<h2><SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>IX<br/> THE CALL OF THE TAME</h2>
<p>When the inauguration was accomplished—the proceedings were made smooth
by the presence of the Rough Riders—it is well known that a herd of those
competent and loyal ex-warriors paid a visit to the big city. The newspaper
reporters dug out of their trunks the old broad-brimmed hats and leather belts
that they wear to North Beach fish fries, and mixed with the visitors. No
damage was done beyond the employment of the wonderful plural
“tenderfeet” in each of the scribe’s stories. The Westerners
mildly contemplated the skyscrapers as high as the third story, yawned at
Broadway, hunched down in the big chairs in hotel corridors, and altogether
looked as bored and dejected as a member of Ye Ancient and Honorable Artillery
separated during a sham battle from his valet.</p>
<p>Out of this sightseeing delegations of good King Teddy’s Gentlemen of the
Royal Bear-hounds dropped one Greenbrier Nye, of Pin Feather, Ariz.</p>
<p>The daily cyclone of Sixth Avenue’s rush hour swept him away from the
company of his pardners true. The dust from a thousand rustling skirts filled
his eyes. The mighty roar of trains rushing across the sky deafened him. The
lightning-flash of twice ten hundred beaming eyes confused his vision.</p>
<p>The storm was so sudden and tremendous that Greenbrier’s first impulse
was to lie down and grab a root. And then he remembered that the disturbance
was human, and not elemental; and he backed out of it with a grin into a
doorway.</p>
<p>The reporters had written that but for the wide-brimmed hats the West was not
visible upon these gauchos of the North. Heaven sharpen their eyes! The suit of
black diagonal, wrinkled in impossible places; the bright blue four-in-hand,
factory tied; the low, turned-down collar, pattern of the days of Seymour and
Blair, white glazed as the letters on the window of the
open-day-and-night-except-Sunday restaurants; the out-curve at the knees from
the saddle grip; the peculiar spread of the half-closed right thumb and fingers
from the stiff hold upon the circling lasso; the deeply absorbed weather tan
that the hottest sun of Cape May can never equal; the seldom-winking blue eyes
that unconsciously divided the rushing crowds into fours, as though they were
being counted out of a corral; the segregated loneliness and solemnity of
expression, as of an Emperor or of one whose horizons have not intruded upon
him nearer than a day’s ride—these brands of the West were set upon
Greenbrier Nye. Oh, yes; he wore a broad-brimmed hat, gentle reader—just
like those the Madison Square Post Office mail carriers wear when they go up to
Bronx Park on Sunday afternoons.</p>
<p>Suddenly Greenbrier Nye jumped into the drifting herd of metropolitan cattle,
seized upon a man, dragged him out of the stream and gave him a buffet upon his
collar-bone that sent him reeling against a wall.</p>
<p>The victim recovered his hat, with the angry look of a New Yorker who has
suffered an outrage and intends to write to the Trib. about it. But he looked
at his assailant, and knew that the blow was in consideration of love and
affection after the manner of the West, which greets its friends with contumely
and uproar and pounding fists, and receives its enemies in decorum and order,
such as the judicious placing of the welcoming bullet demands.</p>
<p>“God in the mountains!” cried Greenbrier, holding fast to the
foreleg of his cull. “Can this be Longhorn Merritt?”</p>
<p>The other man was—oh, look on Broadway any day for the
pattern—business man—latest rolled-brim derby—good barber,
business, digestion and tailor.</p>
<p>“Greenbrier Nye!” he exclaimed, grasping the hand that had smitten
him. “My dear fellow! So glad to see you! How did you come to—oh,
to be sure—the inaugural ceremonies—I remember you joined the Rough
Riders. You must come and have luncheon with me, of course.”</p>
<p>Greenbrier pinned him sadly but firmly to the wall with a hand the size, shape
and color of a McClellan saddle.</p>
<p>“Longy,” he said, in a melancholy voice that disturbed traffic,
“what have they been doing to you? You act just like a citizen. They done
made you into an inmate of the city directory. You never made no such Johnny
Branch execration of yourself as that out on the Gila. ‘Come and have
lunching with me!’ You never defined grub by any such terms of reproach
in them days.”</p>
<p>“I’ve been living in New York seven years,” said Merritt.
“It’s been eight since we punched cows together in Old Man
Garcia’s outfit. Well, let’s go to a café, anyhow. It sounds
good to hear it called ‘grub?’ again.”</p>
<p>They picked their way through the crowd to a hotel, and drifted, as by a
natural law, to the bar.</p>
<p>“Speak up,” invited Greenbrier.</p>
<p>“A dry Martini,” said Merritt.</p>
<p>“Oh, Lord!” cried Greenbrier; “and yet me and you once saw
the same pink Gila monsters crawling up the walls of the same hotel in
Cañon Diablo! A dry—but let that pass. Whiskey straight—and
they’re on you.”</p>
<p>Merritt smiled, and paid.</p>
<p>They lunched in a small extension of the dining room that connected with the
café. Merritt dexterously diverted his friend’s choice, that
hovered over ham and eggs, to a purée of celery, a salmon cutlet, a
partridge pie and a desirable salad.</p>
<p>“On the day,” said Greenbrier, grieved and thunderous, “when
I can’t hold but one drink before eating when I meet a friend I
ain’t seen in eight years at a 2 by 4 table in a thirty-cent town at 1
o’clock on the third day of the week, I want nine broncos to kick me
forty times over a 640-acre section of land. Get them statistics?”</p>
<p>“Right, old man,” laughed Merritt. “Waiter, bring an absinthe
frappé and—what’s yours, Greenbrier?”</p>
<p>“Whiskey straight,” mourned Nye. “Out of the neck of a bottle
you used to take it, Longy—straight out of the neck of a bottle on a
galloping pony—Arizona redeye, not this ab—oh, what’s the
use? They’re on you.”</p>
<p>Merritt slipped the wine card under his glass.</p>
<p>“All right. I suppose you think I’m spoiled by the city. I’m
as good a Westerner as you are, Greenbrier; but, somehow, I can’t make up
my mind to go back out there. New York is comfortable—comfortable. I make
a good living, and I live it. No more wet blankets and riding herd in
snowstorms, and bacon and cold coffee, and blowouts once in six months for me.
I reckon I’ll hang out here in the future. We’ll take in the
theatre to-night, Greenbrier, and after that we’ll dine at—”</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you what you are, Merritt,” said Greenbrier,
laying one elbow in his salad and the other in his butter. “You are a
concentrated, effete, unconditional, short-sleeved, gotch-eared Miss Sally
Walker. God made you perpendicular and suitable to ride straddle and use cuss
words in the original. Wherefore you have suffered his handiwork to elapse by
removing yourself to New York and putting on little shoes tied with strings,
and making faces when you talk. I’ve seen you rope and tie a steer in
42½. If you was to see one now you’d write to the Police
Commissioner about it. And these flapdoodle drinks that you inoculate your
system with—these little essences of cowslip with acorns in ’em,
and paregoric flip—they ain’t anyways in assent with the cordiality
of manhood. I hate to see you this way.”</p>
<p>“Well, Mr. Greenbrier,” said Merritt, with apology in his tone,
“in a way you are right. Sometimes I do feel like I was being raised on
the bottle. But, I tell you, New York is comfortable—comfortable.
There’s something about it—the sights and the crowds, and the way
it changes every day, and the very air of it that seems to tie a one-mile-long
stake rope around a man’s neck, with the other end fastened somewhere
about Thirty-fourth Street. I don’t know what it is.”</p>
<p>“God knows,” said Greenbrier sadly, “and I know. The East has
gobbled you up. You was venison, and now you’re veal. You put me in mind
of a japonica in a window. You’ve been signed, sealed and diskivered.
Requiescat in hoc signo. You make me thirsty.”</p>
<p>“A green chartreuse here,” said Merritt to the waiter.</p>
<p>“Whiskey straight,” sighed Greenbrier, “and they’re on
you, you renegade of the round-ups.”</p>
<p>“Guilty, with an application for mercy,” said Merritt. “You
don’t know how it is, Greenbrier. It’s so comfortable here
that—”</p>
<p>“Please loan me your smelling salts,” pleaded Greenbrier. “If
I hadn’t seen you once bluff three bluffers from Mazatzal City with an
empty gun in Phoenix—”</p>
<p>Greenbrier’s voice died away in pure grief.</p>
<p>“Cigars!” he called harshly to the waiter, to hide his emotion.</p>
<p>“A pack of Turkish cigarettes for mine,” said Merritt.</p>
<p>“They’re on you,” chanted Greenbrier, struggling to conceal
his contempt.</p>
<p>At seven they dined in the Where-to-Dine-Well column.</p>
<p>That evening a galaxy had assembled there. Bright shone the lights o’er
fair women and br—let it go, anyhow—brave men. The orchestra played
charmingly. Hardly had a tip from a diner been placed in its hands by a waiter
when it would burst forth into soniferousness. The more beer you contributed to
it the more Meyerbeer it gave you. Which is reciprocity.</p>
<p>Merritt put forth exertions on the dinner. Greenbrier was his old friend, and
he liked him. He persuaded him to drink a cocktail.</p>
<p>“I take the horehound tea,” said Greenbrier, “for old
times’ sake. But I’d prefer whiskey straight. They’re on
you.”</p>
<p>“Right!” said Merritt. “Now, run your eye down that bill of
fare and see if it seems to hitch on any of these items.”</p>
<p>“Lay me on my lava bed!” said Greenbrier, with bulging eyes.
“All these specimens of nutriment in the grub wagon! What’s this?
Horse with the heaves? I pass. But look along! Here’s truck for twenty
round-ups all spelled out in different directions. Wait till I see.”</p>
<p>The viands ordered, Merritt turned to the wine list.</p>
<p>“This Medoc isn’t bad,” he suggested.</p>
<p>“You’re the doc,” said Greenbrier. “I’d rather
have whiskey straight. It’s on you.”</p>
<p>Greenbrier looked around the room. The waiter brought things and took dishes
away. He was observing. He saw a New York restaurant crowd enjoying itself.</p>
<p>“How was the range when you left the Gila?” asked Merritt.</p>
<p>“Fine,” said Greenbrier. “You see that lady in the red
speckled silk at that table. Well, she could warm over her beans at my
campfire. Yes, the range was good. She looks as nice as a white mustang I see
once on Black River.”</p>
<p>When the coffee came, Greenbrier put one foot on the seat of the chair next to
him.</p>
<p>“You said it was a comfortable town, Longy,” he said, meditatively.
“Yes, it’s a comfortable town. It’s different from the plains
in a blue norther. What did you call that mess in the crock with the handle,
Longy? Oh, yes, squabs in a cash roll. They’re worth the roll. That white
mustang had just such a way of turning his head and shaking his mane—look
at her, Longy. If I thought I could sell out my ranch at a fair price, I
believe I’d—</p>
<p>“Gyar—song!” he suddenly cried, in a voice that paralyzed
every knife and fork in the restaurant.</p>
<p>The waiter dived toward the table.</p>
<p>“Two more of them cocktail drinks,” ordered Greenbrier.</p>
<p>Merritt looked at him and smiled significantly.</p>
<p>“They’re on me,” said Greenbrier, blowing a puff of smoke to
the ceiling.</p>
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