The Girl from Farriss | Page 4

Edgar Rice Burroughs
telephone for a bondsman. That he procured one
an hour later was no fault of Mr. Doarty, who employed his most
persuasive English in an endeavor to convince the sergeant that Mr.
Farris should be locked up forthwith, and given no access to a
telephone until daylight. But the sergeant had no particular grudge
against Mr. Farris, while, on the other hand, he was possessed of a large
family to whom his monthly pay check was an item of considerable
importance. So to Mr. Farris, he was affable courtesy personified.
Thus it was that the defendant went free, while the injured one
remained be-kind prison bars.
Farris's first act was to obtain permission to see the girl who had sworn
to the complaint against him. As he approached her cell he assumed a
jocular suavity that he was far from feeling.

"What you doin' here, Maggie?" he asked, by way of an opening.
"Ask Doarty."
"Didn't you know that you'd get the worst of it if you went to buckin'
me?" queried Farris.
"I didn't want to do it," replied the girl; "though that's not sayin' that
some one hadn't ought to do it to you good an' proper--you got it comin'
to you, all right."
"It won't get you nothin', Maggie."
"Maybe it 'll get me my clothes--that's all I want."
"Why didn't you say so in the first place, then, and not go stirrin' up a
lot of hell this way?" asked Farris in an injured tone. "Ain't I always
been on the square with you?"
"Sure! You been as straight as a corkscrew with me."
"Didn't I keep the bulls from guessin' that you was the only girl in the
place that had any real reason for wantin' to croak old--the old guy?"
continued Mr. Farlis, ignoring the reverse English on the girl's last
statement.
A little shiver ran through the girl at mention of the tragedy that was
still fresh in her memory--her own life tragedy in which the death of the
old man in the hallway at Farris's had been but a minor incident.
"What you goin' to tell the judge?" asked Farris after a moment's pause.
"The truth--that you kept me there against my will by locking my
clothes up where I couldn't get 'em," she replied.
"I was only kiddin'--you could 'a' had 'em any old time. Anyways, there
wasn't no call for your doin' this."
"You got a funny way of kiddin'; but even at that, I didn't have any idea

of peachin' on you--he made me," said the girl.
"Who? Doarty?"
The girl nodded. "Sure---who else? He's got it in for you."
Farris turned away much relieved, and an hour later a colored man
delivered a package at the station for Maggie Lynch. It contained the
girl's clothes, and an envelope in which were five germ-laden, but
perfectly good, ten-dollar bills.
The matron smiled as she opened the envelope.
"Some fox," she said.
"Some fox, is right," replied the girl.

CHAPTER II
AND WIRES ARE PULLED
THE Rev. Theodore Pursen sat at breakfast. With his right hand he
dallied with iced cantaloup. The season was young for cucumis melo;
but who would desire a lean shepherd for a fat flock? Certainly not the
Rev. Theodore Pursen. A slender, well-manicured left supported an
early edition of the "Monarch of the Mornings," a sheet which quite
made up in volume of sound and in color for any lack of similarity in
other respects to the lion of poetry and romance.
On the table in his study were the two morning papers which the Rev.
Pursen read and quoted in public--the Monarch was for the privacy of
his breakfast table.
Across from the divine sat his young assistant, who shared the far more
than comfortable bachelor apartments of his superior.
The Rev. Pursen laid down the paper with a sigh.

"Ah me," he said.
His assistant looked up in polite interrogation.
"This is, indeed, an ungrateful world," continued Mr. Pursen, scooping
a delicious mouthful from the melon's heart. "Here is an interview with
an assistant State attorney in which he mentions impractical reformers
seeking free advertising and cheap notoriety. In view of the talk I had
with him yesterday I cannot but believe that he refers directly to me.
"It is a sad commentary upon the moral perspective of the type of rising
young men of to-day, which this person so truly represents, that ulterior
motives should be ascribed to every noble and unselfish act. To what,
indeed, are we coming?''
"Yes," agreed the assistant, "whither are we drifting?"
"But was it not ever thus? Have not we of the cloth been ever martyrs
to the cause of truth and righteousness?"
"Too true," sighed the assistant, "we have, indeed."
"Yet, on the other hand," continued Mr.
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