David Lockwin--The People's Idol - BestLightNovel.com
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"Now, Mr. Corkey, tell me why Mr. Lockwin went to Owen Sound?"
"I can't do that, nohow; and the less said about it the better. It would let a big political cat out of the bag."
"Politics! Was that the reason?"
"That's what it _was_, your honor, madam."
"Can you tell me something about my poor husband?"
It is a figure that by its mere presence over-awes Corkey. Of all women, he admires the heroic mold. The garb is black beyond the man's conception of mourning. The face is chastened with days of mental torture. There is an intoxication of grief in the aspect of the woman that hangs the house in woe.
The mascot slips away from Corkey. The Special Survivor is drifting into an open sea of sentiment. He feels he shall drown.
Yet the beautiful face seems to take pity on him--seems to read the heart which beats under that burry, bristly form--seems to reach forth a hand.
"Exactly as we catched onto Lockwin," thinks the grateful Corkey.
"It comes mighty hard for me, Mrs. Lockwin, for I never expected to be his friend, nohow. He was an aristocratic duck, and I will say that I thought it was his bar'l that beat me."
The widow is striving so hard to understand that the man speaks more slowly.
"But I meet him at Owen Sound. Between you and me he was to fix me--see?"
The woman does not see.
"You mustn't say it to n.o.body, but I went to Georgian Bay to show him my slate."
"Is it politics?"
"That's what it is, and it's mighty dirty work. But I don't think your husband was no politician."
It is a compliment, and the woman so receives it.
"He was late, and the old tub was rubbing the pier away when the jackleg train arrive."
"The st-st-steamer was wa-wa-waiting," explained the boy.
"Ah! yes," nods the listener.
"You see, the c.o.o.n can't talk," says Corkey, "but he's got any number of points. Well, we wet our whistles, and it's raw stuff they sell over there--but you don't know nothing about that. I introduce him to the outfit, and we go aboard. We eat, but he don't eat nothing. I notice that. We take the lounge in the fore-cabin. You know where that would be?"
A nod, and Corkey is well pleased.
"We sit there all the time. I want to tell you just how he did. He sit back, out straight, like this, his hands deep in his pockets, his legs crossed onto each other, his hat down, and his chin way down--see?"
Corkey is regaining his presence of mind.
The widow attests the correctness of Corkey's ill.u.s.tration.
"You bet your sweet life, n.o.body could get nothing out of him, then.
What ailded him I don't know, and I ain't calling the turn, but n.o.body could get nothing out of him, I know that. I talk and talk. I slap him on the shoulder, and pull his leg and sing to him--"
"S-s-say it over," suggests the mascot.
The widow cannot understand.
"Why, don't you know, I was expecting him to fix me?"
"Is it politics?"
"That's what it _is_. So I guess I sing to him an hour--two hours--I can't tell--when he comes to. 'Mr. Corkey,' says that feller--says Mr.
Lockwin--'you don't get nothing; You don't get the light at Ozaukee.'
"'There ain't no lamp at Ozaukee,' says I.
"'That's what the First High said,' says he. So you see I was whipsawed. I get nothing."
"P-p-politics!" interprets the mascot."
"Perhaps I understand," says the widow. Withal, she can see David Lockwin sitting his last hours on that lounge. How unhappy he was!
Ah! could he only have read her letter!
"I don't just remember what I did after I found I wasn't fixed. It flabbergasted me, don't you forget it! I know I sneezed--and you must excuse me out there a while ago--and a big first mate he tried to put the hoodoo on me. No, that's not politics, but life is too short. We go out on deck."
"To make the raft?"
"Oh, that's all poppyc.o.c.k! Don't you believe no newspaper yarn. You just listen to me. I'm giving it to you straight. We go out on deck, and then I don't see Lockwin till we git the wood-choppers. How many of them wood-choppers, Noey?"
"Ei-ei-eight!"
"Mrs. Lockwin, them wood-choppers was no earthly use. It didn't pay to pull 'em in. I know it was me who hurt Lockwin with the oars. I didn't know for hours that he was aboard. He showed up at daybreak, you see. I tell you he was awfully hurt."
The face of Esther is again miserably expectant. There will be no mystery of politics in it now. "I wouldn't know him, either by face or voice, Mrs. Lockwin. He lie in the stern and Noey try to help him, but the sea was fearful. I couldn't hear him speak. Noey--the c.o.o.n here--hear him speak.
"'Are you a-dying, old man?' I asks.
"Noey says he answer that he was."
"Yessah, h-h-he done spoke that he w-w-was."
"'Want to send some word home, old man?' says I, to cheer him up; for don't you see, I allowed we was all in the drink--just tumble to what an old tub she was--117 of us at the start, and we all croak but me and the moke--the c.o.o.n, I should say."
The woman is afraid to interrupt.
Suddenly the eye of Corkey moistens. He has escaped a great error. "I didn't hear his last words, nohow."
"He said to p-p-put a st-st-stone over D-Davy's grave," says the lad