Going Some

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Going Some Page 12

by Beach, Rex Ellingwood


  "Don't let a Centipede bluff you!" exclaimed Speed. "Cover anything they offer—give 'em odds. Anything you don't want, I'll take, pay or play, money at the tape. We can't lose."

  "I got no more money," said Carara, removing his handsome bespangled hat, "but I bet my sombrero. 'E's wort' two hondred pesos."

  Murphy, the Swede, followed quickly:

  "Aye ban' send may vages home to may ole' moder, but aye skall bat you some."

  "Haven't you boys risked enough already?" ventured Miss Chapin.

  "Remember, it will go pretty hard with the losers."

  "Harder the better," came a voice.

  "Y'all don't have to bet, jest because I'm h'yar," gibed

  Gallagher.

  "God! I wish I was rich!" exclaimed Willie.

  But Miss Chapin persisted. "You are two months overdrawn, all of you. My brother won't advance you any more."

  "Then my man, Lawrence, will take what they can't cover," offered

  Speed.

  "That's right! Clean 'em good, brothers," croaked the trainer.

  "If you'll step over to the bunk-house, Gabby, we'll dig up some personal perquisites and family heirlooms." Stover nodded toward his men's quarters, and Gallagher grinned joyously.

  "That shore listens like a band from where I set. We aim to annex the wages, hopes, and personal ambitions of y'all, along with your talkin'-machine."

  "Excuse me." Willie pushed his way forward. "How's she gettin' along?"

  "Fine!"

  "You mule-skinners ain't broke her?"

  "No; we plays her every evenin'."

  The little man shifted his feet; then allowed himself to inquire, as if regarding the habits of some dear departed friend:

  "Have you chose any favorite records?"

  "We all has our picks. Speakin' personal, I'm stuck on that baggage coach song of Mrs. More's."

  "Mo_ray!_" Willie corrected. "M-o-r-a! Heleney Mo_ray_ is the lady's name."

  "Mebbe so. Our foot-runner likes that Injun war-dance best of all." Carara smiled at Cloudy, who nodded, as if pleased by the compliment. Then it was that the Flying Heart spokesman made an inquiry in hushed, hesitating tones.

  "How do you like The Holy City"—he removed his hat, as did those back of him. "As sung by Madam-o-sella Melby?"

  "Rotten!" Gallagher said promptly. "That's a bum, for fair."

  During one breathless instant the wizened man stood as if disbelieving his ears, the enormity of the insult robbing him of speech and motion. Then he uttered a snarl, and Stover was barely in time to intercept the backward fling of his groping hand.

  "No voylence, Willie! There's ladies present."

  Stover's captive ground his teeth and struggled briefly, then turned and made for the open prairie without a word.

  "It's his first love," said Stover, simply. The other foreman exploded into hoarse laughter, saying:

  "I didn't reckon I was treadin' on the toes of no bereafed relatif's, but them church tunes ain't my style. However, we're wastin' time, gents. Where's that bunk-house? Nothin' but money talks loud enough for me to hear. Good-day, white folks!" Gallagher saluted Miss Chapin and her friends with a flourish, and moved away in company with the cowboys.

  "I never," said Glass, "seen so many tough guys outside of a street-car strike."

  "Gallagher has been in prison," Jean informed him. "He's a wonderful shot."

  "I knew it!"

  Speed spoke up brightly: "Well, let's go back to the house and wait for Covington."

  "But you were getting ready to go running," said Helen.

  "No more running for me! I'm in good enough shape, eh, Larry?"

  "Great! Barring the one thing."

  "What's that?" queried Fresno.

  "A little trouble with one of his nerve-centres, that's all. But even if it got worse during the night, Covington could run the race for him."

  The Californian started. At last all was plain. He had doubted from the first, now he was certain; but with understanding came also a menace to his own careful plans. If Covington ran in Speed's place, how could he effect his rival's exposure? On the way back to the house he had to think rapidly.

  Mrs. Keap was pacing the porch as the others came up, and called Speed aside; then, when they were alone, broke out, with blazing eyes:

  "You said you had stopped him!"

  "And I thought I had. I did my best."

  "But he's coming! He'll be here any minute!"

  "I suppose he learned you were here." Wally laughed.

  "Then you must have told him."

  "No, I didn't."

  "Mr. Speed"—Roberta's cheeks were pallid and her voice trembled —"you—didn't—send that telegram—at all."

  "Oh, but I did."

  "You wanted him to get here in time to run in your place. I see it all now. You arranged it very cleverly, but you will pay the penalty."

  "You surely won't tell Helen?"

  "This minute! You wretched, deceitful man!"

  Before he could say more, from the front of the house came the rattle of wheels, a loud "Whoa!" then Jean's voice, crying:

  "Culver! Culver!" while Mrs. Keap clutched at her bosom and moaned.

  Her companion bolted into the house and down the hall, shouting the name of his room-mate. Out through the front door he dashed headlong, in time to behold Fresno and the two girls assisting the new arrival toward the veranda. They were exclaiming in pity, and had their arms about the athlete, for Culver Covington, Intercollegiate One-Hundred-Yard Champion, was hobbling forward upon a pair of crutches.

  The yell died in Speed's throat, he felt himself grow deadly faint.

  "Crippled!" he gasped, and leaned against the door for support.

  CHAPTER XV

  In a daze, Speed saw his friend mount the porch painfully; in a daze, he shook his hand. Subconsciously he beheld Lawrence Glass come panting into view, throw up his hands at sight of Covington, and cry out in a strange tongue. When he regained his faculties he broke into the conversation harshly.

  "What have you done to yourself?"

  "I broke a toe," explained the athlete.

  "You broke a toe?"

  "He broke a toe!" wailed Glass, faintly.

  "If it's nothing but a toe, it won't hurt your running." Speed seized eagerly upon the faintest hope.

  "No. I'll be all right in a few weeks." Covington spoke carelessly, his eyes bent upon Jean Chapin. "You've g-got to run to-morrow."

  "What!" Covington dragged his glance away from the cheeks of his sweetheart.

  "I—I'm sick. You'll have to."

  "Don't be an idiot, Wally. I can't walk!"

  Helen explained, with the pride of one displaying her own handiwork: "Mr. Speed defends the Flying Heart to-morrow. You are just in time to see him."

  "When did you learn to box, Wally?" Covington was genuinely amazed.

  "I'm not going to box. It's a footrace. I'm training—been training ever since I arrived."

  In his first bewilderment the latecomer might have unwittingly betrayed his friend had not Jean suddenly inquired:

  "Where is Roberta?"

  "Roberta!" Covington tripped over one of his crutches. "Roberta who?"

  "Why, Roberta Keap, of course! She's chaperoning us while mother is away."

  The hero of countless field-days turned pale, and seemed upon the point of hobbling back to "Nigger Mike's" buck-board.

  "You and she are old friends, I believe?" Helen interposed.

  "Yes! Oh yes!" Culver flashed his chum a look of dumb entreaty, but Speed was staring round-eyed into space, striving to read the future.

  Helen started to fetch her just as the pallid chaperon was entering the door.

  She shook hands with Covington. She observed that he was too deeply affected at sight of her to speak, and it awakened fresh misgivings in her mind.

  "H-how d'y do! I didn't know you were—here!" he stammered.

  "I thought it would surprise you!" Roberta smiled wanly, a
mazed at her own self-control, then froze in her tracks as Jean announced:

  "Jack will be home to-night, Culver. He'll be delighted to see you!"

  J. Wallingford Speed offered a diversion by bursting into a hollow laugh. Now that the world was in league to work his own downfall, it was time someone else had a touch of suffering. To this end he inquired how the toe had come to be broken.

  "I broke it in Omaha—automobile accident." Culver was fighting to master himself.

  "Omaha! Did you stop in Omaha?" inquired Jean.

  "A city of beautiful women," Speed reflected, audibly. "Somebody step on your foot at a dance?"

  "No, of course not! I don't know anybody in Omaha! I went motoring—"

  "Joy-ride?"

  "Not at all."

  "Who was with you?" Miss Chapin's voice was ominously sweet.

  "N—nobody I knew."

  "Does that mean that you were alone?"

  "Yes. I stopped off between trains to view the city, and took a

  'Seeing Omaha' ride. The yap wagon upset, and—I broke my toe."

  "You left Chicago ten days ago," said Speed accusingly.

  "Of course, but—when I broke my toe I had to stay. It's a beautiful city—lots of fine buildings." "How did you like the jail?"

  "What in the world are you boys talking about?" queried Miss

  Blake.

  "Mr. Speed seems amused at Culver's accident." Roberta gave him a stinging look. "Now we'd better let Culver go to his room and freshen up a bit. I want to talk to you, Helen," and Speed drooped at the meaning behind her words. But it was time for a general conference; events were shaping themselves too rapidly for him to cope with. Once the three were alone he lost no time in making his predicament known, the while his friend listened in amazement.

  "But is it really so serious?" the latter asked, finally.

  "It's life or death. There's a homocidal maniac named Willie guarding me daytimes, and a pair of renegades who keep watch at my window all night. The cowboys bathe me in ice-water to toughen me, and feed me raw meat to make me wild. In every corner there lurks an assassin with orders to shoot me if I break training, every where I go some low-browed criminal feels my biceps, pinches my legs, and asks how my wind is. I tell you, I'm going mad."

  "And the worst part of it is," spoke Glass, sympathetically, "they'll bump me off first. It's a pipe."

  "But, Wally, you can't run."

  "Don't I know it?"

  "Don't I?" seconded the trainer.

  "Then why attempt the impossible? Call the race off."

  "It's too late. Don't you understand? The bets are made, and its 'pay or play.' The cowboys have mortgaged their souls on me."

  "He was makin' a play for that little doll—"

  "Don't you call Miss Blake a doll, Larry! I won't stand for it!"

  "Well, 'skirt,' then."

  "Why don't you cut it? There's a train East at midnight."

  "And leave Helen—like that? Her faith in me has weakened already; she'd hate me if I did that. No! I've got to face it out!"

  "They'll be singin' hymns for both of us," predicted the fat man.

  "I don't care. They can boil me in oil—I won't let her think I'm a coward."

  "Larry doesn't have to stay."

  "Of course not. He can escape."

  "Not a chance," said the trainer. "They watch me closer 'n they do him."

  Covington considered for a moment. "It certainly looks bad, but perhaps the other fellow can't run either. Who is he?"

  "A cook named Skinner."

  "Happy name! Well, two-thirds of a sprint is in the start. How does Wally get in motion, Lawrence?"

  "Like a sacred ox." Glass could not conceal his contempt.

  "I'll give him some pointers; it will all help." But Speed was nervous and awkward—so awkward, in fact, that the coach finally gave it up as a bad job, saying:

  "It's no use, Wally, you've got fool feet."

  "I have, eh? Well, I didn't break them getting out of jail."

  "The less said about that jail the better. I'm in trouble myself."

  Speed might have explained that his chum's dilemma was by no means so serious as he imagined, had not watchman Willie thrust his head through the open window at that moment with the remark:

  "Time to get busy!"

  "We'll be right with you!" Glass seized his protege by the arm and bore him away, muttering: "Stick it out, brother, we're nearin' the end!"

  Again Speed donned his running-suit and took to the road for his farewell practise. Again Willie followed at a distance on horseback, watching the hills warily. But all hope had fled from the Yale man now, and he returned to his training-quarters disheartened, resigned.

  He was not resigned, however, to the visit he received later from Miss Helen Blake. That young lady rushed in upon him like a miniature cyclone, sweeping him off his feet by the fury of her denunciation, allowing him no opportunity to speak, until, with a half-sob, she demanded:

  "Why—why did you deceive me?"

  "I love you!" Wally said, as if no further explanation were necessary.

  "That explains nothing. You made sport of me! You couldn't love me and do that!"

  "Helen!"

  "I thought you were so fine, so strong, but you lied—yes, that is what you did! You fibbed to me the first day I met you, and you've been fibbing ever since. I could never, never care for a man who would do that."

  "Who has told you these things?"

  "Roberta, for one. She opened my eyes to your—baseness."

  "Well, Roberta has a grudge against my sex. She's engaged to all the men she hasn't already married. Marriage is a habit with her. It has made her suspicious—"

  "But you did deceive me, didn't you?"

  "Will you marry me?" asked J. Wallingford Speed.

  "The idea!" Miss Blake gasped. "Will you?"

  "Please don't speak that way. When a man cares for a woman, he doesn't deceive her—he tells her everything. You told me you were a great runner, and I believed you. I'll never believe you again. Of course, I shall behave to you in a perfectly friendly manner, but underneath the surface I shall be consumed with indignation." Miss Blake commenced to be consumed. "See! You don't acknowledge your perfidy even now."

  "What's the use? If I said I couldn't run, and then beat the cook, you'd believe I deceived you again. And suppose that I can't beat him?"

  "Then I shall know they have told me the truth."

  "And if, on the other hand, I should win"—Miss Blake's eyes fell—"Helen, would you marry me?" Speed started toward her, but she had fled out into the twilight.

  Dusk was settling over stretches of purple land, and already the room was peopled by shadows. Work was over; there were sounds of cheerful preparations for supper; from the house came faint chords of laughter; a Spanish song floated in, as Carara told his love to the tune of Mariedetta's guitar:

  "'Adios! adios! adios! por siempre,

  Adios! coqueta, mi amor;

  Adios! adios! adios! por siempre,

  Adios! coqueta, mi amor!'"

  It was the hush that precedes the evening as it does the dawn; the hour of reverie, in which all music is sweet, and forgotten faces arise to haunt.

  Speed stood where the girl had left him, miserable, hopeless, helpless; the words of the Spanish song seemed sung for a lost love of his. And certainly his love was lost. He had stayed on in the stubborn superstitious belief that something would surely happen to relieve him from his predicament—fortune had never failed him before—and instead, every day, every incident, had served to involve him deeper. Now she knew! It was her golden heart that had held her true thus far, but could any devotion survive the sight of humiliation such as he would suffer on the morrow? Already he heard the triumphant jeers of the Centipede henchmen, the angry clamor of the Flying Heart, the mocking laughter of his rival.

  He groaned aloud. Forsooth, a broken toe! Of all the countless tens of thousands of toes in Christendom, the one
he had hung his salvation upon had proven weaker than a reed. What cruel jest of Fate was this? If Fate had wished to break a toe, why had she not selected, out of all the billions at her disposal, that of some other athlete than Culver Covington—even his own.

  J. Wallingford Speed started suddenly and paled. He had remembered that no one could force a crippled man to run.

  "By Jove," he exclaimed, "I'll do it!"

  He crossed quickly to the bunk-house door and looked in. The room was empty. The supper-bell pealed out, and he heard the cow-men answer it. Now was the appointed moment; he might have no other. With cat-like tread he slipped into the sleeping-quarters, returning in a moment with a revolver. He stared thankfully at the weapon—better this than dishonor.

  "Why didn't I think of it before? It's perfectly simple. I'll accidentally shoot myself—in the foot."

  But even as he gazed at the gun he saw that the muzzle was as large as a gopher-hole. A bullet of that size would sink a ship, he meditated in a panic, and as for his foot—what frightful execution it would work! But—it were better to lose a foot than a foot-race, under present conditions, so he began to unlace his shoe. Then realizing the value of circumstantial evidence, he paused. No! His disability must bear all the earmarks of an accident. He must guess the location of his smallest and least important toe, and trust the rest to his marksmanship. Visions of blood-poisoning beset him, and when he pressed the muzzle against the point of his shoe his hand shook with such a palsy that he feared he might miss. He steeled himself with the thought that other men had snuffed out life itself in this manner, then sat down upon the floor and cocked the weapon a second time. He wondered if the shock might, by any chance, numb him into unconsciousness. If so, he might bleed to death before assistance arrived. But he had nothing to do with that. The only question was, which foot. He regarded them both tenderly. They were nice feet, and had done him many favors. He loved every toe; they were almost like innocent children. It was a dastardly deed to take advantage of them thus, but he advanced the revolver until it pressed firmly against the outside of his left foot, then closed his eyes, and called upon his courage. There came a great roaring in his ears.

  How long he sat thus waiting for the explosion he did not know, but he opened his eyes at length to find the foot still intact, and the muzzle of the weapon pointing directly at his instep. He altered his aim hurriedly, when, without warning of any sort, a man's figure appeared silhouetted against the window.

 

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