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The Error Of The Day
by
“Down–down to your knees, you skunk!” he said, in a low, fierce voice.
The knees of the big man bent–Foyle had not taken lessons of Ogami, the Jap, for nothing–they bent, and the cattleman squealed, so intense was the pain. It was break or bend; and he bent–to the ground and lay there. Foyle stood over him for a moment, a hard light in his eyes, and then, as if bethinking himself, he looked at the other roisterers and said:
“There’s a limit, and he reached it. Your mouths are your own, and you can blow off to suit your fancy, but if any one thinks I’m a tame coyote to be poked with a stick–!” He broke off, stooped over, and helped the man before him to his feet. The arm had been strained, and the big fellow nursed it.
“Hell, but you’re a twister!” the cattleman said, with a grimace of pain.
Billy Goat was a gentleman, after his kind, and he liked Sergeant Foyle with a great liking. He turned to the crowd and spoke.
“Say, boys, this mine’s worked out. Let’s leave the Happy Land to Foyle. Boys, what is he–what–is–he? What–is–Sergeant Foyle–boys?”
The roar of the song they all knew came in reply, as Billy Goat waved his arms about like the wild leader of a wild orchestra:
“Sergeant Foyle, oh, he’s a knocker from the West,
He’s a chase-me-Charley, come-and-kiss-me tiger from the zoo;
He’s a dandy on the pinch, and he’s got a double cinch
On the gent that’s going careless, and he’ll soon cinch you:
And he’ll soon–and he’ll soon–cinch you!”
Foyle watched them go, dancing, stumbling, calling back at him, as they moved toward the Prairie Home Hotel:
“And he’ll soon–and he’ll soon–cinch you!”
His under-lip came out, his eyes half closed, as he watched them. “I’ve done my last cinch. I’ve done my last cinch,” he murmured.
Then, suddenly, the look in his face changed, the eyes swam as they had done a minute before at the sight of the girl in the room behind. Whatever his trouble was, that face had obscured it in a flash, and the pools of feeling far down in the depths of a lonely nature had been stirred. Recognition, memory, tenderness, desire swam in his face, made generous and kind the hard lines of the strong mouth. In an instant he had swung himself over the window-sill. The girl had drawn away now into a more shaded corner of the room, and she regarded him with a mingled anxiety and eagerness. Was she afraid of something? Did she fear that–she knew not quite what, but it had to do with a long ago?
“It was time you hit out, Nett,” she said, half shyly. “You’re more patient than you used to be, but you’re surer. My, that was a twist you gave him, Nett. Aren’t you glad to see me?” she added, hastily and with an effort to hide her agitation.
He reached out and took her hand with a strange shyness and a self-consciousness which was alien to his nature. The touch of her hand thrilled him. Their eyes met. She dropped hers. Then he gathered himself together. “Glad to see you? Of course, of course, I’m glad. You stunned me, Jo. Why, do you know where you are? You’re a thousand miles from home. I can’t get it through my head, not really. What brings you here? It’s ten years–ten years since I saw you, and you were only fifteen, but a fifteen that was as good as twenty.”
He scanned her face closely. “What’s that scar on your forehead, Jo? You hadn’t that–then.”
“I ran up against something,” she said, evasively, her eyes glittering, “and it left that scar. Does it look so bad?”
“No, you’d never notice it, if you weren’t looking close as I am. You see, I knew your face so well ten years ago.”