Under Handicap eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 339 pages of information about Under Handicap.

Under Handicap eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 339 pages of information about Under Handicap.

She answered him with a “Hello, Joe!” as she climbed to his side.

Joe loosened his reins a very little, called sharply to his horses, and in a whirlwind of dust the buckboard made an amazingly sharp turn and shot rattling down the road and out toward the mountains in the south.

“And now what?” grinned Hapgood, maliciously.  “Even your country girl has gone!”

Greek Conniston gazed a moment after the flying buckboard, a vague, wavering, unreal thing, through the dust of its own making, and, hiding his disappointment under a shrug, turned to Hapgood.

“Now for a hotel somewhere, if the place has one.  Come on, Roger.  We’re in for it now, so let’s make the best of it.”

Carrying his suit-case, he strode off toward the saloon, Roger following silently.  The lanky, sunburned individual in the doorway watched their approach idly for a moment and then turned his lazy eyes to a cow and calf trudging past toward the watering-trough.

“Hello, friend!” called Conniston.

The lanky individual drew his eyes from the cow and calf, bestowed a long look and a fleeting nod upon the two strangers, and turned again toward the trough, little impressed, little interested in the Easterners.

“I say!” went on Conniston, brusquely.  “Where’ll a man get a room here?”

“Down to the hotel.”

“So you do have a hotel?  Where is it?”

The lazy individual ducked his head toward the east end of the street, cast a last look at the cow and calf, and, turning, went back into the saloon.

“Nice sort of people,” grunted Hapgood.

Conniston laughed.  “Buck up, Roger,” he grinned, his own spurt of irritation lost in his enjoyment of Hapgood’s greater bitterness.  “It’s different, anyhow, isn’t it?  Come on.  Let’s see what the hotel looks like.”

The hotel was a saloon with a long bar at the front, a little room just off, containing a couple of tables covered with red oil-cloth.  Beyond were half a dozen six-by-six rooms separated from one another by partitions rising to within two feet of the unceiled roof.  The proprietor, busy with some local friends in the card-room, saw the two young men come in and yelled, lustily: 

“Mary!”

Mary, a stout and comfortable-looking woman, appeared from the kitchen, wiping her hands upon her blue apron, and with a sharp glance at the newcomers bobbed her head at them and said, briefly, “Howdy.”

Conniston took off his hat and came into the bar-room.  Roger, with a careless glance at the woman, came in without taking off his hat and dropped into one of the rickety chairs against the wall.  And there he sat until Conniston had negotiated for two rooms for the night.  Then he got jerkily to his feet and stalked after his friend and their hostess to the back of the house.  A moment later he and Conniston, left alone, sat upon their two beds and stared at each other through the doorway connecting their rooms.  Conniston studied the bare floors, the bare walls of rough, unplaned twelve-inch boards set upright with cracks between them ranging from a quarter of an inch to an inch in width, and, rumpling up his hair, sat back and grinned into Hapgood’s woebegone face.  And Hapgood after the same examination and a sight of the rough beds covered with patchwork comforters, groaned aloud.

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Under Handicap from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.