<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER V<br/> RELEASE BRAKES—SHIFT TO THIRD</h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Milt Daggett</span> had not been accurate in his
implication that he had not noticed Claire at a
garage in Schoenstrom. For one thing, he owned the
garage.</p>
<p>Milt was the most prosperous young man in the
village of Schoenstrom. Neither the village itself nor
the nearby <i>Strom</i> is really <i>schoen</i>. The entire business
district of Schoenstrom consists of Heinie Rauskukle's
general store, which is brick; the Leipzig
House, which is frame; the Old Home Poolroom and
Restaurant, which is of old logs concealed by a frame
sheathing; the farm-machinery agency, which is galvanized
iron, its roof like an enlarged washboard;
the church; the three saloons; and the Red Trail Garage,
which is also, according to various signs, the
Agency for Teal Car Best at the Test, Stonewall Tire
Service Station, Sewing Machines and Binders Repaired,
Dr. Hostrum the Veterinarian every Thursday,
Gas Today 27c.</p>
<p>The Red Trail Garage is of cement and tapestry
brick. In the office is a clean hardwood floor, a typewriter,
and a picture of Elsie Ferguson. The establishment<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></SPAN></span>
has an automatic rim-stretcher, a wheel
jack, and a reputation for honesty.</p>
<p>The father of Milt Daggett was the Old Doctor,
born in Maine, coming to this frontier in the day
when Chippewas camped in your dooryard, and came
in to help themselves to coffee, which you made of
roasted corn. The Old Doctor bucked northwest blizzards,
read Dickens and Byron, pulled people through
typhoid, and left to Milt his shabby old medicine case
and thousands of dollars—in uncollectible accounts.
Mrs. Daggett had long since folded her crinkly hands
in quiet death.</p>
<p>Milt had covered the first two years of high school
by studying with the priest, and been sent to the city
of St. Cloud for the last two years. His father had
meant to send him to the state university. But Milt
had been born to a talent for machinery. At twelve he
had made a telephone that worked. At eighteen he
was engineer in the tiny flour mill in Schoenstrom.
At twenty-five, when Claire Boltwood chose to come
tearing through his life in a Gomez-Dep, Milt was the
owner, manager, bookkeeper, wrecking crew, ignition
expert, thoroughly competent bill-collector, and all but
one of the working force of the Red Trail Garage.</p>
<p>There were two factions in Schoenstrom: the retired
farmers who said that German was a good enough language
for anybody, and that taxes for schools and
sidewalks were yes something crazy; and the group<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></SPAN></span>
who stated that a pig-pen is a fine place, but only for
pigs. To this second, revolutionary wing belonged a
few of the first generation, most of the second, and
all of the third; and its leader was Milt Daggett. He
did not talk much, normally, but when he thought
things ought to be done, he was as annoying as a machine-gun
test in the lot next to a Quaker meeting.</p>
<p>If there had been a war, Milt would probably have
been in it—rather casual, clearing his throat, reckoning
and guessing that maybe his men might try going
over and taking that hill ... then taking it.
But all of this history concerns the year just before
America spoke to Germany; and in this town buried
among the cornfields and the wheat, men still thought
more about the price of grain than about the souls of
nations.</p>
<p>On the evening before Claire Boltwood left Minneapolis
and adventured into democracy, Milt was in the
garage. He wore union overalls that were tan where
they were not grease-black; a faded blue cotton shirt;
and the crown of a derby, with the rim not too neatly
hacked off with a dull toad-stabber jack-knife.</p>
<p>Milt smiled at his assistant, Ben Sittka, and suggested,
"Well, <i>wie geht 's mit</i> the work, eh? Like to
stay and get the prof's flivver out, so he can have it
in the morning?"</p>
<p>"You bet, boss."</p>
<p>"Getting to be quite a mechanic, Ben."</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></SPAN></span>"I'll say so!"</p>
<p>"If you get stuck, come yank me out of the Old
Home."</p>
<p>"Aw rats, boss. I'll finish it. You beat it." Ben
grinned at Milt adoringly.</p>
<p>Milt stripped off his overalls and derby-crown, and
washed his big, firm hands with gritty soft soap. He
cleaned his nails with a file which he carried in his
upper vest pocket in a red imitation morocco case
which contained a comb, a mirror, an indelible pencil,
and a note-book with the smudged pencil addresses of
five girls in St. Cloud, and a memorandum about
Rauskukle's car.</p>
<p>He put on a twisted brown tie, an old blue serge
suit, and a hat which, being old and shabby, had become
graceful. He ambled up the street. He couldn't
have ambled more than three blocks and have remained
on the street. Schoenstrom tended to leak off into jungles
of tall corn.</p>
<p>Two men waved at him, and one demanded, "Say,
Milt, is whisky good for the toothache? What d' you
think! The doc said it didn't do any good. But then,
gosh, he's only just out of college."</p>
<p>"I guess he's right."</p>
<p>"Is that a fact! Well, I'll keep off it then."</p>
<p>Two stores farther on, a bulky farmer hailed, "Say,
Milt, should I get an ensilage cutter yet?"</p>
<p>"Yuh," in the manner of a man who knows too<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></SPAN></span>
much to be cocksure about anything, "I don't know
but what I would, Julius."</p>
<p>"I guess I vill then."</p>
<p>Minnie Rauskukle, plump, hearty Minnie, heiress
to the general store, gave evidence by bridling and
straightening her pigeon-like body that she was aware
of Milt behind her. He did not speak to her. He
ducked into the door of the Old Home Poolroom and
Restaurant.</p>
<p>Milt ranged up to the short lunch counter, in front
of the pool table where two brick-necked farm youngsters
were furiously slamming balls and attacking
cigarettes. Loose-jointedly Milt climbed a loose-jointed
high stool and to the proprietor, Bill McGolwey,
his best friend, he yawned, "You might poison
me with a hamburger and a slab of apple, Mac."</p>
<p>"I'll just do that little thing. Look kind of grouchy
tonight, Milt."</p>
<p>"Too much excitement in this burg. Saw three
people on the streets all simultaneously to-once."</p>
<p>"What's been eatin' you lately?"</p>
<p>"Me? Nothing. Only I do get tired of this metropolis.
One of these days I'm going to buck some
bigger place."</p>
<p>"Try Gopher Prairie maybe?" suggested Mac,
through the hiss and steam of the frying hamburger
sandwich.</p>
<p>"Rats. Too small."</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></SPAN></span>"Small? Why, there's darn near five thousand
people there!"</p>
<p>"I know, but—I want to tackle some sure-nuff
city. Like Duluth or New York."</p>
<p>"But what'd you do?"</p>
<p>"That's the devil of it. I don't know just what I
do want to do. I could always land soft in a garage,
but that's nothing new. Might hit Detroit, and learn
the motor-factory end."</p>
<p>"Aw, you're the limit, Milt. Always looking for
something new."</p>
<p>"That's the way to get on. The rest of this town
is afraid of new things. 'Member when I suggested
we all chip in on a dynamo with a gas engine and
have electric lights? The hicks almost died of nervousness."</p>
<p>"Yuh, that's true, but—— You stick here, Milt.
You and me will just nachly run this burg."</p>
<p>"I'll say! Only—— Gosh, Mac, I would like to
go to a real show, once. And find out how radio
works. And see 'em put in a big suspension bridge!"</p>
<p>Milt left the Old Home rather aimlessly. He told
himself that he positively would not go back and help
Ben Sittka get out the prof's car. So he went back
and helped Ben get out the prof's car, and drove the
same to the prof's. The prof, otherwise professor,
otherwise mister, James Martin Jones, B.A., and Mrs.
James Martin Jones welcomed him almost as noisily<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></SPAN></span>
as had Mac. They begged him to come in. With Mr.
Jones he discussed—no, ye Claires of Brooklyn
Heights, this garage man and this threadbare young
superintendent of a paintbare school, talking in a town
that was only a comma on the line, did not discuss
corn-growing, nor did they reckon to guess that by
heck the constabule was carryin' on with the Widdy
Perkins. They spoke of fish-culture, Elihu Root, the
spiritualistic evidences of immortality, government
ownership, self-starters for flivvers, and the stories
of Irvin Cobb.</p>
<p>Milt went home earlier than he wanted to. Because
Mr. Jones was the only man in town besides the priest
who read books, because Mrs. Jones was the only
woman who laughed about any topics other than children
and family sickness, because he wanted to go to
their house every night, Milt treasured his welcome as
a sacred thing, and kept himself from calling on them
more than once a week.</p>
<p>He stopped on his way to the garage to pet Emil
Baumschweiger's large gray cat, publicly known as
Rags, but to Milt and to the lady herself recognized
as the unfortunate Countess Vere de Vere—perhaps
the only person of noble ancestry and mysterious past
in Milt's acquaintance. The Baumschweigers did not
treat their animals well; Emil kicked the bay mare,
and threw pitchforks at Vere de Vere. Milt saluted
her and sympathized:</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></SPAN></span>"You have a punk time, don't you, countess?
Like to beat it to Minneapolis with me?"</p>
<p>The countess said that she did indeed have an
extraordinarily punk time, and she sang to Milt the
hymn of the little gods of the warm hearth. Then
Milt's evening dissipations were over. Schoenstrom
has movies only once a week. He sat in the office of
his garage ruffling through a weekly digest of events.
Milt read much, though not too easily. He had no
desire to be a poet, an Indo-Iranian etymologist, a lecturer
to women's clubs, or the secretary of state. But
he did rouse to the marvels hinted in books and magazines;
to large crowds, the mechanism of submarines,
palm trees, gracious women.</p>
<p>He laid down the magazine. He stared at the wall.
He thought about nothing. He seemed to be fumbling
for something about which he could deliciously think
if he could but grasp it. Without quite visualizing
either wall or sea, he was yet recalling old dreams of a
moonlit wall by a warm stirring southern sea. If
there was a girl in the dream she was intangible as
the scent of the night. Presently he was asleep, a
not at all romantic figure, rather ludicrously tipped
to one side in his office chair, his large solid shoes up
on the desk.</p>
<p>He half woke, and filtered to what he called home—one
room in the cottage of an oldish woman who had
prejudices against the perilous night air. He was too<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></SPAN></span>
sleepy to go through any toilet save pulling off his
shoes, and achieving an unconvincing wash at the
little stand, whose crackly varnish was marked with
white rings from the toothbrush mug.</p>
<p>"I feel about due to pull off some fool stunt. Wonder
what it will be?" he complained, as he flopped on
the bed.</p>
<p>He was up at six, and at a quarter to seven was at
work in the garage. He spent a large part of the
morning in trying to prove to a customer that even a
Teal car, best at the test, would not give perfect service
if the customer persisted in forgetting to fill the oil-well,
the grease-cups, and the battery.</p>
<p>At three minutes after twelve Milt left the garage
to go to dinner. The fog of the morning had turned
to rain. McGolwey was not at the Old Home. Sometimes
Mac got tired of serving meals, and for a day or
two he took to a pocket flask, and among his former
customers the cans of prepared meat at Rauskukle's
became popular. Milt found him standing under the
tin awning of the general store. He had a troubled
hope of keeping Mac from too long a vacation with
the pocket flask. But Mac was already red-eyed. He
seemed only half to recognize Milt.</p>
<p>"Swell day!" said Milt.</p>
<p>"Y' bet."</p>
<p>"Road darn muddy."</p>
<p>"I should worry. Yea, bo', I'm feelin' good!"</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></SPAN></span>At eleven minutes past twelve a Gomez-Dep roadster
appeared down the road, stopped at the garage.
To Milt it was as exciting as the appearance of a
comet to a watching astronomer.</p>
<p>"What kind of a car do you call that, Milt?"
asked a loafer.</p>
<p>"Gomez-Deperdussin."</p>
<p>"Never heard of it. Looks too heavy."</p>
<p>This was sacrilege. Milt stormed, "Why, you poor
floof, it's one of the best cars in the world. Imported
from France. That looks like a special-made American
body, though. Trouble with you fellows is, you're
always scared of anything that's new. Too—heavy!
Huh! Always wanted to see a Gomez—never have,
except in pictures. And I believe that's a New York
license. Let me at it!"</p>
<p>He forgot noon-hunger, and clumped through the
rain to the garage. He saw a girl step from the car.
He stopped, in the doorway of the Old Home, in uneasy
shyness. He told himself he didn't "know just
what it is about her—she isn't so darn unusually
pretty and yet—gee—— Certainly isn't a girl to get
fresh with. Let Ben take care of her. Like to talk
to her, and yet I'd be afraid if I opened my mouth,
I'd put my foot in it."</p>
<p>He was for the first time seeing a smart woman.
This dark, slender, fine-nerved girl, in her plain, rough,
closely-belted, gray suit, her small black Glengarry<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></SPAN></span>
cocked on one side of her smooth hair, her little kid
gloves, her veil, was as delicately adjusted as an aeroplane
engine.</p>
<p>Milt wanted to trumpet her exquisiteness to the
world, so he growled to a man standing beside him,
"Swell car. Nice-lookin' girl, kind of."</p>
<p>"Kind of skinny, though. I like 'em with some
meat on 'em," yawned the man.</p>
<p>No, Milt did not strike him to earth. He insisted
feebly, "Nice clothes she's got, though."</p>
<p>"Oh, not so muchamuch. I seen a woman come
through here yesterday that was swell, though—had
on a purple dress and white shoes and a hat big 's a
bushel."</p>
<p>"Well, I don't know, I kind of like those simple
things," apologized Milt.</p>
<p>He crept toward the garage. The girl was inside.
He inspected the slope-topped, patent-leather motoring
trunk on the rack at the rear of the Gomez-Dep.
He noticed a middle-aged man waiting in the car.
"Must be her father. Probably—maybe she isn't
married then." He could not get himself to shout at
the man, as he usually did. He entered the garage
office; from the inner door he peeped at the girl, who
was talking to his assistant about changing an inner
tube.</p>
<p>That Ben Sittka whom an hour ago he had cajoled
as a promising child he now admired for the sniffing<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></SPAN></span>
calmness with which he was demanding, "Want a red
or gray tube?"</p>
<p>"Really, I don't know. Which is the better?" The
girl's voice was curiously clear.</p>
<p>Milt passed Claire Boltwood as though he did not
see her; stood at the rear of the garage kicking at the
tires of a car, his back to her. Over and over he was
grumbling, "If I just knew one girl like that—— Like
a picture. Like—like a silver vase on a blue
cloth!"</p>
<p>Ben Sittka did not talk to the girl while he inserted
the tube in the spare casing. Only, in the triumphant
moment when the parted ends of the steel rim snapped
back together, he piped, "Going far?"</p>
<p>"Yes, rather. To Seattle."</p>
<p>Milt stared at the cobweb-grayed window. "Now
I know what I was planning to do. I'm going to
Seattle," he said.</p>
<p>The girl was gone at twenty-nine minutes after
twelve. At twenty-nine and a half minutes after,
Milt remarked to Ben Sittka, "I'm going to take a
trip. Uh? Now don't ask questions. You take
charge of the garage until you hear from me. Get
somebody to help you. G'-by."</p>
<p>He drove his Teal bug out of the garage. At
thirty-two minutes after twelve he was in his room,
packing his wicker suitcase by the method of throwing
things in and stamping on the case till it closed. In<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></SPAN></span>
it he had absolutely all of his toilet refinements and
wardrobe except the important portion already in use.
They consisted, according to faithful detailed report,
of four extra pairs of thick yellow and white cotton
socks; two shirts, five collars, five handkerchiefs; a
pair of surprisingly vain dancing pumps; high tan
laced boots; three suits of cheap cotton underclothes;
his Sunday suit, which was dead black in color, and
unimaginative in cut; four ties; a fagged toothbrush,
a comb and hairbrush, a razor, a strop, shaving soap
in a mug; a not very clean towel; and nothing else
whatever.</p>
<p>To this he added his entire library and private picture
gallery, consisting of Ivanhoe, Ben-Hur, his
father's copy of Byron, a wireless manual, and the
1916 edition of Motor Construction and Repairing:
the art collection, one colored Sunday supplement picture
of a princess lunching in a Provençe courtyard,
and a half-tone of Colonel Paul Beck landing in an
early military biplane. Under this last, in a pencil
scrawl now blurred to grayness, Milt had once written,
"This what Ill be aviator."</p>
<p>What he was to wear was a piercing trouble. Till
eleven minutes past twelve that day he had not cared.
People accepted his overalls at anything except a
dance, and at the dances he was the only one who
wore pumps. But in his discovery of Claire Boltwood
he had perceived that dressing is an art. Before<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></SPAN></span>
he had packed, he had unhappily pawed at the prized
black suit. It had become stupid. "Undertaker!"
he growled.</p>
<p>With a shrug which indicated that he had nothing
else, he had exchanged his overalls for a tan flannel
shirt, black bow tie, thick pigskin shoes, and the suit
he had worn the evening before, his best suit of two
years ago—baggy blue serge coat and trousers. He
could not know it, but they were surprisingly graceful
on his wiry, firm, white body.</p>
<p>In his pockets were a roll of bills and an unexpectedly
good gold watch. For warmth he had a
winter ulster, an old-fashioned turtle-neck sweater,
and a raincoat heavy as tarpaulin. He plunged into
the raincoat, ran out, galloped to Rauskukle's store,
bought the most vehement cap in the place—a plaid
of cerise, orange, emerald green, ultramarine, and five
other guaranteed fashionable colors. He stocked up
with food for roadside camping.</p>
<p>In the humping tin-covered tail of the bug was a
good deal of room, and this he filled with motor
extras, a shotgun and shells, a pair of skates, and all
his camping kit as used on his annual duck-hunting
trip to Man Trap Lake.</p>
<p>"I'm a darned fool to take everything I own
but—— Might be gone a whole month," he reflected.</p>
<p>He had only one possession left—a check book, concealed
from the interested eye of his too maternal<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></SPAN></span>
landlady by sticking it under the stair carpet. This
he retrieved. It showed a balance of two hundred
dollars. There was ten dollars in the cash register in
the office, for Ben Sittka. The garage would, with the
mortgage deducted, be worth nearly two thousand.
This was his fortune.</p>
<p>He bolted into the kitchen and all in one shout he
informed his landlady, "Called out of town, li'l trip,
b'lieve I don't owe you an'thing, here's six dollars, two
weeks' notice, dunno just when I be back."</p>
<p>Before she could issue a questionnaire he was out
in the bug. He ran through town. At his friend
McGolwey; now loose-lipped and wabbly, sitting in
the rain on a pile of ties behind the railroad station,
he yelled, "So long, Mac. Take care yourself, old
hoss. Off on li'l trip."</p>
<p>He stopped in front of the "prof's," tooted till the
heads of the Joneses appeared at the window, waved
and shouted, "G'-by, folks. Goin' outa town."</p>
<p>Then, while freedom and the distant Pacific seemed
to rush at him over the hood, he whirled out of town.
It was two minutes to one—forty-seven minutes since
Claire Boltwood had entered Schoenstrom.</p>
<p>He stopped only once. His friend Lady Vere de
Vere was at the edge of town, on a scientific exploring
trip in the matter of ethnology and field mice. She
hailed him, "Mrwr? Me mrwr!"</p>
<p>"You don't say so!" Milt answered in surprise.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></SPAN></span>
"Well, if I promised to take you, I'll keep my word."
He vaulted out, tucked Vere de Vere into the seat,
protecting her from the rain with the tarpaulin winter
radiator-cover.</p>
<p>His rut-skipping car overtook the mud-walloping
Gomez-Dep in an hour, and pulled it out of the mud.</p>
<p>Before Milt slept that night, in his camp three miles
from Gopher Prairie, he went through religious rites.</p>
<p>"Girl like her, she's darn particular about her looks.
I'm a sloppy hound. Used to be snappier about my
clothes when I was in high school. Getting lazy—too
much like Mac. Think of me sleeping in my
clothes last night!"</p>
<p>"Mrwr!" rebuked the cat.</p>
<p>"You're dead right. Fierce is the word. Nev'
will sleep in my duds again, puss. That is, when I
have a reg'lar human bed. Course camping, different.
But still—— Let's see all the funny things we can
do to us."</p>
<p>He shaved—two complete shaves, from lather to
towel. He brushed his hair. He sat down by a campfire
sheltered between two rocks, and fought his nails,
though they were discouragingly crammed with motor
grease. Throughout this interesting but quite painful
ceremony Milt kept up a conversation between himself
as the World's Champion Dude, and his cat
as Vallay. But when there was nothing more to do,
and the fire was low, and Vere de Vere asleep in the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></SPAN></span>
sleeve of the winter ulster, his bumbling voice slackened;
in something like agony he muttered:</p>
<p>"But oh, what's the use? I can't ever be anything
but a dub! Cleaning my nails, to make a hit with
a girl that's got hands like hers! It's a long trail to
Seattle, but it's a darn sight longer one to being—being—well,
sophisticated. Oh! And incidentally,
what the deuce am I going to do in Seattle if I do get
there?"</p>
<hr/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />