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VII Chesterfield Whiting THE next morning Millington came over bright and early, and
his face was aglow with joy. "Get ready as quickly as you can," he said,
"for I will be ready to start for Port Lafayette in a few minutes. The
automobile is in perfect order, and we should have a splendid trip. She isn't knocking
at all." This knocking, which was located in the motor-case, or hood,
was one of the most reliable noises of all those for which Millington listened
when he started the engine of his automobile. He was very fond of it, and it
was one of the heartiest knockings I ever heard in an automobile. It was like
the hiccoughs, only more strenuous. It was as if a giant had been shut in the
motor by mistake and was trying to knock the whole affair to pieces. The knock
came about every eight seconds, lightly at first, getting stronger and stronger
until it made the fore-end of the automobile bounce up a foot or eighteen
inches at each knock. Millington loved all the sounds of trouble, but this
knocking gave him the most pleasure and put him in his pleasantest mood, for he
could never quite discover the cause of it. When everything else was in perfect
order the knock remained. He would do every thing any man could think of to
cure it, but the machine would continue to knock. I remember he even went so
far as to put a new inner tube in a tire once, to see if that would have any
effect, but it did not. But there were plenty of other noises, too. Millington
once told me he had classified and scheduled four hundred and eighteen separate
noises of disorder that he had heard in that one automobile, and that did not
include any that might be another noise for the same disorders. And some days
he would hear the whole four hundred and eighteen before we had gone a block.
Those were his happy days. But this morning Millington came over bright and early.
Isobel was just putting a cake in the oven, and she only took time to tell
Jane, or Sophie, or whoever happened to be our maid that week, that she would
be back in time to take the cake out, and then we went over to Millington's garage.
Mrs. Millington was already in the auto mobile, and Isobel
and I got in, and Millington opened the throttle and the machine ran down the
road to the street as lightly and skimmingly as a swallow. It glided into the
street noiselessly and headed for Port Lafayette like a thing alive. I noticed
that Millington looked anxious, but I thought nothing of it at the time. His
brow was drawn into a frown, and from moment to moment he pulled his cap
farther and farther down over his eyes. He leaned far over the side of the car.
He listened so closely that his ears twitched. Mrs. Millington and Isobel were chatting merrily on the rear
seat, and I was just turning to cast them a word, when the car came to a stop.
I turned to Millington instantly, ready to catch the pleasant bit of humour he
usually let fall when he began to dig out his wrenches and pliers, but his face
wore a glare of anger. His jaws were set, and he was muttering low, intense
curses. I have seldom seen a man more demoniacal than Millington was at that
moment. I asked him, merrily, what was the matter with the old junk shop this
time, but instead of his usual chipper repartee, that "the old tea kettle
has the epizootic," he gave me one ferocious glance in which murder was
plainly to be seen. Without a word he began walking around the automobile,
eyeing it maliciously, and every time he passed a tire he kicked it as hard as
he could. Then he began opening all the opening parts, and when he had opened
them all and had peered into them long and angrily he went over to the curb and
sat down and swore. Isobel and Mrs. Millington politely stuffed their
handkerchiefs in their ears, but I went over to Millington and spoke to him as
man to man. "Millington," I said severely, "calm down! I
am surprised. Time and again I have started for Port Lafayette with you, and
time and again we have paused all day while you repaired the automobile. Much
as I have wished to go to Port Lafayette I have never complained, because you
have always been better company while repairing the machine than at any other
time. But this I cannot stand. If you continue to act this way I shall never
again go toward Port Lafayette with you. Brace up, and repair the
machine." Millington's only answer was a curse. I was about to take him by the throat and teach him a little
better manners when he arose and walked over to the machine again. He got in
and started the motor, and listened intently while I ran alongside. Then, with
a great effort he controlled his feelings and spoke. "Ladies," he said between his teeth, "we
shall have to postpone going to Port Lafayette. I am afraid to drive this car
any farther. There is something very, very serious the matter with it." Then, when the women had disappeared, my wife walking
rapidly so as to arrive at home before her cake was scorched, Millington turned
to me. "John," he said with emotion, "you must
excuse the feeling I showed. I was upset; I admit that I was overcome. I have
owned this car four years, but in all that time, although I have started for
Port Lafayette nearly every day, the car has never behaved as it has just
behaved. I am a brave man, John, and I have never been afraid of a motor-car
before, but when my car acts as this car has just acted, I am afraid!" I could see he was speaking the truth. His face was white
about the mouth, and the tense lines showed he was nerving himself to do his
duty. His voice trembled with the intensity of his self-control. "John," he said, taking my hand, "were you
listening to the car?" "No," I had to admit. "No, Millington, I was
not. I am ashamed to say it, but at the moment my mind was elsewhere.
But," I added, as if in self defence, "I am pretty sure I did not
hear that knocking. I re member quite distinctly that I was not holding on to
anything, and when the engine knocks But what did you hear?" A shiver of involuntary fear passed over Millington, and he
lowered his voice to a frightened whisper. He glanced fearfully at the
automobile. "Nothing! "he said. "What?" I cried. I could not hide my astonishment
and, I am afraid, my disbelief. I would not, for the world, have had Millington
think I thought he was prevaricating. "Not a thing!" he repeated firmly. "Not a
sound; not one bad symptom. Every everything was running just as it should just
as they do in other automobiles." "Millington!" I said reproachfully. "It is the truth!" he declared. "I swear it
is the truth. Nothing seemed broken or about to break. I could not hear a sound
of distress, or a symptom of disorder. Do you wonder I was overcome?" "Millington," I said seriously, "this is no
light matter. I shall not accuse you of wilfully lying to me, but I know your
auto mobile, and I cannot believe your automobile could proceed four hundred
feet without making noises of internal disorder. It is evident to me that your
hearing is growing weak; you may be threatened with deafness." At this Millington seemed to cheer up considerably, for
deafness was something he could understand. I proposed that we both get into
the automobile again, and I, too, would listen. So we did. It was almost
pathetic, it was most pathetic, to see the way Millington looked up into my
face to see what verdict I would give when he started the motor. My verdict was the very worst possible. We ran a block at
low speed and I could hear no trouble. We ran a block at second speed, and no
distressful noise did I hear. We ran two blocks at high speed, with no noise
but the soft purring of motors and machinery. As Millington brought the
automobile to a stop we looked at each other aghast. It was true, too true,
nothing was the matter with the automobile! It sparked, it ignited, it did
everything a perfect automobile should do, just as a perfect automobile should
do it. We got out and stared at the automobile silently. "John," said Millington at length, "you can
easily see that I would not dare to start on a long trip like that to Port
Lafayette when my automobile is acting in this unaccountable manner. It would
be the most foolhardy recklessness. When this machine is running in an
absolutely perfect manner, almost anything may be the matter with it. My own
opinion is that a spell has been cast over it, and that it is bewitched." "I never knew it to come as far as this without
stopping," I said, "and to come this far without a single annoying
noise makes me sure we should not attempt Port Lafayette to-day in this car. I
shall take a little jaunt into the country behind my horse, and " "But don't go to Port Lafayette," pleaded
Millington. "Perhaps the automobile will be worse to-morrow. If she only
develops some of the noises I am familiar with I shall not be afraid of
her." One of the pleasures of being a suburbanite is that you can
have a horse, and one of the pleasures of having a horse is that you keep off
the main roads when you go driving, lest the automobiles get you and your horse
into an awful mess. In driving up cross roads and down back roads you often run
across things you would like to own things the automobilist never sees and
Isobel and I had heard of a genuine Windsor chair of ancient lineage. I imagine
the chair may have been almost as old as our horse. When Mr. Millington told me
we could not go to Port Lafayette in his automobile that day, I hurried home
and had Mr. Prawley harness Bob, and it was that day, when we were hunting the
Windsor chair, that we ran across Chesterfield Whiting. Since Isobel had be gun
to like suburban life, she liked it as only a convert could, and the moment she
saw Chesterfield Whiting she declared we must, by all means, keep a pig, and
that Chester field Whiting was the pig we must keep. Personally I was not much in favour of keeping a pig. I like
things that pay dividends more frequently. I would not give much for a
vegetable garden that had to be planted in the spring, worked all summer,
tended all fall, and that only yielded its product in the winter. I prefer a
garden that gives a vegetable once in awhile. Mine does that it gives a
vegetable every once in awhile. But a pig is a slow dividend payer. I had noticed that Mr. Rolfs and Mr. Millington had never
urged me to get a pig. Whenever I mentioned pig they mentioned various deadly
and popular pig diseases. They had urged me to garden, and to keep chickens,
and a horse, and a cow, and even an automobile Millington urged me to keep his
but never a pig! I would not hint that Rolfs and Millington were selfish, or
that they hoped to receive, now and then, milk from my cow, eggs from my
chickens, or radishes from my garden, but a neighbour may profit in that way.
On the other hand, the neighbour never profits from the suburban pig. I believe
now, however, that Rolfs and Millington wished me to have things that would pay
as they went. But the moment Isobel saw the pig she said we must have him,
because he was so cute. I had never thought of buying a pig because it was cute
any more than I would have thought of buying a spring bonnet because it would
fatten well for winter killing, but I yielded to Isobel. Isobel said the idea of a pig being a nuisance was all
nonsense, for she had been reading a magazine that was largely devoted to pigs
and similar objects loved by country gentle men, and that modern science proved
beyond a doubt that the cleaner the pig the happier it was. She said a pig
could not be too clean, and that if a pig was kept perfectly tidy no one could
object to it. "John," she said, "there is no reason in the
world why a pig should not be as clean as a new pin. The magazine says that if
a pig is usually of a coarse, disgruntled nature, it is only because it is kept
in coarse, brutalizing surroundings, and treated like a pig. If a pig is put
amidst sweetness and light, the pig's nature will be sweet and light, and the
pig will be sweet and light." I suggested gently that a pig, all things considered, was
usually counted a failure if it was a light pig, and that experts had decided
in favour of the pig that became heavy and soggy. "What I mean," said Isobel, "is light in
spirit, not light in weight." We were looking over the fence of a farm when we held this
little conversation, and Chesterfield Whiting was sporting on the clean, green
clover, amidst his brothers, quite unconscious that he was so soon to be
separated from them and lose their companionship. We had been attracted to him
by a very hand-made sign that announced "Pigs for Sale." Chesterfield
was an extremely clean pig, and I must admit that I was rather taken by his
looks myself, and when we drove around to the farm house I was surprised to learn
how inexpensive a pig of tender years is, and I bought the pig. It is hard for
me to deny Isobel these little pleasures. On our way home Isobel and I talked of the future of
Chesterfield, and we resolved that his life should be one grand, sweet song, as
the poet says, and we had hardly started homeward than it appeared as if
Chesterfield meant to attend to the song feature of his life himself. I never
imagined a pig would feel his separation from his native place so keenly. He
began to mourn in a keen treble key the moment the farmer grabbed him, uttering
long, sharp wails of sorrow, and he kept it up. Automobiles with siren horns
stopped in the road as we passed, and the chauffeurs took off their goggles and
stared at us. It was very hard for Isobel to sit up straight in the carriage
and look dignified and cool with Chesterfield wailing out his little soul
sorrows under the seat. As we neared the outskirts of Westcote, I began to keep an
eye out for pig houses. It seemed to me that in these days of uplift the pig
keepers of a suburb such as ours, peopled by intelligent men and women, would
have the most modern improvements in pig dwellings, and I desired to make a few
mental notes of them as I passed by. If I saw a very modern pig palace I meant
to get out of the carriage and examine minutely the conveniences installed for
the pig's com fort, so that I might reproduce them. Isobel had mentioned casually that a pig dwelling with tile
floors and walls and a shower bath would be quite sanitary, provided the tiles
of the wall met the tiles of the floor in a concave curve, leaving no sharp
angles; but as we journeyed into the village we saw no pig houses of this kind.
In fact we saw no pig houses of any kind. At first this only annoyed me, then
it surprised me, and by the time we were well into the village it worried me. "Isobel," I said, "I don't like this absence
of pigs in this village. I am afraid there is something wrong here. I don't know
what to make of it. It may be that hog-cholera is epidemic here the year round,
just as San Jose scale kills all the apple trees. Have you seen a single
pig?" "Not one," she admitted. "It looks as if
there was a law against pigs." I stopped Bob, and looked at Isobel in amazement. "Isobel!" I exclaimed. "You must be right!
There must be a law against pigs! I do wish Chesterfield would stop
yelling!" "John," said Isobel, "now that I come to
think of it I do not believe I ever saw a pig in all Westcote. I wonder if we
couldn't gag Chesterfield some way? If he howls like that every one will know
we have a pig." I gagged the pig. I took Isobel's pink veil and wrapped it
firmly around Chesterfield's nose, and brought the ends around his neck and
tied them. Then I stuck his head into the sleeve of my rain coat and wrapped
him in the coat, and tied it all in the linen dust robe. He was well gagged. "Isobel," I said, as I took up the reins again,
"this is a serious matter. We will have to get rid of this pig, and we
will have to do it quickly. I do not want to get into difficulties with the
City of New York. Keeping a pig in the suburbs is evidently a crime, and it is
a difficult crime to conceal. If I com mitted a murder and used ordinary
precautions there might be no danger of detection, but a pig speaks for
itself." "Chesterfield does," said Isobel. " Do you
suppose they will put you in jail?" "Me in jail?" I ejaculated. "He is your pig,
Isobel." "John," she said generously, "I give
Chesterfield to you." "Isobel," I said, "I cannot accept the
sacrifice. He is your pig." "Well," she said, "we will go to prison
together." |