<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_FOUR" id="CHAPTER_FOUR"></SPAN>CHAPTER FOUR</h2>
<h3>ADVENTURE IN EARNEST</h3>
<p>Mr. Shrimplin had made his way through a number of back streets
without adventure of any sort, and as the night and the storm
closed swiftly in about him, the shapes of himself, his cart and of
wild Bill disappeared, and there remained to mark his progress only
the hissing sputtering flame, that flared spectrally six feet in
air as the little lamplighter drove in and out of shabby
unfrequented streets and alleys.</p>
<p>It had grown steadily colder with the approach of night, and the
wind had risen. The streets seemed deserted, and Mr. Shrimplin
being as he was of a somewhat fanciful turn of mind, could almost
imagine himself and Bill the only living things astir in all the
town.</p>
<p>He reached Water Street, the western boundary of that part of
Mount Hope known as the flats. He jogged past Maxy Schaffer's
Railroad Hotel at the corner of Front Street, which flung the
wicked radiance of its bar-room windows along the shining railroad
track where it crossed the creek on the new iron bridge; and
keeping on down Water Street with its smoky tenements, entered an
outlying district where the lamps were far apart and where red and
blue and green switch lights blinked at him out of the storm.</p>
<p>It was nearly six o'clock when he at last wheeled into the
Square; here only three gasolene burners—survivors of the old
régime—held their own against the fast encroaching
gas-lamp.</p>
<p>He lighted the one in Division Street and was ready to turn and
traverse the north side of the Square to the second lamp which
stood a block away at the corner of High Street. He was drawing
Bill's head about—Bill being smitten with a sudden desire to
go directly home leaving the night's work unfinished—when the
muffled figure of a man appeared in the street in front of him. The
inch or more of snow that now covered the pavement had deadened the
sound of his steps, while the eddying flakes had made possible his
near approach unseen. As he came rapidly into the red glare of Mr.
Shrimplin's hissing torch that hero was exceeding well pleased to
recognize a friendly face.</p>
<p>"How are you, Mr. North!" he said, and John North halted
suddenly.</p>
<p>"Oh, it's you, Shrimp! A nasty night, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"It's the suffering human limit!" rejoined Mr. Shrimplin with
feeling.</p>
<p>As he spoke the town bell rang the hour; unconsciously, perhaps,
the two men paused until the last reverberating stroke had spent
itself in the snowy distance.</p>
<p>"Six o'clock," observed Mr. Shrimplin.</p>
<p>"Good night, Shrimp," replied North irrelevantly.</p>
<p>He turned away and an instant later was engulfed in the wintry
night.</p>
<p>Having at last pointed Bill's head in the right direction Mr.
Shrimplin drove that trusty beast up to the lamp-post on the corner
of High Street, when suddenly and for no apparent reason Bill
settled back in the shafts and exhibited unmistakable, though
humiliating symptoms of fright.</p>
<p>"Go on, you!" cried Mr. Shrimplin, slapping bravely with both
the lines, but his voice was far from steady, for suppose Bill
should abandon the rectitude of a lifetime and begin to kick.</p>
<p>"Go on, you!" repeated Mr. Shrimplin and slapped the lines
again, but less vigorously, for by this time Bill was
unquestionably backing away from the curb.</p>
<p>"Be done! Be done!" expostulated Mr. Shrimplin, but he gave over
slapping the lines, for why irritate Bill in his present uncertain
mood? "Want I should get out and lead you?" asked Mr. Shrimplin,
putting aside with one hand the blankets in which he was wrapped.
"You're a game old codger, ain't you? I guess you ain't aware
you've growed up!"</p>
<p>While he was still speaking he slipped to the ground and worked
his way hand over hand up the lines to Bill's bit. Bill was now
comfortably located on his haunches, but evidently still
dissatisfied for he continued to back vigorously, drawing the
protesting little lamplighter after him. When he had put perhaps
twenty feet between himself and the lamp-post Bill achieved his
usual upright attitude and his countenance assumed its habitual
contemplative expression, the haunted look faded from his sagacious
eye and his flaming nostrils resumed their normal benevolent
expression. Taking note of these swift changes, it occurred to Mr.
Shrimplin that rather than risk a repetition of his recent
experience he would so far sacrifice his official dignity as to go
on foot to the lamp-post. Bill would probably stand where he was,
indefinitely, standing being one of his most valued
accomplishments. The lamplighter took up his torch which he had put
aside in the struggle with Bill and walked to the curb.</p>
<p>And here Mr. Shrimplin noticed that which had not before caught
his attention. McBride's store was apparently open, for the
bracketed oil lamps that hung at regular intervals the full length
of the long narrow room, were all alight.</p>
<p>Mr. Shrimplin, whose moods were likely to be critical and
censorious, realized that there was something personally offensive
in the fact that Archibald McBride had chosen to disregard a
holiday which his fellow-merchants had so very generally
observed.</p>
<p>"And him, I may say, just rotten rich!" he thought.</p>
<p>Mr. Shrimplin further discovered that though the lamps were lit
they were burning low, and he concluded that they had been lighted
in the early dusk of the winter afternoon and that McBride, for
reasons of economy, had deferred turning them up until it should be
quite dark.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm a poor man, but I couldn't think of them things like
he does!" reflected Mr. Shrimplin; and then even before he had
ceased to pride himself on his superior liberality, he made still
another discovery, and this, that the store door stood wide open to
the night.</p>
<p>"Well," thought Mr. Shrimplin, "maybe he's saving oil, but he's
wasting fuel."</p>
<p>Approaching the door he peered in. The store was empty,
Archibald McBride was nowhere visible. Evidently the door had been
open some little time, for he could see where the snow, driven by
the strong wind, had formed a miniature snow-drift just beyond the
threshold.</p>
<p>"Either he's stepped out and the door's blowed open," muttered
Mr. Shrimplin, "or he's in his back office and some customer went
out without latching it."</p>
<p>He paused irresolutely, then he put his hand on the knob of the
door to close it, and paused again. With his taste for fictitious
horrors, usually indulged in, however, by his own warm fireside, he
found the present time and place slightly disquieting; and then
Bill's singular and erratic behavior had rather weakened his nerve.
From under knitted brows he gazed into the room. The storm rattled
the shuttered windows above his head, the dingy sign creaked on its
rusty fastenings, and with each fresh gust the bracketed lamps
rocked gently to and fro, and as they rocked their trembling
shadows slid back and forth along the walls. The very air of the
place was inhospitable, forbidding, and Mr. Shrimplin was strongly
inclined to close the door and beat a hasty retreat.</p>
<p>Still peering down the narrow room with its sagging shelves and
littered counters, he crossed the threshold. Now he could see the
office, a space partitioned off at the rear of the building and
having a glass front that gave into the store itself. Here, as he
knew, stood Mr. McBride's big iron safe, and here was the high
desk, his heavy ledgers—row after row of them; these
histories of commerce covered almost the entire period during which
men had bought and sold in Mount Hope.</p>
<p>A faint light burned beyond the dirty glass partition, but the
tall meager form of the old merchant was nowhere visible. Mr.
Shrimplin advanced yet farther into the room and urged by his sense
of duty and his public spirit, he directed his steps toward the
office, treading softly as one who fears to come upon the
unexpected. Once he paused, and addressing the empty air, broke the
heavy silence:</p>
<p>"Oh, Mr. McBride, your door's open!"</p>
<p>The room echoed to his words.</p>
<p>"Well," carped Mr. Shrimplin, "I don't see as it's any of my
business to attend to his business!" But the very sound of his
voice must have given him courage, for now he stepped forward,
briskly.</p>
<p>On his right was a show-case in which was displayed a varied
assortment of knives, cutlery, and revolvers with shiny silver or
nickel mountings; then the show-case gave place to a long pine
counter, and at the far end of this was a pair of scales. Near the
scales on a low iron standard rested an oil lamp, but this lamp was
not lighted nor were the lamps in the bracket that hung immediately
above the scales, for behind the counter at this point was a door,
the upper half glass, that opened on a small yard which, in turn,
was inclosed by a series of low sheds where the old merchant stored
heavy castings, bar-iron, and the like. Mr. Shrimplin was shrewdly
aware that it was one of McBride's small economies not to light the
lamps by that door so long as he could see to read the figures on
the scales without their artificial aid.</p>
<p>And then Mr. Shrimplin saw a thing that sent the blood leaping
from his heart, while an icy hand seemed to hold him where he
stood. On the floor at his very feet was a strange huddled shape.
He lowered his gasolene torch which he still carried, and the shape
resolved itself into the figure of a man; an old man who lay face
down on the floor, his arms extended as if they had been arrested
while he was in the very act of raising them to his head. The thick
shock of snow-white hair, worn rather long, was discolored just
back of the left ear, and from this Mr. Shrimplin's horrified gaze
was able to trace another discoloration that crossed in a thin red
line the dead man's white collar; for the man was dead past all
peradventure.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><br/> <SPAN href="images/072.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/072.jpg" width-obs="45%" alt= "" title="" /></SPAN><br/> <b>On the floor at his feet was a strange huddled shape.</b>
<br/></div>
<p>Mr. Shrimplin saw and grasped the meaning of it all in an
instant. Then with a feeble cry he turned and fled down the long
room, pursued by a million phantom terrors. His heart seemed to die
within him as he scurried down that long room; then, mercifully,
the keen fresh air filled his lungs. He fairly leaped through the
open door, and again the storm roared about him with a kind of
boisterous fellowship. It smote him in the face and twisted his
shaking legs from under him. Then he fell, speechless, terrified,
into the arms of a passer-by.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />