Jack London

Valley Of The Moon


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he was killed, with General Custer and all the rest, by the Indians. He was an old man by then, but I guess he got his share of Indians before they got him. Men like him always died fighting, and they took their dead with them. I used to know Al Stanley when I was a little girl. He was a gambler, but he was game. A railroad man shot him in the back when he was sitting at a table. That shot killed him, too. He died in about two seconds. But before he died he'd pulled his gun and put three bullets into the man that killed him."

      "I don't like fightin'," Mary protested. "It makes me nervous. Bert gives me the willies the way he's always lookin' for trouble. There ain't no sense in it."

      "And I wouldn't give a snap of my fingers for a man without fighting spirit," Saxon answered. "Why, we wouldn't be here to-day if it wasn't for the fighting spirit of our people before us."

      "You've got the real goods of a fighter in Billy," Bert assured her; "a yard long and a yard wide and genuine A Number One, long-fleeced wool. Billy's a Mohegan with a scalp-lock, that's what he is. And when he gets his mad up it's a case of get out from under or something will fall on you-hard."

      "Just like that," Mary added.

      Billy, who had taken no part in the conversation, got up, glanced into the bedroom off the kitchen, went into the parlor and the bedroom off the parlor, then returned and stood gazing with puzzled brows into the kitchen bedroom.

      "What's eatin' you, old man," Bert queried. "You look as though you'd lost something or was markin' a three-way ticket. What you got on your chest? Cough it up."

      "Why, I'm just thinkin' where in Sam Hill's the bed an' stuff for the back bedroom."

      "There isn't any," Saxon explained. "We didn't order any."

      "Then I'll see about it to-morrow."

      "What d'ye want another bed for?" asked Bert. "Ain't one bed enough for the two of you?"

      "You shut up, Bert!" Mary cried. "Don't get raw."

      "Whoa, Mary!" Bert grinned. "Back up. You're in the wrong stall as usual."

      "We don't need that room," Saxon was saying to Billy. "And so I didn't plan any furniture. That money went to buy better carpets and a better stove."

      Billy came over to her, lifted her from the chair, and seated himself with her on his knees.

      "That's right, little girl. I'm glad you did. The best for us every time. And to-morrow night I want you to run up with me to Salinger's an' pick out a good bedroom set an' carpet for that room. And it must be good. Nothin' snide."

      "It will cost fifty dollars," she objected.

      "That's right," he nodded. "Make it cost fifty dollars and not a cent less. We're goin' to have the best. And what's the good of an empty room? It'd make the house look cheap. Why, I go around now, seein' this little nest just as it grows an' softens, day by day, from the day we paid the cash money down an' nailed the keys. Why, almost every moment I'm drivin' the horses, all day long, I just keep on seein' this nest. And when we're married, I'll go on seein' it. And I want to see it complete. If that room'd he bare-floored an' empty, I'd see nothin' but it and its bare floor all day long. I'd be cheated. The house'd be a lie. Look at them curtains you put up in it, Saxon. That's to make believe to the neighbors that it's furnished. Saxon, them curtains are lyin' about that room, makin' a noise for every one to hear that that room's furnished. Nitsky for us. I'm goin' to see that them curtains tell the truth."

      "You might rent it," Bert suggested. "You're close to the railroad yards, and it's only two blocks to a restaurant."

      "Not on your life. I ain't marryin' Saxon to take in lodgers. If I can't take care of her, d'ye know what I'll do? Go down to Long Wharf, say 'Here goes nothin',' an' jump into the bay with a stone tied to my neck. Ain't I right, Saxon?"

      It was contrary to her prudent judgment, but it fanned her pride. She threw her arms around her lover's neck, and said, ere she kissed him:

      "You're the boss, Billy. What you say goes, and always will go."

      "Listen to that!" Bert gibed to Mary. "That's the stuff. Saxon's onto her job."

      "I guess we'll talk things over together first before ever I do anything," Billy was saying to Saxon.

      "Listen to that," Mary triumphed. "You bet the man that marries me'll have to talk things over first."

      "Billy's only givin' her hot air," Bert plagued. "They all do it before they're married."

      Mary sniffed contemptuously.

      "I'll bet Saxon leads him around by the nose. And I'm goin' to say, loud an' strong, that I'll lead the man around by the nose that marries me."

      "Not if you love him," Saxon interposed.

      "All the more reason," Mary pursued.

      Bert assumed an expression and attitude of mournful dejection.

      "Now you see why me an' Mary don't get married," he said. "I'm some big Indian myself, an' I'll be everlastingly jiggerooed if I put up for a wigwam I can't be boss of."

      "And I'm no squaw," Mary retaliated, "an' I wouldn't marry a big buck Indian if all the rest of the men in the world was dead."

      "Well this big buck Indian ain't asked you yet."

      "He knows what he'd get if he did."

      "And after that maybe he'll think twice before he does ask you."

      Saxon, intent on diverting the conversation into pleasanter channels, clapped her hands as if with sudden recollection.

      "Oh! I forgot! I want to show you something." From her purse she drew a slender ring of plain gold and passed it around. "My mother's wedding ring. I've worn it around my neck always, like a locket. I cried for it so in the orphan asylum that the matron gave it back for me to wear. And now, just to think, after next Tuesday I'll be wearing it on my finger. Look, Billy, see the engraving on the inside."

      "C to D, 1879," he read.

      "Carlton to Daisy-Carlton was my father's first name. And now, Billy, you've got to get it engraved for you and me."

      Mary was all eagerness and delight.

      "Oh, it's fine," she cried. "W to S, 1907."

      Billy considered a moment.

      "No, that wouldn't be right, because I'm not giving it to Saxon."

      "I'll tell you what," Saxon said. "W and S."

      "Nope." Billy shook his head. "S and W, because you come first with me."

      "If I come first with you, you come first with us. Billy, dear, I insist on W and S."

      "You see," Mary said to Bert. "Having her own way and leading him by the nose already."

      Saxon acknowledged the sting.

      "Anyway you want, Billy," she surrendered. His arms tightened about her.

      "We'll talk it over first, I guess."

      CHAPTER XIV

      Sarah was conservative. Worse, she had crystallized at the end of her love-time with the coming of her first child. After that she was as set in her ways as plaster in a mold. Her mold was the prejudices and notions of her girlhood and the house she lived in. So habitual was she that any change in the customary round assumed the proportions of a revolution. Tom had gone through many of these revolutions, three of them when he moved house. Then his stamina broke, and he never moved house again.

      So it was that Saxon had held back the announcement of her approaching marriage until it was unavoidable. She expected a scene, and she got it.

      "A prizefighter, a hoodlum, a plug-ugly," Sarah sneered, after she had exhausted herself of all calamitous forecasts of her own future and the future of her children in the absence of Saxon's weekly four dollars and a half. "I don't know what your mother'd thought if she lived to see the day when you took up with a tough like Bill Roberts. Bill! Why,