O. Henry

The Complete Works


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tall man moved uneasily. He fingered the badge on his breast for a moment, and then he put an arm around the old woman and drew her close to him. She smiled the unchanging mother smile of three-score years, and patted his big brown hand with her crooked, mittened fingers while her son spake.

      “I says this,” he said, looking squarely into the eyes of the other man, “that if I was in your place I’d follow it. If I was a drunken, desp’rate character, without shame or hope, I’d follow it. If I was in your place and you was in mine I’d say: ‘Marshal, I’m willin’ to swear if you’ll give me the chance I’ll quit the racket. I’ll drop the tanglefoot and the gun play, and won’t play hoss no more. I’ll be a good citizen and go to work and quit my foolishness. So help me God!’ That’s what I’d say to you if you was marshal and I was in your place.”

      “Hear my son talkin’,” said the old woman softly. “Hear him, sir. You promise to be good and he won’t do you no harm. Forty-one year ago his heart first beat ag’in’ mine, and it’s beat true ever since.”

      The other man rose to his feet, trying his limbs and stretching his muscles.

      “Then,” said he, “if you was in my place and said that, and I was marshal, I’d say: ‘Go free, and do your best to keep your promise.’”

      “Lawsy!” exclaimed the old woman, in a sudden flutter, “ef I didn’t clear forget that trunk of mine! I see a man settin’ it on the platform jest as I seen son’s face in the window, and it went plum out of my head. There’s eight jars of homemade quince jam in that trunk that I made myself. I wouldn’t have nothin’ happen to them jars for a red apple.”

      Away to the door she trotted, spry and anxious, and then Calliope Catesby spoke out to Buck Patterson:

      “I just couldn’t help it, Buck. I seen her through the window a-comin’ in. She never had heard a word ‘bout my tough ways. I didn’t have the nerve to let her know I was a worthless cuss bein’ hunted down by the community. There you was lyin’ where my shot laid you, like you was dead. The idea struck me sudden, and I just took your badge off and fastened it onto myself, and I fastened my reputation onto you. I told her I was the marshal and you was a holy terror. You can take your badge back now, Buck.”

      With shaking fingers Calliope began to unfasten the disc of metal from his shirt.

      “Easy there!” said Buck Patterson. “You keep that badge right where it is, Calliope Catesby. Don’t you dare to take it off till the day your mother leaves this town. You’ll be city marshal of Quicksand as long as she’s here to know it. After I stir around town a bit and put ’em on I’ll guarantee that nobody won’t give the thing away to her. And say, you leather-headed, rip-roarin’, low-down son of a locoed cyclone, you follow that advice she give me! I’m goin’ to take some of it myself, too.”

      “Buck,” said Calliope feelingly, “ef I don’t I hope I may—”

      “Shut up,” said Buck. “She’s a-comin’ back.”

      My Tussle With The Devil by O. Henry’s Ghost

       Table of Contents

       The Barrage Fire

       Comments

       Over There

       Foreword

       My Tussle With The Devil

       The Contest

       Sleeping

       Yearning

       Animals

       Weariness

       I. — The King

       II. — The Toiler

       The Slave

       Freedom

       Multitudes

       Going Home

       The Three H’s

       The Senses

      Fancies:

       Fancies

       Trusting

       Thoughts

       Thinking

       Yesterday-today

       Action-reaction

       A Vision

      The Barrage Fire

       Table of Contents

      I FEEL I cannot give O. Henry’s Ghost better ammunition with which to meet his critics than a bit of truth voiced by Joan in one of Algernon Blackwood’s wonderful books.

      “The beloved dead step nearer when their bodies drop aside. They know where they are and what they are doing. It’s not for us to worry — in that way. And they are out of hours and minutes”

      To meet the onslaught of you, Mr. Scoffer and Mr. Skeptic, who will say, “Impossible! They are not a bit like O. Henry’s stories! They lack all his virility, etc., etc.” I say at once, of course they are different! Where before his stories were written in the bold black and red of human passions, which belong to materiality, now, they must of necessity be pastel in hue and delicate gossamer things, for O. Henry’s Ghost is using finer material to mold his creations. The land where he dwells is subject to a different rate of vibration, and as the rhythm must be totally unlike, it is natural that the thoughts should flow and take form in the vehicle of poets.

      But one characteristic is dominant still — the completeness of each Pastel. Not a word more is needed to complete a picture or convey an emotion, and while the aspiration of O.’ Henry’s Ghost has changed and he deals with higher, finer forces and desires, he still retains his mastery of the short story.