Owen Wister

Virginian, The The


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have staked out their claims,” he added.

      In this public sleeping room they had done what one does to secure a seat in a railroad train. Upon each bed, as notice of occupancy, lay some article of travel or of dress. As we stood there, the two Jews came in and opened and arranged their valises, and folded and refolded their linen dusters. Then a railroad employee entered and began to go to bed at this hour, before dusk had wholly darkened into night. For him, going to bed meant removing his boots and placing his overalls and waistcoat beneath his pillow. He had no coat. His work began at three in the morning; and even as we still talked he began to snore.

      “The man that keeps the store is a friend of mine,” said the Virginian; “and you can be pretty near comfortable on his counter. Got any blankets?”

      I had no blankets.

      “Looking for a bed?” inquired the American drummer, now arriving.

      “Yes, he’s looking for a bed,” answered the voice of Steve behind him.

      “Seems a waste of time,” observed the Virginian. He looked thoughtfully from one bed to another. “I didn’t know I’d have to lay over here. Well, I have sat up before.”

      “This one’s mine,” said the drummer, sitting down on it. “Half’s plenty enough room for me.”

      “You’re cert’nly mighty kind,” said the cow-puncher. “But I’d not think o’ disconveniencing yu’.”

      “That’s nothing. The other half is yours. Turn in right now if you feel like it.”

      “No. I don’t reckon I’ll turn in right now. Better keep your bed to yourself.”

      “See here,” urged the drummer, “if I take you I’m safe from drawing some party I might not care so much about. This here sleeping proposition is a lottery.”

      “Well,” said the Virginian (and his hesitation was truly masterly), “if you put it that way—”

      “I do put it that way. Why, you’re clean! You’ve had a shave right now. You turn in when you feel inclined, old man! I ain’t retiring just yet.”

      The drummer had struck a slightly false note in these last remarks. He should not have said “old man.” Until this I had thought him merely an amiable person who wished to do a favor. But “old man” came in wrong. It had a hateful taint of his profession; the being too soon with everybody, the celluloid good-fellowship that passes for ivory with nine in ten of the city crowd. But not so with the sons of the sagebrush. They live nearer nature, and they know better.

      But the Virginian blandly accepted “old man” from his victim: he had a game to play. “Well, I cert’nly thank yu’,” he said. “After a while I’ll take advantage of your kind offer.”

      I was surprised. Possession being nine points of the law, it seemed his very chance to intrench himself in the bed. But the cow-puncher had planned a campaign needing no intrenchments. Moreover, going to bed before nine o’clock upon the first evening in many weeks that a town’s resources were open to you, would be a dull proceeding. Our entire company, drummer and all, now walked over to the store, and here my sleeping arrangements were made easily. This store was the cleanest place and the best in Medicine Bow, and would have been a good store anywhere, offering a multitude of things for sale, and kept by a very civil proprietor. He bade me make myself at home, and placed both of his counters at my disposal. Upon the grocery side there stood a cheese too large and strong to sleep near comfortably, and I therefore chose the dry-goods side. Here thick quilts were unrolled for me, to make it soft; and no condition was placed upon me, further than that I should remove my boots, because the quilts were new, and clean, and for sale. So now my rest was assured. Not an anxiety remained in my thoughts. These therefore turned themselves wholly to the other man’s bed, and how he was going to lose it.

      I think that Steve was more curious even than myself. Time was on the wing. His bet must be decided, and the drinks enjoyed. He stood against the grocery counter, contemplating the Virginian. But it was to me that he spoke. The Virginian, however, listened to every word.

      “Your first visit to this country?”

      I told him yes.

      “How do you like it?”

      I expected to like it very much.

      “How does the climate strike you?”

      I thought the climate was fine.

      “Makes a man thirsty though.”

      This was the sub-current which the Virginian plainly looked for. But he, like Steve, addressed himself to me.

      “Yes,” he put in, “thirsty while a man’s soft yet. You’ll harden.”

      “I guess you’ll find it a drier country than you were given to expect,” said Steve.

      “If your habits have been frequent that way,” said the Virginian.

      “There’s parts of Wyoming,” pursued Steve, “where you’ll go hours and hours before you’ll see a drop of wetness.”

      “And if yu’ keep a-thinkin’ about it,” said the Virginian, “it’ll seem like days and days.”

      Steve, at this stroke, gave up, and clapped him on the shoulder with a joyous chuckle. “You old son-of-a!” he cried affectionately.

      “Drinks are due now,” said the Virginian. “My treat, Steve. But I reckon your suspense will have to linger a while yet.”

      Thus they dropped into direct talk from that speech of the fourth dimension where they had been using me for their telephone.

      “Any cyards going to-night?” inquired the Virginian.

      “Stud and draw,” Steve told him. “Strangers playing.”

      “I think I’d like to get into a game for a while,” said the Southerner. “Strangers, yu’ say?”

      And then, before quitting the store, he made his toilet for this little hand at poker. It was a simple preparation. He took his pistol from its holster, examined it, then shoved it between his overalls and his shirt in front, and pulled his waistcoat over it. He might have been combing his hair for all the attention any one paid to this, except myself. Then the two friends went out, and I bethought me of that epithet which Steve again had used to the Virginian as he clapped him on the shoulder. Clearly this wild country spoke a language other than mine—the word here was a term of endearment. Such was my conclusion.

      The drummers had finished their dealings with the proprietor, and they were gossiping together in a knot by the door as the Virginian passed out.

      “See you later, old man!” This was the American drummer accosting his prospective bed-fellow.

      “Oh, yes,” returned the bed-fellow, and was gone.

      The American drummer winked triumphantly at his brethren. “He’s all right,” he observed, jerking a thumb after the Virginian. “He’s easy. You got to know him to work him. That’s all.”

      “Und vat is your point?” inquired the German drummer.

      “Point is—he’ll not take any goods off you or me; but he’s going to talk up the killer to any consumptive he runs across. I ain’t done with him yet. Say,” (he now addressed the proprietor), “what’s her name?”

      “Whose name?”

      “Woman runs the eating-house.”

      “Glen. Mrs. Glen.”

      “Ain’t she new?”

      “Been settled here about a month. Husband’s a freight conductor.”

      “Thought I’d not seen her before. She’s a good-looker.”

      “Hm! Yes. The kind of good looks I’d sooner see in another man’s wife than mine.”

      “So