All He Knew | Page 2

John Habberton
the station platform but the agent,
whose face was not familiar to the last passenger.
A gust of wind brought to the platform a scrap of a circus-poster which
had been loosened by recent rain from a fence opposite the station. The
agent kicked the paper from the platform; Sam picked it up and looked
at it; it bore a picture of a gorgeously-colored monkey and the head and
shoulders of an elephant.
"Ain't you goin' to put it back?" he asked.
"Not much," said the agent. "I don't rent that fence to the circus, or
menagerie, or whatever it is."
"Can I have it?"
"Findings are keepings," said the agent, "especially when they ain't
worth looking for; that's railroad rule, and I guess circus-companies

haven't got a better one."
The finder sat down on the platform, took a knife from his pocket, and
carefully cut the monkey and the elephant's head from the paper. Then
he walked to the end of the platform and looked cautiously in the
direction of the town. A broad road, crossed by a narrow street, led
from the station; into the street the little man hurried, believing himself
secure from observation, but just then the door of a coal-yard office
opened, and Judge Prency, who had been county judge, and Deacon
Quickset emerged. Both saw the new arrival, who tried to pass them
without being recognized. But the deacon was too quick for him;
planting himself in the middle of the sidewalk, which was as narrow as
the deacon was broad, he stopped the wayfarer and said,--
"Samuel, I hope you're not going back to your old ways again,--fighting,
drinking, loafing, and stealing?"
"No, deacon, I ain't. I'm a changed man."
"That's what they all say, Samuel," the deacon replied, not unkindly,
"but saying isn't doing. Human nature's pretty weak when it don't lean
on a stronger one."
"That's how I'm leanin', deacon."
"I'm glad to hear it, Samuel," said the deacon, offering his hand, though
in a rather conservative manner.
"Sam," said the judge, "I sentenced you, but I don't want you to think
hard of me and take it out of my orchard and chicken-coop. It wasn't
your first offence, you know."
"Nor the tenth, judge. You did just right. I hope 'twas a warnin' to
others."
"I think it was," said the judge, thrusting both hands into his pockets
and studying the wall of the station as if it were the record of his own
court. "I think it was; and here's my hand, Sam, and my best wishes for

a square start in life."
As the judge withdrew his hand he left behind a little wad of paper
which Sam recognized by sense of touch as the customary American
substitute for the coin of the realm. The poor fellow did not know what
to say: so he said nothing.
"Hurry along to your family, Sam. I hope you'll find them all well. I've
told my wife to see to it that they didn't suffer while you were away,
and I guess she's done it: she's that kind of woman."
Sam hurried away. The deacon followed him with his eyes, and finally
said,--
"I wonder how much truth there was in him--about leaning on a higher
power?"
"Oh, about as much as in the rest of us, I suppose."
"What do you mean?" The deacon snapped out this question; his words
sounded like a saw-file at work.
"Merely what I say," the judge replied. "We all trust to our religion
while things go to suit us, but as soon as there's something unusual to
be done--in the way of business--we fall back on our old friend the
Devil, just as Sam Kimper used to do."
"Speak for yourself, judge, and for Sam, if you want to," said the
deacon with fine dignity, "but don't include me among 'the rest of us.'
Good-morning, judge."
"Good-morning, deacon. No offence meant."
"Perhaps not; but some men give it without meaning to.
Good-morning."
"I guess the coat fits him," murmured the judge to himself, as he
sauntered homeward.

CHAPTER II.
Sam Kimper hurried through a new street, sparsely settled, crossed a
large vacant lot, tramped over the grounds of an unused foundry, and
finally went through a vacancy in a fence on which there were only
enough boards to show what the original plan had been. A heap of
ashes, a dilapidated chicken-coop, and a forest of tall dingy weeds were
the principal contents of the garden, which had for background a small
unpainted house in which were several windows which had been
repaired with old hats and masses of newspaper. As he neared the
house he saw in a cove in the weeds a barrel lying on its side, and
seated in the mouth of the barrel
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