“Yes, dear, it is election stuff, but it is not a bit tiresome,” he answered smiling, as he kissed her tenderly. Several times during the evening, and into the night, she heard him laugh his happy boyish laugh.
James Ducker did not get the nomination.
Patsey Watson waited on the corner of the street. It was in the early morning and Patsey’s face bore marks of a recent and mighty conflict with soap and water. Patsey looked apprehensively every now and then at his home; his mother might emerge any minute and insist on his wearing a coat; his mother could be very tiresome that way sometimes.
It seemed long this morning to wait for the butcher, but the only way to be sure of a ride was to be on the spot. Sometimes there were delays in getting away from home. Getting on a coat was one; finding a hat was the worst of all. Since Bugsey got the nail in his foot and could not go out the hat question was easier. The hat was still hard to find, but not impossible.
Wilford Ducker came along. Wilford had just had a dose of electric oil artfully concealed in a cup of tea, and he felt desperate. His mother had often told him not to play with any of the Watson boys, they were so rough and unladylike in their manner. Perhaps that was why Wilford came over at once to Patsey. Patsey did not care for Wilford Ducker even if he did live in a big house with screen doors on it. Mind you, he did not wear braces yet, only a waist with white buttons on it, and him seven! Patsey’s manner was cold.
“You goin’ fer butcher-ride?” Wilford asked.
“Yep,” Patsey answered with very little warmth.
“Say, Pat, lemme go,” Wilford coaxed.
“Nope,” Patsey replied, indifferently.
“Aw, do, Pat, won’t cher?”
Mrs. Ducker had been very particular about Wilford’s enunciation. Once she dismissed a servant for dropping her final g’s. Mrs. Ducker considered it more serious to drop a final g than a dinner plate. She often spoke of how particular she was. She said she had insisted on correct enunciation from the first. So Wilford said again:
“Aw, do, Pat, won’t cher?”
Patsey looked carelessly down the street and began to sing:
How much wood would a wood-chuck
chuck
If a wood-chuck could chuck wood.
“What cher take fer butcher-ride, Pat?” Wilford asked.
“What cher got?”
Patsey had stopped singing, but still beat time with his foot to the imaginary music.
Wilford produced a jack-knife in very good repair.
Patsey stopped beating time, though only for an instant. It does not do to be too keen.
“It’s a good un,” Wilford said with pride. “It’s a Rodger, mind ye—two blades.”
“Name yer price,” Patsey condescended, after a deliberate examination.