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The road agent smiled.
"My profession has its faults," he acknowledged, "but I am not an exhorter."
But still the Girl was nonplussed, and eyed him steadily for a moment or two.
"You know I can't figger out jest exactly what you are?" she admitted smilingly.
"Well, try . . ." he suggested, slightly colouring under her persistent gaze.
"Well, you ain't one o' us."
"No?"
"Oh, I can tell--I can spot my man every time. I tell you, keepin'
saloon's a great educator." And so saying she plumped herself down in a chair and went on very seriously now: "I dunno but what it's a good way to bring up girls--they git to know things. Now," and here she looked at him long and earnestly, "I'd trust you."
Johnson was conscious of a guilty feeling, though he said as he took a seat beside her:
"You would trust me?"
The Girl nodded an a.s.sent and observed in a tone that was intended to be thoroughly conclusive:
"Notice I danced with you to-night?"
"Yes," was his brief reply, though the next moment he wondered that he had not found something more to say.
"I seen from the first that you were the real article."
"I beg your pardon," he said absently, still lost in thought.
"Why, that was a compliment I handed out to you," returned the Girl with a pained look on her face.
"Oh!" he e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed with a faint little smile.
Now the Girl, who had drawn up her chair close to his, leaned over and said in a low, confidential voice:
"Your kind don't prevail much here. I can tell--I got what you call a quick eye."
As might be expected Johnson flushed guiltily at this remark. No different, for that matter, would have acted many a man whose conscience was far clearer.
"Oh, I'm afraid that men like me prevail--prevail, as you say,--almost everywhere," he said, laying such stress on the words that it would seem almost impossible for anyone not to see that they were shot through with self-depreciation.
The Girl gave him a playful dig with her elbow.
"Go on! What are you givin' me! O' course they don't . . .!" She laughed outright; but the next instant checking herself, went on with absolute ingenuousness: "Before I went on that trip to Monterey I tho't Rance here was the genuine thing in a gent, but the minute I kind o' glanced over you on the road I--I seen he wasn't." She stopped, a realisation having suddenly been borne in upon her that perhaps she was laying her heart too bare to him. To cover up her embarra.s.sment, therefore, she took refuge, as before, in hospitality, and rushing over to the bar she called to Nick to come and serve Mr. Johnson with a drink, only to dismiss him the moment he put his head through the door with: "Never mind, I'll help Mr. Johnson m'self." Turning to her visitor again, she said: "Have your whisky with water, won't you?"
"But I don't--" began Johnson in protest.
"Say," interrupted the Girl, falling back into her favourite position of resting both elbows on the bar, her face in her hands, "I've got you figgered out. You're awful good or awful bad." A remark which seemed to amuse the man, for he laughed heartily.
"Now, what do you mean by that?" presently he asked.
"Well, I mean so good that you're a teetotaller, or so bad that you're tired o' life an' whisky."
Johnson shook his head.
"On the contrary, although I'm not good, I've lived and I've liked life pretty well. It's been bully!"
Surprised and delighted with his enthusiasm, the Girl raised her eyes to his, which look he mistook--not unnaturally after all that had been said--for one of encouragement. A moment more and the restraint that he had exercised over himself had vanished completely.
"So have you liked it, Girl," he went on, trying vainly to get possession of her hand, "only you haven't lived, you haven't lived--not with your nature. You see I've got a quick eye, too."
To Johnson's amazement she flushed and averted her face. Following the direction of her eyes he saw Nick standing in the door with a broad grin on his face.
"You git, Nick! What do you mean by . . .?" cried out the Girl in a tone that left no doubt in the minds of her hearers that she was annoyed, if not angry, at the intrusion.
Nick disappeared into the dance-hall as though shot out of a gun; whereupon, the Girl turned to Johnson with:
"I haven't lived? That's good!"
Johnson's next words were insinuating, but his voice was cold in comparison with the fervent tones of a moment previous.
"Oh, you know!" was what he said, seating himself at the poker table.
"No, I don't," contradicted the Girl, taking a seat opposite him.
"Yes, you do," he insisted.
"Well, say it's an even chance I do an' an even chance I don't," she parried.
Once more the pa.s.sion in the man was stirring.
"I mean," he explained in a voice that barely reached her, "life for all it's worth, to the uttermost, to the last drop in the cup, so that it atones for what's gone before, or may come after."
The Girl's face wore a puzzled look as she answered:
"No, I don't believe I know what you mean by them words. Is it a--" She cut her sentence short, and springing up, cried out: "Oh, Lord--Oh, excuse me, I sat on my gun!"
Johnson looked at her, genuine amus.e.m.e.nt depicted on his face.
"Look here," said the Girl, suddenly perching herself upon the table, "I'm goin' to make you an offer."
"An offer?" Johnson fairly s.n.a.t.c.hed the words out of her mouth. "You're going to make me an offer?"
"It's this," declared the Girl with a pleased look on her face. "If ever you need to be staked--"
Johnson eyed her uncomprehendingly.
"Which o' course you don't," she hastened to add. "Name your price. It's yours jest for the style I git from you an' the deportment."