<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
<h3>IN MARION’S SHOP</h3></div>
<p>In Boney Street, Medicine Bend, stands an early-day
row of one-story buildings; they once
made up a prosperous block, which has long since
fallen into the decay of paintless days. There is
in Boney Street a livery stable, a second-hand
store, a laundry, a bakery, a moribund grocery,
and a bicycle shop, and at the time of this story
there was also Marion Sinclair’s millinery shop;
but the better class of Medicine Bend business,
such as the gambling houses, saloons, pawnshops,
restaurants, barber shops, and those sensitive,
clean-shaven, and alert establishments known as
“gents’ stores,” had deserted Boney Street for
many years. Bats fly in the dark of Boney Street
while Front Street at the same hour is a blaze of
electricity and frontier hilarity. The millinery store
stood next to the corner of Fort Street. The lot
lay in an “L,” and at the rear of the store the
first owner had built a small connecting cottage to
live in. This faced on Fort Street, so that Marion
had her shop and living-rooms communicating,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_65' name='page_65'></SPAN>65</span>
and yet apart. The store building is still pointed
out as the former shop of Marion Sinclair, where
George McCloud boarded when the Crawling
Stone Line was built, where Whispering Smith
might often have been seen, where Sinclair himself
was last seen alive in Medicine Bend, where
Dicksie Dunning’s horse dragged her senseless one
wild mountain night, and where, indeed, for a
time the affairs of the whole mountain division
seemed to tangle in very hard knots.</p>
<p>As to the millinery business, it was never, after
Marion bought the shop, more than moderately
successful. The demand that existed in Medicine
Bend for red hats of the picture sort Marion declined
to recognize. For customers who sought
these she turned out hats of sombre coloring calculated
to inspire gloom rather than revelry, and she
naturally failed to hold what might be termed the
miscellaneous business. But after Dicksie Dunning
of the Stone Ranch, fresh from the convent,
rode into the shop, or if not into it nearly so,
and, gliding through the door, ordered a hat
out of hand, Marion always had some business.
All Medicine Bend knew Dicksie Dunning, who
dressed stunningly, rode famously, and was so
winningly democratic that half the town never
called her anything, at a distance, but Dicksie.</p>
<p>The first hat was a small affair but haughty.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_66' name='page_66'></SPAN>66</span>
The materials were unheard of in Marion’s stock
and had to be sent for. Marion’s arrangements
with the jobbing houses always had a C. O. D.
complexion; the jobbers maintained that this
saved book-keeping, and Marion, who of course
never knew any better, paid the double express
charges like a lamb. She acted, too, as banker for
the other impecunious tradespeople in the block,
and as this included nearly all of them she was
often pressed for funds herself. McCloud undertook
sometimes to intervene and straighten out
her millinery affairs. One evening he went so
far as to attempt an inventory of her stock and
some schedule of her accounts; but Marion, with
the front-shop curtains closely drawn and McCloud
perspiring on a step-ladder, inspecting boxes
of feathers and asking stern questions, would look
so pathetically sweet and helpless when she tried to
recall what things cost that McCloud could not
be angry with her; indeed, the pretty eyes behind
the patient spectacles would disarm any one. In
the end he took inventory on the basis of the retail
prices, dividing it afterward by five, as Marion estimated
the average profit in the business at five
hundred per cent.––this being what the woman she
bought out had told her.</p>
<p>How then, McCloud asked himself, could Marion
be normally hard pressed for money? He
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_67' name='page_67'></SPAN>67</span>
talked to her learnedly about fixed charges, but
even these seemed difficult to arrive at. There
was no rent, because the building belonged to the
railroad company, and when the real-estate and
tax man came around and talked to McCloud
about rent for the Boney Street property, McCloud
told him to chase himself. There was no insurance,
because no one would dream of insuring
Marion’s stock boxes; there were no bills payable,
because no travelling man would advise a line of
credit to an inexperienced and, what was worse, an
unpractical milliner. Marion did her own trimming,
so there were no salaries except to Katie
Dancing. It puzzled McCloud to find the leak.
How could he know that Marion was keeping
nearly all the block supplied with funds? So
McCloud continued to raise the price of his table-board,
and, though Marion insisted he was paying
her too much, held that he must be eating her out
of house and home.</p>
<p>In her dining-room, which connected through a
curtained door with the shop, McCloud sat one
day alone eating his dinner. Marion was in front
serving a customer. McCloud heard voices in
the shop, but gave no heed till a man walked
through the curtained doorway and he saw Murray
Sinclair standing before him. The stormy interview
with Callahan and Blood at the Wickiup
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_68' name='page_68'></SPAN>68</span>
had taken place just a week before, and McCloud,
after what Sinclair had then threatened, though
not prepared, felt as he saw him that anything
might occur. McCloud being in possession of the
little room, however, the initiative fell on Sinclair,
who, looking his best, snatched his hat from his
head and bowed ironically. “My mistake,” he
said blandly.</p>
<p>“Come right in,” returned McCloud, not knowing
whether Marion had a possible hand in
her husband’s unexpected appearance. “Do you
want to see me?”</p>
<p>“I don’t,” smiled Sinclair; “and to be perfectly
frank,” he added with studied consideration, “I
wish to God I never had seen you. Well––you’ve
thrown me, McCloud.”</p>
<p>“You’ve thrown yourself, haven’t you, Murray?”</p>
<p>“From your point of view, of course. But,
McCloud, this is a small country for two points of
view. Do you want to get out of it, or do you
want me to?”</p>
<p>“The country suits me, Sinclair.”</p>
<p>“No man that has ever played me dirt can
stay here while I stay.” Sinclair, with a hand on
the portière, was moving from the doorway into
the room. McCloud in a leisurely way rose,
though with a slightly flushed face, and at that
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_69' name='page_69'></SPAN>69</span>
juncture Marion ran into the room and spoke
abruptly. “Here is the silk, Mr. Sinclair,” she
exclaimed, handing to him a package she had not
finished wrapping. “I meant you to wait in the
other room.”</p>
<p>“It was an accidental intrusion,” returned Sinclair,
maintaining his irony. “I have apologized,
and Mr. McCloud and I understand one another
better than ever.”</p>
<p>“Please say to Miss Dunning,” continued Marion,
nervous and insistent, “that the band for her
riding-hat hasn’t come yet, but it should be here
to-morrow.”</p>
<p>As she spoke McCloud leaned across the table,
resolved to take advantage of the opening, if it
cost him his life. “And by the way, Mr. Sinclair,
Miss Dunning wished me to say to you that the
lovely bay colt you sent her had sprung his shoulder
badly, the hind shoulder, I think, but they are
doing everything possible for it and they think it
will make a great horse.”</p>
<p>Sinclair’s snort at the information was a marvel
of indecision. Was he being made fun of?
Should he draw and end it? But Marion faced
him resolutely as he stood, and talking in the most
business-like way she backed him out of the room
and to the shop door. Balked of his opportunity,
he retreated stubbornly but with the utmost politeness,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_70' name='page_70'></SPAN>70</span>
and left with a grin, lashing his tail, so
to speak.</p>
<p>Coming back, Marion tried to hide her uneasiness
under even tones to McCloud. “I’m sorry
he disturbed you. I was attending to a customer
and had to ask him to wait a moment.”</p>
<p>“Don’t apologize for having a customer.”</p>
<p>“He lives over beyond the Stone Ranch, you
know, and is taking some things out for the Dunnings
to-day. He likes an excuse to come in here
because it annoys me. Finish your dinner, Mr.
McCloud.”</p>
<p>“Thank you, I’m done.”</p>
<p>“But you haven’t eaten anything. Isn’t your
steak right?”</p>
<p>“It’s fine, but that man––well, you know how I
like him and how he likes me. I’ll content myself
with digesting my temper.”
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_71' name='page_71'></SPAN>71</span></p>
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