called "Fatty" ran up and down the station platform.
"Where is that bundle of Omaha papers, you Irish loafer?" he shouted,
shaking his fist at Jerry Donlin who stood upon a truck at the front of
the train, up- ending trunks into the baggage car.
Jerry paused with a trunk dangling in mid-air. "In the baggage-room, of
course. Hurry, man. Do you want the kid to work the whole train?"
An air of something impending hung over the idlers upon the platform,
the train crew, and even the travelling men who began climbing off the
train. The engineer thrust his head out of the cab; the conductor, a
dignified looking man with a grey moustache, threw back his head and
shook with mirth; a young man with a suit-case in his hand and a long
pipe in his mouth ran to the door of the baggage-room, calling, "Hurry!
Hurry, Fatty! The kid is working the entire train. You won't be able to
sell a paper."
The fat young man ran from the baggage-room to the platform and
shouted again to Jerry Donlin, who was now slowly pushing the empty
truck along the platform. From the train came a clear voice calling,
"Latest Omaha papers! Have your change ready! Fatty, the train
newsboy, has fallen down a well! Have your change ready, gentlemen!"
Jerry Donlin, followed by Fatty, again disappeared from sight. The
conductor, waving his hand, jumped upon the steps of the train. The
engineer pulled in his head and the train began to move.
The fat young man emerged from the baggage-room, swearing revenge
upon the head of Jerry Donlin. "There was no need to put it under a
mail sack!" he shouted, shaking his fist. "I'll be even with you for this."
Followed by the shouts of the travelling men and the laughter of the
idlers upon the platform he climbed upon the moving train and began
running from car to car. Off the last car dropped Sam McPherson, a
smile upon his lips, the bundle of newspapers gone, his pocket jingling
with coins. The evening's entertainment for the town of Caxton was at
an end.
John Telfer, standing by the side of Valmore, waved his cane in the air
and began talking.
"Beat him again, by Gad!" he exclaimed. "Bully for Sam! Who says the
spirit of the old buccaneers is dead? That boy didn't understand what I
said about art, but he is an artist just the same!"
CHAPTER II
Windy McPherson, the father of the Caxton newsboy, Sam McPherson,
had been war touched. The civilian clothes that he wore caused an
itching of the skin. He could not forget that he had once been a sergeant
in a regiment of infantry and had commanded a company through a
battle fought in ditches along a Virginia country road. He chafed under
the fact of his present obscure position in life. Had he been able to
replace his regimentals with the robes of a judge, the felt hat of a
statesman, or even with the night stick of a village marshal life might
have retained something of its sweetness, but to have ended by
becoming an obscure housepainter in a village that lived by raising
corn and by feeding that corn to red steers --ugh!--the thought made
him shudder. He looked with envy at the blue coat and the brass
buttons of the railroad agent; he tried vainly to get into the Caxton
Cornet Band; he got drunk to forget his humiliation and in the end he
fell to loud boasting and to the nursing of a belief within himself that in
truth not Lincoln nor Grant but he himself had thrown the winning die
in the great struggle. In his cups he said as much and the Caxton corn
grower, punching his neighbour in the ribs, shook with delight over the
statement.
When Sam was a twelve year old, barefooted boy upon the streets a
kind of backwash of the wave of glory that had swept over Windy
McPherson in the days of '61 lapped upon the shores of the Iowa
village. That strange manifestation called the A. P. A. movement
brought the old soldier to a position of prominence in the community.
He founded a local branch of the organisation; he marched at the head
of a procession through the streets; he stood on a corner and pointing a
trembling forefinger to where the flag on the schoolhouse waved beside
the cross of Rome, shouted hoarsely, "See, the cross rears itself above
the flag! We shall end by being murdered in our beds!"
But although some of the hard-headed, money-making men of Caxton
joined the movement started by the boasting old soldier and although
for the moment they vied with him in stealthy creepings through the
streets to
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