me.”
A moment later the old workman and the general manager, in John’s roadster, were on their way to the Mill.
When Tom arrived at the cottage with Helen’s car the two young women were ready. They were entering the automobile when Billy Rand appeared. It was evident from his labored breathing that he had been running, but his face betrayed no excitement. With a pleased smile, as one who would say, “Luckily I got here just in time,” he handed a folded paper to Mary.
By the light of the automobile lamp she read the Interpreter’s message aloud to Helen.”
“Telephone John to come to me at once with a big car. If you can’t get John tell Helen.”
For an instant they looked at each other questioningly. Then Helen spoke to the chauffeur. “To the Interpreter’s, Tom.” She indicated to Billy Rand that he was to go with them.
* * * * *
It was not Jake Vodell’s purpose to call openly in his address to the assembled workmen for an attack on the Mill. Such a demonstration against the employer class was indeed the purpose of the gathering, but it must come as the spontaneous outburst from the men themselves. His speech was planned merely to lay the kindling for the fire. The actual lighting of the blaze would follow later. The conflagration, too, would be started simultaneously from so many different points in the crowd that no one individual could be singled out as having incited the riot.
The agitator was still speaking when John and Peter Martin arrived on the scene. Quietly and carefully John drove through the outskirts of the crowd to a point close to the wall and not far from the main door of the building, nearly opposite the speaker. Stopping the motor the two men sat in the car listening to Vodell’s address.
The agitator did not call attention to the presence of the manager of the Mill as he had to the police, nor was there any noticeable break in his speech. But throughout the great throng there was a movement–a ripple of excitement–as the men looked toward John and the old workman, and turned each to his neighbor with low-spoken comments. And then, from every part of the crowd, the agitator saw individuals moving quietly toward the manager’s car until between the two men in the automobile and the main body of the speaker’s audience a small compact group of workmen stood shoulder to shoulder. They were the men of the Mill workers’ union who had refused to follow Jake Vodell. And every man, as he took his place, greeted John and the old workman with a low word, or a nod and a smile. The agitator concluded his address, and amid the shouts and applause left his place on the goods box to move about among his followers.
Presently, a low murmur arose like a growling undertone. Now and then a voice was raised sharply in characteristic threat or epithet against the employer class. The murmur swelled into a heavy menacing roar. The crowd, shaken by some invisible inner force, swayed to and fro. A shrill yell rang out and at the signal scores of hoarse voices were raised in shouts of mad defiance–threats and calls for action. As the whirling waters of a maelstrom are drawn to the central point, the mob was massed before the doors of the Mill.
The little squad of police was struggling forward. John Ward sprang to his feet. The loyal union men about the car stood fast.
At the sound of the manager’s voice the mob hesitated. In all that maddened crowd there was not a soul in ignorance of John Ward’s comradeship with his fellow workmen. In spite of Jake Vodell’s careful teaching–in spite of his devilish skill in using McIver as an example in his appeals and arguments inciting their hatred against all employers as a class, they were checked in their madness by the presence of Captain Charlie’s friend.
But it was only for the moment. The members of Vodell’s inner circle were at work among them. John had spoken but a few sentences when he was interrupted by voices from the crowd.
“Tell us where your old man got this Mill that he says is his?”
“Where did Adam get his castle on the hill?”
“We and our families live in shanties.”
“Who paid for your automobile, John?”
“We and our children walk.”
As the manager, ignoring the voices, continued his appeal, the interruptions came with more frequency, accompanied now by groans, shouts, hisses and derisive laughter.
“You’re all right, John, but you’re in with the wrong bunch.”
“We’re going to run things for a while now and give you a chance to do some real work.”
The police pleaded with them. The mob jeered, “Go get a job with McIver’s gunmen. Go find the man who murdered Captain Charlie.”
Once more the growling undertones swelled into a roar. “Come on–come on–we’ve had enough talk–let’s do something.”
As the crowd surged again toward the Mill doors, there was a forward movement of the close-packed group of workmen about the ear. John, leaning over them, said, sharply, “No–no–not that–men, not that!”
Then suddenly the movement of the mob toward the Mill was again checked as Peter Martin raised his voice. “If you won’t listen to Mr. Ward,” said the old man, when he had caught their attention, “perhaps you’ll not mind hearin’ me.”
In the stillness of the uncertain moment, a voice answered, “Go ahead, Uncle Pete!”
Standing on the seat of the automobile, the kindly old workman looked down into the grim faces of his comrades. And, as they saw him there and thought of Captain Charlie, a deep breath of feeling swept over the throng.
In his slow, thoughtful way the veteran of the Mill spoke. “There’ll be no one among you, I’m thinkin’, that’ll dare say as how I don’t belong to the workin’ class. An’ there’ll be no man that’ll deny my right to be heard in any meeting of Millsburgh working men. I helped the Interpreter to organize the first union that was ever started in this city–and so far we’ve managed to carry on our union work without any help from outsiders who have no real right to call themselves American citizens even–much less to dictate to us American workmen.”
There was a stir among Vodell’s followers. A voice rose but was silenced by the muttered protest which it caused. Jake Vodell, quick to grasp the feeling of the crowd, was making his way toward his goods box rostrum. Here and there he paused a moment to whisper to one of his inner circle.
The old workman continued, “You all know the principles that my boy Charlie stood for. You know that he was just as much against employers like McIver as he was against men like this agitator who is leading you into this trouble here to-night. Jake Vodell has made you believe that my boy was killed by the employer class. But I tell you men that Charlie had no better friend in the world than his employer, John Ward. And I tell you that John and Charlie were working together here for the best interests of us all–just as they were together in France. You know what my boy would say if he was here to-night. He would say just what I am saying. He would tell you that we workmen have got to stand by the employers who stand by us. He would tell you that we American union workmen must protect ourselves and our country against this anarchy and lawlessness that has got you men here to-night so all excited and beside yourselves that you don’t know what you’re doing. In Captain Charlie’s name I ask you men to break up this mob and go quietly to your homes where you can think this thing over. We–“
From his position across the street Jake Vodell suddenly interrupted the old workman with a rapid fire of questions and insinuations and appeals to the mob.
Peter Martin, poorly equipped for a duel of words with such a master of the art, was silenced.
Slowly the mob swung again to the agitator. Under the spell of his influence they were responding once more to his call, when a big automobile rolled swiftly up to the edge of the crowd and stopped.
John Ward was the first to recognize his sister’s car. With a word to the men near him he sprang to the ground and ran forward. The loyal workmen went with him.
In the surprise of the moment, not knowing what was about to happen, Jake Vodell stood silent. In breathless suspense every eye in the crowd was fixed upon that little group about Helen’s car.
Another moment and the assembled workmen witnessed a sight that they will never forget. Down the lane that opened as if by magic through the mass of men came the loyal members of the Mill workers’ union. High on their shoulders they carried the Interpreter.
In a silence, deep as the stillness of death, they bore him through those close-packed walls of humanity, straight to the big doors of the Mill. With their backs against the building they held him high–face to face with Jake Vodell and the mob that the agitator was swaying to his will.
The old basket maker’s head was bare and against the dark background of the dingy walls his venerable face with its crown of silvery hair was as the face of a prophet.
They did not cheer. In silent awe they stood with tense, upturned faces.
A voice, low but clear and distinct, cut the stillness.
“Hats off!”
As one man, they uncovered their heads.
The Interpreter’s deep voice–kindly but charged with strange authority–swept over them.
“Workmen–what are you doing here? Are you toys that you give yourselves as playthings into the hands of this man who chooses to use you in his game? Are you children to be led by his idle words and moved by his foolish dreams? Are you men or are you cattle to be stampeded by him, without reason, to your own destruction? Would you, at this stranger’s bidding, dig a pit for your fancied enemies and fall into it yourselves?”
Not a man in that great crowd of workmen moved. In breathless silence they stood awed by the majesty of the old basket maker’s presence–hushed by the sorrowful authority of his voice.
Solemnly the Interpreter continued, “The one who took the life of your comrade workman, Captain Charlie, was not a tool in the hands of your employers as you have been led to believe. Neither was that dreadful act inspired by the workmen of Millsburgh. Captain Charlie was killed by a poor, foolish weakling who was under the same spell that to-night has so nearly led you into this blind folly of destroying that which should be your glory and your pride. Sam Whaley has confessed to me. He has surrendered himself to the proper authorities. But the instigator of the crime–the one who planned, ordered and directed it–the leader who dominated and drove his poor tool to the deed is this man Jake Vodell.”
The sound of the Interpreter’s voice ceased. For a moment longer that dead silence held–then as the full import of the old basket maker’s words went home to them, the crowd with a roar of fury turned toward the spot where the agitator had stood when the arrival of the Interpreter interrupted his address.
But Jake Vodell had disappeared.
CHAPTER XXIX
CONTRACTS
They had carried the Interpreter back to his wheel chair in the hut on the cliff.
John, Peter Martin and the two young women were bidding the old basket maker goodnight when suddenly they were silenced by the dull, heavy sound of a distant explosion.
A moment they stood gazing at one another, then John voiced the thoughts that had gripped the minds of every one in that little group:
“The Mill!”
Springing to the door that opened on to the balcony porch, John threw it open and they went out, taking the Interpreter in his chair. In breathless silence they strained their eyes toward the dark mass of the Mill with its forest of stacks and its many lights.
“Everything seems to be all right there,” murmured John.
But as the last word left his lips a chorus of exclamations came from the others. Farther up the river a dull red glow flushed the sky.
“McIver’s!”
“The factory!”
The Interpreter said, quietly, “Jake Vodell.”
With every second the red glow grew brighter–reaching higher and higher–spreading wider and wider over the midnight sky. Then they could see the flames–threadlike streaks and flashes in the dark cloud of smoke at first but increasing in volume, climbing and climbing in writhing, twisting columns of red fury. The wild, long-drawn shriek of the fire whistles, the clanging roar of the engines, the frantic rush of speeding automobiles awoke the echoes of the cliffs and aroused the sleeping creatures on the hillsides. The volume of the leaping, whirling mass of flames increased until the red glare shut out the stars.
The officers of the law who were hunting Jake Vodell heard that explosion and telephoned their stations for orders. The business men of the little city, awakened from their sleep, looked from their windows, muttered drowsy conjectures and returned to their beds. Mothers and children in their homes heard and turned uneasily in their dreams. The dwellers in the Flats heard and wondered fearfully.
Before morning dawned the telegraph wires would carry the word throughout the land. In every corner of our country the people would read, as they have all too often read of similar explosions. They would read, offer idle comments, perhaps, and straightway forget. That is the wonder and the shame of it–that with these frequent warnings ringing in our ears we are not warned. With these things continually forced upon our attention we do not heed. With the demonstration before our eyes we are not convinced. We are not aroused to the meaning of it all.
In his cell in the county jail, Sam Whaley heard that explosion and knew what it was.
The Interpreter was right when he said, “Jake Vodell.”
It was an hour, perhaps, after the Interpreter’s friends had left the hut when the old basket maker, who was still sitting at the window watching the burning factory, heard an automobile approaching at a frightful pace from the direction of the fire. The noise of the speeding machine ceased with startling suddenness at the foot of the stairway, and the Interpreter heard some one running up the steps with headlong haste. Without pausing to knock, Adam Ward burst into the room and stood panting and shaking with mad excitement before the man in the wheel chair.
The Mill owner’s condition was pitiful. By his eyes that were glittering with wild, unnatural light, by the gray, twitching features, the grotesque gestures, the trembling, jerking limbs, the Interpreter knew that the last flickering gleam of reason had gone out. The hour toward which the man himself had looked with such dread had come. Adam Ward was insane.
With a leering grin of triumph the madman went closer to the old basket maker. “I got away again. They were right after me but they couldn’t catch me. That roadster of mine is the fastest car in the county–cost me four thousand dollars. I knew if I could get here I would be safe. They wouldn’t think of looking for me here in your shanty, would they? They can’t get in anyway if they should come. You wouldn’t–you wouldn’t let them get me, would you?”
“Peace, Adam Ward! You are safe here.”
The insane man chuckled. “The folks at the house think I am in my room asleep. They don’t know that I never sleep. I’ll tell you something. If a man sleeps he goes to hell–hell–hell–” His voice rose almost to a scream and he shook with terror.
“Did you see it? Did you see when hell broke out to-night over there where McIver’s factory used to be? I did–I was there and I heard them roaring in the fibres of torment and screaming in the flames. They called for me but I laughed and came here. They’ll never get Adam Ward into hell. They don’t know it yet, but I’ve got a contract with God. I fixed it up myself just like you told me to and God signed it without reading it just as Peter Martin did. I’ll show them! It’ll take more than God to get the best of Adam Ward in a deal.”
He walked about the room, waving his arms and laughing in hideous triumph, muttering mad boasts and mumbling to himself or taunting the phantom creatures of his disordered brain.
The helpless Interpreter could only wait silently for whatever was to follow.
At last the madman turned again to the old basket maker. Placing a chair close in front of the Interpreter, he seated himself and in a confidential whisper said, “Did you know that everybody thinks I am going insane? Well, I am not. Nobody knows it, but it’s not me that’s crazy–it’s John. He’s been that way ever since he got home from France. The poor boy thinks the world is still at war and that he can run the Mill just as he fought the Germans over there. There’s another thing that you ought to know, too–you are crazy yourself. Don’t be afraid, I won’t tell anybody else. But you ought to know it. If a man knows it when he is going crazy it gives him a chance to fix things up with God so they can’t get him into hell for all eternity, you see. So I thought I had better tell you.”
The Interpreter spoke in a calm, matter-of-fact tone. “Thank you, Adam, I appreciate your kindness.”
“I was there at the Mill tonight,” Adam continued, “and I heard you tell them who killed Charlie Martin. And then those crazy fools went tearing off to hunt Jake Vodell.” He chuckled and laughed. “What difference does it make who killed Charlie Martin? I own the patented process. I am the man they want. But they can’t touch me. I hired the best lawyers in the country and I’ve got it sewed up tight. I put one over on Pete Martin in that deal and I’ve put one over on God, too. I’ve got God sewed up tight, I tell you, just like I sewed up Peter Martin. They can howl their heads off but they’ll never get me into hell.”
He leaned back in his chair with the satisfied air of a business man crediting himself with having closed a successful transaction.
Then, with a manner and voice that was apparently normal, he said, “Did I ever tell you about how I got that patented process of mine, Wallace?” The Interpreter knew by his use of that name, so seldom heard in these later years, that Adam’s mind was back in the old days when, with Peter Martin, they had worked side by side at the same bench in the Mill.
Hoping to calm him, the old basket maker returned indifferently, “No, Adam, I don’t remember that you ever told me, but don’t you think some other time would be better perhaps than to-night? It is getting late and you–“
The other interrupted with a wave of his hand. “Oh, that’s all right. It’s safe enough to talk about it now. Besides,” he added, with a cunning leer, “nobody would believe you if you should tell them the truth. You’re nothing but a crazy old basket maker and I am Adam Ward, don’t forget that for a minute.” He glared threateningly at the man in the wheel chair, and the Interpreter, fearing another outburst, said, soothingly, “Certainly, Adam, I understand. I will not forget.”
With the manner of one relating an interesting story in which he himself figured with great personal credit, Adam Ward said:
“It was Pete Martin, you see, who actually discovered the new process. But, luckily for me, I was the first one he told about it. He had worked it all out and I persuaded him not to say a thing to any one else until the patents were secured. Pete didn’t really know the value of what he had. But I knew–I saw from the first that it would revolutionize the whole business, and I knew it would make a fortune for the man that owned the patents.
“Pete and I were pretty good friends in those days, but friendship don’t go far in business. I never had a friend in my life that I couldn’t use some way. So I had Pete over to my house every evening and made a lot over him and talked over his new process and made suggestions how he should handle it, until finally he offered to give me a half interest if I would look after the business details. That, of course, was exactly what I was playing for. And all this time, you see, I took mighty good care that not a soul was around when Pete and I talked things over. So we fixed it all up between us–with no one to hear us, mind you–that we were to share equally–half and half–in whatever the new process brought.
“After that, I went ahead and got all the patents good and tight and then I fixed up a nice little document for Pete to sign. But I waited and I didn’t say a word to Pete until one evening when he and his wife were studying and figuring out the plans for the house they were going to build. I sat and planned with them a while until I saw how Pete’s mind was all on his new house, and then all at once I put my little document down on the table in front of him and said, ‘By the way, Pete, those patents will be coming along pretty soon and I have had a little contract fixed up just as a matter of form–you know how we planned it all. Here’s where you sign–‘”
Adam Ward paused to laugh with insane glee. “Pete did just what I knew he’d do–he signed that document without even reading a line of it and went on with his house planning and figuring as if nothing had happened. But something had happened–something big had happened. Instead of the way we had planned it together when we were talking alone with nobody to witness it, Pete signed to me outright for one dollar all his rights and interests in that new patented process.”
Again the madman laughed triumphantly. “Pete never even found out what he’d done until nearly a year later. And then he wouldn’t believe it until the lawyers made him. He couldn’t do anything of course. I had it sewed up too tight. That process is mine, I tell you–mine by all the laws in the country. What if I did take advantage of him! That’s business. A man ought to have sense enough to read what he puts his signature to. You don’t catch me trusting anybody far enough to sign anything he puts before me without reading it. Why–why–what are you crying for?”
Adam Ward was not mistaken–the Interpreter’s eyes were wet with tears.
The sight of the old basket maker’s grief sent the insane man off on another tangent. “Don’t you worry about me. Helen and John and their mother worry a lot about me. They think I’m going to hell.”
He sprang to his feet with a hoarse inarticulate cry. “They’ll never get me into hell! God has got to keep His contracts and I’ve fixed it all up so He’ll have to save me whether He wants to or not. The papers are all signed and everything. My lawyer has got them in his safe. God can’t help Himself. You told me I’d better do it and I have. I’m not afraid to meet God now! I’ll show Him just like I showed Pete.”
He rushed from the room as abruptly as he had entered. The Interpreter heard him plunging down the stairs. The roar of his automobile died away in the distance.
In an early morning extra edition, the Millsburgh _Clarion_ announced the death of two of the most prominent citizens.
James McIver was killed in the explosion that burned his factory.
Adam Ward’s body was found in a secluded corner of his beautiful estate. He died by his own hand.
The cigar-store philosopher put his paper down and reached into the show case for the box that the judge wanted. “It looks like McIver played the wrong cards in his little game with Jake Vodell,” he remarked, as the judge made a careful selection.
“I am afraid so,” returned the judge.
The postmaster took a handful from the same box and said, as he dropped a dollar on the top of the show case, “I see Sam Whaley has confessed that the blowing up of the factory was all set as part of their program. Their plan was to wreck the Mill first then McIver’s place. Where do you suppose Jake Vodell got away to?”
“Hard to guess,” said the judge.
The philosopher put the proper change before them. “There’s one thing sure–the people of these here United States had better get good and busy findin’ out where he is.”
It was significant that neither the philosopher nor his customers mentioned the passing of Adam Ward.
BOOK IV
THE OLD HOUSE
“_Tell them, O Guns, that we have heard their call,
That we have sworn, and will not turn aside, That we will onward till we win or fall,
That we will keep the faith for which they died_.”
CHAPTER XXX
“JEST LIKE THE INTERPRETER SAID”
It is doubtful if in all Millsburgh there was a soul who felt a personal loss in the passing of their “esteemed citizen” Adam Ward. During the years that followed his betrayal of Peter Martin’s friendship the man had never made a friend who loved him for himself–who believed in him or trusted him. In business circles his reputation for deals that were always carefully legal but often obviously dishonest had caused the men he met to accept him only so far as their affairs made the contact necessary. Because of the power he had through his possession of the patented process he was known. His place in the community had been fixed by what he took from the community. His habit of boasting of his possessions, of his power, and of his business triumphs, and his way of considering the people as his personal debtors had been a never-failing subject of laughing comment. Men spoke of his death in a jocular vein–made jests about it–wondering what he was really worth. But one and all invariably concluded their comments with some word of sincere sympathy for his family.
Because of the people’s estimation of the Mill owner’s character, the publication of his will created a sensation the like of which was never before known in the community.
One half of his estate, including the Mill, Adam Ward gave to his family. The other half he gave to his old workman friend, Peter Martin.
Millsburgh was stunned, stupefied with amazement and wonder. But no one outside the two families, save the Interpreter, ever knew the real reason for the bequest. The old basket maker alone understood that this was Adam Ward’s deal with God–it was the contract by which he was to escape the hell of his religious fears–the horrors of which he had so often suffered in his dreams and the dread of which had so preyed upon his diseased mind.
When the necessary time for the legal processes in the settlement of Adam Ward’s estate had passed, John called the Mill workers together. In his notice of the meeting, the manager stated simply that it was to consider the mutual interests of the employers and employees by safeguarding the future of the industry. When the workmen had assembled, they wondered to see on the platform with their general manager, Helen and her mother, Mary and Peter Martin, the city mayor, with representative men from the labor unions and from the business circles of the community, and, sitting in his wheel chair, the Interpreter.
To the employees in the Mill and to the representatives of the people the announcement of the final disposition of Adam Ward’s estate was made.
The house on the hill with the beautiful grounds surrounding it became in effect the property of the people–with an endowment fixed for its maintenance. It was to be converted into a center of community interest, one feature of which was to be an institute for the study of patriotism.
“We have foundations for the promotion of the sciences, of art and of business,” said the legal gentleman who made the announcements. “Why not an institution for the study and promotion of patriotism–research in the fields of social and industrial life that are peculiarly American–lectures, classes, and literature on the true Americanization of those who come to us from foreign countries–the promotion of true American principles and standards of citizenship in our public schools and educational institutions and among our people–the collection and study of authentic data from the many industrial and social experiments that are being carried on–these are some of the proposed activities.”
This Institute of American Patriotism would be under the leadership of the Interpreter and would stand as a memorial to the memory of Captain Charlie Martin.
When the mayor, in behalf of the people, had made a fitting response to this presentation, John told the Mill men that their employer, Pete Martin, would make an announcement.
The old workman was greeted with cheers. Some one in the crowd called, good-naturedly, “How does it feel to be an owner, Uncle Pete?” Everybody laughed and the veteran himself grinned.
“I guess I’m too old to change my feelings much, Bill Sewold,” he answered. “And that’s about what I was going to tell you. The lawyers say that I own half of our Mill here and that I can do what I please with it. But I can’t some way make it seem any more mine than it always was. Mary and I are agreed that we’d like to do what we know Charlie would be in for if he was here, and we’ve talked it over with John and his folks and they feel just like we do about it.
“The lawyers can explain the workin’s of the plan to you better than I can; but this is the main idea: The whole thing has been made over into a company with John and his mother and sister owning one half and me the other. What John wants me to tell you is that he and his folks are turning one half of their interest and Mary and me are turning one half of our interest back to you workmen. So that from now on all the employees of the Mill will be employers–and all the employers will be employees. With John and me and our folks owning one half, you can see that we’re figuring on keeping the management in the proper hands, John will be in the office where he belongs and the rest of us will be where we belong. Considering our recent demonstration, I guess you’ll all agree that a lot of us need to be protected by the rest of us from all of us. And now all we have to do is to work. And I’d like to see Jake Vodell or any other foreign agitator try to start another industrial war in Millsburgh.”
It was the Interpreter who asked the assembled workmen to endorse a petition to the governor asking clemency for Sam Whaley. The ground upon which the petition was based was that the guilty principal in the crime was still at liberty–that others, still unknown, were involved with him–that Sam Whaley by his confession had saved the Mill and the community from the full horrors planned by the agitator, and that under the new standard of industrial citizenship the former follower of the anarchist might in time become a useful member of society.
A solemn hush fell over the company when Peter Martin, Mary, John and Helen were the first to sign the petition.
The old house is no longer empty, deserted and forlorn. Repaired and repainted from the front gate to the back-yard fence–with well-kept lawn, flowers and garden–it impresses the passer-by with its air of modest home happiness. To Helen and her mother who live there, to John and his wife, Mary, and to the old workman who live in the cottage next door, the spirit of the old days has returned.
The neighbors in passing always stop for a word with the gray-haired woman who works among her flowers just as she used to do before the discovery of the new process, or with her sweet-faced daughter. The workmen going to or from the Mill always have a smile or a word of greeting for the mother and the sister of their comrade manager.
Nor is there a man or woman in all the city or in the country round about who does not know and love this Helen of the old house, who is giving herself so without reserve to the people’s need, who has, as the Interpreter says, “found herself in service.”
But when the deep tones of the Mill whistle sound over the city, the valley and the hillsides, there is a look in Helen’s eyes that only those who know her best understand.
And often in these days the neighborhood of the old house rings with the merry voices of Bobby and Maggie and their playmates. From the Flats–from the tenement houses–from the homes of the laborers, they come, these children, to this beautiful woman who loves them all and who calls them, somewhat fancifully, her “jewels of happiness.”
“Yer see,” explained little Maggie, “the princess lady, she jest couldn’t help findin’ them there happiness jewels–’cause her heart was so kind–jest like the Interpreter said.”
THE END