosely silent, staring
at his hands. The veins stood out on the backs
of the hands, large and swollen; and the knuckles,
smashed and battered and malformed, testified to the
use to which they had been put. He had never
heard that a man’s life was the life of his arteries,
but well he knew the meaning of those big upstanding
veins. His heart had pumped too much blood through
them at top pressure. They no longer did the work.
He had stretched the elasticity out of them, and with
their distension had passed his endurance. He
tired easily now. No longer could he do a fast
twenty rounds, hammer and tongs, fight, fight, fight,
from gong to gong, with fierce rally on top of fierce
rally, beaten to the ropes and in turn beating his
opponent to the ropes, and rallying fiercest and fastest
of all in that last, twentieth round, with the house
on its feet and yelling, himself rushing, striking,
ducking, raining showers of blows upon showers of
blows and receiving showers of blows in return, and
all the time the heart faithfully pumping the surging
blood through the adequate veins. The veins,
swollen at the time, had always shrunk down again,
though each time, imperceptibly at first, not quite remaining
just a trifle larger than before. He stared at
them and at his battered knuckles, and, for the moment,
caught a vision of the youthful excellence of those
hands before the first knuckle had been smashed on
the head of Benny Jones, otherwise known as the Welsh
Terror.
The impression of his hunger came back on him.
“Blimey, but couldn’t
I go a piece of steak!” he muttered aloud, clenching
his huge fists and spitting out a smothered oath.
“I tried both Burke’s
an’ Sawley’s,” his wife said half
apologetically.
“An’ they wouldn’t?” he demanded.
“Not a ha’penny. Burke said ”
She faltered.
“G’wan! Wot’d he say?”
“As how ‘e was thinkin’
Sandel ud do ye to-night, an’ as how yer score
was comfortable big as it was.”
Tom King grunted, but did not reply.
He was busy thinking of the bull terrier he had kept
in his younger days to which he had fed steaks without
end. Burke would have given him credit for a thousand
steaks then. But times had changed.
Tom King was getting old; and old men, fighting before
second-rate clubs, couldn’t expect to run bills
of any size with the tradesmen.
He had got up in the morning with
a longing for a piece of steak, and the longing had
not abated. He had not had a fair training for
this fight. It was a drought year in Australia,
times were hard, and even the most irregular work
was difficult to find. He had had no sparring
partner, and his food had not been of the best nor
always sufficient. He had done a few days’
navvy work when he could get it, and he had run around
the Domain in the early mornings to get his legs in
shape. But it was hard, training without a partner
and with a wife and two kiddies that must be fed.
Credit with the tradesmen had undergone very slight
expansion when he was matched with Sandel. The
secretary of the Gayety Club had advanced him three
pounds the loser’s end of the purse and
beyond that had refused to go. Now and again he
had managed to borrow a few shillings from old pals,
who would have lent more only that it was a drought
year and they were hard put themselves. No and
there was no use in disguising the fact his
training had not been satisfactory. He should
have had better food and no worries. Besides,
when a man is forty, it is harder to get into condition
than when he is twenty.
“What time is it, Lizzie?” he asked.
His wife went across the hall to inquire, and came
back.
“Quarter before eight.”
“They’ll be startin’
the first bout in a few minutes,” he said.
“Only a try-out. Then there’s a four-round
spar ‘tween Dealer Wells an’ Gridley,
an’ a ten-round go ‘tween Starlight an’
some sailor bloke. I don’t come on for
over an hour.”
At the end of another silent ten minutes, he rose
to his feet.
“Truth is, Lizzie, I ain’t had proper
trainin’.”
He reached for his hat and started
for the door. He did not offer to kiss her he
never did on going out but on this night
she dared to kiss him, throwing her arms around him
and compelling him to bend down to her face.
She looked quite small against the massive bulk of
the man.
“Good luck, Tom,” she said. “You
gotter do ’im.”
“Ay, I gotter do ‘im,”
he repeated. “That’s all there is
to it. I jus’ gotter do ’im.”
He laughed with an attempt at heartiness,
while she pressed more closely against him. Across
her shoulders he looked around the bare room.
It was all he had in the world, with the rent overdue,
and her and the kiddies. And he was leaving it
to go out into the night to get meat for his mate
and cubs not like a modern working-man going
to his machine grind, but in the old, primitive, royal,
animal way, by fighting for it.
“I gotter do ’im,”
he repeated, this time a hint of desperation in his
voice. “If it’s a win, it’s
thirty quid an’ I can pay all that’s
owin’, with a lump o’ money left over.
If it’s a lose, I get naught not even
a penny for me to ride home on the tram. The secretary’s
give all that’s comin’ from a loser’s
end. Good-bye, old woman. I’ll come
straight home if it’s a win.”
“An’ I’ll be waitin’
up,” she called to him along the hall.
It was full two miles to the Gayety,
and as he walked along he remembered how in his palmy
days he had once been the heavyweight champion
of New South Wales he would have ridden
in a cab to the fight, and how, most likely, some
heavy backer would have paid for the cab and ridden
with him. There were Tommy Burns and that Yankee
nigger, Jack Johnson they rode about in
motor-cars. And he walked! And, as any man
knew, a hard two miles was not the best preliminary
to a fight. He was an old un, and the world did
not wag well with old uns. He was good for
nothing now except navvy work, and his broken nose
and swollen ear were against him even in that.
He found himself wishing that he had learned a trade.
It would have been better in the long run. But
no one had told him, and he knew, deep down in his
heart, that he would not have listened if they had.
It had been so easy. Big money sharp,
glorious fights periods of rest and loafing
in between a following of eager flatterers,
the slaps on the back, the shakes of the hand, the
toffs glad to buy him a drink for the privilege of
five minutes’ talk and the glory
of it, the yelling houses, the whirlwind finish, the
referee’s “King wins!” and his name
in the sporting columns next day.
Those had been times! But he
realized now, in his slow, ruminating way, that it
was the old uns he had been putting away.
He was Youth, rising; and they were Age, sinking.
No wonder it had been easy they with their
swollen veins and battered knuckles and weary in the
bones of them from the long battles they had already
fought. He remembered the time he put out old
Stowsher Bill, at Rush-Cutters Bay, in the eighteenth
round, and how old Bill had cried afterward in the
dressing-room like a baby. Perhaps old Bill’s
rent had been overdue. Perhaps he’d had
at home a missus an’ a couple of kiddies.
And perhaps Bill, that very day of the fight, had
had a hungering for a piece of steak. Bill had
fought game and taken incredible punishment.
He could see now, after he had gone through the mill
himself, that Stowsher Bill had fought for a bigger
stake, that night twenty years ago, than had young
Tom King, who had fought for glory and easy money.
No wonder Stowsher Bill had cried afterward in the
dressing-room.
Well, a man had only so many fights
in him, to begin with. It was the iron law of
the game. One man might have a hundred hard fights
in him, another man only twenty; each, according to
the make of him and the quality of his fibre, had
a definite number, and, when he had fought them, he
was done. Yes, he had had more fights in him than
most of them, and he had had far more than his share
of the hard, gruelling fights the kind
that worked the heart and lungs to bursting, that took
the elastic out of the arteries and made hard knots
of muscle out of Youth’s sleek suppleness, that
wore out nerve and stamina and made brain and bones
weary from excess of effort and endurance overwrought.
Yes, he had done better than all of them. There
were none of his old fighting partners left.
He was the last of the old guard. He had seen
them all finished, and he had had a hand in finishing
some of them.
They had tried him out against the
old uns, and one after another he had put them
away laughing when, like old Stowsher Bill,
they cried in the dressing-room. And now he was
an old un, and they tried out the youngsters on him.
There was that bloke, Sandel. He had come over
from New Zealand with a record behind him. But
nobody in Australia knew anything about him, so they
put him up against old Tom King. If Sandel made
a showing, he would be given better men to fight, with
bigger purses to win; so it was to be depended upon
that he would put up a fierce battle. He had
everything to win by it money and glory
and career; and Tom King was the grizzled old chopping-block
that guarded the highway to fame and fortune.
And he had nothing to win except thirty quid, to pay
to the landlord and the tradesmen. And, as Tom
King thus ruminated, there came to his stolid vision
the form of Youth, glorious Youth, rising exultant
and invincible, supple of muscle and silken of skin,
with heart and lungs that had never been tired and
torn and that laughed at limitation of effort.
Yes, Youth was the Nemesis. It destroyed the
old uns and recked not that, in so doing, it destroyed
itself. It enlarged its arteries and smashed its
knuckles, and was in turn destroyed by Youth.
For Youth was ever youthful. It was only Age
that grew old.
At Castlereagh Street he turned to
the left, and three blocks along came to the Gayety.
A crowd of young larrikins hanging outside the door
made respectful way for him, and he heard one say
to another: “That’s ’im!
That’s Tom King!”
Inside, on the way to his dressing-room,
he encountered the secretary, a keen-eyed, shrewd-faced
young man, who shook his hand.
“How are you feelin’, Tom?” he asked.
“Fit as a fiddle,” King
answered, though he knew that he lied, and that if
he had a quid, he would give it right there for a good
piece of steak.
When he emerged from the dressing-room,
his seconds behind him, and came down the aisle to
the squared ring in the centre of the hall, a burst
of greeting and applause went up from the waiting crowd.
He acknowledged salutations right and left, though
few of the faces did he know. Most of them were
the faces of kiddies unborn when he was winning his
first laurels in the squared ring. He leaped
lightly to the raised platform and ducked through
the ropes to his corner, where he sat down on a folding
stool. Jack Ball, the referee, came over and shook
his hand. Ball was a broken-down pugilist who
for over ten years had not entered the ring as a principal.
King was glad that he had him for referee. They
were both old uns. If he should rough it
with Sandel a bit beyond the rules, he knew Ball could
be depended upon to pass it by.
Aspiring young heavyweights, one after
another, were climbing into the ring and being presented
to the audience by the referee. Also, he issued
their challenges for them.
“Young Pronto,” Bill announced,
“from North Sydney, challenges the winner for
fifty pounds side bet.”
The audience applauded, and applauded
again as Sandel himself sprang through the ropes and
sat down in his corner. Tom King looked across
the ring at him curiously, for in a few minutes they
would be locked together in merciless combat, each
trying with all the force of him to knock the other
into unconsciousness. But little could he see,
for Sandel, like himself, had trousers and sweater
on over his ring costume. His face was strongly
handsome, crowned with a curly mop of yellow hair,
while his thick, muscular neck hinted at bodily magnificence.
Young Pronto went to one corner and
then the other, shaking hands with the principals
and dropping down out of the ring. The challenges
went on. Ever Youth climbed through the ropes Youth
unknown, but insatiable crying out to mankind
that with strength and skill it would match issues
with the winner. A few years before, in his own
heyday of invincibleness, Tom King would have been
amused and bored by these preliminaries. But
now he sat fascinated, unable to shake the vision
of Youth from his eyes. Always were these youngsters
rising up in the boxing game, springing through the
ropes and shouting their defiance; and always were
the old uns going down before them. They
climbed to success over the bodies of the old uns.
And ever they came, more and more youngsters Youth
unquenchable and irresistible and ever they
put the old uns away, themselves becoming old
uns and travelling the same downward path, while
behind them, ever pressing on them, was Youth eternal the
new babies, grown lusty and dragging their elders down,
with behind them more babies to the end of time Youth
that must have its will and that will never die.
King glanced over to the press box
and nodded to Morgan, of the Sportsman, and Corbett,
of the Referee. Then he held out his hands, while
Sid Sullivan and Charley Bates, his seconds, slipped
on his gloves and laced them tight, closely watched
by one of Sandel’s seconds, who first examined
critically the tapes on King’s knuckles.
A second of his own was in Sandel’s corner,
performing a like office. Sandel’s trousers
were pulled off, and, as he stood up, his sweater was
skinned off over his head. And Tom King, looking,
saw Youth incarnate, deep-chested, heavy-thewed, with
muscles that slipped and slid like live things under
the white satin skin. The whole body was a-crawl
with life, and Tom King knew that it was a life that
had never oozed its freshness out through the aching
pores during the long fights wherein Youth paid its
toll and departed not quite so young as when it entered.
The two men advanced to meet each
other, and, as the gong sounded and the seconds clattered
out of the ring with the folding stools, they shook
hands and instantly took their fighting attitudes.
And instantly, like a mechanism of steel and springs
balanced on a hair trigger, Sandel was in and out
and in again, landing a left to the eyes, a right to
the ribs, ducking a counter, dancing lightly away
and dancing menacingly back again. He was swift
and clever. It was a dazzling exhibition.
The house yelled its approbation. But King was
not dazzled. He had fought too many fights and
too many youngsters. He knew the blows for what
they were too quick and too deft to be
dangerous. Evidently Sandel was going to rush
things from the start. It was to be expected.
It was the way of Youth, expending its splendour and
excellence in wild insurgence and furious onslaught,
overwhelming opposition with its own unlimited glory
of strength and desire.
Sandel was in and out, here, there,
and everywhere, light-footed and eager-hearted, a
living wonder of white flesh and stinging muscle that
wove itself into a dazzling fabric of attack, slipping
and leaping like a flying shuttle from action to action
through a thousand actions, all of them centred upon
the destruction of Tom King, who stood between him
and fortune. And Tom King patiently endured.
He knew his business, and he knew Youth now that Youth
was no longer his. There was nothing to do till
the other lost some of his steam, was his thought,
and he grinned to himself as he deliberately ducked
so as to receive a heavy blow on the top of his head.
It was a wicked thing to do, yet eminently fair according
to the rules of the boxing game. A man was supposed
to take care of his own knuckles, and, if he insisted
on hitting an opponent on the top of the head, he
did so at his own peril. King could have ducked
lower and let the blow whiz harmlessly past, but he
remembered his own early fights and how he smashed
his first knuckle on the head of the Welsh Terror.
He was but playing the game. That duck had accounted
for one of Sandel’s knuckles. Not that
Sandel would mind it now. He would go on, superbly
regardless, hitting as hard as ever throughout the
fight. But later on, when the long ring battles
had begun to tell, he would regret that knuckle and
look back and remember how he smashed it on Tom King’s
head.
The first round was all Sandel’s,
and he had the house yelling with the rapidity of
his whirlwind rushes. He overwhelmed King with
avalanches of punches, and King did nothing.
He never struck once, contenting himself with covering
up, blocking and ducking and clinching to avoid punishment.
He occasionally feinted, shook his head when the weight
of a punch landed, and moved stolidly about, never
leaping or springing or wasting an ounce of strength.
Sandel must foam the froth of Youth away before discreet
Age could dare to retaliate. All King’s
movements were slow and methodical, and his heavy-lidded,
slow-moving eyes gave him the appearance of being
half asleep or dazed. Yet they were eyes that
saw everything, that had been trained to see everything
through all his twenty years and odd in the ring.
They were eyes that did not blink or waver before
an impending blow, but that coolly saw and measured
distance.
Seated in his corner for the minute’s
rest at the end of the round, he lay back with outstretched
legs, his arms resting on the right angle of the ropes,
his chest and abdomen heaving frankly and deeply as
he gulped down the air driven by the towels of his
seconds. He listened with closed eyes to the
voices of the house, “Why don’t yeh fight,
Tom?” many were crying. “Yeh ain’t
afraid of ’im, are yeh?”
“Muscle-bound,” he heard
a man on a front seat comment. “He can’t
move quicker. Two to one on Sandel, in quids.”
The gong struck and the two men advanced
from their corners. Sandel came forward fully
three-quarters of the distance, eager to begin again;
but King was content to advance the shorter distance.
It was in line with his policy of economy. He
had not been well trained, and he had not had enough
to eat, and every step counted. Besides, he had
already walked two miles to the ringside. It
was a repetition of the first round, with Sandel attacking
like a whirlwind and with the audience indignantly
demanding why King did not fight. Beyond feinting
and several slowly delivered and ineffectual blows
he did nothing save block and stall and clinch.
Sandel wanted to make the pace fast, while King, out
of his wisdom, refused to accommodate him. He
grinned with a certain wistful pathos in his ring-battered
countenance, and went on cherishing his strength with
the jealousy of which only Age is capable. Sandel
was Youth, and he threw his strength away with the
munificent abandon of Youth. To King belonged
the ring generalship, the wisdom bred of long, aching
fights. He watched with cool eyes and head, moving
slowly and waiting for Sandel’s froth to foam
away. To the majority of the onlookers it seemed
as though King was hopelessly outclassed, and they
voiced their opinion in offers of three to one on Sandel.
But there were wise ones, a few, who knew King of
old time, and who covered what they considered easy
money.
The third round began as usual, one-sided,
with Sandel doing all the leading, and delivering
all the punishment. A half-minute had passed
when Sandel, over-confident, left an opening.
King’s eyes and right arm flashed in the same
instant. It was his first real blow a
hook, with the twisted arch of the arm to make it
rigid, and with all the weight of the half-pivoted
body behind it. It was like a sleepy-seeming lion
suddenly thrusting out a lightning paw. Sandel,
caught on the side of the jaw, was felled like a bullock.
The audience gasped and murmured awe-stricken applause.
The man was not muscle-bound, after all, and he could
drive a blow like a trip-hammer.
Sandel was shaken. He rolled
over and attempted to rise, but the sharp yells from
his seconds to take the count restrained him.
He knelt on one knee, ready to rise, and waited, while
the referee stood over him, counting the seconds loudly
in his ear. At the ninth he rose in fighting
attitude, and Tom King, facing him, knew regret that
the blow had not been an inch nearer the point of
the jaw. That would have been a knock-out, and
he could have carried the thirty quid home to the missus
and the kiddies.
The round continued to the end of
its three minutes, Sandel for the first time respectful
of his opponent and King slow of movement and sleepy-eyed
as ever. As the round neared its close, King,
warned of the fact by sight of the seconds crouching
outside ready for the spring in through the ropes,
worked the fight around to his own corner. And
when the gong struck, he sat down immediately on the
waiting stool, while Sandel had to walk all the way
across the diagonal of the square to his own corner.
It was a little thing, but it was the sum of little
things that counted. Sandel was compelled to
walk that many more steps, to give up that much energy,
and to lose a part of the precious minute of rest.
At the beginning of every round King loafed slowly
out from his corner, forcing his opponent to advance
the greater distance. The end of every round
found the fight manoeuvred by King into his own corner
so that he could immediately sit down.
Two more rounds went by, in which
King was parsimonious of effort and Sandel prodigal.
The latter’s attempt to force a fast pace made
King uncomfortable, for a fair percentage of the multitudinous
blows showered upon him went home. Yet King persisted
in his dogged slowness, despite the crying of the
young hot-heads for him to go in and fight. Again,
in the sixth round, Sandel was careless, again Tom
King’s fearful right flashed out to the jaw,
and again Sandel took the nine seconds count.
By the seventh round Sandel’s
pink of condition was gone, and he settled down to
what he knew was to be the hardest fight in his experience.
Tom King was an old un, but a better old un than he
had ever encountered an old un who never
lost his head, who was remarkably able at defence,
whose blows had the impact of a knotted club, and who
had a knockout in either hand. Nevertheless,
Tom King dared not hit often. He never forgot
his battered knuckles, and knew that every hit must
count if the knuckles were to last out the fight.
As he sat in his corner, glancing across at his opponent,
the thought came to him that the sum of his wisdom
and Sandel’s youth would constitute a world’s
champion heavyweight. But that was the trouble.
Sandel would never become a world champion. He
lacked the wisdom, and the only way for him to get
it was to buy it with Youth; and when wisdom was his,
Youth would have been spent in buying it.
King took every advantage he knew.
He never missed an opportunity to clinch, and in effecting
most of the clinches his shoulder drove stiffly into
the other’s ribs. In the philosophy of the
ring a shoulder was as good as a punch so far as damage
was concerned, and a great deal better so far as concerned
expenditure of effort. Also, in the clinches
King rested his weight on his opponent, and was loath
to let go. This compelled the interference of
the referee, who tore them apart, always assisted
by Sandel, who had not yet learned to rest. He
could not refrain from using those glorious flying
arms and writhing muscles of his, and when the other
rushed into a clinch, striking shoulder against ribs,
and with head resting under Sandel’s left arm,
Sandel almost invariably swung his right behind his
own back and into the projecting face. It was
a clever stroke, much admired by the audience, but
it was not dangerous, and was, therefore, just that
much wasted strength. But Sandel was tireless
and unaware of limitations, and King grinned and doggedly
endured.
Sandel developed a fierce right to
the body, which made it appear that King was taking
an enormous amount of punishment, and it was only the
old ringsters who appreciated the deft touch of King’s
left glove to the other’s biceps just before
the impact of the blow. It was true, the blow
landed each time; but each time it was robbed of its
power by that touch on the biceps. In the ninth
round, three times inside a minute, King’s right
hooked its twisted arch to the jaw; and three times
Sandel’s body, heavy as it was, was levelled
to the mat. Each time he took the nine seconds
allowed him and rose to his feet, shaken and jarred,
but still strong. He had lost much of his speed,
and he wasted less effort. He was fighting grimly;
but he continued to draw upon his chief asset, which
was Youth. King’s chief asset was experience.
As his vitality had dimmed and his vigour abated,
he had replaced them with cunning, with wisdom born
of the long fights and with a careful shepherding of
strength. Not alone had he learned never to make
a superfluous movement, but he had learned how to
seduce an opponent into throwing his strength away.
Again and again, by feint of foot and hand and body
he continued to inveigle Sandel into leaping back,
ducking, or countering. King rested, but he never
permitted Sandel to rest. It was the strategy
of Age.
Early in the tenth round King began
stopping the other’s rushes with straight lefts
to the face, and Sandel, grown wary, responded by drawing
the left, then by ducking it and delivering his right
in a swinging hook to the side of the head. It
was too high up to be vitally effective; but when
first it landed, King knew the old, familiar descent
of the black veil of unconsciousness across his mind.
For the instant, or for the slighest fraction of an
instant, rather, he ceased. In the one moment
he saw his opponent ducking out of his field of vision
and the background of white, watching faces; in the
next moment he again saw his opponent and the background
of faces. It was as if he had slept for a time
and just opened his eyes again, and yet the interval
of unconsciousness was so microscopically short that
there had been no time for him to fall. The audience
saw him totter and his knees give, and then saw him
recover and tuck his chin deeper into the shelter
of his left shoulder.
Several times Sandel repeated the
blow, keeping King partially dazed, and then the latter
worked out his defence, which was also a counter.
Feinting with his left he took a half-step backward,
at the same time upper cutting with the whole strength
of his right. So accurately was it timed that
it landed squarely on Sandel’s face in the full,
downward sweep of the duck, and Sandel lifted in the
air and curled backward, striking the mat on his head
and shoulders. Twice King achieved this, then
turned loose and hammered his opponent to the ropes.
He gave Sandel no chance to rest or to set himself,
but smashed blow in upon blow till the house rose
to its feet and the air was filled with an unbroken
roar of applause. But Sandel’s strength
and endurance were superb, and he continued to stay
on his feet. A knock-out seemed certain, and a
captain of police, appalled at the dreadful punishment,
arose by the ringside to stop the fight. The
gong struck for the end of the round and Sandel staggered
to his corner, protesting to the captain that he was
sound and strong. To prove it, he threw two back-air-springs,
and the police captain gave in.
Tom King, leaning back in his corner
and breathing hard, was disappointed. If the
fight had been stopped, the referee, perforce, would
have rendered him the decision and the purse would
have been his. Unlike Sandel, he was not fighting
for glory or career, but for thirty quid. And
now Sandel would recuperate in the minute of rest.
Youth will be served this
saying flashed into King’s mind, and he remembered
the first time he had heard it, the night when he had
put away Stowsher Bill. The toff who had bought
him a drink after the fight and patted him on the
shoulder had used those words. Youth will be
served! The toff was right. And on that night
in the long ago he had been Youth. To-night Youth
sat in the opposite corner. As for himself, he
had been fighting for half an hour now, and he was
an old man. Had he fought like Sandel, he would
not have lasted fifteen minutes. But the point
was that he did not recuperate. Those upstanding
arteries and that sorely tried heart would not enable
him to gather strength in the intervals between the
rounds. And he had not had sufficient strength
in him to begin with. His legs were heavy under
him and beginning to cramp. He should not have
walked those two miles to the fight. And there
was the steak which he had got up longing for that
morning. A great and terrible hatred rose up
in him for the butchers who had refused him credit.
It was hard for an old man to go into a fight without
enough to eat. And a piece of steak was such
a little thing, a few pennies at best; yet it meant
thirty quid to him.
With the gong that opened the eleventh
round, Sandel rushed, making a show of freshness which
he did not really possess. King knew it for what
it was a bluff as old as the game itself.
He clinched to save himself, then, going free, allowed
Sandel to get set. This was what King desired.
He feinted with his left, drew the answering duck and
swinging upward hook, then made the half-step backward,
delivered the upper cut full to the face and crumpled
Sandel over to the mat. After that he never let
him rest, receiving punishment himself, but inflicting
far more, smashing Sandel to the ropes, hooking and
driving all manner of blows into him, tearing away
from his clinches or punching him out of attempted
clinches, and ever when Sandel would have fallen, catching
him with one uplifting hand and with the other immediately
smashing him into the ropes where he could not fall.
The house by this time had gone mad,
and it was his house, nearly every voice yelling:
“Go it, Tom!” “Get ’im!
Get ’im!” “You’ve got ’im,
Tom! You’ve got ’im!” It was
to be a whirlwind finish, and that was what a ringside
audience paid to see.
And Tom King, who for half an hour
had conserved his strength, now expended it prodigally
in the one great effort he knew he had in him.
It was his one chance now or not at all.
His strength was waning fast, and his hope was that
before the last of it ebbed out of him he would have
beaten his opponent down for the count. And as
he continued to strike and force, coolly estimating
the weight of his blows and the quality of the damage
wrought, he realized how hard a man Sandel was to knock
out. Stamina and endurance were his to an extreme
degree, and they were the virgin stamina and endurance
of Youth. Sandel was certainly a coming man.
He had it in him. Only out of such rugged fibre
were successful fighters fashioned.
Sandel was reeling and staggering,
but Tom King’s legs were cramping and his knuckles
going back on him. Yet he steeled himself to strike
the fierce blows, every one of which brought anguish
to his tortured hands. Though now he was receiving
practically no punishment, he was weakening as rapidly
as the other. His blows went home, but there was
no longer the weight behind them, and each blow was
the result of a severe effort of will. His legs
were like lead, and they dragged visibly under him;
while Sandel’s backers, cheered by this symptom,
began calling encouragement to their man.
King was spurred to a burst of effort.
He delivered two blows in succession a
left, a trifle too high, to the solar plexus, and a
right cross to the jaw. They were not heavy blows,
yet so weak and dazed was Sandel that he went down
and lay quivering. The referee stood over him,
shouting the count of the fatal seconds in his ear.
If before the tenth second was called, he did not
rise, the fight was lost. The house stood in
hushed silence. King rested on trembling legs.
A mortal dizziness was upon him, and before his eyes
the sea of faces sagged and swayed, while to his ears,
as from a remote distance, came the count of the referee.
Yet he looked upon the fight as his. It was impossible
that a man so punished could rise.
Only Youth could rise, and Sandel
rose. At the fourth second he rolled over on
his face and groped blindly for the ropes. By
the seventh second he had dragged himself to his knee,
where he rested, his head rolling groggily on his
shoulders. As the referee cried “Nine!”
Sandel stood upright, in proper stalling position,
his left arm wrapped about his face, his right wrapped
about his stomach. Thus were his vital points
guarded, while he lurched forward toward King in the
hope of effecting a clinch and gaining more time.
At the instant Sandel arose, King
was at him, but the two blows he delivered were muffled
on the stalled arms. The next moment Sandel was
in the clinch and holding on desperately while the
referee strove to drag the two men apart. King
helped to force himself free. He knew the rapidity
with which Youth recovered, and he knew that Sandel
was his if he could prevent that recovery. One
stiff punch would do it. Sandel was his, indubitably
his. He had out-generalled him, out-fought him,
out-pointed him. Sandel reeled out of the clinch,
balanced on the hair line between defeat or survival.
One good blow would topple him over and down and out.
And Tom King, in a flash of bitterness, remembered
the piece of steak and wished that he had it then behind
that necessary punch he must deliver. He nerved
himself for the blow, but it was not heavy enough
nor swift enough. Sandel swayed, but did not fall,
staggering back to the ropes and holding on. King
staggered after him, and, with a pang like that of
dissolution, delivered another blow. But his
body had deserted him. All that was left of him
was a fighting intelligence that was dimmed and clouded
from exhaustion. The blow that was aimed for
the jaw struck no higher than the shoulder. He
had willed the blow higher, but the tired muscles
had not been able to obey. And, from the impact
of the blow, Tom King himself reeled back and nearly
fell. Once again he strove. This time his
punch missed altogether, and, from absolute weakness,
he fell against Sandel and clinched, holding on to
him to save himself from sinking to the floor.
King did not attempt to free himself.
He had shot his bolt. He was gone. And Youth
had been served. Even in the clinch he could feel
Sandel growing stronger against him. When the
referee thrust them apart, there, before his eyes,
he saw Youth recuperate. From instant to instant
Sandel grew stronger. His punches, weak and futile
at first, became stiff and accurate. Tom King’s
bleared eyes saw the gloved fist driving at his jaw,
and he willed to guard it by interposing his arm.
He saw the danger, willed the act; but the arm was
too heavy. It seemed burdened with a hundredweight
of lead. It would not lift itself, and he strove
to lift it with his soul. Then the gloved fist
landed home. He experienced a sharp snap that
was like an electric spark, and, simultaneously, the
veil of blackness enveloped him.
When he opened his eyes again he was
in his corner, and he heard the yelling of the audience
like the roar of the surf at Bondi Beach. A wet
sponge was being pressed against the base of his brain,
and Sid Sullivan was blowing cold water in a refreshing
spray over his face and chest. His gloves had
already been removed, and Sandel, bending over him,
was shaking his hand. He bore no ill-will toward
the man who had put him out and he returned the grip
with a heartiness that made his battered knuckles
protest. Then Sandel stepped to the centre of
the ring and the audience hushed its pandemonium to
hear him accept young Pronto’s challenge
and offer to increase the side bet to one hundred pounds.
King looked on apathetically while his seconds mopped
the streaming water from him, dried his face, and
prepared him to leave the ring. He felt hungry.
It was not the ordinary, gnawing kind, but a great
faintness, a palpitation at the pit of the stomach
that communicated itself to all his body. He
remembered back into the fight to the moment when he
had Sandel swaying and tottering on the hair-line
balance of defeat. Ah, that piece of steak would
have done it! He had lacked just that for the
decisive blow, and he had lost. It was all because
of the piece of steak.
His seconds were half-supporting him
as they helped him through the ropes. He tore
free from them, ducked through the ropes unaided, and
leaped heavily to the floor, following on their heels
as they forced a passage for him down the crowded
centre aisle. Leaving the dressing-room for the
street, in the entrance to the hall, some young fellow
spoke to him.
“W’y didn’t yuh
go in an’ get ’im when yuh ’ad ’im?”
the young fellow asked.
“Aw, go to hell!” said
Tom King, and passed down the steps to the sidewalk.
The doors of the public-house at the
corner were swinging wide, and he saw the lights and
the smiling barmaids, heard the many voices discussing
the fight and the prosperous chink of money on the
bar. Somebody called to him to have a drink.
He hesitated perceptibly, then refused and went on
his way.
He had not a copper in his pocket,
and the two-mile walk home seemed very long.
He was certainly getting old. Crossing the Domain,
he sat down suddenly on a bench, unnerved by the thought
of the missus sitting up for him, waiting to learn
the outcome of the fight. That was harder than
any knockout, and it seemed almost impossible to face.
He felt weak and sore, and the pain
of his smashed knuckles warned him that, even if he
could find a job at navvy work, it would be a week
before he could grip a pick handle or a shovel.
The hunger palpitation at the pit of the stomach
was sickening. His wretchedness overwhelmed him,
and into his eyes came an unwonted moisture. He
covered his face with his hands, and, as he cried,
he remembered Stowsher Bill and how he had served
him that night in the long ago. Poor old Stowsher
Bill! He could understand now why Bill had cried
in the dressing-room.