"They
do," Eugene agreed.
"I
thought you'd probably heard about it--thought most likely Fred's wife might
have said something to your daughter, especially as they're cousins."
"I
think not."
"Well,
I'm off to the store," said Mr. Kinney briskly; yet he lingered. "I
suppose we'll all have to club in and keep old Fanny out of the poorhouse if he
does blow up. From all I hear it's usually only a question of time. They say
she hasn't got anything else to depend on."
"I
suppose not."
"Well--I
wondered--" Kinney hesitated. "I was wondering why you hadn't thought
of finding something around your works for him. They say he's an all-fired
worker and he certainly does seem to have hid some decent stuff in him under
all his damfoolishness. And you used to be such a tremendous friend of the
family--I thought perhaps you--of course I know he's a queer lot--I know he's--"
"Yes,
I think he is," said Eugene. "No. I haven't anything to offer
him."
"I
suppose not," Kinney returned thoughtfully, as he went out. "I don't
know that I would myself. Well, we'll probably see his name in the papers some
day if he stays with that job!"
.
. . However, the nitro-glycerin expert of whom they spoke did not get into the
papers as a consequence of being blown up, although his daily life was
certainly a continuous exposure to that risk. Destiny has a constant passion
for the incongruous, and it was George's lot to manipulate wholesale quantities
of terrific and volatile explosives in safety, and to be laid low by an
accident so commonplace and inconsequent that it was a comedy. Fate had
reserved for him the final insult of riding him down under the wheels of one of
those juggernauts at which he had once shouted "Git a hoss!"
Nevertheless, Fate's ironic choice for Georgie's undoing was not a big and
swift and momentous car, such as Eugene manufactured; it was a specimen of the
hustling little type that was flooding the country, the cheapest, commonest,
hardiest little car ever made.
The
accident took place upon a Sunday morning, on a downtown crossing, with the
streets almost empty, and no reason in the world for such a thing to happen. He
had gone out for his Sunday morning walk, and he was thinking of an automobile
at the very moment when the little car struck him; he was thinking of a shiny
landaulet and a charming figure stepping into it, and of the quick gesture of a
white glove toward the chauffeur, motioning him to go on. George heard a shout
but did not look up, for he could not imagine anybody's shouting at him, and he
was too engrossed in the question "Was it Lucy?" He could not decide,
and his lack of decision in this matter probably superinduced a lack of
decision in another, more pressingly vital. At the second and louder shout he
did look up; and the car was almost on him; but he could not make up his mind
if the charming little figure he had seen was Lucy's and he could not make up his
mind whether to go backward or forward: these questions became entangled in his
mind. Then, still not being able to decide which of two ways to go, he tried to
go both--and the little car ran him down. It was not moving very rapidly, but
it went all the way over George.
He
was conscious of gigantic violence; of roaring and jolting and concussion; of
choking clouds of dust, shot with lightning, about his head; he heard snapping
sounds as loud as shots from a small pistol, and was stabbed by excruciating pains
in his legs. Then he became aware that the machine was being lifted off of him.
People were gathering in a circle round him, gabbling.
His
forehead was bedewed with the sweat of anguish, and he tried to wipe off this
dampness, but failed. He could not get his arm that far.
"Nev'
mind," a policeman said; and George could see above his eyes the skirts of
the blue coat, covered with dust and sunshine. "Amb'lance be here in a
minute. Nev' mind tryin' to move any. You want em to send for some special
doctor?"
"No."
George's lips formed the word.
"Or
to take you to some private hospital?"
"Tell
them to take me," he said faintly, "to the City Hospital."
"A'
right."
A
smallish young man in a duster fidgeted among the crowd, explaining and
protesting, and a strident voiced girl, his companion, supported his argument,
declaring to everyone her willingness to offer testimony in any court of law
that every blessed word he said was the God's truth.
"It's
the fella that hit you," the policeman said, looking down on George.
"I guess he's right; you must of b'en thinkin' about somep'm' or other.
It's wunnerful the damage them little machines can do--you'd never think
it--but I guess they ain't much case ag'in this fella that was drivin'
it."
"You
bet your life they ain't no case on me!" the young man in the duster
agreed, with great bitterness. He came and stood at George's feet, addressing
him heatedly: "I'm sorry fer you all right, and I don't say I ain't. I
hold nothin' against you, but it wasn't any more my fault than the statehouse!
You run into me, much as I run into you, and if you get well you ain't goin' to
get not one single cent out o' me! This lady here was settin' with me and we
both yelled at you. Wasn't goin' a step over eight mile an hour! I'm perfectly
willing to say I'm sorry for you though, and so's the lady with me. We're both
willing to say that much, but that's all, understand!"
George's
drawn eyelids twitched; his misted glance rested fleetingly upon the two
protesting motorists, and the old imperious spirit within him flickered up in a
single word. Lying on his back in the middle of the street, where he was
regarded by an increasing public as an unpleasant curiosity, he spoke this word
clearly from a mouth filled with dust, and from lips smeared with blood.
.
. . It was a word which interested the policeman. When the ambulance clanged
away, he turned to a fellow patrolman who had joined him. "Funny what he
says to the little cuss that done the damage. That's all he did call
him--nothin' else at all--and the cuss had broke both his legs fer him and
God-knows-what-all!"
"I
wasn't here then. What was it?"
"'Riffraff!'"
CHAPTER XXXV
EUGENE'S
feeling about George had not been altered by his talk with Kinney in the club
window, though he was somewhat disturbed. He was not disturbed by Kinney's hint
that Fanny Minafer might be left on the hands of her friends through her
nephew's present dealings with nitro-glycerin, but he was surprised that Kinney
had "led up" with intentional tact to the suggestion that a position
might be made for George in the Morgan factory. Eugene did not care to have any
suggestions about Georgie Minafer made to him. Kinney had represented Georgie
as a new Georgie--at least in spots--a Georgie who was proving that decent
stuff had been hid in him; in fact, a Georgie who was doing rather a, handsome
thing in taking a risky job for the sake of his aunt, poor old silly Fanny
Minafer! Eugene didn't care what risks Georgie took, or how much decent stuff
he had in him: nothing that Georgie would ever do in this world or the next
could change Eugene Morgan's feeling toward him.
If
Eugene could possibly have brought himself to offer Georgie a position in the
automobile business, he knew full well the proud devil wouldn't have taken it
from him; though Georgie's proud reason would not have been the one attributed
to him by Eugene. George would never reach the point where he could accept
anything material from Eugene and preserve the self-respect he had begun to
regain.
But
if Eugene had wished, he could easily have taken George out of the
nitro-glycerin branch of the chemical works. Always interested in apparent
impossibilities of invention, Eugene had encouraged many experiments in such
gropings as those for the discovery of substitutes for gasoline and rubber;
and, though his mood had withheld the information from Kinney, he had recently
bought from the elder Akers a substantial quantity of stock on the condition
that the chemical company should establish an experimental laboratory. He
intended to buy more; Akers was anxious to please him; and a word from Eugene
would have placed George almost anywhere in the chemical works. George need
never have known it, for Eugene's purchases of stock were always quiet ones:
the transaction remained, so far, between him and Akers, and could be kept
between them.
The
possibility just edged itself into Eugene's mind; that is, he let it become
part of his perceptions long enough for it to prove to him that it was actually
a possibility. Then he half started with disgust that he should be even idly
considering such a thing over his last cigar for the night, in his library.
"No!" And he threw the cigar into the empty fireplace and went to
bed.
His
bitterness for himself might have worn away, but never his bitterness for
Isabel. He took that thought to bed with him--and it was true that nothing
George could do would ever change this bitterness of Eugene. Only George's
mother could have changed it.
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