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A sort of meditative silence which had fallen upon the two men was broken at last by George, who for some time had been showing signs of uneasiness.
"How long are we going to stay in Seattle?" he inquired.
"Only long enough," Boyd replied, "for me to arrange a connection with some bank. That will require a day, perhaps."
"I suppose a feller has got to dress pretty swell back there in Chicago,"
George ventured.
"Some people do."
"Full-dress suits of clothes, eh?"
"Yes."
"Did you ever wear one?"
"Certainly."
"Well, I'll be--" The fisherman checked himself and gazed at his companion as if he saw him suddenly in a new light; in fact, he had discovered many strange phases of this young man's character during the past fortnight.
"Right along?" he questioned, incredulously.
"Why, yes. Pretty steadily."
"All day, at a time?"
Boyd laughed. "I haven't worn one in the daytime since I left college.
They are used only at night."
George pondered this for some time, while Emerson stared out into the velvet darkness, to be roused again a moment later.
"A feller told me a funny thing once. He said them rich men back East had women come around and clean their finger-nails, and s.h.i.+ne 'em up. Is that right?"
"Quite right!"
Another pause, then Balt cleared his throat and said, with an a.s.sumption of carelessness:
"Well, I don't suppose--you ever had 'em--s.h.i.+ne your finger-nails, did you?"
"Yes."
The big man opened his mouth to speak; then, evidently changing his mind, observed, "Seems to me I'd better stay here on the coast and wait for you."
"No, indeed!" the other answered, quickly. "I will need you in raising that money. You know the practical side of the fis.h.i.+ng business, and I don't."
"All right, I'll go. If you can stand for me, I'll stand for the full- dress suits of clothes and the finger-nail women. Anyhow, it won't last long."
"When were you outside last?"
"Four years ago."
"Ever been East?"
"Sure! I've got a sister in Spokane Falls. But I don't like it back there."
"You will have a good time in Chicago." Boyd smiled.
"Fingerless" Fraser came to them from the lighted regions amids.h.i.+p, greeting them cheerfully.
"Well, we're pretty near there, ain't we? I'm glad of it; I've about cleaned up this s.h.i.+p."
The adventurer had left his companions alone much of the time during the trip--greatly to Boyd's relief, for the fellow was an unconscionable bore --and had thus allowed them time to perfect their plans and thresh out numberless details.
"I grabbed another farmer's son at supper--just got through with him. He was good for three-fifty."
"Three hundred and fifty _dollars?_" questioned Balt.
"Yep! I opened a little stud game for him. Beats all how these suckers fall for the old stuff."
"Where did you get money to gamble with?" inquired Boyd.
"Oh! I won a pinch of change last night in a bridge game with that Dawson Bunch."
"But it must have required a bank-roll to sit in a game with them. They seem to be heavy spenders. How did you manage that?"
"I sold some mining property the day before. I got the captain of the s.h.i.+p." Fraser chuckled.
"Did you swindle that old fellow?" Emerson cried, angrily. "See here! I won't allow--"
"Swindle! Who said I 'swindled' anybody? I wouldn't trim my worst enemy."
"You have no mining claims."
"What makes you think I haven't? Alaska is a big country."
"You told me so."
"Well, I didn't have any claims at that time, but since we came aboard of this wagon at Juneau I have improved each s.h.i.+ning hour. While you and George was building canneries I was rustling. And I did pretty well, if I do say it as shouldn't."
Emerson shrugged his broad shoulders. "You will get into trouble! If you do, I won't come to your rescue. I have helped you all I can."
"Not me!" denied the self-satisfied Fraser. "There ain't a chance. Why?
Because I'm on the level, I am. That's why. But say, getting money from these Reubs is a joke. It's like kicking a lamb in the face." He clinked some gold coins in his pocket and began to whistle noiselessly. "When do we pull out for Chi?" he next inquired.
"We?" said Emerson. "I told you I would take you as far as Seattle. I can't stand for your 'work.' I think you had better stop here, don't you?"
"Perhaps it _is_ for the best," Fraser observed, carelessly. "Time alone can tell." He bade them good-night and disappeared to s.n.a.t.c.h a few hours' sleep, but upon their arrival at the dock on the following morning, without waiting for an invitation he bundled himself into their carriage and rode to the hotel, registering immediately beneath them. They soon lost sight of him, however, for their next move was in the direction of a clothier's, where they were outfitted from sole to crown. The garments they stood up in showed whence they had come; yet the strangeness of their apparel excited little comment, for Seattle is the gateway to the great North Country, and hither the Northmen foregather, going and coming. But to them the city was very strange and exciting. The noises deafened them, the odors of civilization now tantalized, now offended their nostrils; the crowding streams of humanity confused them, fresh from their long sojourn in the silences and solitudes. Every clatter and crash, every brazen clang of gong, caused George to start; he watched his chance and took street- crossings as if pursued.
"If one of them bells rings behind me," he declared, "I'll jump through a plate-gla.s.s window." When his roving eyes first lighted upon a fruit stand he bolted for it and filled his pockets with tomatoes.