The Long Shadow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 213 pages of information about The Long Shadow.

The Long Shadow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 213 pages of information about The Long Shadow.

The foreman studied keenly the face of Charming Billy, saw there an immobility that somehow belied his cheerful view of the case, and abruptly changed the subject.

“You’ve got things swept and garnished, all right,” he remarked, looking at the nearly clean floor with the tiny pools of dirty water still standing in the worn places.  “When did the fit take yuh?  Did it come on with fever-n’-chills, like most other breaking-outs?  Or, did the girl—­”

“Aw, the darned dawg mussed up the floor, dying in here,” Billy apologized weakly.  “I was plumb obliged to clean up after him.”  He glanced somewhat shamefacedly at the floor.  After all, it did not look quite like the one where Miss Bridger lived; in his heart Billy believed that was because he had no strip of carpet to spread before the table.  He permitted his glance to take in the bunk, nakedly showing the hay it held for a softening influence and piled high with many things—­the things that would not go beneath.

“Your soogans are gathering frost to beat the band, Bill,” the foreman informed him, following his glance to the bunk.  “Your inexperience is something appalling, for a man that has fried his own bacon and swabbed out his own frying-pan as many times as you have.  Better go bring ’em in.  It was thinking about snowing again when I come.”

Billy grinned a little and went after his bedding, brought it and threw it with a fine disregard for order upon the accumulation of boxes and benches in the bunk.  “I’ll go feed the hosses, and then I’ll cook yuh some supper,” he told the foreman still humped comfortably before the stove with his fur coat thrown open to the heat and his spurred boots hoisted upon the hearth.  “Better make up your mind to stay till morning; it’s getting mighty chilly, outside.”

The foreman, at the critical stage of cigarette lighting, grunted unintelligibly.  Billy was just laying hand to the door-knob when the foreman looked toward him in the manner of one about to speak.  Billy stood and waited inquiringly.

“Say, Bill,” drawled Jawbreaker, “yuh never told me her name, yet.”

The brows of Charming Billy pinched involuntarily together.  “I thought the Pilgrim had wised yuh up to all the details,” he said coldly.

“The Pilgrim didn’t know; he says yuh never introduced him.  And seeing it’s serious enough to start yuh on the godly trail uh cleanliness, I’m naturally taking a friendly interest in her, and—­”

“Aw—­go to hell!” snapped Charming Billy, and went out and slammed the door behind him so that the cabin shook.

CHAPTER V.

The Man From Michigan.

     “How old is she, Billy boy, Billy boy,
     How old is she, charming Billy? 
       Twice six, twice seven,
       Forty-nine and eleven—­
     She’s a young thing, and cannot leave her mother.”

“C’m-awn, yuh lazy old skate!  Think I want to sleep out to-night, when town’s so clost?” Charming Billy yanked his pack-pony awake and into a shuffling trot over the trail, resettled his hat on his head, sagged his shoulders again and went back to crooning his ditty.

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Project Gutenberg
The Long Shadow from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.