The Gentle Grafter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 172 pages of information about The Gentle Grafter.

The Gentle Grafter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 172 pages of information about The Gentle Grafter.

“The only times,” said he, “that me and Andy Tucker ever had any hiatuses in our cordial intents was when we differed on the moral aspects of grafting.  Andy had his standards and I had mine.  I didn’t approve of all of Andy’s schemes for levying contributions from the public, and he thought I allowed my conscience to interfere too often for the financial good of the firm.  We had high arguments sometimes.  One word led on to another till he said I reminded him of Rockefeller.

“‘I don’t know how you mean that, Andy,’ says I, ’but we have been friends too long for me to take offense at a taunt that you will regret when you cool off.  I have yet,’ says I, ’to shake hands with a subpoena server.’

“One summer me and Andy decided to rest up a spell in a fine little town in the mountains of Kentucky called Grassdale.  We was supposed to be horse drovers, and good decent citizens besides, taking a summer vacation.  The Grassdale people liked us, and me and Andy declared a cessation of hostilities, never so much as floating the fly leaf of a rubber concession prospectus or flashing a Brazilian diamond while we was there.

“One day the leading hardware merchant of Grassdale drops around to the hotel where me and Andy stopped, and smokes with us, sociable, on the side porch.  We knew him pretty well from pitching quoits in the afternoons in the court house yard.  He was a loud, red man, breathing hard, but fat and respectable beyond all reason.

[Illustration:  “Pitching quoits in the afternoon in the court house yard.”]

“After we talk on all the notorious themes of the day, this Murkison—­ for such was his entitlements—­takes a letter out of his coat pocket in a careful, careless way and hands it to us to read.

“‘Now, what do you think of that?’ says he, laughing—­’a letter like that to me!’

“Me and Andy sees at a glance what it is; but we pretend to read it through.  It was one of them old time typewritten green goods letters explaining how for $1,000 you could get $5,000 in bills that an expert couldn’t tell from the genuine; and going on to tell how they were made from plates stolen by an employee of the Treasury at Washington.

“’Think of ’em sending a letter like that to me!’ says Murkison again.

[Illustration:  “’Think of ’em sending a letter like that to me!’”]

“’Lot’s of good men get ’em,’ says Andy.  ’If you don’t answer the first letter they let you drop.  If you answer it they write again asking you to come on with your money and do business.’

“’But think of ’em writing to me!’ says Murkison.

“A few days later he drops around again.

“‘Boys,’ says he, ’I know you are all right or I wouldn’t confide in you.  I wrote to them rascals again just for fun.  They answered and told me to come on to Chicago.  They said telegraph to J. Smith when I would start.  When I get there I’m to wait on a certain street corner till a man in a gray suit comes along and drops a newspaper in front of me.  Then I am to ask him how the water is, and he knows it’s me and I know it’s him.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Gentle Grafter from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.