Cabin Fever
Cabin FeverCHAPTER ONE. THE FEVER MANIFESTS ITSELFCHAPTER TWO. TWO MAKE A QUARRELCHAPTER THREE. TEN DOLLARS AND A JOB FOB BUDCHAPTER FOUR. HEAD SOUTH AND KEEP GOINGCHAPTER FIVE. BUD CANNOT PERFORM MIRACLESCHAPTER SIX. BUD TAKES TO THE HILLSCHAPTER SEVEN. INTO THE DESERTCHAPTER EIGHT. MANY BARREN MONTHS AND MILESCHAPTER NINE. THE BITE OF MEMORYCHAPTER TEN. EMOTIONS ARE TRICKY THINGSCHAPTER ELEVEN. THE FIRST STAGESCHAPTER TWELVE. MARIE TAKES A DESPERATE CHANCECHAPTER THIRTEEN. CABIN FEVER IN THE WORST FORMCHAPTER FOURTEEN. CASH GETS A SHOCKCHAPTER FIFTEEN. AND BUD NEVER GUESSEDCHAPTER SIXTEEN. THE ANTIDOTECHAPTER SEVENTEEN. LOVIN CHILD WRIGGLES INCHAPTER EIGHTEEN. THEY HAVE THEIR TROUBLESCHAPTER NINETEEN. BUD FACES FACTSCHAPTER TWENTY. LOVIN CHILD STRIKES IT RICHCHAPTER TWENTY-ONE. MARIE'S SIDE OF ITCHAPTER TWENTY-TWO. THE CURE COMPLETECopyright
Cabin Fever
B. M. Bower
CHAPTER ONE. THE FEVER MANIFESTS ITSELF
There is a certain malady of the mind induced by too much of
one thing. Just as the body fed too long upon meat becomes a prey
to that horrid disease called scurvy, so the mind fed too long upon
monotony succumbs to the insidious mental ailment which the West
calls "cabin fever." True, it parades under different names,
according to circumstances and caste. You may be afflicted in a
palace and call it ennui, and it may drive you to commit
peccadillos and indiscretions of various sorts. You may be attacked
in a middle-class apartment house, and call it various names, and
it may drive you to cafe life and affinities and alimony. You may
have it wherever you are shunted into a backwater of life, and lose
the sense of being borne along in the full current of progress. Be
sure that it will make you abnormally sensitive to little things;
irritable where once you were amiable; glum where once you went
whistling about your work and your play. It is the crystallizer of
character, the acid test of friendship, the final seal set upon
enmity. It will betray your little, hidden weaknesses, cut and
polish your undiscovered virtues, reveal you in all your glory or
your vileness to your companions in exile--if so be you have
any.If you would test the soul of a friend, take him into the
wilderness and rub elbows with him for five months! One of three
things will surely happen: You will hate each other afterward with
that enlightened hatred which is seasoned with contempt; you will
emerge with the contempt tinged with a pitying toleration, or you
will be close, unquestioning friends to the last six feet of
earth--and beyond. All these things will cabin fever do, and more.
It has committed murder, many's the time. It has driven men crazy.
It has warped and distorted character out of all semblance to its
former self. It has sweetened love and killed love. There is an
antidote--but I am going to let you find the antidote somewhere in
the story.Bud Moore, ex-cow-puncher and now owner of an auto stage that
did not run in the winter, was touched with cabin fever and did not
know what ailed him. His stage line ran from San Jose up through
Los Gatos and over the Bear Creek road across the summit of the
Santa Cruz Mountains and down to the State Park, which is locally
called Big Basin. For something over fifty miles of wonderful
scenic travel he charged six dollars, and usually his big car was
loaded to the running boards. Bud was a good driver, and he had a
friendly pair of eyes--dark blue and with a humorous little twinkle
deep down in them somewhere--and a human little smiley quirk at the
corners of his lips. He did not know it, but these things helped to
fill his car.Until gasoline married into the skylark family, Bud did well
enough to keep him contented out of a stock saddle. (You may not
know it, but it is harder for an old cow-puncher to find content,
now that the free range is gone into history, than it is for a
labor agitator to be happy in a municipal boarding
house.)Bud did well enough, which was very well indeed. Before the
second season closed with the first fall rains, he had paid for his
big car and got the insurance policy transferred to his name. He
walked up First Street with his hat pushed back and a cigarette
dangling from the quirkiest corner of his mouth, and his hands in
his pockets. The glow of prosperity warmed his manner toward the
world. He had a little money in the bank, he had his big car, he
had the good will of a smiling world. He could not walk half a
block in any one of three or four towns but he was hailed with a
"Hello, Bud!" in a welcoming tone. More people knew him than Bud
remembered well enough to call by name--which is the final proof of
popularity the world over.In that glowing mood he had met and married a girl who went
into Big Basin with her mother and camped for three weeks. The girl
had taken frequent trips to Boulder Creek, and twice had gone on to
San Jose, and she had made it a point to ride with the driver
because she was crazy about cars. So she said. Marie had all the
effect of being a pretty girl. She habitually wore white middies
with blue collar and tie, which went well with her clear, pink skin
and her hair that just escaped being red. She knew how to tilt her
"beach" hat at the most provocative angle, and she knew just when
to let Bud catch a slow, sidelong glance--of the kind that is
supposed to set a man's heart to syncopatic behavior. She did not
do it too often. She did not powder too much, and she had the
latest slang at her pink tongue's tip and was yet moderate in her
use of it.Bud did not notice Marie much on the first trip. She was
demure, and Bud had a girl in San Jose who had brought him to that
interesting stage of dalliance where he wondered if he dared kiss
her good night the next time he called. He was preoccupiedly
reviewing the she-said-and-then-I-said, and trying to make up his
mind whether he should kiss her and take a chance on her
displeasure, or whether he had better wait. To him Marie appeared
hazily as another camper who helped fill the car--and his
pocket--and was not at all hard to look at. It was not until the
third trip that Bud thought her beautiful, and was secretly glad
that he had not kissed that San Jose girl.You know how these romances develop. Every summer is
saturated with them the world over. But Bud happened to be a
simple-souled fellow, and there was something about Marie--He
didn't know what it was. Men never do know, until it is all over.
He only knew that the drive through the shady stretches of woodland
grew suddenly to seem like little journeys into paradise. Sentiment
lurked behind every great, mossy tree bole. New beauties unfolded
in the winding drive up over the mountain crests. Bud was terribly
in love with the world in those days.There were the evenings he spent in the Basin, sitting beside
Marie in the huge campfire circle, made wonderful by the shadowy
giants, the redwoods; talking foolishness in undertones while the
crowd sang snatches of songs which no one knew from beginning to
end, and that went very lumpy in the verses and very much out of
harmony in the choruses. Sometimes they would stroll down toward
that sweeter music the creek made, and stand beside one of the
enormous trees and watch the glow of the fire, and the silhouettes
of the people gathered around it.In a week they were surreptitiously holding hands. In two
weeks they could scarcely endure the partings when Bud must start
back to San Jose, and were taxing their ingenuity to invent new
reasons why Marie must go along. In three weeks they were married,
and Marie's mother--a shrewd, shrewish widow--was trying to decide
whether she should wash her hands of Marie, or whether it might be
well to accept the situation and hope that Bud would prove himself
a rising young man.But that was a year in the past. Bud had cabin fever now and
did not know what ailed him, though cause might have been summed up
in two meaty phrases: too much idleness, and too much mother-
in-law. Also, not enough comfort and not enough love.In the kitchen of the little green cottage on North Sixth
Street where Bud had built the home nest with much nearly-Mission
furniture and a piano, Bud was frying his own hotcakes for his ten
o'clock breakfast, and was scowling over the task. He did not mind
the hour so much, but he did mortally hate to cook his own
breakfast--or any other meal, for that matter. In the next room a
rocking chair was rocking with a rhythmic squeak, and a baby was
squalling with that sustained volume of sound which never fails to
fill the adult listener with amazement. It affected Bud
unpleasantly, just as the incessant bawling of a band of weaning
calves used to do. He could not bear the thought of young things
going hungry."For the love of Mike, Marie! Why don't you feed that kid, or
do something to shut him up?" he exploded suddenly, dribbling
pancake batter over the untidy range.The squeak, squawk of the rocker ceased abruptly. "'Cause it
isn't time yet to feed him--that's why. What's burning out there?
I'll bet you've got the stove all over dough again--" The chair
resumed its squeaking, the baby continued uninterrupted its
wah-h-hah! wah-h-hah, as though it was a phonograph that had been
wound up with that record on, and no one around to stop
itBud turned his hotcakes with a vicious flop that spattered
more batter on the stove. He had been a father only a month or so,
but that was long enough to learn many things about babies which he
had never known before. He knew, for instance, that the baby wanted
its bottle, and that Marie was going to make him wait till feeding
time by the clock."By heck, I wonder what would happen if that darn clock was
to stop!" he exclaimed savagely, when his nerves would bear no
more. "You'd let the kid starve to death before you'd let your own
brains tell you what to do! Husky youngster like that--feeding 'im
four ounces every four days--or some simp rule like that--" He
lifted the cakes on to a plate that held two messy-looking fried
eggs whose yolks had broken, set the plate on the cluttered table
and slid petulantly into a chair and began to eat. The squeaking
chair and the crying baby continued to torment him. Furthermore,
the cakes were doughy in the middle."For gosh sake, Marie, give that kid his bottle!" Bud
exploded again. "Use the brains God gave yuh--such as they are! By
heck, I'll stick that darn book in the stove. Ain't yuh got any
feelings at all? Why, I wouldn't let a dog go hungry like that!
Don't yuh reckon the kid knows when he's hungry? Why, good Lord!
I'll take and feed him myself, if you don't. I'll burn that
book--so help me!""Yes, you will--not!" Marie's voice rose shrewishly, riding
the high waves of the baby's incessant outcry against the
restrictions upon appetite imposed by enlightened motherhood. "You
do, and see what'll happen! You'd have him howling with colic,
that's what you'd do.""Well, I'll tell the world he wouldn't holler for grub! You'd
go by the book if it told yuh to stand 'im on his head in the ice
chest! By heck, between a woman and a hen turkey, give me the
turkey when it comes to sense. They do take care of their young
ones--""Aw, forget that! When it comes to sense---"Oh, well, why go into details? You all know how these
domestic storms arise, and how love washes overboard when the
matrimonial ship begins to wallow in the seas of
recrimination.Bud lost his temper and said a good many things should not
have said. Marie flung back angry retorts and reminded Bud of all
his sins and slights and shortcomings, and told him many of mamma's
pessimistic prophecies concerning him, most of which seemed likely
to be fulfilled. Bud fought back, telling Marie how much of a snap
she had had since she married him, and how he must have looked like
ready money to her, and added that now, by heck, he even had to do
his own cooking, as well as listen to her whining and nagging, and
that there wasn't clean corner in the house, and she'd rather let
her own baby go hungry than break a simp rule in a darn book got up
by a bunch of boobs that didn't know anything about kids. Surely to
goodness, he finished his heated paragraph, it wouldn't break any
woman's back to pour a little warm water on a little malted milk,
and shake it up.He told Marie other things, and in return, Marie informed him
that he was just a big-mouthed, lazy brute, and she could curse the
day she ever met him. That was going pretty far. Bud reminded her
that she had not done any cursing at the time, being in his opinion
too busy roping him in to support her.By that time he had gulped down his coffee, and was into his
coat, and looking for his hat. Marie, crying and scolding and
rocking the vociferous infant, interrupted herself to tell him that
she wanted a ten-cent roll of cotton from the drug store, and added
that she hoped she would not have to wait until next Christmas for
it, either. Which bit of sarcasm so inflamed Bud's rage that he
swore every step of the way to Santa Clara Avenue, and only stopped
then because he happened to meet a friend who was going down town,
and they walked together.At the drug store on the corner of Second Street Bud stopped
and bought the cotton, feeling remorseful for some of the things he
had said to Marie, but not enough so to send him back home to tell
her he was sorry. He went on, and met another friend before he had
taken twenty steps. This friend was thinking of buying a certain
second-hand automobile that was offered at a very low price, and he
wanted Bud to go with him and look her over. Bud went, glad of the
excuse to kill the rest of the forenoon.They took the car out and drove to Schutzen Park and back.
Bud opined that she didn't bark to suit him, and she had a knock in
her cylinders that shouted of carbon. They ran her into the garage
shop and went deep into her vitals, and because she jerked when Bud
threw her into second, Bud suspected that her bevel gears had lost
a tooth or two, and was eager to find out for sure.Bill looked at his watch and suggested that they eat first
before they got all over grease by monkeying with the rear end. So
they went to the nearest restaurant and had smothered beefsteak and
mashed potato and coffee and pie, and while they ate they talked of
gears and carburetors and transmission and ignition troubles, all
of which alleviated temporarily Bud's case of cabin fever and
caused him to forget that he was married and had quarreled with his
wife and had heard a good many unkind things which his
mother-in-law had said about him.By the time they were back in the garage and had the grease
cleaned out of the rear gears so that they could see whether they
were really burred or broken, as Bud had suspected, the twinkle was
back in his eyes, and the smiley quirk stayed at the corners of his
mouth, and when he was not talking mechanics with Bill he was
whistling. He found much lost motion and four broken teeth, and he
was grease to his eyebrows--in other words, he was
happy.When he and Bill finally shed their borrowed overalls and
caps, the garage lights were on, and the lot behind the shop was
dusky. Bud sat down on the running board and began to figure what
the actual cost of the bargain would be when Bill had put it into
good mechanical condition. New bearings, new bevel gear, new brake,
lining, rebored cylinders--they totalled a sum that made Bill
gasp.By the time Bud had proved each item an absolute necessity,
and had reached the final ejaculation: "Aw, forget it, Bill, and
buy yuh a Ford!" it was so late that he knew Marie must have given
up looking for him home to supper. She would have taken it for
granted that he had eaten down town. So, not to disappoint her, Bud
did eat down town. Then Bill wanted him to go to a movie, and after
a praiseworthy hesitation Bud yielded to temptation and went. No
use going home now, just when Marie would be rocking the kid to
sleep and wouldn't let him speak above a whisper, he told his
conscience. Might as well wait till they settled down for the
night.
CHAPTER TWO. TWO MAKE A QUARREL
At nine o'clock Bud went home. He was feeling very well
satisfied with himself for some reason which he did not try to
analyze, but which was undoubtedly his sense of having saved Bill
from throwing away six hundred dollars on a bum car; and the weight
in his coat pocket of a box of chocolates that he had bought for
Marie. Poor girl, it was kinda tough on her, all right, being tied
to the house now with the kid. Next spring when he started his run
to Big Basin again, he would get a little camp in there by the Inn,
and take her along with him when the travel wasn't too heavy. She
could stay at either end of the run, just as she took a notion.
Wouldn't hurt the kid a bit--he'd be bigger then, and the outdoors
would make him grow like a pig. Thinking of these things, Bud
walked briskly, whistling as he neared the little green house, so
that Marie would know who it was, and would not be afraid when he
stepped up on the front porch.He stopped whistling rather abruptly when he reached the
house, for it was dark. He tried the door and found it locked. The
key was not in the letter box where they always kept it for the
convenience of the first one who returned, so Bud went around to
the back and climbed through the pantry window. He fell over a
chair, bumped into the table, and damned a few things. The electric
light was hung in the center of the room by a cord that kept him
groping and clutching in the dark before he finally touched the
elusive bulb with his fingers and switched on the
light.The table was set for a meal--but whether it was dinner or
supper Bud could not determine. He went into the little sleeping
room and turned on the light there, looked around the empty room,
grunted, and tiptoed into the bedroom. (In the last month he had
learned to enter on his toes, lest he waken the baby.) He might
have saved himself the bother, for the baby was not there in its
new gocart. The gocart was not there, Marie was not there--one
after another these facts impressed themselves upon Bud's mind,
even before he found the letter propped against the clock in the
orthodox manner of announcing unexpected departures. Bud read the
letter, crumpled it in his fist, and threw it toward the little
heating stove. "If that's the way yuh feel about it, I'll tell the
world you can go and be darned!" he snorted, and tried to let that
end the matter so far as he was concerned. But he could not shake
off the sense of having been badly used. He did not stop to
consider that while he was working off his anger, that day, Marie
had been rocking back and forth, crying and magnifying the quarrel
as she dwelt upon it, and putting a new and sinister meaning into
Bud's ill-considered utterances. By the time Bud was thinking only
of the bargain car's hidden faults, Marie had reached the white
heat of resentment that demanded vigorous action. Marie was packing
a suitcase and meditating upon the scorching letter she meant to
write.Judging from the effect which the letter had upon Bud, it
must have been a masterpiece of its kind. He threw the box of
chocolates into the wood-box, crawled out of the window by which he
had entered, and went down town to a hotel. If the house wasn't
good enough for Marie, let her go. He could go just as fast and as
far as she could. And if she thought he was going to hot-foot it
over to her mother's and whine around and beg her to come home, she
had another think coming.He wouldn't go near the darn place again, except to get his
clothes. He'd bust up the joint, by thunder. He'd sell off the
furniture and turn the house over to the agent again, and Marie
could whistle for a home. She had been darn glad to get into that
house, he remembered, and away from that old cat of a mother. Let
her stay there now till she was darn good and sick of it. He'd just
keep her guessing for awhile; a week or so would do her good. Well,
he wouldn't sell the furniture--he'd just move it into another
house, and give her a darn good scare. He'd get a better one, that
had a porcelain bathtub instead of a zinc one, and a better porch,
where the kid could be out in the sun. Yes, sir, he'd just do that
little thing, and lay low and see what Marie did about that. Keep
her guessing--that was the play to make.Unfortunately for his domestic happiness, Bud failed to take
into account two very important factors in the quarrel. The first
and most important one was Marie's mother, who, having been a widow
for fifteen years and therefore having acquired a habit of managing
affairs that even remotely concerned her, assumed that Marie's
affairs must be managed also. The other factor was Marie's craving
to be coaxed back to smiles by the man who drove her to tears.
Marie wanted Bud to come and say he was sorry, and had been a brute
and so forth. She wanted to hear him tell how empty the house had
seemed when he returned and found her gone. She wanted him to be
good and scared with that letter. She stayed awake until after
midnight, listening for his anxious footsteps; after midnight she
stayed awake to cry over the inhuman way he was treating her, and
to wish she was dead, and so forth; also because the baby woke and
wanted his bottle, and she was teaching him to sleep all night
without it, and because the baby had a temper just like his
father.His father's temper would have yielded a point or two, the
next day, had it been given the least encouragement. For instance,
he might have gone over to see Marie before he moved the furniture
out of the house, had he not discovered an express wagon standing
in front of the door when he went home about noon to see if Marie
had come back. Before he had recovered to the point of profane
speech, the express man appeared, coming out of the house, bent
nearly double under the weight of Marie's trunk. Behind him in the
doorway Bud got a glimpse of Marie's mother.That settled it. Bud turned around and hurried to the nearest
drayage company, and ordered a domestic wrecking crew to the scene;
in other words, a packer and two draymen and a dray. He'd show 'em.
Marie and her mother couldn't put anything over on him --he'd stand
over that furniture with a sheriff first.He went back and found Marie's mother still there, packing
dishes and doilies and the like. They had a terrible row, and all
the nearest neighbors inclined ears to doors ajar--getting an
earful, as Bud contemptuously put it. He finally led Marie's mother
to the front door and set her firmly outside. Told her that Marie
had come to him with no more than the clothes she had, and that his
money had bought every teaspoon and every towel and every stick of
furniture in the darned place, and he'd be everlastingly
thus-and-so if they were going to strong-arm the stuff off him now.
If Marie was too good to live with him, why, his stuff was too good
for her to have.Oh, yes, the neighbors certainly got an earful, as the town
gossips proved when the divorce suit seeped into the papers. Bud
refused to answer the proceedings, and was therefore ordered to pay
twice as much alimony as he could afford to pay; more, in fact,
than all his domestic expense had amounted to in the fourteen
months that he had been married. Also Marie was awarded the custody
of the child and, because Marie's mother had represented Bud to be
a violent man who was a menace to her daughter's safety--and proved
it by the neighbors who had seen and heard so much--Bud was served
with a legal paper that wordily enjoined him from annoying Marie
with his presence.That unnecessary insult snapped the last thread of Bud's
regret for what had happened. He sold the furniture and the
automobile, took the money to the judge that had tried the case,
told the judge a few wholesome truths, and laid the pile of money
on the desk."That cleans me out, Judge," he said stolidly. "I wasn't such
a bad husband, at that. I got sore--but I'll bet you get sore
yourself and tell your wife what-for, now and then. I didn't get a
square deal, but that's all right. I'm giving a better deal than I
got. Now you can keep that money and pay it out to Marie as she
needs it, for herself and the kid. But for the Lord's sake, Judge,
don't let that wildcat of a mother of hers get her fingers into the
pile! She framed this deal, thinking she'd get a haul outa me this
way. I'm asking you to block that little game. I've held out ten
dollars, to eat on till I strike something. I'm clean; they've
licked the platter and broke the dish. So don't never ask me to dig
up any more, because I won't--not for you nor no other darn man.
Get that."This, you must know, was not in the courtroom, so Bud was not
fined for contempt. The judge was a married man himself, and he may
have had a sympathetic understanding of Bud's position. At any rate
he listened unofficially, and helped Bud out with the legal part of
it, so that Bud walked out of the judge's office financially free,
even though he had a suspicion that his freedom would not bear the
test of prosperity, and that Marie's mother would let him alone
only so long as he and prosperity were strangers.
CHAPTER THREE. TEN DOLLARS AND A JOB FOB BUD
To withhold for his own start in life only one ten-dollar
bill from fifteen hundred dollars was spectacular enough to soothe
even so bruised an ego as Bud Moore carried into the judge's
office. There is an anger which carries a person to the extreme of
self-sacrifice, in the subconscious hope of exciting pity for one
so hardly used. Bud was boiling with such an anger, and it demanded
that he should all but give Marie the shirt off his back, since she
had demanded so much--and for so slight a cause.
Bud could not see for the life of him why Marie should have
quit for that little ruction. It was not their first quarrel, nor
their worst; certainly he had not expected it to be their last.
Why, he asked the high heavens, had she told him to bring home a
roll of cotton, if she was going to leave him? Why had she turned
her back on that little home, that had seemed to mean as much to
her as it had to him?
Being kin to primitive man, Bud could only bellow rage when
he should have analyzed calmly the situation. He should have seen
that Marie too had cabin fever, induced by changing too suddenly
from carefree girlhood to the ills and irks of wifehood and
motherhood. He should have known that she had been for two months
wholly dedicated to the small physical wants of their baby, and
that if his nerves were fraying with watching that incessant
servitude, her own must be close to the snapping point; had
snapped, when dusk did not bring him home repentant.
But he did not know, and so he blamed Marie bitterly for the
wreck of their home, and he flung down all his worldly goods before
her, and marched off feeling self-consciously proud of his
martyrdom. It soothed him paradoxically to tell himself that he was
"cleaned"; that Marie had ruined him absolutely, and that he was
just ten dollars and a decent suit or two of clothes better off
than a tramp. He was tempted to go back and send the ten dollars
after the rest of the fifteen hundred, but good sense prevailed. He
would have to borrow money for his next meal, if he did that, and
Bud was touchy about such things.
He kept the ten dollars therefore, and went down to the
garage where he felt most at home, and stood there with his hands
in his pockets and the corners of his mouth tipped
downward--normally they had a way of tipping upward, as though he
was secretly amused at something--and his eyes sullen, though they
carried tiny lines at the corners to show how they used to twinkle.
He took the ten-dollar bank note from his pocket, straightened out
the wrinkles and looked at it disdainfully. As plainly as though he
spoke, his face told what he was thinking about it: that this was
what a woman had brought him to! He crumpled it up and made a
gesture as though he would throw it into the street, and a man
behind him laughed abruptly. Bud scowled and turned toward him a
belligerent glance, and the man stopped laughing as suddenly as he
had begun.
"If you've got money to throw to the birds, brother, I guess
I won't make the proposition I was going to make. Thought I could
talk business to you, maybe--but I guess I better tie a can to that
idea."
Bud grunted and put the ten dollars in his pocket.
"What idea's that?" "Oh, driving a car I'm taking south.
Sprained my shoulder, and don't feel like tackling it myself. They
tell me in here that you aren't doing anything now--" He made the
pause that asks for an answer.
"They told you right. I've done it."
The man's eyebrows lifted, but since Bud did not explain, he
went on with his own explanation.
"You don't remember me, but I rode into Big Basin with you
last summer. I know you can drive, and it doesn't matter a lot
whether it's asphalt or cow trail you drive over."
Bud was in too sour a mood to respond to the flattery. He did
not even grunt.
"Could you take a car south for me? There'll be night
driving, and bad roads, maybe--"
"If you know what you say you know about my driving, what's
the idea--asking me if I can?"
"Well, put it another way. Will you?"
"You're on. Where's the car? Here?" Bud sent a seeking look
into the depths of the garage. He knew every car in there. "What is
there in it for me?" he added perfunctorily, because he would have
gone just for sake of getting a free ride rather than stay in San
Jose over night.
"There's good money in it, if you can drive with your mouth
shut. This isn't any booster parade. Fact is--let's walk to the
depot, while I tell you." He stepped out of the doorway, and Bud
gloomily followed him. "Little trouble with my wife," the man
explained apologetically. "Having me shadowed, and all that sort of
thing. And I've got business south and want to be left alone to do
it. Darn these women!" he exploded suddenly.
Bud mentally said amen, but kept his mouth shut upon his
sympathy with the sentiment.