登陆注册
26291300000057

第57章 CHAPTER XI IN THE GREAT METROPOLIS(3)

Sure, I ax you and your friend's pardon for bein' so short to yez this mornin', but I'm in that throuble lately that me timper is all but gone.'

"'That so?' says I. 'Trouble's thick in this world, ain't it? Me and Mr. Phinney got a case of trouble on our hands now, Mr. Dempsey, and--'

"'Excuse me, sor,' he says. 'My name's not Dempsey. I suppose you seen the sign with me partner's name on it. I only bought into the business a while ago, and the new sign's not ready yit. Me name is O'Shaughnessy, sor.'

"'What?' says I. And then: 'WHAT?'

"'O'Shaughnessy. Michael O'Shaughnessy. I--'

"'Hold on!' I sung out. 'For the land sakes, hold on! WHAT'S your name?'

"He bristled up like a cat.

"'Michael O'Shaughnessy,' he roars, like the bull of Bashan.

'D'yez find any fault with it? 'Twas me father's before me--Michael Patrick O'Shaughnessy, of County Sligo. I'll have yez know-- WHAT'S THAT?'

"'Twas a scream from the libr'ry. Next thing I knew, Margaret, the nurse girl, was standin' in the hall, white as a Sunday shirt, and swingin' back and forth like a wild-carrot stalk in a gale.

"'Mike!' says she, kind of low and faint. 'Mary be good to us!

MIKE!'

"And the big chap dropped his tall hat on the floor and turned as white as she was.

"'MAGGIE!' he hollers. And then they closed in on one another.

"Sim and the priest and Archie had followed the girl into the hall.

Me and Phinney was too flabbergasted to do anything, but big Father McGrath was cool as an ice box. When Archibald, like the little imp he was, sets up a whoop and dives for them two, the priest grabs him by the rope of the blanket nighty and swings him into the libr'ry, and shuts the door on him.

"'And now,' says he, takin' Sim and me by the arms and leadin' us to the parlor, 'we'll just step in here and wait a bit.'

"We waited, maybe, ten minutes. Archibald, dear, shut up in the libr'ry, was howlin' blue murder, but nobody paid any attention to him. Then there was a knock on the door between us and the hall, and Father McGrath opened it. There they was, the two of 'em--Mike and Maggie--lookin' red and foolish--but happy, don't talk!

"'You see, sor,' says the O'Shaughnessy man to me, ''twas the five-thousand-dollar prize that done it. I'd been workin' at me trade, sor--larnin' to tind bar it was--and I'd just got a new job where the pay was pretty good, and I'd sint over for Maggie, and was plannin' for the little flat we was to have, and the like of that, when I drew that prize. And the joy of it was like handin' me a jolt on the jaw. It put me out for two weeks, sor, and when I come to I was in Baltimore, where I'd gone to collect the money; and two thousand of the five was gone, and I knew me job in New York was gone, and I was that shamed and sick it took me three days more to make up me mind to come to me Cousin Tim's, where I knew Maggie'd be waitin' for me. And when I did come back she was gone, too.'

"'And then,' says Father McGrath, sharp, 'I suppose you went on another spree, and spent the rest of the money.'

"'I did not, sor--axin' your pardon for contradictin' your riverence. I signed the pledge, and I'll keep it, with Maggie to help me. I put me three thousand into a partnership with me friend Dempsey, who was runnin' the Golconda House--'tis over on the East Side, with a fine bar trade--and I'm doin' well, barrin' that I've been crazy for this poor girl, and advertisin' and--'

"'And look at the clothes of him!' sings out Margaret, reverentlike.

'And is that YOUR tall hat, Mike? To think of you with a tall hat!

Sure it's a proud girl I am this day. Saints forgive me, I've forgot Archie!'

"And afore we could stop her she'd run into the hall and unfastened the libr'ry door. It took her some time to smooth down the young one's sensitive feelin's, and while she was gone, me and Simeon told the O'Shaughnessy man a little of what his girl had had to put up with along of Cousin Harriet and Archibald. He was mad.

"'Is that the little blackguard?' he asks, pointin' to Archibald, who had arrived by now.

"'That's the one,' says I.

"Archibald looked up at him and grinned, sassy as ever.

"'Father McGrath,' asks O'Shaughnessy, determined like, 'can you marry us this night?'

"'I can,' says the Father.

"'And will yez?'

"'I will, with pleasure.'

"'Maggie,' says Mike, 'get your hat and jacket on and come with the Father and me this minute. These gintlemen here will explain to your lady when she comes back. But YOU'LL come back no more.

We'll send for your trunk to-morrer.'

"Even then the girl hesitated. She'd been so used to bein' a slave that I suppose she couldn't realize she was free at last.

"'But, Mike, dear,' she says. 'I--oh, your lovely hat! Put it down, Archie, darlin'. Put it down!'

"Archibald had been doin' a little cruisin' on his own hook, and he'd dug up Mike's shiny beaver where it had been dropped in the hall. Now he was dancin' round with it, bangin' it on the top as if it was a drum.

"'Put it down, PLEASE!' pleads Margaret. 'Twas plain that that plug was a crown of glory to her.

"'Drop it, you little thafe!' yells O'Shaughnessy, makin' a dive for the boy.

"'I won't!' screams Archibald, and starts to run. He tripped over the corner of a mat, and fell flat. The plug hat was underneath him, and it fell flat, too.

"'Oh! oh! oh!' wails Margaret, wringin' her hands. 'Your beautiful hat, Mike!'

"Mike's face was like a sunset.

"'Your reverence,' says he, 'tell me this; don't the wife promise to "obey" in the marriage service?'

"'She does,' says Father McGrath.

"'D'ye hear that, you that's to be Margaret O'Shaughnessy? You do?

Well, then, as your husband that's to be in tin minutes, I order you to give that small divil what's comin' to him. D'ye hear me?

Will yez obey me, or will yez not?'

"She didn't know what to do. You could see she wanted to--her fingers was itchin' to do it, but-- And then Archie held up the ruins of the hat and commenced to laugh.

"That settled it. Next minute he was across her knee and gettin' what he'd been sufferin' for ever sence he was born; and gettin' all the back numbers along with it, too.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 守护甜心之梦曲铃

    守护甜心之梦曲铃

    原来我对你的痴情,却只是进入游戏空间的漩涡。
  • 我希望你能为我而活

    我希望你能为我而活

    他,曾说要为她而活,不求生,不求死,只求爱。那时候他们是初中,女孩很漂亮,但男孩很可爱。后来上了初三,一切开始改变了,喜欢女孩的人越来越多,争夺得最持久的就是顾东,风源,风辰和他吴廖晨,还有女孩顾念。可后来他吴廖晨竟被赶出了这场六个人的大赌局,誓言褪去,他竟要给她叫嫂子!关系歴缘就此展开。
  • 传习录

    传习录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 2006年短篇小说新选

    2006年短篇小说新选

    为检阅文学领域每一年度的盛景实绩,积累文学创作与理论批评的丰硕成果,推荐应予关注与值得阅读的文学新作,我们自2005年起,正式启动“专家年选”丛书。本丛书出版后,深得文坛内外广大读者的厚爱与好评。应读者要求,此丛书将继续编选下去。因此,我们特别联袂中国社会科学院、中国作家协会、中国艺术研究院以及相关高校的专家学者组成“专家年选丛书”编委会,由专治中国当代文学研究的知名专家出任各卷主编。
  • 龙凤呈翔

    龙凤呈翔

    我这性子爹娘可愁了。擅长的是大刀和斧子,没点女孩样儿,朋友尽是些坑货:以受人崇拜流芳百年为目标的未来司天;以能治得好病不下毒手为目标的未来御医;以让人恐惧为目标的腹黑刑部尚书之子;以努力赚钱娶媳妇为目标的……大多如此。再遇上个成日里诉说着人生艰难四处打听八卦的四皇子;还有个雁过拔毛、功夫极高、制他不得,且让人看不透的五皇子。唯一性子尚算正常的闺蜜竟也生了胆子拖着我逃家!照此下去,将来怕是难寻夫家。
  • 一号考查组

    一号考查组

    本书是作家陈玉福“1号”系列长篇小说第三部。这是一曲正义战胜邪恶的赞歌,是党在改革开放新时期坚持“三个代表”重要思想的真实写照。小说讴歌新城市几届领导班子坚持为人民谋福利,最终胜利在戈壁沙滩上完成“引黄入新”的水利工程的伟大业绩。伴随这项工程进展的是新城市委在省委的领导下如何排除来自党内蜕化变质分子和社会恶势力的干扰和破坏……
  • 鬼王的嗜血妖妃

    鬼王的嗜血妖妃

    她,无视世人的的辱骂,将痴傻扮演得淋漓尽致,只为保全家人一生平安她,放下心中所有的仇恨,低调、淡薄,只为与爱人一世幸福奈何,她的痴傻,换来的是家破人亡,奈何,她的原谅,换来的是洞房花烛夜,与相爱之人阴阳相隔。她,忍耐,承受,将锥心的痛埋在心间。
  • 树下的少年

    树下的少年

    自是少年,韶华倾覆;我们不曾为东流水的青春后悔,我们怀恋;怀恋患难与共后,在夜晚一醉方休;兄弟我们风雨同舟!
  • 兵王从警

    兵王从警

    一声啼哭,一个超级兵器诞生了。一个阴谋注定跟随主角一生,错误的曲线,不一样的成兵王之路,大海成就了兵王。一个神秘的组织一生追随着主角,兵王之路有它相伴,退伍之际,唯有成超级警王,才能找到身世之谜,一切的开始只因前身的死亡……“感谢创世书评团提供论坛书评支持!”
  • 重生之超凡时代

    重生之超凡时代

    当一个网文迷重生了会发生什么?写小说吧,在他脑海中竟然有着一个强大的系统,它说:码字码的越多,就有机会得到小说中的功法,丹药,天材地宝。系统:“宿主努力码字,努力构建世界框架。”林晟凌乱了,妈的,好不容易过上了好日子,还要给别人打工,这日子什么时候是个头,哥哥我的命怎么这么苦逼。“别说废话,你写不写,不写的话,可以,就是境界降低3个层次,让你回到弱鸡阶段,哼哼。”听着系统之灵小萝莉那恶狠狠的威胁,林晟歇菜了,不敢反抗啊,哥还有大把的妹子等我去安慰,不能让别人祸害了。码字码字……