<h3><SPAN name="chap18"></SPAN>Chapter XVIII</h3>
<p>Those were trying days for Michael.</p>
<p>The weather had turned suddenly very warm. The office was sometimes stifling.
The daily routine got upon his nerves, he who had never before known that he
had nerves. There was always the aching thought that Starr was gone from
him—forever—and now he had by his own word cut loose from her
father—forever! His literal heart saw no hope in the future.</p>
<p>About that time, too, another sorrow fell upon him. He was glancing over the
paper one morning on his way to the office, and his eye fell on the following
item:</p>
<p class="center">
LONE TRAIN BANDIT HURT IN FIGHT AFTER GETTING LOOT</p>
<p class="center">
Captured by Conductor After He Had Rifled Mail Bags on Union Pacific Express</p>
<p class="letter">
Topeka, Kan., July—. A daring bandit was captured last night a he had
robbed the mail car on Union Pacific train No. —— which left Kansas
City for Denver at 10 o’clock.<br/>
The train known as the Denver Express, carrying heavy mail, was just
leaving Kansas City, when a man ran across the depot platform and leaped into
the mail car through the open door. The clerk in charge faced the man, who
aimed a revolver at him. He was commanded to bind and gag his five associates,
and obeyed. The robber then went through all the registered pouches, stuffing
the packages into his pockets. Then he commanded the clerk to untie his
comrades.<br/>
At Bonner Springs where the train made a brief stop the bandit ordered the
men to continue their work, so as not to attract the attention of persons at
the station. When Lawrence was reached the robber dropped from the car and ran
toward the rear of the train. The conductor summoned two Lawrence policemen and
all three followed. After a quick race, and a struggle during which the
bandit’s arm was broken, he was captured. It appears that the prisoner is
an old offender, for whom the police of New York have been searching in vain
for the past ten months. He is known in the lower districts of New York City as
“Fighting Buck,” and has a list of offenses against him too
numerous to mention.</p>
<p>Michael did not know why his eye had been attracted to the item nor why he had
read the article through to the finish. It was not the kind of thing he cared
to read; yet of late all crime and criminals had held a sort of sorrowful
fascination for him. “It is what I might have done if I had stayed in the
alley,” he would say to himself when he heard of some terrible crime that
had been committed.</p>
<p>But when he reached the end of the article and saw Buck’s name his heart
seemed to stand still.</p>
<p>Buck! The one of all his old comrades whom he had loved the most, who had loved
him, and sacrificed for him; to whom he had written and sent money; whose brain
was brighter and whose heart bigger than any of the others; for whom he had
searched in vain, and found only to lose before he had seen him; whom he had
hoped yet to find and to save. Buck had done this, and was caught in his guilt.
And a government offense, too, robbing the mail bags! It would mean long, hard
service. It would mean many years before Michael could help him to the right
kind of life, even if ever.</p>
<p>He asked permission to leave the office that afternoon, and took the train down
to the farm where Sam had been staying for some weeks. He read the article to
him, hoping against hope that Sam would say there was some mistake; would know
somehow that Buck was safe. But Sam listened with lowering countenance, and
when the reading was finished he swore a great oath, such as he had not uttered
before in Michael’s presence, and Michael knew that the story must be
true.</p>
<p>Nothing could be done now. The law must have its course, but Michael’s
heart was heavy with the weight of what might have been if he could but have
found Buck sooner. The next day he secured permission to begin his vacation at
once, and in spite of great need of his presence at Old Orchard he took the
train for Kansas. He felt that he must see Buck at once.</p>
<p>All during that long dismal ride Michael’s heart was beating over and
over with the story of his own life. “I might have done this thing. I
would have dared and thought it brave if I had not been taught better. I might
be even now in jail with a broken arm and a useless life: the story of my crime
might be bandied through the country in the newspapers if it had not been for
Mr. Endicott—and little Starr! And yet I have hurt his feelings and
alienated his great kindness by refusing his request. Was there no other way?
Was there no other way?” And always his conscience answered, “There
was no other way!”</p>
<p>Michael, armed with a letter from the senior Holt to a powerful member of
western municipal affairs, found entrance to Buck in his miserable confinement
quite possible. He dawned upon his one-time friend, out of the darkness of the
cell, as a veritable angel of light. Indeed, Buck, waking from a feverish sleep
on his hard little cot, moaning and cursing with the pain his arm was giving
him, started up and looked at him with awe and horror! The light from the
corridor caught the gold in Michael’s hair and made his halo perfect; and
Buck thought for the moment that some new terror had befallen him, and he was
in the hands of the angel of death sent to summon him to a final judgment for
all his misdeeds.</p>
<p>But Michael met his old friend with tenderness, and a few phrases that had been
wont to express their childish loyalty; and Buck, weakened by the fever and the
pain, and more than all by his own defeat and capture, broke down and wept, and
Michael wept with him.</p>
<p>“It might have been me instead of you, Buck. If I had stayed behind,
I’d have done all those things. I see it clearly. I might have been lying
here and you out and free. Buck, if it could give you my chance in life, and
help you see it all as I do I’d gladly lie here and take your
place.”</p>
<p>“Mikky! Mikky!” cried Buck. “It’s me own Mikky! You was
allus willin’ to take de rubs! But, Mikky, ef you’d hed de
trainin’ you’d hev made de fine robber! You’d hev been a
peach an’ no mistake!”</p>
<p>Michael had found a soft spot in the warden’s heart and succeeded in
doing a number of little things for Buck’s comfort. He hunted up the
chaplain and secured a promise from him to teach Buck to read and write, and
also to read to him all letters that Buck received, until such a time as he
should be able to read them for himself. He sent a pot of roses with buds and
full bloom to perfume the dark cell, and he promised to write often; while Buck
on his part could only say over and over; “Oh, Mikky! Mikky! Ef we wos
oney kids agin! Oh, Mikky, I’ll git out o’ here yit an’ find
ye. Ye’ll not be ashamed o’ me. Ef I oney hadn’t a bungled de
job. It were a bum job! Mikky! A bum job!”</p>
<p>Michael saw that there was little use in talking to Buck about his sin. Buck
had nothing whatever to build upon in the line of morals. To be loyal to his
friends, and to do his “work” so that he would not get caught were
absolutely the only articles in his creed. To get ahead of the rich, to take
from them that which was theirs if he could, regardless of life or
consequences, that was virtue; the rich were enemies, and his daring code of
honor gave them the credit of equal courage with himself. They must outwit him
or lose. If they died it was “all in the day’s work” and
their loss. When his turn came he would take his medicine calmly. But the
trouble with Buck now was that he had “bungled the job.” It was a
disgrace on his profession. Things had been going against him lately, and he
was “down on his luck.”</p>
<p>Michael went back from the West feeling that the brief time allowed him with
Buck was all too short for what he wanted to do for him; yet he felt that it
had been worth the journey. Buck appreciated his sympathy, if he did not have
an adequate sense of his own sinfulness. Michael had talked and pitied and
tried to make Buck see, but Buck saw not, and Michael went home to hope and
write and try to educate Buck through sheer love. It was all he saw to do.</p>
<p>It was about this time that Michael began to receive money in small sums,
anonymously, through the mail. “For your work” the first was
labelled and the remittances that followed had no inscriptions. They were not
always addressed in the same hand, and never did he know the writing. Sometimes
there would be a ten-dollar bill, sometimes a twenty, and often more, and they
came irregularly, enclosed in a thin, inner envelope of foreign looking paper.
Michael wondered sometimes if Starr could have sent them, but that was
impossible of course, for she knew nothing of his work, and they were always
postmarked New York. He discovered that such thin foreign-looking envelopes
could be had in New York, and after that he abandoned all idea of trying to
solve the mystery. It was probably some queer, kind person who did not wish to
be known. He accepted the help gladly and broadened his plans for the farm
accordingly.</p>
<p>Sam and his five friends had gone down early in the spring, bunking in the old
house, and enjoying the outing immensely. Under Sam’s captaincy, and the
tutelage of an old farmer whom Michael had found, who could not work much
himself but could direct, the work had gone forward; Michael himself coming
down Saturdays, and such of the tail ends of the afternoons as he could get. It
is true that many mistakes were made through ignorance, and more through
stupidity. It is true that no less than five times the whole gang went on a
strike until Michael should return to settle some dispute between the new
scientific farming that he had taught them, and some old superstition, or
clumsy practice of the farmer’s. But on the whole they did tolerably good
work.</p>
<p>The farm colony had been meantime increasing. Michael picked them up in the
alley; they came to him and asked to be taken on for a trial. They had heard of
the experiment through Sam, or one of the other boys who had come back to the
city for a day on some errand for the farm.</p>
<p>One glorious summer morning Michael took ten small eager newsboys down to pick
wild strawberries for the day, and they came back dirty, tired, strawberry
streaked, and happy, and loudly sang the praises of Old Orchard as though it
had been a Heaven. After that Michael had no trouble in transplanting any one
he wished to take with him.</p>
<p>He found a poor wretch who had lately moved with his family to one of the
crowded tenements in the alley. He was sodden in drink and going to pieces
fast. Michael sobered him down, found that he used to be a master carpenter,
and forthwith transplanted him to Old Orchard, family and all.</p>
<p>Under the hand of the skilled carpenter there sprang up immediately a colony of
tents and later small one-roomed shacks or bungalows. Michael bought lumber and
found apprentices to help, and the carpenter of the colony repaired barns and
outhouses, fences, or built shacks, whenever the head of affairs saw fit to
need another.</p>
<p>The only person in the whole alley whom Michael had invited in vain to the farm
was old Sally. She had steadily refused to leave her gaily papered room, her
curtained window and her geranium. It was a symbol of “ould
Ireland” to her, and she felt afraid of this new place of
Michael’s. It seemed to her superstitious fancy like an immediate door to
a Heaven, from which she felt herself barred by her life. It assumed a kind of
terror to her thoughts. She was not ready to leave her little bit of life and
take chances even for Michael. And so old Sal sat on her doorstep and watched
the alley dwellers come and go, listening with interest to each new account of
the farm, but never willing to see for herself. Perhaps the secret of her
hesitation after all went deeper than superstition. She had received private
information that Old Orchard had no Rum Shop around the corner. Old Sally could
not run any risks, so she stayed at home.</p>
<p>But the carpenter’s wife was glad to cook for the men when the busy days
of planting and weeding and harvesting came, and the colony grew and grew. Two
or three other men came down with their families, and helped the carpenter to
build them little houses, with a bit of garden back, and a bed of flowers in
front. They could see the distant sea from their tiny porches, and the river
wound its salty silver way on the other hand. It was a great change from the
alley. Not all could stand it, but most of them bore the summer test well. It
would be when winter set its white distance upon them, chilled the flowers to
slumber, and stopped the labor that the testing time would come; and Michael
was thinking about that.</p>
<p>He began hunting out helpers for his purposes.</p>
<p>He found a man skilled in agricultural arts and secured his services to hold a
regular school of agriculture during the winter for the men. He found a poor
student at Princeton who could run up on the train daily and give simple
lessons in reading and arithmetic. He impressed it upon Sam and the other young
men that unless they could read for themselves enough to keep up with the new
discoveries in the science other farmers would get ahead of them and grow
bigger potatoes and sweeter ears of corn than they did. He kept up a continual
sunny stream of eager converse with them about what they were going to do, and
how the place was going to grow, until they felt as if they owned the earth and
meant to show the world how well they were running it. In short, he simply
poured his own spirit of enthusiasm into them, and made the whole hard summer
of unaccustomed labor one great game; and when the proceeds from their first
simple crops came in from the sale of such products as they did not need for
their own use in the colony, Michael carefully divided it among his various
workmen and at his wish they went in a body and each started a bank account at
the little National Bank of the town. It was a very little of course, absurdly
little, but it made the workers feel like millionaires, and word of the
successes went back to the city, and more and more the people were willing to
come down, until by fall there were thirty-eight men, women and children, all
told, living on the farm.</p>
<p>Of course that made little appreciable difference in the population of the
alley, for as soon as one family moved out another was ready to move in, and
there was plenty of room for Michael’s work to go on. Nevertheless, there
were thirty-eight souls on the way to a better knowledge of life, with clean
and wholesome surroundings and a chance to learn how to read and how to work.</p>
<p>The carpenter was set to get ready more tiny houses for the next summer’s
campaign, the tents were folded away, the spring wheat was all in; the fall
plowing and fertilizing completed and whatever else ought to be done to a farm
for its winter sleep; half a dozen cows were introduced into the settlement and
a roomy chicken house and run prepared. Sam set about studying incubators, and
teaching his helpers. Then when the cranberries were picked the colony settled
down to its study.</p>
<p>The Princeton student and the agricultural student grew deeply interested in
their motley school, and finally produced a young woman who came down every
afternoon for a consideration, and taught a kindergarten, to which many of the
prematurely grown-up mothers came also with great delight and profit, and
incidentally learned how to be better, cleaner, wiser mothers. The young woman
of her own accord added a cooking school for the women and girls.</p>
<p>Once a week Michael brought down some one from New York to amuse these poor
childish people. And so the winter passed.</p>
<p>Once a wealthy friend of Mr. Holt asked to be taken down to see the place, and
after going the rounds of the farm and making himself quite friendly roasting
chestnuts around the great open fire in the “big house,” as the
original cottage was called, returned to New York with many congratulations for
Michael. A few days afterward he mailed to Michael the deed of the adjoining
farm of one hundred acres, and Michael, radiant, wondering, began to know that
his dreams for his poor downtrodden people were coming true. There would be
room enough now for many a year to come for the people he needed to bring down.</p>
<p>Of course this had not all been done without discouragements. Some of the most
hopeful of the colonists had proved unmanageable, or unwilling to work; some
had run away, or smuggled in some whiskey. There had been two or three
incipient rows, and more than double that number of disappointing enterprises,
but yet, the work was going on.</p>
<p>And still, there came no word from Mr. Endicott.</p>
<p>Michael was holding well with his employers, and they were beginning to talk to
him of a partnership with them when he was done, for he had far outstripped
French in his studies, and seemed to master everything he touched with an
eagerness that showed great intellectual appetite.</p>
<p>He still kept up his work in the little white room in the alley, evenings,
though he divided his labors somewhat with Will French, Miss Semple and others
who had heard of the work and had gradually offered their services. It had
almost become a little settlement or mission in itself. The one room had become
two and a bath; then the whole first floor with a small gymnasium. French was
the enthusiastic leader in this, and Hester Semple had done many things for the
little children and women. The next set of colonists for Michael’s farm
were always being got ready and were spoken of as “eligibles” by
the workers.</p>
<p>Hester Semple had proved to be a most valuable assistant, ever ready with
suggestions, tireless and as enthusiastic as Michael himself. Night after night
the three toiled, and came home happily together. The association with the two
was very sweet to Michael, whose heart was famished for friends and relations
who “belonged,” But it never occurred to Michael to look on Miss
Semple in any other light than friend and fellow worker.</p>
<p>Will French and Michael were coming home from the office one afternoon
together, and talking eagerly of the progress at the farm.</p>
<p>“When you get married, Endicott,” said Will, “you must build
a handsome bungalow or something for your summer home, down there on that knoll
just overlooking the river where you can see the sea in the distance.”</p>
<p>Michael grew sober at once.</p>
<p>“I don’t expect ever to be married, Will,” he said after a
pause, with one of his far-away looks, and his chin up, showing that what he
had said was an indisputable fact.</p>
<p>“The Dickens!” said Will stopping in his walk and holding up
Michael. “She hasn’t refused you, has she?”</p>
<p>“Refused me? Who? What do you mean?” asked Michael looking puzzled.</p>
<p>“Why, Hester—Miss Semple. She hasn’t turned you down, old
chap?”</p>
<p>“Miss Semple! Why, Will, you never thought—you don’t think
she ever thought—?”</p>
<p>“Well, I didn’t know,” said Will embarrassedly, “it
looked pretty much like it sometimes. There didn’t seem much show for me.
I’ve thought lately you had it all settled and were engaged sure.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Will,” said Michael in that tone that showed his soul was
moved to its depth.</p>
<p>“I say, old chap!” said Will, “I’m fiercely sorry
I’ve butted in to your affairs. I never dreamed you’d feel like
this. But seeing I have, would you mind telling me if you’ll give me a
good send off with Hester? Sort of ‘bless-you-my-son,’ you know;
and tell me you don’t mind if I go ahead and try my luck.”</p>
<p>“With all my heart, Will. I never thought of it, but I believe it would
be great for you both. You seem sort of made for each other.”</p>
<p>“It’s awfully good of you to say so,” said Will, “but
I’m afraid Hester doesn’t think so. She’s all taken up with
you.”</p>
<p>“Not at all!” said Michael eagerly. “Not in the least.
I’ve never noticed it. I’m sure she likes you best.”</p>
<p>And it was so from that night that Michael almost always had some excuse for
staying later at the room, or for going somewhere else for a little while so
that he would have to leave them half way home; and Hester and Will from that
time forth walked together more and more. Thus Michael took his lonely way, cut
off from even this friendly group.</p>
<p>And the summer and the winter made the second year of the colony at Old
Orchard.</p>
<p>Then, the following spring Starr Endicott and her mother came home and things
began to happen.</p>
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