nigger on the box in a biled shirt and a plug hatâhowâs that for high? And weâll take care of you, pard. Weâll fix you all right. Thereâll be a kerridge for you; and whatever you want, you just âscape out and weâll âtend to it. Weâve got a shebang fixed up for you to stand behind, in No. 1âs house, and donât you be afraid. Just go in and toot your horn, if you donât sell a clam. Put Buck through as bully as you can, pard, for anybody that knowed him will tell you that he was one of the whitest men that was ever in the mines. You canât draw it too strong. He never could stand it to see things going wrong. Heâs done more to make this town quiet and peaceable than any man in it. Iâve seen him lick four Greasers in eleven minutes, myself. If a thing wanted regulating, he warnât a man to go browsing around after somebody to do it, but he would prance in and regulate it himself. He warnât a Catholic. Scasely. He was down on âem. His word was, âNo Irish need apply!â But it didnât make no difference about that when it came down to what a manâs rights wasâand so, when some roughs jumped the Catholic bone-yard and started in to stake out town-lots in it he went for âem! And he cleaned âem, too! I was there, pard, and I seen it myself.â
âThat was very well indeedâat least the impulse wasâwhether the act was strictly defensible or not. Had deceased any religious convictions? That is to say, did he feel a dependence upon, or acknowledge allegiance to a higher power?â
More reflection.
âI reckon youâve stumped me again, pard. Could you say it over once more, and say it slow?â
âWell, to simplify it somewhat, was he, or rather had he ever been connected with any organization sequestered from secular concerns and devoted to self-sacrifice in the interests of morality?â
âAll down but nineâset âem up on the other alley, pardâ
âWhat did I understand you to say?â
âWhy, youâre most too many for me, you know. When you get in with your left I hunt grass every time. Every time you draw, you fill; but I donât seem to have any luck. Lets have a new deal.â
âHow? Begin again?â
âThatâs it.â
âVery well. Was he a good man, andââ
âThereâI see that; donât put up another chip till I look at my hand. A good man, says you? Pard, it ainât no name for it. He was the best man that everâpard, you would have doted on that man. He could lam any galoot of his inches in America. It was him that put down the riot last election before it got a start; and everybody said he was the only man that could have done it. He waltzed in with a spanner in one hand and a trumpet in the other, and sent fourteen men home on a shutter in less than three minutes. He had that riot all broke up and prevented nice before anybody ever got a chance to strike a blow. He was always for peace, and he would have peaceâhe could not stand disturbances. Pard, he was a great loss to this town. It would please the boys if you could chip in something like that and do him justice. Here once when the Micks got to throwing stones through the Methodisâ Sunday school windows, Buck Fanshaw, all of his own notion, shut up his saloon and took a couple of six-shooters and mounted guard over the Sunday school. Says he, âNo Irish need apply!â And they didnât. He was the bulliest man in the mountains, pard! He could run faster, jump higher, hit harder, and hold more tangle-foot whisky without spilling it than any man in seventeen counties. Put that in, pardâitâll please the boys more than anything you could say. And you can say, pard, that he never shook his mother.â
âNever shook his mother?â
âThatâs itâany of the boys will tell you so.â
âWell,
A. W. Moore
Silken Bondage
Sedona Venez
Jim DeFelice
Fay Weldon
Lily Marie, Terra Wolf, Artemis Wolffe, Mercy May, Amanda Jones, Bliss Devlin, Steffanie Holmes, Christy Rivers, Lily Thorn, Lucy Auburn
N. K. Jemisin
Sean Kennedy
David C. Taylor
Kathi S. Barton