Galusha the Magnificent - novelonlinefull.com
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"Oh, confound it!" he exclaimed. "Lulie, it's your father."
"Father? Coming here? Why, he started for church. He never comes to the cemetery on Sunday MORNING."
"I can't help it, he's coming now. And there's some one with him, or coming after him. It looks like--Yes, it's Raish Pulcifer."
Miss Hallett was very much distressed. "Oh, dear, dear, dear!" she cried. "If father finds us there will be another dreadful time. And I wouldn't have Raish Pulcifer see and hear it, of all people in the world. Oh, WHAT made father come? Nelson, can't we run away before he gets here? Into the pines, or somewhere?"
"No chance, Lulie. He would see us sure. If he should stop at the other end of the cemetery it might give us a chance, but he probably won't.
He'll come to your mother's grave and that is close by here. Oh, hang the luck!"
Galusha looked at the young people; he was almost as distressed as they were. He liked young Howard; the latter had been very kind to him on the fateful Friday afternoon when he had alighted at South Wellmouth.
He liked Lulie, also--had fancied her at first sight. He wished he might help them. And then he had an idea.
"I wouldn't--ah--interfere in your affairs for the world, Miss Hallett," he faltered, "but if I might--ah--offer a suggestion, suppose I--ah--meet your father and talk with him for a few moments. Then you might--so to speak--ah--go, you know."
"Yes, of course, of course. Oh, WILL you, Mr. Bangs? Thank you so much."
Galusha climbed the bank. There was no one in sight, but he heard masculine voices from the hollow beyond the farther end of the cemetery.
He hastened to that end and, stooping, began to examine the inscription upon a tomb.
The voices drew nearer as the men climbed the hill. The breeze now was stronger than ever and was blowing more from the west. The conversation, borne by the gusts, came to Galusha's ears clearly and distinctly. One of the speakers seemed to be explaining, urging, the other peremptorily refusing to listen.
"But, Cap'n Jeth," urged the first voice, and Mr. Bangs recognized it as belonging to his obliging guide and pilot of the fateful Friday evening, Mr. Horatio Pulcifer. "But, Cap'n Jeth," said Mr. Pulcifer, "don't fly off the handle for nothin'. I ain't tryin' to put nothin' over on you.
I'm just--"
"I don't want to hear you," broke in the second voice, gruffly. "This is the Lord's Day and I don't want to talk business with you or n.o.body else--especially with you."
For some reason this seemed to irritate Mr. Pulcifer. His tone had lost a little of its urbanity when he answered.
"Oh, especially with me, eh?" he repeated. "Well, what's the 'especially with me' for? If you think I'm any more to blame than the rest, you're mistaken. I tell you when you and me and Cap'n Jim and all hands of us got the Wellmouth Development Company goin' it looked like a cinch. How was I to know?"
"I tell you, Raish, I don't want to talk about it."
"And I tell you, Jeth Hallett, I DO want to. You've hove in that 'especially with me' and I don't like it. Look here, what are you pickin' on me for? How was I to--No, now you wait a minute, Cap'n Jeth, and answer me. I've chased you 'way over here and you can give me five minutes even if 'tis Sunday. Come, Cap'n, come, just answer me and then I won't bother you any more."
There was silence for a brief interval. Galusha, crouching behind the tomb and wondering if the time had come for him to show himself, waited anxiously. But Captain Hallett's answer, when at last he did reply, sounded no nearer. Apparently the men were now standing still.
"Well," grunted the light keeper, "I'll listen to you for the five minutes, Raish, but no more. I hadn't ought to do that. This is Sabbath day and I make it a p'int never--"
"I know," hastily, "I know. Well, I tell you, Cap'n Jeth, all's I wanted to say was this: What are we goin' to do with this Development stock of ours?"
"Do with it? Why, nothin' at present. CAN'T do anything with it, can we? All we can do is wait. It may be one year or three, but some day somebody will have to come to us. There ain't a better place for a cold storage fish house on this coast and the Wellmouth Development Company owns that place."
"Yes, that's so, that's so. But some of us can afford to wait and some can't. Now I've got more of the Development Company stock than anybody else. I've got five hundred shares, Cap'n Jeth; five hundred shares at twenty dollars a share. A poor man like me can't afford to have ten thousand dollars tied up as long's this is liable to be. Can he now? Eh?
Can he, Cap'n?"
"Humph! Well, I've got eight thousand tied up there myself."
"Ye-es, but it don't make so much difference to you. You can afford to wait. You've got a gov'ment job."
"Ye-es, and from what I hear you may be havin' a state job pretty soon yourself, Raish. Well, never mind that. What is it you're drivin' at, anyhow?"
"Why, I tell you, Jeth. Course you know and I know that this is a perfectly sure investment to anybody that'll wait. I can't afford to wait, that's what's the matter. It kind of run acrost my mind that maybe you'd like to have my holdin's, my five hundred shares. I'll sell 'em to you reasonable."
"Humph! I want to know! What do you call reasonable?"
"I'll sell 'em to you for--for--well, say nineteen dollars a share."
"Humph! Don't bother me any more, Raish."
"Well, say eighteen dollars a share. Lord sakes, that's reasonable enough, ain't it?"
"Cruise along towards home, Raish. I've talked all the business I want to on Sunday. Good-by."
"Look here, Jethro, I--I'm hard up, I'm desp'rate, pretty nigh. I'll let you have my five hundred shares of Wellmouth Development Company for just half what I paid for it--ten dollars a share. If you wasn't my friend, I wouldn't--What are you laughin' at?"
Galusha Bangs, hiding behind the tomb, understanding nothing of this conversation, yet feeling like an eavesdropper, wished this provoking pair would stop talking and go away. He heard the light keeper laugh sardonically.
"Ho, ho, ho," chuckled Hallett. "You're a slick article, ain't you, Raish? Why, you wooden-headed swab, did you cal'late you was the only one that had heard about the directors' meetin' over to the Denboro Trust Company yesterday? _I_ knew the Trust Company folks had decided not to go ahead with the fish storage business just as well as you did, and I heard it just as soon, too. _I_ know they've decided to put the twelve hundred shares of Wellmouth Development stock into profit and loss, or to just hang on and see if it ever does come to anything. But you cal'lated I didn't know it and that maybe you could unload your five hundred shares on to me at cut rates, eh? Raish, you're slick--but you ain't bright, not very."
He chuckled again. Mr. Pulcifer whistled, apparently expressing resignation.
"ALL right, Cap'n," he observed, cheerfully, "just as you say. No harm in tryin', was there? Never catch a fish without heavin' over a hook, as the feller said. Maybe somebody else that ain't heard will buy that stock, you can't tell."
"Maybe so, but--See here, Raish, don't you go tryin' anything like this on--on--"
"I know who you mean. No danger. There ain't money enough there to buy anything, if what I hear's true."
"What's that?"
"Oh, nothin', nothin'. Just talk, I guess. Well, Jeth, I won't keep you any longer. Goin' to hang on to YOUR four hundred Development stock, I presume likely?"
"Yes. I shall sell that at a profit. Not a big profit, but a profit."
"Sho! Is that so? Who told you?"
"It was," the gruff voice became solemn, "it was revealed to me."
"Revealed to you? Oh, from up yonder, up aloft, eh?"
"Raish," sharply, "don't you dare be sacrilegious in my presence."
"No, no, not for nothin', Cap'n. So you had a message from the sperit world about that stock, eh?"
"Yes. It bade me be of good cheer and hold for a small profit. When that profit comes, no matter how small it may be, I'll sell and sell quick, but not sooner.... But there, I've profaned the Lord's day long enough.
I came over here this mornin' to visit Julia's grave. There was a scoffer in our pulpit, that young whippersnapper from Wapatomac had exchanged with our minister and I didn't care to hear him."
"Oh, I see. So you come over to your wife's grave, eh?"