“No you don’t, my Spider; you’re coming home with me.”
“What—me? Not much I ain’t—no, sir! I ain’t no giddy gink t’ go dinin’ with millionaires in open-faced clo’es—not me!”
“But you’re coming to have dinner with that same peanut man who learned to respect you because you were a real, white man, Spider Connolly. And that’s another reason why I want you for my chauffeur.”
“But—say, I—I can’t shuv.”
“Joe shall teach you.”
“Joe? Y’ mean—Joe Madden?”
“He’ll be chauffeur number one—and there’s a cross-town car! Come on, Spider! Now—in with you!”
CHAPTER XXXI
IN WHICH SOAPY TAKES A HAND
O’Rourke’s was full: its long bar, shaped something like the letter J, supported many lounging arms and elbows; its burnished foot-rail was scraped by boots of many shapes and sizes; its heavy air, thick with cigarette smoke, hummed with many voices. In one corner, a remote corner where few ventured to penetrate, Soapy leaned, as pallid and noncommittal as ever, while Spike poured out to him the story of his woes.
“She drove me out, Soapy! She drove me away from her!” he repeated for the hundredth time. The boy was unnaturally flushed and bright of eye, and his voice was as shaky as the hand which fidgeted with his whisky glass; and the sense of his wrongs was great and growing greater with every sip.
“She told me t’ leave her! She drove me away from her—”
“So you come here, eh, Kid?” drawled Soapy, pendent cigarette smouldering. “You skinned over here t’ Bud f’ comfort, an’ you’ll sure get it, Kid—in a glass!”
“Bud’s always good t’ me—”
“‘S right, Kid, ‘s right, Bud’s an angel sure, though he ain’t got no wings yet. Oh, Bud’ll comfort ye—frequent, an’ by an’ by he’ll take ye back t’ Hermy good an’ soused; you can get your own back that ways—eh, Kid? It’ll sure make her sit up an’ take notice when she sees ye come in reelin’ an’ staggerin’—eh, Kid? An’ to-morrow you’ll be sick mebbe, an’ she’ll have ter nurse ye—oh, Bud’ll fix things fer ye, I guess.” Spike glowered and pushed his half-emptied glass further away.
“I ain’t goin’ home soused!” he muttered.
“No?” said Soapy, faintly surprised. “Bud’ll feel kind o’ hurt, won’t he?”
“I ain’t goin’ home soused—not for Bud nor nobody else!”
“Why, then, if I was you, Kid, I should beat it before Bud comes in.”
“I guess I will,” said Spike, rising.
But now was sudden uproar of voices in the street hard by, a running and trampling of feet, and, the swing doors opening, a group of men appeared, bearing among them a heavy burden; and coming to the quiet corner they laid M’Ginnis there. Battered, bloody, and torn he lay, his handsome features swollen and disfigured, his clothes dusty and dishevelled, while above him and around him men stooped and peered and whispered.
“Why, it’s—it’s—Bud!” stammered Spike, shrinking away from that inanimate form, “my God! It’s—Bud!”
“‘S right, Kid!” nodded Soapy imperturbably, hands in pockets and, though his voice sounded listless as ever, his eyes gleamed evilly, and the dangling cigarette quivered and stirred.
“Ain’t—dead, is he?” some one questioned.
“Dead—not much!” answered Soapy, “guess it’s goin’ to take more ‘n that t’ make Bud a stiff ‘un. Besides, Bud ain’t goin’ t’ die that way, no, not—that way, I reckon. Dead? Watch this!” So saying, he reached Spike’s half-emptied glass from the bar and, not troubling to stoop, poured the raw spirit down upon M’Ginnis’s pale, blood-smirched face.
“Dead?” said Soapy. “Well, I guess not—look at him!”
And, sure enough, M’Ginnis stirred, groaned, opened swollen eyelids and, aided by some ready arm, sat up feebly. Then he glanced up at the ring of peering faces and down upon his rent and dusty person, and fell to a sudden, fierce torrent of curses; cursing thus, his strength seemed to return all at once, for he sprang to his feet and with clenched fists drove through the crowd, and lifting a flap in the bar, opened a door beyond and was gone.
“No,” said Soapy, shaking his head, “I guess Bud ain’t dead—yet, fellers. I wonder who gave him that eye, Kid? An’ his mouth too! Did ye pipe them split lips! Kind o’ painful, I guess. An’ a couple o’ teeth knocked out too! Some punchin’, Kid! An’ Bud kind o’ fancied them nice, white teeth of his a whole heap!”
Here the bartender glanced toward the corner where they stood, and, lifting an eyebrow, jerked his thumb at the door behind him with the words: “Kid, I reckon Bud wants ye.”
For a moment Spike hesitated then, lifting the mahogany flap, crossed the bar, and opened the door.
“Guess I’ll come along, Kid,” and, hands in pockets, Soapy followed.
They found M’Ginnis sprawling at a table and scowling at the knuckles of his bruised right hand while at his elbow were a bottle and two glasses. He had washed the blood and dirt from him, had brushed and straightened his dusty garments, but he couldn’t hide the cuts and bruises that disfigured his face, nor his scratched and swollen throat.
“What you here for?” he demanded, as Soapy closed the door, “didn’t send for you, did I?”
“No, that’s why I come, Bud.”
“But, say, Bud, what—what’s been th’ matter?” stammered Spike, his gaze upon M’Ginnis’s battered face, “who’s been—”
“Matter? Nothin’! I had a bit of a rough-house as I come along—”
“‘S right,” nodded Soapy, “you sure look it! Never seen a fatter eye—”
“Well, what you got t’ beef about?”
“Nothin’, Bud, only—”
“Only what?”
“It’s kind o’ tough you losin’ them couple o’ teeth—or is it three?”
M’Ginnis turned on him with a snarl. “A-r-r-, you—! Some day I’m goin’ t’ kick the insides out o’ ye!”
“Some day, Bud, sure. I’ll be waitin’! Meantime why not get some doctor-guy t’ put ye face back in shape—gee, I hate t’ see ye—you look like a butcher’s shop! An’ them split lips pains some, I guess!”
Here, while M’Ginnis choked in impotent rage, Soapy lit a fresh cigarette from the butt of the last and held out the packet.
“Try a coffin-nail, Bud? No? Well, I guess y’ couldn’t smoke good with a mouth on ye like that.”
“Who did it, Bud?” questioned Spike eagerly. “Who was it?”
“Hush up, Kid, hush up!” said Soapy, viewing M’Ginnis’s cuts and bruises with glistening eyes. “I guess that guy’s layin’ around somewheres waitin’ f’r th’ coroner—Bud wouldn’t let him make such a holy mess of his face an’ get away with it—not much! Bud’s a killer, I know that—don’t I, Bud?”
“You close up that dog’s head o’ yours, Soapy, or by—”
“‘S all right, Bud, ‘s all right. Don’t get peeved; I’ll close up tighter ‘n a clam, only—it’s kinder tough about them teeth—”
“Are ye goin’ t’ cut it out or shall—”
“Aw, calm down, Bud, calm down! Take a drink; it’ll do ye good.” And filling a glass with rye whisky, Soapy set it before M’Ginnis, who cursed him, took it up, and turned to Spike.
“Fill it up, Kid,” he commanded.
“Not me, Bud, I—I ain’t here for that,” said Spike. “I come t’ tell ye as some dirty guy’s been an’ blown th’ game on me t’ Hermy; she—she knows everything, an’ to-night she—drove me away from her—”
“Did she, Kid, oh, did she?” said M’Ginnis, a new note of eagerness in his voice. “Drove ye out onto th’ streets, Kid? That’s dam’ hard on you!”
“Yes, Bud, I—guess she—don’t want me around—”
“Kind o’ looks that way!” nodded M’Ginnis, and filling Spike’s glass, he put it into the boy’s unwilling fingers. “Take a drink, Kid; ye sure need it!” said he.
“‘S right,” murmured Soapy, “told ye Bud ‘ud comfort ye, didn’t I, Kid?”
“So Hermy’s drove ye away?” said M’Ginnis, “throwed ye out—eh?”
“She sure has, Bud, an’ I—Oh, I’m miserable as hell!”
“Why, then, get some o’ Bud’s comfort into ye, Kid,” murmured Soapy. “Lap it up good, Kid; there’s plenty more—in th’ bottle!”
“Let him alone,” growled M’Ginnis, “he don’t want you buttin’ in!”
“‘S right, too, Bud!” nodded Soapy, “he’s got you, ain’t he? An’ you—got him, ain’t you?”
“I didn’t think Hermy ‘ud ever treat me—like this!” said Spike tearfully.
“You mean—throwin’ ye out into th’ streets, Kid? Why, I been expectin’ it!”
“Expectin’ it?” repeated Spike, setting down his glass and staring, “why?”
“Well, she’s a girl, ain’t she, an’ they’re all th’ same, I reckon—”
“An’ Bud knows all about girls, Kid!” murmured Soapy. “Bud’s wise t’ all their tricks—ain’t you, Bud?”
“But whatcher mean?” cried Spike. “What ye mean about expectin’ it?”
“Well, she don’t want ye no more, does she?” answered M’Ginnis, his bruised hands fierce clenched, his voice hoarse and thick with passion. “She’s got some one else now—ain’t she? She’s—in love—ain’t she? She’s all waked up an’ palpitatin’ for—for that dam’—” he choked, and set one hand to his scratched throat.
“What d’ye mean, Bud?”
“Ah!” said Soapy, softer than before, “I’m on, Bud; you put me wise! He means, Kid, as Hermy’s in love with th’ guy as has just been punchin’ hell out of him—he means your pal Geoff.” With a hoarse, strangling cry, M’Ginnis leapt up, his hand flashed behind him, and—he stood suddenly very still, staring into the muzzle of the weapon Soapy had levelled from his hip.
“Aw, quit it, Bud, quit it,” he sighed, “it ain’t come t’ that—yet. Besides, the Kid’s here, so loose ye gun, Bud. No, give it t’me; you’re a bit on edge t’night, I guess, an’ it might go off an’ break a glass or somethin’. So gimme ye gun, Bud. That’s it! Now we can sit an’ talk real sociable, can’t we? Now listen, Bud—what you want is t’ get your own back on this guy Geoff, an’ what th’ Kid wants is t’ show his sister as he ain’t a kid, an’ what I want is t’ give ye both a helpin’ hand—”
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