登陆注册
15489200000011

第11章 IV A WALKING DELEGATE LEARNS A NEW STEP(1)

McGaw's failure to undermine Tom's business with Babcock, and his complete discomfiture over Crane's coal contract at the fort, only intensified his hatred of the woman.

Finding that he could make no headway against her alone, he called upon the Union to assist him, claiming that she was employing non-union labor, and had thus been able to cut down the discharging rates to starvation prices.

A meeting was accordingly called by the executive committee of the Knights, and a resolution passed condemning certain persons in the village of Rockville as traitors to the cause of the workingman.

Only one copy of this edict was issued and mailed. This found its way into Tom Grogan's letter-box. Five minutes after she had broken the seal, her men discovered the document pasted upside down on her stable door.

McGaw heard of her action that night, and started another line of attack. It was managed so skillfully that that which until then had been only a general dissatisfaction on the part of the members of the Union and their sympathizers over Tom's business methods now developed into an avowed determination to crush her. They discussed several plans by which she could be compelled either to restore rates for unloading, or be forced out of the business altogether. As one result of these deliberations a committee called upon the priest, Father McCluskey, and informed him of the delicate position in which the Union had been placed by her having hidden her husband away, thus forcing them to fight the woman herself. She was making trouble, they urged, with her low wages and her unloading rates. "Perhaps his Riverence c'u'd straighten her out." Father McCluskey's interview with Tom took place in the priest's room one morning after early mass. It had gone abroad, somehow, that his Reverence intended to discipline the "high-flyer," and a considerable number of the "tenement-house gang," as Tom called them, had loitered behind to watch the effect of the good father's remonstrances.

What Tom told the priest no one ever knew: such conferences are part of the regime of the church, and go no farther. It was noticed, however, as she came down the aisle, that her eyes were red, as if from weeping, and that she never raised them from the floor as she passed between her enemies on her way to the church door. Once outside, she put her arm around Jennie, who was waiting, and the two strolled slowly across the lots to her house.

When the priest came out, his own eyes were tinged with moisture.

He called Dennis Quigg, McGaw's right-hand man, and in a voice loud enough to be heard by those nearest him expressed his indignation that any dissension should have arisen among his people over a woman's work, and said that he would hear no more of this unchristian and unmanly interference with one whose only support came from the labor of her hands.

McGaw and his friends were not discouraged. They were only determined upon some more definite stroke. It was therefore ordered that a committee be appointed to waylay her men going to work, and inform them of their duty to their fellow-laborers.

Accordingly, this same Quigg--smooth-shaven, smirking, and hollow-eyed, with a diamond pin, half a yard of watch-chain, and a fancy shirt--ex-village clerk with his accounts short, ex-deputy sheriff with his accounts of cruelty and blackmail long, and at present walking delegate of the Union--was appointed a committee of one for that duty.

Quigg began by begging a ride in one of Tom's return carts, and taking this opportunity to lay before the driver the enormity of working for Grogan for thirty dollars a month and board, when there were a number of his brethren out of work and starving who would not work for less than two dollars a day if it were offered them. It was plainly the driver's duty, Quigg urged, to give up his job until Tom Grogan could be compelled to hire him back at advanced wages. During this enforced idleness the Union would pay the driver fifty cents a day. Here Quigg pounded his chest, clenched his fists, and said solemnly, "If capital once downs the lab'rin' man, we'll all be slaves."

The driver was Carl Nilsson, a Swede, a big, blue-eyed, light-haired young fellow of twenty-two, a sailor from boyhood, who three years before, on a public highway, had been picked up penniless and hungry by Tom Grogan, after the keeper of a sailors' boarding-house had robbed him of his year's savings. The change from cracking ice from a ship's deck with a marlinespike, to currying and feeding something alive and warm and comfortable, was so delightful to the Swede that he had given up the sea for a while. He had felt that he could ship again at anytime, the water was so near. As the months went by, however, he, too, gradually fell under the spell of Tom's influence. She reminded him of the great Norse women he had read about in his boyhood. Besides all this, he was loyal and true to the woman who had befriended him, and who had so far appreciated his devotion to her interests as to promote him from hostler and driver to foreman of the stables.

Nilsson knew Quigg by sight, for he had seen him walking home with Jennie from church. His knowledge of English was slight, but it was enough to enable him to comprehend Quigg's purpose as he talked beside him on the cart. After some questions about how long the enforced idleness would continue, he asked suddenly:--"Who da horse clean when I go 'way?"

"D--n her! let her clean it herself," Quigg answered angrily.

This ended the question for Nilsson, and it very nearly ended the delegate. Jumping from the cart, Carl picked up the shovel and sprang toward Quigg, who dodged out of his way, and then took to his heels.

When Nilsson, still white with anger, reached the dock, he related the incident to Cully, who, on his return home, retailed it to Jennie with such variety of gesture and intonation that that young lady blushed scarlet, but whether from sympathy for Quigg or admiration for Nilsson, Cully was unable to decide.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 英雄联盟之疾风剑豪

    英雄联盟之疾风剑豪

    死亡如风,常伴吾身。剑之故事,以血为墨。小说跟游戏有很大的区别,小说里的人物实力强弱不代表游戏里的实力,如果有抹黑你喜欢的游戏人物,还请见谅,不喜勿喷,谢谢嘴下留情。
  • 风中飞舞着蓝色的翅膀
  • 生杀神魔

    生杀神魔

    做人在世一生软弱,恨苍天不公,恨厚土无德,独欲成魔,放纵心里的悟空。去看那看不到的风景,听那听不到的声音,去那不曾到过的地方。
  • 界中人

    界中人

    一位来历不明的少年被强者收养,却没有得到强者的一丝传承,反而被称为小白脸。但是,有一天,这一切都变了。
  • 儒道文圣

    儒道文圣

    文道之路,圣人修行。这个世界,文气至上。黑色、白色、赤红、黄色、青色、紫色六色文气包容万物。看苏然如何在这滚滚红尘中苦修,历万劫而成圣。
  • 於陷於深

    於陷於深

    是多年前的梦境,近日整理上传,笔记略显不足之处希望大家多多担待青梅竹马/重生/攻受心理扭曲/1V1
  • 古凌大帝

    古凌大帝

    古凌父亲是刘家奴仆,为救患病在床的妻子,冒险偷盗灵药。后被刘家族人发现,将其打成重伤并挂于刘家大门前。古凌得知此事后,救下父亲,但父亲却只剩最后一口气,临死前告知古凌身世。为报父仇,为寻身世,开启一代逆天强者崛起之路!
  • 穿越三万英尺的虐恋

    穿越三万英尺的虐恋

    那一次无意的邂逅,那一眼的回眸,那莫名其妙的失控,那忘乎所以的追逐,却始终无法抵达蓝天里的白鹭。究竟是因为缘分太浅,还是原来自有天定,我不信!但我还是更改不了这样悲剧的人生!……
  • 逆袭:荣耀归来

    逆袭:荣耀归来

    她八岁那年因种种原因被他收为童养媳,十四岁那年逃脱她的掌控,十八岁那年出国四处留学,二十三岁那年她带着她的骄傲和荣耀归来。
  • 昊天浮屠

    昊天浮屠

    神秘的浮屠,神秘的仙道,一切都那么不可知,温婉的女子,魔,还是道?修补天道,逆天成仙(作品属于慢热,剧情文,所以一开始并没有爽点,作者正在努力塑造一个性格鲜明的英雄,希望大家喜欢)