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Windy McPherson’s Son
BOOK I   BOOK I - CHAPTER III
Sherwood Anderson
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       _ One evening, when he had grown so that he outtopped Windy, Sam McPherson
       returned from his paper route to find his mother arrayed in her black,
       church-going dress. An evangelist was at work in Caxton and she had
       decided to hear him. Sam shuddered. In the house it was an understood
       thing that when Jane McPherson went to church her son went with her. There
       was nothing said. Jane McPherson did all things without words, always
       there was nothing said. Now she stood waiting in her black dress when her
       son came in at the door and he hurriedly put on his best clothes and went
       with her to the brick church.
       Valmore, John Telfer, and Freedom Smith, who had taken upon themselves a
       kind of common guardianship of the boy and with whom he spent evening
       after evening at the back of Wildman's grocery, did not go to church. They
       talked of religion and seemed singularly curious and interested in what
       other men thought on the subject but they did not allow themselves to be
       coaxed into a house of worship. To the boy, who had become a fourth member
       of the evening gatherings at the back of the grocery store, they would not
       talk of God, answering the direct questions he sometimes asked by changing
       the subject. Once Telfer, the reader of poetry, answered the boy. "Sell
       papers and fill your pockets with money but let your soul sleep," he said
       sharply.
       In the absence of the others Wildman talked more freely. He was a
       spiritualist and tried to make Sam see the beauties of that faith. On long
       summer afternoons the grocer and the boy spent hours driving through the
       streets in a rattling old delivery wagon, the man striving earnestly to
       make clear to the boy the shadowy ideas of God that were in his mind.
       Although Windy McPherson had been the leader of a Bible class in his
       youth, and had been a moving spirit at revival meetings during his early
       days in Caxton, he no longer went to church and his wife did not ask him
       to go. On Sunday mornings he lay abed. If there was work to be done about
       the house or yard he complained of his wounds. He complained of his wounds
       when the rent fell due, and when there was a shortage of food in the
       house. Later in his life and after the death of Jane McPherson the old
       soldier married the widow of a farmer by whom he had four children and
       with whom he went to church twice on Sunday. Kate wrote Sam one of her
       infrequent letters about it. "He has met his match," she said, and was
       tremendously pleased.
       In church on Sunday mornings Sam went regularly to sleep, putting his head
       on his mother's arm and sleeping throughout the service. Jane McPherson
       loved to have the boy there beside her. It was the one thing in life they
       did together and she did not mind his sleeping the time away. Knowing how
       late he had been upon the streets at the paper selling on Saturday
       evenings, she looked at him with eyes filled with tenderness and sympathy.
       Once the minister, a man with brown beard and hard, tightly-closed mouth,
       spoke to her. "Can't you keep him awake?" he asked impatiently. "He needs
       the sleep," she said and hurried past the minister and out of the church,
       looking ahead of her and frowning.
       The evening of the evangelist meeting was a summer evening fallen on a
       winter month. All day the warm winds had come up from the southwest. Mud
       lay soft and deep in the streets and among the little pools of water on
       the sidewalks were dry spots from which steam arose. Nature had forgotten
       herself. A day that should have sent old fellows to their nests behind
       stoves in stores sent them forth to loaf in the sun. The night fell warm
       and cloudy. A thunder storm threatened in the month of February.
       Sam walked along the sidewalk with his mother bound for the brick church,
       wearing a new grey overcoat. The night did not demand the overcoat but Sam
       wore it out of an excess of pride in its possession. The overcoat had an
       air. It had been made by Gunther the tailor after a design sketched on the
       back of a piece of wrapping paper by John Telfer and had been paid for out
       of the newsboy's savings. The little German tailor, after a talk with
       Valmore and Telfer, had made it at a marvellously low price. Sam swaggered
       as he walked.
       He did not sleep in church that evening; indeed he found the quiet church
       filled with a medley of strange noises. Folding carefully the new coat and
       laying it beside him on the seat he looked with interest at the people,
       feeling within him something of the nervous excitement with which the air
       was charged. The evangelist, a short, athletic-looking man in a grey
       business suit, seemed to the boy out of place in the church. He had the
       assured business-like air of the travelling men who come to the New Leland
       House, and Sam thought he looked like a man who had goods to be sold. He
       did not stand quietly back of the pulpit giving out the text as did the
       brown-bearded minister, nor did he sit with closed eyes and clasped hands
       waiting for the choir to finish singing. While the choir sang he ran up
       and down the platform waving his arms and shouting excitedly to the people
       on the church benches, "Sing! Sing! Sing! For the glory of God, sing!"
       When the song was finished, he began talking, quietly at first, of life in
       the town. As he talked he grew more and more excited. "The town is a
       cesspool of vice!" he shouted. "It reeks with evil! The devil counts it a
       suburb of hell!"
       His voice rose, and sweat ran off his face. A sort of frenzy seized him.
       He pulled off his coat and throwing it over a chair ran up and down the
       platform and into the aisles among the people, shouting, threatening,
       pleading. People began to stir uneasily in their seats. Jane McPherson
       stared stonily at the back of the woman in front of her. Sam was horribly
       frightened.
       The newsboy of Caxton was not without a hunger for religion. Like all boys
       he thought much and often of death. In the night he sometimes awakened
       cold with fear, thinking that death must be just without the door of his
       room waiting for him. When in the winter he had a cold and coughed, he
       trembled at the thought of tuberculosis. Once, when he was taken with a
       fever, he fell asleep and dreamed that he had died and was walking on the
       trunk of a fallen tree over a ravine filled with lost souls that shrieked
       with terror. When he awoke he prayed. Had some one come into his room and
       heard his prayer he would have been ashamed.
       On winter evenings as he walked through the dark streets with the papers
       under his arm he thought of his soul. As he thought a tenderness came over
       him; a lump came into his throat and he pitied himself; he felt that there
       was something missing in his life, something he wanted very badly.
       Under John Telfer's influence, the boy, who had quit school to devote
       himself to money making, read Walt Whitman and had a season of admiring
       his own body with its straight white legs, and the head that was poised so
       jauntily on the body. Sometimes he would awaken on summer nights and be so
       filled with strange longing that he would creep out of bed and, pushing
       open the window, sit upon the floor, his bare legs sticking out beyond his
       white nightgown, and, thus sitting, yearn eagerly toward some fine
       impulse, some call, some sense of bigness and of leadership that was
       absent from the necessities of the life he led. He looked at the stars and
       listened to the night noises, so filled with longing that the tears sprang
       to his eyes.
       Once, after the affair of the bugle, Jane McPherson had been ill--and the
       first touch of the finger of death reaching out to her--had sat with her
       son in the warm darkness in the little grass plot at the front of the
       house. It was a clear, warm, starlit evening without a moon, and as the
       two sat closely together a sense of the coming of death crept over the
       mother.
       At the evening meal Windy McPherson had talked voluminously, ranting and
       shouting about the house. He said that a housepainter who had a real sense
       of colour had no business trying to work in a hole like Caxton. He had
       been in trouble with a housewife about a colour he had mixed for painting
       a porch floor and at his own table he raved about the woman and what he
       declared her lack of even a primitive sense of colour. "I am sick of it
       all," he shouted, going out of the house and up the street with uncertain
       steps. His wife had been unmoved by his outburst, but in the presence of
       the quiet boy whose chair touched her own she trembled with a strange new
       fear and began to talk of the life after death, making effort after effort
       to get at what she wanted to say, and only succeeding in finding
       expression for her thoughts in little sentences broken by long painful
       pauses. She told the boy she had no doubt at all that there was some kind
       of future life and that she believed she should see and live with him
       again after they had finished with this world.
       One day the minister who had been annoyed because he had slept in his
       church, stopped Sam on the street to talk to him of his soul. He said that
       the boy should be thinking of making himself one of the brothers in Christ
       by joining the church. Sam listened silently to the talk of the man, whom
       he instinctively disliked, but in his silence felt there was something
       insincere. With all his heart he wanted to repeat a sentence he had heard
       from the lips of grey-haired, big-fisted Valmore--"How can they believe
       and not lead a life of simple, fervent devotion to their belief?" He
       thought himself superior to the thin-lipped man who talked with him and
       had he been able to express what was in his heart he might have said,
       "Look here, man! I am made of different stuff from all the people there at
       the church. I am new clay to be moulded into a new man. Not even my mother
       is like me. I do not accept your ideas of life just because you say they
       are good any more than I accept Windy McPherson just because he happens to
       be my father."
       During one winter Sam spent evening after evening reading the Bible in his
       room. It was after Kate's marriage--she had got into an affair with a
       young farmer that had kept her name upon the tongues of whisperers for
       months but was now a housewife on a farm at the edge of a village some
       miles from Caxton, and the mother was again at her endless task among the
       soiled clothes in the kitchen and Windy McPherson off drinking and
       boasting about town. Sam read the book in secret. He had a lamp on a
       little stand beside his bed and a novel, lent him by John Telfer, beside
       it. When his mother came up the stairway he slipped the Bible under the
       cover of the bed and became absorbed in the novel. He thought it something
       not quite in keeping with his aims as a business man and a money getter to
       be concerned about his soul. He wanted to conceal his concern but with all
       his heart wanted to get hold of the message of the strange book, about
       which men wrangled hour after hour on winter evenings in the store.
       He did not get it; and after a time he stopped reading the book. Left to
       himself he might have sensed its meaning, but on all sides of him were the
       voices of the men--the men at Wildman's who owned to no faith and yet were
       filled with dogmatisms as they talked behind the stove in the grocery; the
       brown-bearded, thin-lipped minister in the brick church; the shouting,
       pleading evangelists who came to visit the town in the winter; the gentle
       old grocer who talked vaguely of the spirit world,--all these voices were
       at the mind of the boy pleading, insisting, demanding, not that Christ's
       simple message that men love one another to the end, that they work
       together for the common good, be accepted, but that their own complex
       interpretation of his word be taken to the end that souls be saved.
       In the end the boy of Caxton got to the place where he had a dread of the
       word soul. It seemed to him that the mention of the word in conversation
       was something shameful and to think of the word or the shadowy something
       for which the word stood an act of cowardice. In his mind the soul became
       a thing to be hidden away, covered up, not thought of. One might be
       allowed to speak of the matter at the moment of death, but for the healthy
       man or boy to have the thought of his soul in his mind or word of it on
       his lips--one might better become blatantly profane and go to the devil
       with a swagger. With delight he imagined himself as dying and with his
       last breath tossing a round oath into the air of his death chamber.
       In the meantime Sam continued to have inexplicable longings and hopes. He
       kept surprising himself by the changing aspect of his own viewpoint of
       life. He found himself indulging in the most petty meannesses, and
       following these with flashes of a kind of loftiness of mind. Looking at a
       girl passing in the street, he had unbelievably mean thoughts; and the
       next day, passing the same girl, a line caught from the babbling of John
       Telfer came to his lips and he went his way muttering, "June's twice June
       since she breathed it with me."
       And then into the complex nature of this boy came the sex motive. Already
       he dreamed of having women in his arms. He looked shyly at the ankles of
       women crossing the street, and listened eagerly when the crowd about the
       stove in Wildman's fell to telling smutty stories. He sank to unbelievable
       depths of triviality in sordidness, looking shyly into dictionaries for
       words that appealed to the animal lust in his queerly perverted mind and,
       when he came across it, lost entirely the beauty of the old Bible tale of
       Ruth in the suggestion of intimacy between man and woman that it brought
       to him. And yet Sam McPherson was no evil-minded boy. He had, as a matter
       of fact, a quality of intellectual honesty that appealed strongly to the
       clean-minded, simple-hearted old blacksmith Valmore; he had awakened
       something like love in the hearts of the women school teachers in the
       Caxton schools, at least one of whom continued to interest herself in him,
       taking him with her on walks along country roads, and talking to him
       constantly of the development of his mind; and he was the friend and boon
       companion of Telfer, the dandy, the reader of poems, the keen lover of
       life. The boy was struggling to find himself. One night when the sex call
       kept him awake he got up and dressed, and went and stood in the rain by
       the creek in Miller's pasture. The wind swept the rain across the face of
       the water and a sentence flashed through his mind: "The little feet of the
       rain run on the water." There was a quality of almost lyrical beauty in
       the Iowa boy.
       And this boy, who couldn't get hold of his impulse toward God, whose sex
       impulses made him at times mean, at times full of beauty, and who had
       decided that the impulse toward bargaining and money getting was the
       impulse in him most worth cherishing, now sat beside his mother in church
       and watched with wide-open eyes the man who took off his coat, who sweated
       profusely, and who called the town in which he lived a cesspool of vice
       and its citizens wards of the devil.
       The evangelist from talking of the town began talking instead of heaven
       and hell and his earnestness caught the attention of the listening boy who
       began seeing pictures.
       Into his mind there came a picture of a burning pit of fire in which great
       flames leaped about the heads of the people who writhed in the pit. "Art
       Sherman would be there," thought Sam, materialising the picture he saw;
       "nothing can save him; he keeps a saloon."
       Filled with pity for the man he saw in the picture of the burning pit, his
       mind centered on the person of Art Sherman. He liked Art Sherman. More
       than once he had felt the touch of human kindness in the man. The roaring,
       blustering saloonkeeper had helped the boy sell and collect for
       newspapers. "Pay the kid or get out of the place," the red-faced man
       roared at drunken men leaning on the bar.
       And then, looking into the burning pit, Sam thought of Mike McCarthy, for
       whom he had at that moment a kind of passion akin to a young girl's blind
       devotion to her lover. With a shudder he realised that Mike also would go
       into the pit, for he had heard Mike laughing at churches and declaring
       there was no God.
       The evangelist ran upon the platform and called to the people demanding
       that they stand upon their feet. "Stand up for Jesus," he shouted; "stand
       up and be counted among the host of the Lord God."
       In the church people began getting to their feet. Jane McPherson stood
       with the others. Sam did not stand. He crept behind his mother's dress,
       hoping to pass through the storm unnoticed. The call to the faithful to
       stand was a thing to be complied with or resisted as the people might
       wish; it was something entirely outside of himself. It did not occur to
       him to count himself among either the lost or the saved.
       Again the choir began singing and a businesslike movement began among the
       people. Men and women went up and down the aisles clasping the hands of
       people in the pews, talking and praying aloud. "Welcome among us," they
       said to certain ones who stood upon their feet. "It gladdens our hearts to
       see you among us. We are happy at seeing you in the fold among the saved.
       It is good to confess Jesus."
       Suddenly a voice from the bench back of him struck terror to Sam's heart.
       Jim Williams, who worked in Sawyer's barber shop, was upon his knees and
       in a loud voice was praying for the soul of Sam McPherson. "Lord, help
       this erring boy who goes up and down in the company of sinners and
       publicans," he shouted.
       In a moment the terror of death and the fiery pit that had possessed him
       passed, and Sam was filled instead with blind, dumb rage. He remembered
       that this same Jim Williams had treated lightly the honour of his sister
       at the time of her disappearance, and he wanted to get upon his feet and
       pour out his wrath on the head of the man, who, he felt, had betrayed him.
       "They would not have seen me," he thought; "this is a fine trick Jim
       Williams has played me. I shall be even with him for this."
       He got to his feet and stood beside his mother. He had no qualms about
       passing himself off as one of the lambs safely within the fold. His mind
       was bent upon quieting Jim Williams' prayers and avoiding the attention of
       the people.
       The minister began calling on the standing people to testify of their
       salvation. From various parts of the church the people spoke out, some
       loudly and boldly and with a ring of confidence in their voices, some
       tremblingly and hesitatingly. One woman wept loudly shouting between the
       paroxysms of sobbing that seized her, "The weight of my sins is heavy on
       my soul." Girls and young men when called on by the minister responded
       with shamed, hesitating voices asking that a verse of some hymn be sung,
       or quoting a line of scripture.
       At the back of the church the evangelist with one of the deacons and two
       or three women had gathered about a small, black-haired woman, the wife of
       a baker to whom Sam delivered papers. They were urging her to rise and get
       within the fold, and Sam turned and watched her curiously, his sympathy
       going out to her. With all his heart he hoped that she would continue
       doggedly shaking her head.
       Suddenly the irrepressible Jim Williams broke forth again. A quiver ran
       over Sam's body and the blood rose to his cheeks. "Here is another sinner
       saved," shouted Jim, pointing to the standing boy. "Count this boy, Sam
       McPherson, in the fold among the lambs."
       On the platform the brown-bearded minister stood upon a chair and looked
       over the heads of the people. An ingratiating smile played about his lips.
       "Let us hear from the young man, Sam McPherson," he said, raising his hand
       for silence, and, then, encouragingly, "Sam, what have you to say for the
       Lord?"
       Become the centre for the attention of the people in the church Sam was
       terror-stricken. The rage against Jim Williams was forgotten in the spasm
       of fear that seized him. He looked over his shoulder to the door at the
       back of the church and thought longingly of the quiet street outside. He
       hesitated, stammered, grew more red and uncertain, and finally burst out:
       "The Lord," he said, and then looked about hopelessly, "the Lord maketh me
       to lie out in green pastures."
       In the seats behind him a titter arose. A young woman sitting among the
       singers in the choir put her handkerchief to her face and throwing back
       her head rocked back and forth. A man near the door guffawed loudly and
       went hurriedly out. All over the church people began laughing.
       Sam turned his eyes upon his mother. She was staring straight ahead of
       her, and her face was red. "I'm going out of this place and I'm never
       coming back again," he whispered, and, stepping into the aisle, walked
       boldly toward the door. He had made up his mind that if the evangelist
       tried to stop him he would fight. At his back he felt the rows of people
       looking at him and smiling. The laughter continued.
       In the street he hurried along consumed with indignation. "I'll never go
       into any church again," he swore, shaking his fist in the air. The public
       avowals he had heard in the church seemed to him cheap and unworthy. He
       wondered why his mother stayed in there. With a sweep of his arm he
       dismissed all the people in the church. "It is a place to make public
       asses of the people," he thought.
       Sam McPherson wandered through Main Street, dreading to meet Valmore and
       John Telfer. Finding the chairs back of the stove in Wildman's grocery
       deserted, he hurried past the grocer and hid in a corner. Tears of wrath
       stood in his eyes. He had been made a fool of. He imagined the scene that
       would go on when he came upon the street with the papers the next morning.
       Freedom Smith would be there sitting in the old worn buggy and roaring so
       that all the street would listen and laugh. "Going to lie out in any green
       pastures to-night, Sam?" he would shout. "Ain't you afraid you'll take
       cold?" By Geiger's drug store would stand Valmore and Telfer, eager to
       join in the fun at his expense. Telfer would pound on the side of the
       building with his cane and roar with laughter. Valmore would make a
       trumpet of his hands and shout after the fleeing boy. "Do you sleep out
       alone in them green pastures?" Freedom Smith would roar again.
       Sam got up and went out of the grocery. As he hurried along, blind with
       wrath, he felt he would like a stand-up fight with some one. And, then,
       hurrying and avoiding the people, he merged with the crowd on the street
       and became a witness to the strange thing that happened that night in
       Caxton.
       * * * * *
       In Main Street hushed people stood about in groups talking. The air was
       heavy with excitement. Solitary figures went from group to group
       whispering hoarsely. Mike McCarthy, the man who had denied God and who had
       won a place for himself in the affection of the newsboy, had assaulted a
       man with a pocket knife and had left him bleeding and wounded beside a
       country road. Something big and sensational had happened in the life of
       the town.
       Mike McCarthy and Sam were friends. For years the man had idled upon the
       streets of the town, loitering about, boasting and talking. He had sat for
       hours in a chair under a tree before the New Leland House, reading books,
       doing tricks with cards, engaging in long discussions with John Telfer or
       any who would stand up to him.
       Mike McCarthy got into trouble in a fight over a woman. A young farmer
       living at the edge of Caxton had come home from the fields to find his
       wife in the bold Irishman's arms and the two men had gone out of the house
       together to fight in the road. The woman, weeping in the house, followed
       to ask forgiveness of her husband. Running in the gathering darkness along
       the road she had found him cut and bleeding terribly, lying in a ditch
       under a hedge. On down the road she ran and appeared at the door of a
       neighbour, screaming and calling for help.
       The story of the fight in the road got to Caxton just as Sam came out of
       the corner, back of the stove in Wildman's and appeared on the street. Men
       ran from store to store and from group to group along the street saying
       that the young farmer had died and that murder had been done. On a street
       corner Windy McPherson harangued the crowd declaring that the men of
       Caxton should arise in the defence of their homes and string the murderer
       to a lamp post. Hop Higgins, driving a horse from Culvert's livery,
       appeared on Main Street. "He will be at the McCarthy farm," he shouted.
       When several men, coming out of Geiger's drug store, stopped the marshal's
       horse, saying, "You will have trouble out there; you had better take
       help," the little red-faced marshal with the crippled leg laughed. "What
       trouble?" he asked--"To get Mike McCarthy? I shall ask him to come and he
       will come. The rest of that lot won't cut any figure. Mike can wrap the
       entire McCarthy family around his finger."
       There were six of the McCarthy men, all, except Mike, silent, sullen men
       who only talked when they were in liquor. Mike furnished the town's social
       touch with the family. It was a strange family to live there in that fat,
       corn-growing country, a family with something savage and primitive about
       it, one that belonged among western mining camps or among the half savage
       dwellers in deep alleys in cities, and the fact that it lived on a corn
       farm in Iowa was, in the words of John Telfer, "something monstrous in
       Nature."
       The McCarthy farm, lying some four miles east of Caxton, had once
       contained a thousand acres of good corn-growing land. Lem McCarthy, the
       father of the family, had inherited it from a brother, a gold miner, a
       forty-niner, a sport owning fast horses, who planned to breed race horses
       on the Iowa land. Lem had come out of the back streets of an eastern city,
       bringing his brood of tall, silent, savage boys to live upon the land and,
       like the forty-niner, to be a sport. Thinking the wealth that had come to
       him vast beyond spending, he had plunged into horse racing and gambling.
       When, within two years, five hundred acres of the farm had to be sold to
       pay gambling debts, and the wide acres lay covered with weeds, Lem became
       alarmed, and settled down to hard work, the boys working all day in the
       field and at long intervals coming into town at night to get into trouble.
       Having no mother or sister, and knowing that no Caxton woman could be
       hired to go upon the place, they did their own housework; and on rainy
       days sat about the old farmhouse playing cards and fighting. On other days
       they would stand around the bar in Art Sherman's saloon in Piety Hollow
       drinking until they had lost their savage silence and had become loud and
       quarrelsome, going from there upon the streets to seek trouble. Once,
       going into Hayner's restaurant, they took stacks of plates from shelves
       back of the counter and, standing in the doorway, threw them at people
       passing in the street, the crash of the breaking crockery accompanying
       their roaring laughter. When they had driven the people to cover they got
       upon their horses and with wild shouts raced up and down Main Street
       between the rows of tied horses until Hop Higgins, the town marshal,
       appeared, when they rode off into the country awakening the farmers along
       the darkened road as they fled, shouting and singing, toward home.
       When the McCarthy boys got into trouble in Caxton, old Lem McCarthy drove
       into town and got them out of it, paying for the damage done and going
       about declaring the boys meant no harm. When told to keep them out of town
       he shook his head and said he would try.
       Mike McCarthy did not ride swearing and singing with the five brothers
       along the dark road. He did not work all day in the hot corn fields. He
       was the family gentleman, and, wearing good clothes, strolled instead upon
       the street or loitered in the shade before the New Leland House. Mike had
       been educated. For some years he had attended a college in Indiana from
       which he was expelled for an affair with a woman. After his return from
       college he stayed in Caxton, living at the hotel and making a pretence of
       studying law in the office of old Judge Reynolds. He paid slight attention
       to the study of law, but with infinite patience had so trained his hands
       that he became wonderfully dexterous with coins and cards, plucking them
       out of the air and making them appear in the shoes, the hats, and even in
       the mouths, of bystanders. During the day he walked the streets looking at
       the girl clerks in the stores, or stood upon the station platform waving
       his hand to women passengers on passing trains. He told John Telfer that
       the flattery of women was a lost art that he intended to restore. Mike
       McCarthy carried in his pockets books which he read sitting in a chair
       before the hotel or on the stones before store windows. When on Saturdays
       the streets were filled with people, he stood on the corners giving
       gratuitous performances of his magical art with cards and coins, and
       eyeing country girls in the crowd. Once, a woman, the town stationer's
       wife, shouted at him, calling him a lazy lout, whereupon he threw a coin
       in the air, and when it did not come down rushed toward her shouting, "She
       has it in her stocking." When the stationer's wife ran into her shop and
       banged the door the crowd laughed and shouted with delight.
       Telfer had a liking for the tall, grey-eyed, loitering McCarthy and
       sometimes sat with him discussing a novel or a poem; Sam in the background
       listened eagerly. Valmore did not care for the man, shaking his head and
       declaring that such a fellow could come to no good end.
       The rest of the town agreed with Valmore, and McCarthy, knowing this,
       sunned himself in the town's displeasure. For the sake of the public furor
       it brought down upon his head he proclaimed himself a socialist, an
       anarchist, an atheist, a pagan. Among all the McCarthy boys he alone cared
       greatly about women, and he made public and open declarations of his
       passion for them. Before the men gathered about the stove in Wildman's
       grocery store he would stand whipping them into a frenzy by declaring for
       free love, and vowing that he would have the best of any woman who gave
       him the chance.
       For this man the frugal, hard working newsboy had conceived a regard
       amounting to a passion. As he listened to McCarthy he got continuous
       delightful little thrills. "There is nothing he would not dare," thought
       the boy. "He is the freest, the boldest, the bravest man in town." When
       the young Irishman, seeing the admiration in his eyes, flung him a silver
       dollar saying, "That is for your fine brown eyes, my boy; it I had them I
       would have half the women in town after me," Sam kept the dollar in his
       pocket and counted it a kind of treasure like the rose given a lover by
       his sweetheart.
       * * * * *
       It was past eleven o'clock when Hop Higgins returned to town with
       McCarthy, driving quietly along the street and through an alley at the
       back of the town hall. The crowd upon the street had broken up. Sam had
       gone from one to another of the muttering groups, his heart quaking with
       fear. Now he stood at the back of the mass of men gathered at the jail
       door. An oil lamp, burning at the top of the post above the door, threw
       dancing, flickering lights on the faces of the men before him. The thunder
       storm that had threatened had not come, but the unnatural warm wind
       continued and the sky overhead was inky black.
       Through the alley, to the jail door, drove the town marshal, the young
       McCarthy sitting in the buggy beside him. A man rushed forward to hold the
       horse. McCarthy's face was chalky white. He laughed and shouted, raising
       his hand toward the sky.
       "I am Michael, son of God. I have cut a man with a knife so that his red
       blood ran upon the ground. I am the son of God and this filthy jail shall
       be my sanctuary. In there I shall talk aloud with my Father," he roared
       hoarsely, shaking his fist at the crowd. "Sons of this cesspool of
       respectability, stay and hear! Send for your females and let them stand in
       the presence of a man!"
       Taking the white, wild-eyed man by the arm Marshal Higgins led him into
       the jail, the clank of locks, the low murmur of the voice of Higgins and
       the wild laughter of McCarthy floating out to the group of silent men
       standing in the mud of the alley.
       Sam McPherson ran past the group of men to the side of the jail and
       finding John Telfer and Valmore leaning silently against the wall of Tom
       Folger's wagon shop slipped between them. Telfer put out his arm and laid
       it upon the boy's shoulder. Hop Higgins, coming out of the jail, addressed
       the crowd. "Don't answer if he talks," he said; "he is as crazy as a
       loon."
       Sam moved closer to Telfer. The voice of the imprisoned man, loud, and
       filled with a startling boldness, rolled out of the jail. He began
       praying.
       "Hear me, Father Almighty, who has permitted this town of Caxton to exist
       and has let me, Thy son, grow to manhood. I am Michael, Thy son. They have
       put me in this jail where rats run across the floor and they stand in the
       mud outside as I talk with Thee. Are you there, old Truepenny?"
       A breath of cold air blew up the alley followed by a flaw of rain. The
       group under the flickering lamp by the jail entrance drew back against the
       walls of the building. Sam could see them dimly, pressing closely against
       the wall. The man in the jail laughed loudly.
       "I have had a philosophy of life, O Father," he shouted. "I have seen men
       and women here living year after year without children. I have seen them
       hoarding pennies and denying Thee new life on which to work Thy will. To
       these women I have gone secretly talking of carnal love. With them I have
       been gentle and kind; them I have flattered."
       A roaring laugh broke from the lips of the imprisoned man. "Are you there,
       oh dwellers in the cesspool of respectability?" he shouted. "Do you stand
       in the mud with cold feet listening? I have been with your wives. Eleven
       Caxton wives without babes have I been with and it has been fruitless. The
       twelfth woman I have just left, leaving her man in the road a bleeding
       sacrifice to thee. I shall call out the names of the eleven. I shall have
       revenge also upon the husbands of the women, some of whom wait with the
       others in the mud outside."
       He began calling off the names of Caxton wives. A shudder ran through the
       body of the boy, sensitised by the new chill in the air and by the
       excitement of the night. Among the men standing along the wall of the jail
       a murmur arose. Again they grouped themselves under the flickering light
       by the jail door, disregarding the rain. Valmore, stumbling out of the
       darkness beside Sam, stood before Telfer. "The boy should be going home,"
       he said; "this isn't fit for him to hear."
       Telfer laughed and drew Sam closer to him. "He has heard enough lies in
       this town," he said. "Truth won't hurt him. I would not go myself, nor
       would you, and the boy shall not go. This McCarthy has a brain. Although
       he is half insane now he is trying to work something out. The boy and I
       will stay to hear."
       The voice from the jail continued calling out the names of Caxton wives.
       Voices in the group before the jail door began shouting: "This should be
       stopped. Let us tear down the jail."
       McCarthy laughed aloud. "They squirm, oh Father, they squirm; I have them
       in the pit and I torture them," he cried.
       An ugly feeling of satisfaction came over Sam. He had a sense of the fact
       that the names shouted from the jail would be repeated over and over
       through the town. One of the women whose names had been called out had
       stood with the evangelist at the back of the church trying to induce the
       wife of the baker to rise and be counted in the fold with the lambs.
       The rain, falling on the shoulders of the men by the jail door, changed to
       hail, the air grew colder and the hailstones rattled on the roofs of
       buildings. Some of the men joined Telfer and Valmore, talking in low,
       excited voices. "And Mary McKane, too, the hypocrite," Sam heard one of
       them say.
       The voice inside the jail changed. Still praying, Mike McCarthy seemed
       also to be talking to the group in the darkness outside.
       "I am sick of my life. I have sought leadership and have not found it. Oh
       Father! Send down to men a new Christ, one to get hold of us, a modern
       Christ with a pipe in his mouth who will swear and knock us about so that
       we vermin who pretend to be made in Thy image will understand. Let him go
       into churches and into courthouses, into cities, and into towns like this,
       shouting, 'Be ashamed! Be ashamed of your cowardly concern over your
       snivelling souls!' Let him tell us that never will our lives, so miserably
       lived, be repeated after our bodies lie rotting in the grave."
       A sob broke from his lips and a lump came into Sam's throat.
       "Oh Father! help us men of Caxton to understand that we have only this,
       our lives, this life so warm and hopeful and laughing in the sun, this
       life with its awkward boys full of strange possibilities, and its girls
       with their long legs and freckles on their noses, that are meant to carry
       life within themselves, new life, kicking and stirring, and waking them at
       night."
       The voice of the prayer broke. Wild sobs took the place of speech.
       "Father!" shouted the broken voice, "I have taken a life, a man that moved
       and talked and whistled in the sunshine on winter mornings; I have
       killed."
       * * * * *
       The voice inside the jail became inaudible. Silence, broken by low sobs
       from the jail, fell on the little dark alley and the listening men began
       going silently away. The lump in Sam's throat grew larger. Tears stood in
       his eyes. He went with Telfer and Valmore out of the alley and into the
       street, the two men walking in silence. The rain had ceased and a cold
       wind blew.
       The boy felt that he had been shriven. His mind, his heart, even his tired
       body seemed strangely cleansed. He felt a new affection for Telfer and
       Valmore. When Telfer began talking he listened eagerly, thinking that at
       last he understood him and knew why men like Valmore, Wildman, Freedom
       Smith, and Telfer loved each other and went on being friends year after
       year in the face of difficulties and misunderstandings. He thought that he
       had got hold of the idea of brotherhood that John Telfer talked of so
       often and so eloquently. "Mike McCarthy is only a brother who has gone the
       dark road," he thought and felt a glow of pride in the thought and in the
       apt expression of it in his mind.
       John Telfer, forgetting the boy, talked soberly to Valmore, the two men
       stumbling along in the darkness intent upon their own thoughts.
       "It is an odd thought," said Telfer and his voice seemed far away and
       unnatural like the voice from the jail; "it is an odd thought that but for
       a quirk in the brain this Mike McCarthy might himself have been a kind of
       Christ with a pipe in his mouth."
       Valmore stumbled and half fell in the darkness at a street crossing.
       Telfer went on talking.
       "The world will some day grope its way into some kind of an understanding
       of its extraordinary men. Now they suffer terribly. In success or in such
       failures as has come to this imaginative, strangely perverted Irishman
       their lot is pitiful. It is only the common, the plain, unthinking man who
       slides peacefully through this troubled world."
       At the house Jane McPherson sat waiting for her boy. She was thinking of
       the scene in the church and a hard light was in her eyes. Sam went past
       the sleeping room of his parents, where Windy McPherson snored peacefully,
       and up the stairway to his own room. He undressed and, putting out the
       light, knelt upon the floor. From the wild ravings of the man in the jail
       he had got hold of something. In the midst of the blasphemy of Mike
       McCarthy he had sensed a deep and abiding love of life. Where the church
       had failed the bold sensualist succeeded. Sam felt that he could have
       prayed in the presence of the entire town.
       "Oh, Father!" he cried, sending up his voice in the silence of the little
       room, "make me stick to the thought that the right living of this, my
       life, is my duty to you."
       By the door below, while Valmore waited on the sidewalk, Telfer talked to
       Jane McPherson.
       "I wanted Sam to hear," he explained. "He needs a religion. All young men
       need a religion. I wanted him to hear how even a man like Mike McCarthy
       keeps instinctively trying to justify himself before God." _