<h2><SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN>VI<br/> THE PHONOGRAPH AND THE GRAFT</h2>
<p>“What was this graft?” asked Johnny, with the impatience of the
great public to whom tales are told.</p>
<p>“’Tis contrary to art and philosophy to give you the
information,” said Keogh, calmly. “The art of narrative consists in
concealing from your audience everything it wants to know until after you
expose your favourite opinions on topics foreign to the subject. A good story
is like a bitter pill with the sugar coating inside of it. I will begin, if you
please, with a horoscope located in the Cherokee Nation; and end with a moral
tune on the phonograph.</p>
<p>“Me and Henry Horsecollar brought the first phonograph to this country.
Henry was a quarter-breed, quarter-back Cherokee, educated East in the idioms
of football, and West in contraband whisky, and a gentleman, the same as you
and me. He was easy and romping in his ways; a man about six foot, with a kind
of rubber-tire movement. Yes, he was a little man about five foot five, or five
foot eleven. He was what you would call a medium tall man of average smallness.
Henry had quit college once, and the Muscogee jail three times—the
last-named institution on account of introducing and selling whisky in the
territories. Henry Horsecollar never let any cigar stores come up and stand
behind him. He didn’t belong to that tribe of Indians.</p>
<p>“Henry and me met at Texarkana, and figured out this phonograph scheme.
He had $360 which came to him out of a land allotment in the reservation. I had
run down from Little Rock on account of a distressful scene I had witnessed on
the street there. A man stood on a box and passed around some gold watches,
screw case, stem-winders, Elgin movement, very elegant. Twenty bucks they cost
you over the counter. At three dollars the crowd fought for the tickers. The
man happened to find a valise full of them handy, and he passed them out like
putting hot biscuits on a plate. The backs were hard to unscrew, but the crowd
put its ear to the case, and they ticked mollifying and agreeable. Three of
these watches were genuine tickers; the rest were only kickers. Hey? Why, empty
cases with one of them horny black bugs that fly around electric lights in
’em. Them bugs kick off minutes and seconds industrious and beautiful.
So, this man I was speaking of cleaned up $288; and then he went away, because
he knew that when it came time to wind watches in Little Rock an entomologist
would be needed, and he wasn’t one.</p>
<p>“So, as I say, Henry had $360, and I had $288. The idea of introducing
the phonograph to South America was Henry’s; but I took to it freely,
being fond of machinery of all kinds.</p>
<p>“‘The Latin races,’ says Henry, explaining easy in the idioms
he learned at college, ‘are peculiarly adapted to be victims of the
phonograph. They have the artistic temperament. They yearn for music and color
and gaiety. They give wampum to the hand-organ man and the four-legged chicken
in the tent when they’re months behind with the grocery and the
bread-fruit tree.’</p>
<p>“‘Then,’ says I, ‘we’ll export canned music to
the Latins; but I’m mindful of Mr. Julius Cæsar’s account of
’em where he says: “<i>Omnia Gallia in tres partes divisa
est</i>;” which is the same as to say, “We will need all of our
gall in devising means to tree them parties.”’</p>
<p>“I hated to make a show of education; but I was disinclined to be
overdone in syntax by a mere Indian, a member of a race to which we owe nothing
except the land on which the United States is situated.</p>
<p>“We bought a fine phonograph in Texarkana—one of the best
make—and half a trunkful of records. We packed up, and took the T. and P.
for New Orleans. From that celebrated centre of molasses and disfranchised coon
songs we took a steamer for South America.</p>
<p>“We landed at Solitas, forty miles up the coast from here. ’Twas a
palatable enough place to look at. The houses were clean and white; and to look
at ’em stuck around among the scenery they reminded you of hard-boiled
eggs served with lettuce. There was a block of skyscraper mountains in the
suburbs; and they kept pretty quiet, like they had crept up there and were
watching the town. And the sea was remarking ‘Sh-sh-sh’ on the
beach; and now and then a ripe cocoanut would drop kerblip in the sand; and
that was all there was doing. Yes, I judge that town was considerably on the
quiet. I judge that after Gabriel quits blowing his horn, and the car starts,
with Philadelphia swinging to the last strap, and Pine Gully, Arkansas, hanging
onto the rear step, this town of Solitas will wake up and ask if anybody spoke.</p>
<p>“The captain went ashore with us, and offered to conduct what he seemed
to like to call the obsequies. He introduced Henry and me to the United States
Consul, and a roan man, the head of the Department of Mercenary and Licentious
Dispositions, the way it read upon his sign.</p>
<p>“‘I touch here again a week from to-day,’ says the captain.</p>
<p>“‘By that time,’ we told him, ‘we’ll be amassing
wealth in the interior towns with our galvanized prima donna and correct
imitations of Sousa’s band excavating a march from a tin mine.’</p>
<p>“‘Ye’ll not,’ says the captain. ‘Ye’ll be
hypnotized. Any gentleman in the audience who kindly steps upon the stage and
looks this country in the eye will be converted to the hypothesis that
he’s but a fly in the Elgin creamery. Ye’ll be standing knee deep
in the surf waiting for me, and your machine for making Hamburger steak out of
the hitherto respected art of music will be playing “There’s no
place like home.”’</p>
<p>“Henry skinned a twenty off his roll, and received from the Bureau of
Mercenary Dispositions a paper bearing a red seal and a dialect story, and no
change.</p>
<p>“Then we got the consul full of red wine, and struck him for a horoscope.
He was a thin, youngish kind of man, I should say past fifty, sort of
French-Irish in his affections, and puffed up with disconsolation. Yes, he was
a flattened kind of a man, in whom drink lay stagnant, inclined to corpulence
and misery. Yes, I think he was a kind of Dutchman, being very sad and genial
in his ways.</p>
<p>“‘The marvelous invention,’ he says, ‘entitled the
phonograph, has never invaded these shores. The people have never heard it.
They would not believe it if they should. Simple-hearted children of nature,
progress has never condemned them to accept the work of a can-opener as an
overture, and rag-time might incite them to a bloody revolution. But you can
try the experiment. The best chance you have is that the populace may not wake
up when you play. There’s two ways,’ says the consul, ‘they
may take it. They may become inebriated with attention, like an Atlanta colonel
listening to “Marching Through Georgia,” or they will get excited
and transpose the key of the music with an axe and yourselves into a dungeon.
In the latter case,’ says the consul, ‘I’ll do my duty by
cabling to the State Department, and I’ll wrap the Stars and Stripes
around you when you come to be shot, and threaten them with the vengeance of
the greatest gold export and financial reserve nation on earth. The flag is
full of bullet holes now,’ says the consul, ‘made in that way.
Twice before,’ says the consul, ‘I have cabled our government for a
couple of gunboats to protect American citizens. The first time the Department
sent me a pair of gum boots. The other time was when a man named Pease was
going to be executed here. They referred that appeal to the Secretary of
Agriculture. Let us now disturb the señor behind the bar for a subsequence of
the red wine.’</p>
<p>“Thus soliloquized the consul of Solitas to me and Henry Horsecollar.</p>
<p>“But, notwithstanding, we hired a room that afternoon in the Calle de los
Angeles, the main street that runs along the shore, and put our trunks there.
’Twas a good-sized room, dark and cheerful, but small. ’Twas on a
various street, diversified by houses and conservatory plants. The peasantry of
the city passed to and fro on the fine pasturage between the sidewalks.
’Twas, for the world, like an opera chorus when the Royal Kafoozlum is
about to enter.</p>
<p>“We were rubbing the dust off the machine and getting fixed to start
business the next day, when a big, fine-looking white man in white clothes
stopped at the door and looked in. We extended the invitations, and he walked
inside and sized us up. He was chewing a long cigar, and wrinkling his eyes,
meditative, like a girl trying to decide which dress to wear to the party.</p>
<p>“‘New York?’ he says to me finally.</p>
<p>“‘Originally, and from time to time,’ I says.
‘Hasn’t it rubbed off yet?’</p>
<p>“‘It’s simple,’ says he, ‘when you know how.
It’s the fit of the vest. They don’t cut vests right anywhere else.
Coats, maybe, but not vests.’</p>
<p>“The white man looks at Henry Horsecollar and hesitates.</p>
<p>“‘Injun,’ says Henry; ‘tame Injun.’</p>
<p>“‘Mellinger,’ says the man—‘Homer P. Mellinger.
Boys, you’re confiscated. You’re babes in the wood without a
chaperon or referee, and it’s my duty to start you going. I’ll
knock out the props and launch you proper in the pellucid waters of this
tropical mud puddle. You’ll have to be christened, and if you’ll
come with me I’ll break a bottle of wine across your bows, according to
Hoyle.’</p>
<p>“Well, for two days Homer P. Mellinger did the honors. That man cut ice
in Anchuria. He was It. He was the Royal Kafoozlum. If me and Henry was babes
in the wood, he was a Robin Redbreast from the topmost bough. Him and me and
Henry Horsecollar locked arms, and toted that phonograph around, and had
wassail and diversions. Everywhere we found doors open we went inside and set
the machine going, and Mellinger called upon the people to observe the artful
music and his two lifelong friends, the Señors Americanos. The opera chorus was
agitated with esteem, and followed us from house to house. There was a
different kind of drink to be had with every tune. The natives had acquirements
of a pleasant thing in the way of a drink that gums itself to the recollection.
They chop off the end of a green cocoanut, and pour in on the juice of it
French brandy and other adjuvants. We had them and other things.</p>
<p>“Mine and Henry’s money was counterfeit. Everything was on Homer P.
Mellinger. That man could find rolls of bills concealed in places on his person
where Hermann the Wizard couldn’t have conjured out a rabbit or an
omelette. He could have founded universities, and made orchid collections, and
then had enough left to purchase the colored vote of his country. Henry and me
wondered what his graft was. One evening he told us.</p>
<p>“‘Boys,’ said he, ‘I’ve deceived you. You think
I’m a painted butterfly; but in fact I’m the hardest worked man in
this country. Ten years ago I landed on its shores; and two years ago on the
point of its jaw. Yes, I guess I can get the decision over this ginger cake
commonwealth at the end of any round I choose. I’ll confide in you
because you are my countrymen and guests, even if you have assaulted my adopted
shores with the worst system of noises ever set to music.</p>
<p>“‘My job is private secretary to the president of this republic;
and my duties are running it. I’m not headlined in the bills, but
I’m the mustard in the salad dressing just the same. There isn’t a
law goes before Congress, there isn’t a concession granted, there
isn’t an import duty levied but what H. P. Mellinger he cooks and seasons
it. In the front office I fill the president’s inkstand and search
visiting statesmen for dirks and dynamite; but in the back room I dictate the
policy of the government. You’d never guess in the world how I got my
pull. It’s the only graft of its kind on earth. I’ll put you wise.
You remember the old top-liner in the copy book—“Honesty is the
Best Policy”? That’s it. I’m working honesty for a graft.
I’m the only honest man in the republic. The government knows it; the
people know it; the boodlers know it; the foreign investors know it. I make the
government keep its faith. If a man is promised a job he gets it. If outside
capital buys a concession it gets the goods. I run a monopoly of square dealing
here. There’s no competition. If Colonel Diogenes were to flash his
lantern in this precinct he’d have my address inside of two minutes.
There isn’t big money in it, but it’s a sure thing, and lets a man
sleep of nights.’</p>
<p>“Thus Homer P. Mellinger made oration to me and Henry Horsecollar. And,
later, he divested himself of this remark:</p>
<p>“‘Boys, I’m to hold a <i>soirée</i> this evening with a gang
of leading citizens, and I want your assistance. You bring the musical corn
sheller and give the affair the outside appearance of a function. There’s
important business on hand, but it mustn’t show. I can talk to you
people. I’ve been pained for years on account of not having anybody to
blow off and brag to. I get homesick sometimes, and I’d swap the entire
perquisites of office for just one hour to have a stein and a caviare sandwich
somewhere on Thirty-fourth Street, and stand and watch the street cars go by,
and smell the peanut roaster at old Giuseppe’s fruit stand.’</p>
<p>“‘Yes,’ said I, ‘there’s fine caviare at Billy
Renfrew’s café, corner of Thirty-fourth and—’</p>
<p>“‘God knows it,’ interrupts Mellinger, ‘and if
you’d told me you knew Billy Renfrew I’d have invented tons of ways
of making you happy. Billy was my side-kicker in New York. There is a man who
never knew what crooked was. Here I am working Honesty for a graft, but that
man loses money on it. Carrambos! I get sick at times of this country.
Everything’s rotten. From the executive down to the coffee pickers,
they’re plotting to down each other and skin their friends. If a mule
driver takes off his hat to an official, that man figures it out that
he’s a popular idol, and sets his pegs to stir up a revolution and upset
the administration. It’s one of my little chores as private secretary to
smell out these revolutions and affix the kibosh before they break out and
scratch the paint off the government property. That’s why I’m down
here now in this mildewed coast town. The governor of the district and his crew
are plotting to uprise. I’ve got every one of their names, and
they’re invited to listen to the phonograph to-night, compliments of H.
P. M. That’s the way I’ll get them in a bunch, and things are on
the programme to happen to them.’</p>
<p>“We three were sitting at table in the cantina of the Purified Saints.
Mellinger poured out wine, and was looking some worried; I was thinking.</p>
<p>“‘They’re a sharp crowd,’ he says, kind of fretful.
‘They’re capitalized by a foreign syndicate after rubber, and
they’re loaded to the muzzle for bribing. I’m sick,’ goes on
Mellinger, ‘of comic opera. I want to smell East River and wear
suspenders again. At times I feel like throwing up my job, but I’m
d——n fool enough to be sort of proud of it. “There’s
Mellinger,” they say here. “<i>Por Dios!</i> you can’t touch
him with a million.” I’d like to take that record back and show it
to Billy Renfrew some day; and that tightens my grip whenever I see a fat thing
that I could corral just by winking one eye—and losing my graft. By
——, they can’t monkey with me. They know it. What money I get
I make honest and spend it. Some day I’ll make a pile and go back and eat
caviare with Billy. To-night I’ll show you how to handle a bunch of
corruptionists. I’ll show them what Mellinger, private secretary, means
when you spell it with the cotton and tissue paper off.’</p>
<p>“Mellinger appears shaky, and breaks his glass against the neck of the
bottle.</p>
<p>“I says to myself, ‘White man, if I’m not mistaken
there’s been a bait laid out where the tail of your eye could see
it.’</p>
<p>“That night, according to arrangements, me and Henry took the phonograph
to a room in a ’dobe house in a dirty side street, where the grass was
knee high. ’Twas a long room, lit with smoky oil lamps. There was plenty
of chairs, and a table at the back end. We set the phonograph on the table.
Mellinger was there, walking up and down, disturbed in his predicaments. He
chewed cigars and spat ’em out, and he bit the thumb nail of his left
hand.</p>
<p>“By and by the invitations to the musicale came sliding in by pairs and
threes and spade flushes. Their colour was of a diversity, running from a
three-days’ smoked meerschaum to a patent-leather polish. They were as
polite as wax, being devastated with enjoyments to give Señor Mellinger the
good evenings. I understood their Spanish talk—I ran a pumping engine two
years in a Mexican silver mine, and had it pat—but I never let on.</p>
<p>“Maybe fifty of ’em had come, and was seated, when in slid the king
bee, the governor of the district. Mellinger met him at the door, and escorted
him to the grand stand. When I saw that Latin man I knew that Mellinger,
private secretary, had all the dances on his card taken. That was a big,
squashy man, the colour of a rubber overshoe, and he had an eye like a head
waiter’s.</p>
<p>“Mellinger explained, fluent, in the Castilian idioms, that his soul was
disconcerted with joy at introducing to his respected friends America’s
greatest invention, the wonder of the age. Henry got the cue and run on an
elegant brass-band record and the festivities became initiated. The governor
man had a bit of English under his hat, and when the music was choked off he
says:</p>
<p>“‘Ver-r-ree fine. <i>Gr-r-r-r-racias</i>, the American gentleemen,
the so esplendeed moosic as to playee.’</p>
<p>“The table was a long one, and Henry and me sat at the end of it next the
wall. The governor sat at the other end. Homer P. Mellinger stood at the side
of it. I was just wondering how Mellinger was going to handle his crowd, when
the home talent suddenly opened the services.</p>
<p>“That governor man was suitable for uprisings and policies. I judge he
was a ready kind of man, who took his own time. Yes, he was full of attention
and immediateness. He leaned his hands on the table and imposed his face toward
the secretary man.</p>
<p>“‘Do the American señors understand Spanish?’ he asks in his
native accents.</p>
<p>“‘They do not,’ says Mellinger.</p>
<p>“‘Then listen,’ goes on the Latin man, prompt. ‘The
musics are of sufficient prettiness, but not of necessity. Let us speak of
business. I well know why we are here, since I observe my compatriots. You had
a whisper yesterday, Señor Mellinger, of our proposals. To-night we will speak
out. We know that you stand in the president’s favour, and we know your
influence. The government will be changed. We know the worth of your services.
We esteem your friendship and aid so much that’—Mellinger raises
his hand, but the governor man bottles him up. ‘Do not speak until I have
done.’</p>
<p>“The governor man then draws a package wrapped in paper from his pocket,
and lays it on the table by Mellinger’s hand.</p>
<p>“‘In that you will find fifty thousand dollars in money of your
country. You can do nothing against us, but you can be worth that for us. Go
back to the capital and obey our instructions. Take that money now. We trust
you. You will find with it a paper giving in detail the work you will be
expected to do for us. Do not have the unwiseness to refuse.’</p>
<p>“The governor man paused, with his eyes fixed on Mellinger, full of
expressions and observances. I looked at Mellinger, and was glad Billy Renfrew
couldn’t see him then. The sweat was popping out on his forehead, and he
stood dumb, tapping the little package with the ends of his fingers. The
colorado-maduro gang was after his graft. He had only to change his politics,
and stuff five fingers in his inside pocket.</p>
<p>“Henry whispers to me and wants the pause in the programme interpreted. I
whisper back: ‘H. P. is up against a bribe, senator’s size, and the
coons have got him going.’ I saw Mellinger’s hand moving closer to
the package. ‘He’s weakening,’ I whispered to Henry.
‘We’ll remind him,’ says Henry, ‘of the peanut-roaster
on Thirty-fourth Street, New York.’</p>
<p>“Henry stooped down and got a record from the basketful we’d
brought, slid it in the phonograph, and started her off. It was a cornet solo,
very neat and beautiful, and the name of it was ‘Home, Sweet Home.’
Not one of them fifty odd men in the room moved while it was playing, and the
governor man kept his eyes steady on Mellinger. I saw Mellinger’s head go
up little by little, and his hand came creeping away from the package. Not
until the last note sounded did anybody stir. And then Homer P. Mellinger takes
up the bundle of boodle and slams it in the governor man’s face.</p>
<p>“‘That’s my answer,’ says Mellinger, private secretary,
‘and there’ll be another in the morning. I have proofs of
conspiracy against every man of you. The show is over, gentlemen.’</p>
<p>“‘There’s one more act,’ puts in the governor man.
‘You are a servant, I believe, employed by the president to copy letters
and answer raps at the door. I am governor here. <i>Señores</i>, I call upon
you in the name of the cause to seize this man.’</p>
<p>“That brindled gang of conspirators shoved back their chairs and advanced
in force. I could see where Mellinger had made a mistake in massing his enemy
so as to make a grand-stand play. I think he made another one, too; but we can
pass that, Mellinger’s idea of a graft and mine being different,
according to estimations and points of view.</p>
<p>“There was only one window and door in that room, and they were in the
front end. Here was fifty odd Latin men coming in a bunch to obstruct the
legislation of Mellinger. You may say there were three of us, for me and Henry,
simultaneous, declared New York City and the Cherokee Nation in sympathy with
the weaker party.</p>
<p>“Then it was that Henry Horsecollar rose to a point of disorder and
intervened, showing, admirable, the advantages of education as applied to the
American Indian’s natural intellect and native refinement. He stood up
and smoothed back his hair on each side with his hands as you have seen little
girls do when they play.</p>
<p>“‘Get behind me, both of you,’ says Henry.</p>
<p>“‘What’s it to be, chief?’ I asked.</p>
<p>“‘I’m going to buck centre,’ says Henry, in his
football idioms. ‘There isn’t a tackle in the lot of them. Follow
me close, and rush the game.’</p>
<p>“Then that cultured Red Man exhaled an arrangement of sounds with his
mouth that made the Latin aggregation pause, with thoughtfulness and
hesitations. The matter of his proclamation seemed to be a co-operation of the
Carlisle war-whoop with the Cherokee college yell. He went at the chocolate
team like a bean out of a little boy’s nigger shooter. His right elbow
laid out the governor man on the gridiron, and he made a lane the length of the
crowd so wide that a woman could have carried a step-ladder through it without
striking against anything. All Mellinger and me had to do was to follow.</p>
<p>“It took us just three minutes to get out of that street around to
military headquarters, where Mellinger had things his own way. A colonel and a
battalion of bare-toed infantry turned out and went back to the scene of the
musicale with us, but the conspirator gang was gone. But we recaptured the
phonograph with honours of war, and marched back to the <i>cuartel</i> with it
playing ‘All Coons Look Alike to Me.’</p>
<p>“The next day Mellinger takes me and Henry to one side, and begins to
shed tens and twenties.</p>
<p>“‘I want to buy that phonograph,’ says he. ‘I liked
that last tune it played at the <i>soirée</i>.’</p>
<p>“‘This is more money than the machine is worth,’ says I.</p>
<p>“‘’Tis government expense money,’ says Mellinger.
‘The government pays for it, and it’s getting the tune-grinder
cheap.’</p>
<p>“Me and Henry knew that pretty well. We knew that it had saved Homer P.
Mellinger’s graft when he was on the point of losing it; but we never let
him know we knew it.</p>
<p>“‘Now you boys better slide off further down the coast for a
while,’ says Mellinger, ‘till I get the screws put on these fellows
here. If you don’t they’ll give you trouble. And if you ever happen
to see Billy Renfrew again before I do, tell him I’m coming back to New
York as soon as I can make a stake—honest.’</p>
<p>“Me and Henry laid low until the day the steamer came back. When we saw
the captain’s boat on the beach we went down and stood in the edge of the
water. The captain grinned when he saw us.</p>
<p>“‘I told you you’d be waiting,’ he says.
‘Where’s the Hamburger machine?’</p>
<p>“‘It stays behind,’ I says, ‘to play “Home, Sweet
Home.”’</p>
<p>“‘I told you so,’ says the captain again. ‘Climb in the
boat.’</p>
<p>“And that,” said Keogh, “is the way me and Henry Horsecollar
introduced the phonograph into this country. Henry went back to the States, but
I’ve been rummaging around in the tropics ever since. They say Mellinger
never travelled a mile after that without his phonograph. I guess it kept him
reminded about his graft whenever he saw the siren voice of the boodler tip him
the wink with a bribe in its hand.”</p>
<p>“I suppose he’s taking it home with him as a souvenir,”
remarked the consul.</p>
<p>“Not as a souvenir,” said Keogh. “He’ll need two of
’em in New York, running day and night.”</p>
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