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The Trailer for Room No. 8
by
“I can’t make the people in that house over there hear me,” complained the old man, with the simple confidence that old age has in very young boys. “Do you happen to know if they’re at home?”
“Nop,” growled Snipes.
“I’m looking for a man named Perceval,” said the stranger; “he lives in that house, and I wanter see him on most particular business. It isn’t a very pleasing place he lives in, is it–at least,” he hurriedly added, as if fearful of giving offence, “it isn’t much on the outside? Do you happen to know him?”
Perceval was Alf Wolfe’s business name.
“Nop,” said the trailer.
“Well, I’m not looking for him,” explained the stranger, slowly, “as much as I’m looking for a young man that I kind of suspect is been to see him to-day: a young man that looks like me, only younger. Has lightish hair and pretty tall and lanky, and carrying a shiny black bag with him. Did you happen to hev noticed him going into that place across the way?”
“Nop,” said Snipes.
The old man sighed and nodded his head thoughtfully at Snipes, and puckered up the corners of his mouth, as though he were thinking deeply. He had wonderfully honest blue eyes, and with the white hair hanging around his sun-burned face, he looked like an old saint. But the trailer didn’t know that: he did know, though, that this man was a different sort from the rest. Still, that was none of his business.
“What is’t you want to see him about?” he asked sullenly, while he looked up and down the street and everywhere but at the old man, and rubbed one bare foot slowly over the other.
The old man looked pained, and much to Snipe’s surprise, the question brought the tears to his eyes, and his lips trembled. Then he swerved slightly, so that he might have fallen if Snipes had not caught him and helped him across the pavement to a seat on a stoop. “Thankey, son,” said the stranger; “I’m not as strong as I was, an’ the sun’s mighty hot, an’ these streets of yours smell mighty bad, and I’ve had a powerful lot of trouble these last few days. But if I could see this man Perceval before my boy does, I know I could fix it, and it would all come out right.”
“What do you want to see him about?” repeated the trailer, suspiciously, while he fanned the old man with his hat. Snipes could not have told you why he did this or why this particular old countryman was any different from the many others who came to buy counterfeit money and who were thieves at heart as well as in deed.
“I want to see him about my son,” said the old man to the little boy. “He’s a bad man whoever he is. This ‘ere Perceval is a bad man. He sends down his wickedness to the country and tempts weak folks to sin. He teaches ’em ways of evil-doing they never heard of, and he’s ruined my son with the others–ruined him. I’ve had nothing to do with the city and its ways; we’re strict living, simple folks, and perhaps we’ve been too strict, or Abraham wouldn’t have run away to the city. But I thought it was best, and I doubted nothing when the fresh-air children came to the farm. I didn’t like city children, but I let ’em come. I took ’em in, and did what I could to make it pleasant for ’em. Poor little fellers, all as thin as corn-stalks and pale as ghosts, and as dirty as you.
“I took ’em in and let ’em ride the horses, and swim in the river, and shoot crows in the cornfield, and eat all the cherries they could pull, and what did the city send me in return for that? It sent me this thieving, rascally scheme of this man Perceval’s, and it turned my boy’s head, and lost him to me. I saw him poring over the note and reading it as if it were Gospel, and I suspected nothing. And when he asked me if he could keep it, I said yes he could, for I thought he wanted it for a curiosity, and then off he put with the black bag and the $200 he’s been saving up to start housekeeping with when the old Deacon says he can marry his daughter Kate.” The old man placed both hands on his knees and went on excitedly.