O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1920 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 467 pages of information about O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1920.

O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1920 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 467 pages of information about O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1920.

(And from that time on, it was noted, he never referred to the fugitive by any other name than cachorra, which is a kind of dog.  “That cachorra!” As if he had forfeited the relationship not only of the family, but of the very genus, the very race!  “That cachorra!”)

He pronounced this resolution without passion.  When they assured him that the culprit would come back again indeed, much sooner than he expected, “with a rope around his neck,” he shook his head slowly.

“No, you shall not catch that cachorra now.  But one day—­”

There was something about its very colourlessness which made it sound oracular.  It was at least prophetic.  They searched, laid their traps, proceeded with all their placards, descriptions, rewards, clues, trails.  But on Manuel Negro they never laid their hands.

Months passed and became years.  Boaz Negro did not rebuild his house.  He might have done so, out of his earnings, for upon himself he spent scarcely anything, reverting to his old habit of an almost miserly economy.  Yet perhaps it would have been harder after all.  For his earnings were less and less.  In that town a cobbler who sits in an empty shop is apt to want for trade.  Folk take their boots to mend where they take their bodies to rest and their minds to be edified.

No longer did the walls of Boaz’s shop resound to the boastful recollections of young men.  Boaz had changed.  He had become not only different, but opposite.  A metaphor will do best.  The spirit of Boaz Negro had been a meadowed hillside giving upon the open sea, the sun, the warm, wild winds from beyond the blue horizon.  And covered with flowers, always hungry and thirsty for the sun and the fabulous wind and bright showers of rain.  It had become an entrenched camp, lying silent, sullen, verdureless, under a gray sky.  He stood solitary against the world.  His approaches were closed.  He was blind, and he was also deaf and dumb.

Against that what can young fellows do who wish for nothing but to rest themselves and talk about their friends and enemies?  They had come and they had tried.  They had raised their voices even higher than before.  Their boasts had grown louder, more presumptuous, more preposterous, until, before the cold separation of that unmoving and as if contemptuous presence in the cobbler’s chair, they burst of their own air, like toy balloons.  And they went and left Boaz alone.

There was another thing which served, if not to keep them away, at least not to entice them back.  That was the aspect of the place.  It was not cheerful.  It invited no one.  In its way that fire-bitten ruin grew to be almost as great a scandal as the act itself had been.  It was plainly an eyesore.  A valuable property, on the town’s main thoroughfare—­and an eyesore!  The neighbouring owners protested.

Their protestations might as well have gone against a stone wall.  That man was deaf and dumb.  He had become, in a way, a kind of vegetable, for the quality of a vegetable is that, while it is endowed with life, it remains fixed in one spot.  For years Boaz was scarcely seen to move foot out of that shop that was left him, a small square, blistered promontory on the shores of ruin.

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O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1920 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.