Part 24 (2/2)

”Yees; certingly I remember it--he, he, he! But I kim a better trick then thet on the Orleens people 'bout five yeer ago--jest 'fore I jined the Rangers.”

”Fwhat was it, shure?”

”We--ell, ye see, I wan't allers es poor es I'm now. I hed a pertners.h.i.+p in a bit o' a schooner, es used to trade 'tween Bosting an'

Orleens, an' we used to load her wi' all sorts o' notions, to sell to the Orleens folk. Jehosophet an' pork-pies! they air fools, an' no mistake--them Creole French. We ked a sold 'em wooden nutmegs, an'

brick-dust for Cayenne pepper, an' such like; an' I 'bout guess es how we did spekoolate a leetle in thet line o' bizness. Wall, there kim a time when they tuk a notion they ked make cheep _brogan_, as they call 'em, out o' allygator's leather, an' supply the hul n.i.g.g.e.r market wi'

'em. The neels were dear, an' so they tuk to usin' boot-pegs; but not hevin' a manafactry o' the pegs down south, they hed to git 'em from the no'th. Jest then, my pertner an' I thought o' makin' a spekoolashun on the pegs; so we loaded our schooner wi' thet eer freight, chuck right up to the hetches; an' then sot off from Bosting for Orleens. We thort we'd make our derned fortune out thet eer trip.”

”Shure yez did, didn't ye?”

”No-o-o; neer a bit o' 't. It keemd nigh breakin' us.”

”Arrah, how?”

”We-ell! ye see, when we got roun' to Orleens, we learnt that the boot-trade hed a'most stopped. The allygator leather didn't turn out jest the thing for brogans; an' besides, it got sca'ce by reezun o' the killin' o' them verming. In coorse, the pegs hed fell in price; they'd kim down so low, that we ked only git twenty-five cents a bushel for 'em!”

”Mother ov Moses! only twenty-five cents a bushel!”

”Thet was all they'd fetch--offer 'em when an' wheer we would. In coorse, we wan't fools enough to take thet--the dernationed pegs hed cost us more in Bosting!”

”Divil a doubt ov it? But fwhat did yez do wid 'em, anyhow?”

”We-ell, Mister Tigg, we weer cleer beat at fust; an' didn't know what to do--neyther me'r my pertner. But arter takin' a good think over it, I seed a way o' gitting out o' the sc.r.a.pe--leestwise 'ithout sech a loss as sellin' the pegs at twenty-five cents the bushel. I seed a chence o'

gitting rid o' them at fifty cents.”

”Arrah, now! in fwhat way, comrade?”

”You've seed boot-pegs, I recking, Mister Tigg?”

”An' shure I hiv. Aren't they the same that's in these suttlers'

brogues we've got on--bad luck to them?”

”Jess the same--only whitier when they air new.”

”Be j.a.pers! I think I remimber seein' a barrel full ov thim in New Yark.”

”Very certing it were them--they air usooaly packed in berr'ls. Can you think o' anything they looked like?”

”Wil, in troth, they looked more loike oats than anything I can recollect. Shure they did look moighty like oats!”

”An' don't ee kalkerlate they'd a looked more like oats, ef they'd been pointed at both ends instead o' one!”

”In troth, would they--all that same.”

”We-ell, thet's the very idee thet kem inter my mind at the time.”

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