Part 8 (1/2)

Hiram wheeled slowly.

Tweet studied him from every angle, and as Hiram turned he noted the twinkles which came and went in his slate-blue eyes. Without another word Tweet left him standing there, went back and sat down, and hid his face behind his paper.

Hiram waited a minute, then slowly sank to the edge of his chair.

After a little he asked pleadingly:

”Ain't they all right?”

Tweet's paper trembled. A bit of this, then Tweet lowered it and presented a countenance which seemed never to have known a smile.

”Hiram,” he remarked, ”I don't wanta hurt your feelin's, but the part o' true friends.h.i.+p calls for me to use the surgeon's knife. Hiram, I wouldn't wear that outfit to a funeral. D'ye get me?”

Hiram's blue eyes blazed. ”Yes, I get you,” he began coldly, then curbed a threatening outburst. ”I know they're not the best in the land,” he concluded sensibly, ”but I feel better in 'em.”

”There's somethin' in that,” Tweet propounded sagely. ”There's a whole lot in gettin' that feel. Good clothes kinda brace a fella up and give him the nerve to buck on in the big game. Hiram, if your new outfit gives you the _feel_, it's the goods. When you get next a little it'll cost you more money to get that feel outa clothes. After all, now, when that tin-roof look wears off of 'em you won't appear so whittled-out in that suit. But now, layin' all jokes aside, are they just the thing for drivin' old Jack and Ned on the railroad grade?

And didn't this sudden lavishness kinda set the company back on its haunches?”

Hiram looked out the window. ”Did you see the fire?” he asked absently.

”Yes--walked round the block to get outa the crowd. But----”

”I just had to kinda spruce up a bit, Mr. Tweet. I felt so kinda--well, kinda countrified and--and lost, you might say.”

”What's the fire got to do with that? And call me Playmate, too.”

”Nothin', I suppose.”

”Right across from the restaurant wasn't it?”

”Yes.”

”M'm-m--I'd 'a' made a good lawyer, wouldn't I, Hiram?”

”I don't know--why?”

”Why, talkin' about sprucin' up, as you call it, you drift to a fire that occurred across the street from the place where there's a frowsy-topped waitress that's got you goin'. Well, le's foget it. Do we go to southern California together, or not? Our pile's dwindlin' on account o' this b.u.t.terfly life you're leadin'.”

”I--I'd like to, but---- Well, I left home to get a start in the city, and I think I oughta---- Really, I wanta go, but----” Hiram gave it up, and his lean face flushed.

”Go on--I didn't interrupt you.”

”Well, I--that's all. I want to go to work here.”

Tweet laughed with a little snort. ”Now looky here,” he said, ”I think I savvy you pretty well. If I was to go to work and tell you outright that you couldn't win Lucy, you'd get bull-headed and try to show me.

But le'me tell you this: You ain't goin' to win her till you get next to yourself. Now, Lucy's a pretty popular dame with the fellas about the restaurant. I've seen her joy-ridin' with fellas I know are there with the coin, and savvy more in a minute than you ever knew. Now, wait a minute!--don't get excited. All this ain't your fault. It's the fault o' your past environment. You're a hick, and you can't help it. You get out and learn somethin' and gather up a few beans. Then come back and, if you still want the kid, go get her.

”Now, you see this Lucy this afternoon and tell her you're bound out into the Great Unknown to make your fortune, but that you're comin'

back to see her. Put emphasis on who you're comin' back to see. Then flee from temptation. Come now--le's swallow this awful pill like a man.”