Part 49 (1/2)
Uncle Denny pulled a chair out for Murphy and looked at him thoughtfully.
”Do you know this jackal, Fleckenstein?”
”I do. The Boss showed me that letter. I suppose you know how a man like Mr. Manning would take to a fellow like Fleckenstein?”
”Know!” snorted Uncle Denny. ”Why, young fellow, I'd know Jim's disembodied soul if I met it in an uninhabited desert.”
Murphy raised his eyebrows. ”You're Irish, I take it.”
”You take it right.”
”I was born in Dublin myself.”
The two men shook hands and Murphy went on. ”I told the Boss to forget that letter. I know Fleckenstein. I know all his secrets just as I do about every other man's in the valley. I know their shames and their business grafts. In fact I know everything but the best side of 'em.
I've been in the saloon business in this valley for twenty years, Mr.
Dennis.”
”Ah!” said Uncle Denny. ”I understand now!”
”All I've got to do,” said Murphy, ”is to drop in on Fleckenstein and mention this letter and suggest that my own information is what you might call detailed. 'Twill be enough.”
”Of course, it might not be Fleckenstein,” said Dennis.
”Never mind! My warning will reach the proper party, if I go to Fleckenstein,” said Murphy. He smacked his lips over the cup of coffee Mrs. Flynn set before him.
”And how came you to be helping the Boss instead of distributing booze?”
asked Uncle Denny.
”I was about ready to quit, anyhow,” said Murphy. ”A man gets sick of crooked deals if you give him time. And time was when a man could keep a saloon in this section and still be the leading citizen and his wife could hold up her head with the banker's wife. That time's gone. I've been thinking for a long time of marrying and settling down. Then the Boss cleaned me out.” Murphy chuckled.
”How was that?” asked Dennis. Mrs. Flynn began to clear the table very slowly.
”Well, this is the way of it,” and Murphy told the story of his first meeting with Jim. ”I've seen him in action, you see,” he concluded, ”and I'd be sorry for Fleckenstein if he crosses the Boss's path.”
”Jim'll never trouble himself to kick the jackal!” said Uncle Denny.
”Huh! You don't know that boy. There was a look in his eye this morning--G.o.d help Fleckenstein if he meets the Big Boss--but he'll avoid the Boss like poison.”
Uncle Denny shook his head. ”What kind is Fleckenstein?”
”What kind of a man would be countenancing a letter like that?” Then Murphy laughed. ”The first time I ever saw Fleckenstein he was riding in the stage that ran west from Cabillo. Bill Evans was driving and Fleckenstein got to knocking this country and telling about the real folks back East. Bill stood it for an hour, then he turned round and said: 'Why, d.a.m.n your soul, we make better men than you in this country out of binding wire! What do you say to that?' And Fleckenstein shut up.”
Uncle Denny chuckled. ”Have a cigar? Is Jim making any headway in this 'silent campaign' I'm hearing about?”
”Thanks,” said Murphy. ”Well, he is and he ain't. He's got a great personality and everybody who gets his number will eat sand for him. He made a great speech at Cabillo, time of the Hearing. He said the dam was his thumb-print--kind of like the mounds the Injuns left, I guess.
People are kind of coupling that speech up now with him when they meet him and they are beginning to have their doubts about his dishonesty.
But I don't believe he can get his other idea across on the farmers and rough-necks in time to lick Fleckenstein.”
”And what is his other idea?” asked Dennis.