The Stephen Crane Megapack. Stephen Crane

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The Stephen Crane Megapack - Stephen Crane

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little man like impassioned carbuncles. His voice arose to a howl of ferocity. “It’s your ante!” With a panther-like motion he drew a long, thin knife and advanced, stooping. Two cadaverous hounds came from nowhere, and, scowling and growling, made desperate feints at the little man’s legs. His quaking companions pushed him forward.

      Tremblingly he put his hand to his pocket.

      “How much?” he said, with a shivering look at the knife that glittered.

      The carbuncles faded.

      “Three dollars,” said the hermit, in sepulchral tones which rang against the walls and among the passages, awakening long-dead spirits with voices. The shaking little man took a roll of bills from a pocket and placed “three ones” upon the altar-like stone. The recluse looked at the little volume with reverence in his eyes. It was a pack of playing cards.

      Under the three swinging candles, upon the altar-like stone, the grey beard and the agonized little man played at poker. The three other men crouched in a corner, and stared with eyes that gleamed with terror. Before them sat the cadaverous hounds licking their red lips. The candles burned low, and began to flicker. The fire in the corner expired.

      Finally, the game came to a point where the little man laid down his hand and quavered: “I can’t call you this time, sir. I’m dead broke.”

      “What?” shrieked the recluse. “Not call me! Villain Dastard! Cur! I have four queens, miscreant.” His voice grew so mighty that it could not fit his throat. He choked wrestling with his lungs for a moment. Then the power of his body was concentrated in a word: “Go!”

      He pointed a quivering, yellow finger at a wide crack in the rock. The little man threw himself at it with a howl. His erstwhile frozen companions felt their blood throb again. With great bounds they plunged after the little man. A minute of scrambling, falling, and pushing brought them to open air. They climbed the distance to their camp in furious springs.

      The sky in the east was a lurid yellow. In the west the footprints of departing night lay on the pine trees. In front of their replenished camp fire sat John Willerkins, the guide.

      “Hello!” he shouted at their approach. “Be you fellers ready to go deer huntin’?”

      Without replying, they stopped and debated among themselves in whispers.

      Finally, the pudgy man came forward.

      “John,” he inquired, “do you know anything peculiar about this cave below here?”

      “Yes,” said Willerkins at once; “Tom Gardner.”

      “What?” said the pudgy man.

      “Tom Gardner.”

      “How’s that?”

      “Well, you see,” said Willerkins slowly, as he took dignified pulls at his pipe, “Tom Gardner was once a fambly man, who lived in these here parts on a nice leetle farm. He uster go away to the city orften, and one time he got a-gamblin’ in one of them there dens. He went ter the dickens right quick then. At last he kum home one time and tol’ his folks he had up and sold the farm and all he had in the worl’. His leetle wife she died then. Tom he went crazy, and soon after—”

      The narrative was interrupted by the little man, who became possessed of devils.

      “I wouldn’t give a cuss if he had left me ’nough money to get home on the doggoned, grey-haired red pirate,” he shrilled, in a seething sentence. The pudgy man gazed at the little man calmly and sneeringly.

      “Oh, well,” he said, “we can tell a great tale when we get back to the city after having investigated this thing.”

      “Go to the devil,” replied the little man.

      THE MESMERIC MOUNTAIN

      A TALE OF SULLIVAN COUNTY

      On the brow of a pine-plumed hillock there sat a little man with his back against a tree. A venerable pipe hung from his mouth, and smoke-wreaths curled slowly skyward, he was muttering to himself with his eyes fixed on an irregular black opening in the green wall of forest at the foot of the hill. Two vague wagon ruts led into the shadows. The little man took his pipe in his hands and addressed the listening pines.

      “I wonder what the devil it leads to,” said he.

      A grey, fat rabbit came lazily from a thicket and sat in the opening. Softly stroking his stomach with his paw, he looked at the little man in a thoughtful manner. The little man threw a stone, and the rabbit blinked and ran through an opening. Green, shadowy portals seemed to close behind him.

      The little man started. “He’s gone down that roadway,” he said, with ecstatic mystery to the pines. He sat a long time and contemplated the door to the forest. Finally, he arose, and awakening his limbs, started away. But he stopped and looked back.

      “I can’t imagine what it leads to,” muttered he. He trudged over the brown mats of pine needles, to where, in a fringe of laurel, a tent was pitched, and merry flames caroused about some logs. A pudgy man was fuming over a collection of tin dishes. He came forward and waved a plate furiously in the little man’s face.

      “I’ve washed the dishes for three days. What do you think I am—”

      He ended a red oration with a roar: “Damned if I do it any more.”

      The little man gazed dim-eyed away. “I’ve been wonderin’ what it leads to.”

      “What?”

      “That road out yonder. I’ve been wonderin’ what it leads to. Maybe, some discovery or something,” said the little man.

      The pudgy man laughed. “You’re an idiot. It leads to ol’ Jim Boyd’s over on the Lumberland Pike.”

      “Ho!” said the little man, “I don’t believe that.”

      The pudgy man swore. “Fool, what does it lead to, then?”

      “I don’t know just what, but I’m sure it leads to something great or something. It looks like it.”

      While the pudgy man was cursing, two more men came from obscurity with fish dangling from birch twigs. The pudgy man made an obviously herculean struggle and a meal was prepared. As he was drinking his cup of coffee, he suddenly spilled it and swore. The little man was wandering off.

      “He’s gone to look at that hole,” cried the pudgy man.

      The little man went to the edge of the pine-plumed hillock, and, sitting down, began to make smoke and regard the door to the forest. There was stillness for an hour. Compact clouds hung unstirred in the sky. The pines stood motionless, and pondering.

      Suddenly the little man slapped his knees and bit his tongue. He stood up and determinedly filled his pipe, rolling his eye over the bowl to the doorway. Keeping his eyes fixed he slid dangerously to the foot of the hillock and walked down the wagon ruts. A moment later he passed from the noise of the sunshine to the gloom of the woods.

      The green portals closed, shutting out live things. The little man trudged on alone.

      Tall

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