Part 12 (2/2)
”Oh, thank you--thank you kindly, Mr. Crow,” she giggled, and proceeded to let it slip out of her fingers again. ”Oh, how stupid! How perfectly clumsy--”
”Did I hear you addressed as Mr. Crow?” inquired the foremost of the two strangers, halting abruptly. He was a tall, florid man of forty or thereabouts, with a deep and not unpleasant voice. His companion was also tall but very gaunt and sallow. He wore huge round spectacles, hooked over his ears. Both were well dressed, one in grey flannel, the other in blue serge.
”You did,” said the town marshal, straightening up. ”You dropped your umbrell' ag'in, Sue,” he added. ”Yes, sir, my name's Crow.”
Miss Becker waited a few seconds and then picked up the parasol.
”The celebrated Anderson Crow?” asked the man with the gla.s.ses, opening his eyes a little wider.
[Ill.u.s.tration: _”The celebrated Anderson Crow?” asked the man with the gla.s.ses_]
Mr. Crow suddenly remembered that he was in his s.h.i.+rt-sleeves. His faded blue sack-coat--”undress,” he called it--hung limp and neglected on the gate-post.
”More or less,” he admitted, wis.h.i.+ng to goodness he had on his best pair of ”galluses” instead of the ones he was wearing.
”Marshal of Tinkletown, I believe?” said the florid stranger, raising his eyebrows slightly.
”Excuse me,” said Anderson, conscious of a certain disparaging note in the speaker's voice, which he quite naturally laid to the ”galluses.”
Without turning his back toward them he retrieved his coat from the gate-post, remembering in time that those ”plaguey” suspenders had played him false that day and Alf Reesling had volunteered to ”tie a knot in 'em,” somewhere in the back. ”I could fine myself five dollars fer goin' without my uniform,” said he, as he slipped an arm into one sleeve. ”It's one of my hide-boundest rules,” and his other arm went in--not without a slight twinge, for he had been experiencing a touch of rheumatism in that shoulder. ”Yes, sir, I'm the Marshal o' Tinkletown,”
he added, indicating the bright nickel star that gleamed resplendent among an a.s.sortment of glittering and impressive dangling emblems.
The man with the spectacles peered intently at the collection on Mr.
Crow's breast.
”You appear to be almost everything else as well, Mr. Crow,” said he, respectfully.
”Well, I guess I'll have to be going,” put in Miss Becker at this juncture. ”Give my love to the girls, Mr. Crow.”
She moved off up the board-walk, her back as stiff as a ramrod. Any one with half an eye could see that she was resolved not to drop the parasol again. No savage warrior on battle bent ever gripped his club with greater determination.
”So long,” was all that Marshal Crow could spare the time to say. ”Yes sir,” he went on, making a fine show of stifling a yawn, ”yes, sir, I've had a few triflin' honours in my day. You gentlemen lookin' fer any one in partic'lar?”
”Not now,” said the florid one. ”We've found him.”
The spectacled man had his nose quite close to Mr. Crow's badges. He read them off, in the voice and manner of one tremendously impressed.
”Grand Army of the Republic. Sons of the American Revolution. Sons of Veterans. Tinkletown Battlefield a.s.sociation. New York Imperial Detective a.s.sociation. Bramble County Horse-Thief Detective a.s.sociation.
Chief of Fire Department. And what, may I ask, is the little round b.u.t.ton at the top?”
The marshal was astonished. ”Don't you know what that is?”
”It doesn't appear to have any lettering--”
”It don't have to have any. That's an American Red Cross b.u.t.ton.”
”So it is,--so it is,” cried the other hastily. ”How stupid of me.”
<script>