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    The Valley of the Moon Jack London

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    counters. Once, she even considered taking up with hand-painted

      china, but gave over the idea when she learned its expensiveness.

      She slowly replaced all her simple maiden underlinen with

      garments which, while still simple, were wrought with beautiful

      French embroidery, tucks, and drawnwork. She crocheted fine

      edgings on the inexpensive knitted underwear she wore in winter.

      She made little corset covers and chemises of fine but fairly

      inexpensive lawns, and, with simple flowered designs and perfect

      laundering, her nightgowns were always sweetly fresh and dainty.

      In some publication she ran across a brief printed note to the

      effect that French women were just beginning to wear fascinating

      beruffled caps at the breakfast table. It meant nothing to her

      that in her case she must first prepare the breakfast. Promptly

      appeared in the house a yard of dotted Swiss muslin, and Saxon

      was deep in experimenting on patterns for herself, and in sorting

      her bits of laces for suitable trimmings. The resultant dainty

      creation won Mercedes Higgins' enthusiastic approval.

      Saxon made for herself simple house slips of pretty gingham, with

      neat low collars turned back from her fresh round throat. She

      crocheted yards of laces for her underwear, and made Battenberg

      in abundance for her table and for the bureau. A great

      achievement, that aroused Billy's applause, was an Afghan for the

      bed. She even ventured a rag carpet, which, the women's magazines

      informed her, had newly returned into fashion. As a matter of

      course she hemstitched the best table linen and bed linen they

      could afford.

      As the happy months went by she was never idle. Nor was Billy

      forgotten. When the cold weather came on she knitted him

      wristlets, which he always religiously wore from the house and

      pocketed immediately thereafter. The two sweaters she made for

      him, however, received a better fate, as did the slippers which

      she insisted on his slipping into, on the evenings they remained

      at home.

      The hard practical wisdom of Mercedes Higgins proved of immense

      help, for Saxon strove with a fervor almost religious to have

      everything of the best and at the same time to be saving. Here

      she faced the financial and economic problem of keeping house in

      a society where the cost of living rose faster than the wages of

      industry. And here the old woman taught her the science of

      marketing so thoroughly that she made a dollar of Billy's go half

      as far again as the wives of the neighborhood made the dollars of

      their men go.

      Invariably, on Saturday night, Billy poured his total wages into

      her lap. He never asked for an accounting of what she did with

      it, though he continually reiterated that he had never fed so

      well in his life. And always, the wages still untouched in her

      lap, she had him take out what he estimated he would need for

      spending money for the week to come. Not only did she bid him

      take plenty but she insisted on his taking any amount extra that

      he might desire at any time through the week. And, further, she

      insisted he should not tell her what it was for.

      "You've always had money in your pocket," she reminded him, "and

      there's no reason marriage should change that. If it did, I'd

      wish I'd never married you. Oh, I know about men when they get

      together. First one treats and then another, and it takes money.

      Now if you can't treat just as freely as the rest of them, why I

      know you so well that I know you'd stay away from them. And that

      wouldn't be right . . . to you, I mean. I want you to be together

      with men. It's good for a man."

      And Billy buried her in his arms and swore she was the greatest

      little bit of woman that ever came down the pike.

      "Why," he jubilated; "not only do I feed better, and live more

      comfortable, and hold up my end with the fellows; but I'm

      actually saving money--or you are for me. Here I am, with

      furniture being paid for regular every month, and a little woman

      I'm mad over, and on top of it money in the bank. How much is it

      now?"

      "Sixty-two dollars," she told him. "Not so bad for a rainy day.

      You might get sick, or hurt, or something happen."

      It was in mid-winter, when Billy, with quite a deal of obvious

      reluctance, broached a money matter to Saxon. His old friend,

      Billy Murphy, was laid up with la grippe, and one of his

      children, playing in the street, had been seriously injured by a

      passing wagon. Billy Murphy, still feeble after two weeks in bed,

      had asked Billy for the loan of fifty dollars.

      "It's perfectly safe," Billy concluded to Saxon. "I've known him

      since we was kids at the Durant School together. He's straight as

      a die."

      "That's got nothing to do with it," Saxon chided. "If you were

      single you'd have lent it to him immediately, wouldn't you?"

      Billy nodded.

      "Then it's no different because you're married. It's your money,

      Billy."

      "Not by a damn sight," he cried. "It ain't mine. It's ourn. And I

      wouldn't think of lettin' anybody have it without seein' you

      first."

      "I hope you didn't tell him that," she said with quick concern.

      "Nope," Billy laughed. "I knew, if I did, you'd be madder'n a

      hatter. I just told him I'd try an' figure it out. After all, I

      was sure you'd stand for it if you had it."

      "Oh, Billy," she murmured, her voice rich and low with love;

      "maybe you don't know it, but that's one of the sweetest things

      you've said since we got married."

      The more Saxon saw of Mercedes Higgins the less did she

      understand her. That the old woman was a close-fisted miser,

      Saxon soon learned. And this trait she found hard to reconcile

      with her tales of squandering. On the other hand, Saxon was

      bewildered by Mercedes' extravagance in personal matters. Her

      underlinen, hand-made of course, was very costly. The table she

      set for Barry was good, but the table for herself was vastly

      better. Yet both tables were set on the same table. While Barry

      contented himself with solid round steak, Mercedes ate

      tenderloin. A huge, tough muttonchop on Barry's plate would be

      balanced by tiny French chops on Mercedes' plate. Tea was brewed

      in separate pots. So was coffee. While Barry gulped twenty-five

      cent tea from a large and heavy mug, Mercedes sipped three-dollar

      tea from a tiny cup of Belleek, rose-tinted, fragile as all

      egg-shell. In the same manner, his twenty-five cent coffee was

      diluted with milk, her eighty cent Turkish with cream.

      "'Tis good enough for the old man," she told Saxon. "He knows no

      better, and it would be a wicked sin to waste it on him."

      Little traffickings began between the two women. After Mercedes

      had freely taught Saxon the loose-wristed facility of playing

      accompaniments on the ukulele, she proposed an exchange. Her time

      was past, she said, for such frivolities, and she offered the

      instrument for the breakfast cap of which Saxon had made so good

      a success.

      "It's worth a few dollars,
    " Mercedes said. "It cost me twenty,

      though that was years ago. Yet it is well worth the value of the

      cap."

      "But wouldn't the cap be frivolous, too?" Saxon queried, though

      herself well pleased with the bargain.

      "'Tis not for my graying hair," Mercedes frankly disclaimed. "I

      shall sell it for the money. Much that I do, when the rheumatism

      is not maddening my fingers, I sell. La la, my dear, 'tis not old

      Barry's fifty a month that'll satisfy all my expensive tastes.

      'Tis I that make up the difference. And old age needs money as

      never youth needs it. Some day you will learn for yourself."

      "I am well satisfied with the trade," Saxon said. "And I shall

      make me another cap when I can lay aside enough for the

      material."

      "Make several," Mercedes advised. "I'll sell them for you,

      keeping, of course, a small commission for my services. I can

      give you six dollars apiece for them. We will consult about them.

      The profit will more than provide material for your own."

      CHAPTER V

      Four eventful things happened in the course of the winter. Bert

      and Mary got married and rented a cottage in the neighborhood

      three blocks away. Billy's wages were cut, along with the wages

      of all the teamsters in Oakland. Billy took up shaving with a

      safety razor. And, finally, Saxon was proven a false prophet and

      Sarah a true one.

      Saxon made up her mind, beyond any doubt, ere she confided the

      news to Billy. At first, while still suspecting, she had felt a

      frightened sinking of the heart and fear of the unknown and

      unexperienced. Then had come economic fear, as she contemplated

      the increased expense entailed. But by the time she had made

      surety doubly sure, all was swept away before a wave of

      passionate gladness. HERS AND BILLY'S! The phrase was continually

      in her mind, and each recurrent thought of it brought an actual

      physical pleasure-pang to her heart.

      The night she told the news to Billy, he withheld his own news of

      the wage-cut, and joined with her in welcoming the little one.

      "What'll we do? Go to the theater to celebrate?" he asked,

      relaxing the pressure of his embrace so that she might speak. "Or

      suppose we stay in, just you and me, and . . . and the three of

      us?"

      "Stay in," was her verdict. "I just want you to hold me, and hold

      me, and hold me."

      "That's what I wanted, too, only I wasn't sure, after bein' in

      the house all day, maybe you'd want to go out."

      There was frost in the air, and Billy brought the Morris chair in

      by the kitchen stove. She lay cuddled in his arms, her head on

      his shoulder, his cheek against her hair.

      "We didn't make no mistake in our lightning marriage with only a

      week's courtin'," he reflected aloud. "Why, Saxon, we've been

      courtin' ever since just the same. And now . . . my God, Saxon,

      it's too wonderful to be true. Think of it! Ourn! The three of

      us! The little rascal! I bet he's goin' to be a boy. An' won't I

      learn 'm to put up his fists an' take care of himself! An'

      swimmin' too. If he don't know how to swim by the time he's

      six . . ."

      "And if HE'S a girl?"

      "SHE'S goin' to be a boy," Billy retorted, joining in the playful

      misuse of pronouns.

      And both laughed and kissed, and sighed with content. "I'm goin'

      to turn pincher, now," he announced, after quite an interval of

      meditation. "No more drinks with the boys. It's me for the water

      wagon. And I'm goin' to ease down on smokes. Huh! Don't see why I

      can't roll my own cigarettes. They're ten times cheaper'n tailor-

      mades. An' I can grow a beard. The amount of money the barbers

      get out of a fellow in a year would keep a baby."

      "Just you let your beard grow, Mister Roberts, and I'll get a

      divorce," Saxon threatened. "You're just too handsome and strong

      with a smooth face. I love your face too much to have it covered

      up.--Oh, you dear! you dear! Billy, I never knew what happiness

      was until I came to live with you."

      "Nor me neither."

      "And it's always going to be so?"

      "You can just bet," he assured her.

      "I thought I was going to be happy married," she went on; "but I

      never dreamed it would be like this." She turned her head on his

      shoulder and kissed his cheek. "Billy, it isn't happiness. It's

      heaven."

      And Billy resolutely kept undivulged the cut in wages. Not until

      two weeks later, when it went into effect, and he poured the

      diminished sum into her lap, did he break it to her. The next

      day, Bert and Mary, already a month married, had Sunday dinner

      with them, and the matter came up for discussion. Bert was

      particularly pessimistic, and muttered dark hints of an impending

      strike in the railroad shops.

      "If you'd all shut your traps, it'd be all right," Mary

      criticized. "These union agitators get the railroad sore. They

      give me the cramp, the way they butt in an' stir up trouble. If I

      was boss I'd cut the wages of any man that listened to them."

      "Yet you belonged to the laundry workers' union," Saxon rebuked

      gently.

      "Because I had to or I wouldn't a-got work. An' much good it ever

      done me."

      "But look at Billy," Bert argued "The teamsters ain't ben sayin'

      a word, not a peep, an' everything lovely, and then, bang, right

      in the neck, a ten per cent cut. Oh, hell, what chance have we

      got? We lose. There's nothin' left for us in this country we've

      made and our fathers an' mothers before us. We're all shot to

      pieces. We Can see our finish--we, the old stock, the children of

      the white people that broke away from England an' licked the tar

      outa her, that freed the slaves, an' fought the Indians, 'an made

      the West! Any gink with half an eye can see it comin'."

      "But what are we going to do about it?" Saxon questioned

      anxiously.

      "Fight. That's all. The country's in the hands of a gang of

      robbers. Look at the Southern Pacific. It runs California."

      "Aw, rats, Bert," Billy interrupted. "You're takin' through your

      lid. No railroad can ran the government of California."

      "You're a bonehead," Bert sneered. "And some day, when it's too

      late, you an' all the other boneheads'll realize the fact.

      Rotten? I tell you it stinks. Why, there ain't a man who wants to

      go to state legislature but has to make a trip to San Francisco,

      an' go into the S. P. offices, an' take his hat off, an' humbly

      ask permission. Why, the governors of California has been

      railroad governors since before you and I was born. Huh! You

      can't tell me. We're finished. We're licked to a frazzle. But

      it'd do my heart good to help string up some of the dirty thieves

      before I passed out. D'ye know what we are?--we old white stock

      that fought in the wars, an' broke the land, an' made all this?

      I'll tell you. We're the last of the Mohegans."

      "He scares me to death, he's so violent," Mary said with

      unconcealed hostility. "If he don't quit shootin' off his mouth

      he'll get fired from the shops. And then
    what'll we do? He don't

      consider me. But I can tell you one thing all right, all right.

      I'll not go back to the laundry." She held her right hand up and

      spoke with the solemnity of an oath. "Not so's you can see it.

      Never again for yours truly."

      "Oh, I know what you're drivin' at," Bert said with asperity.

      "An' all I can tell you is, livin' or dead, in a job or out, no

      matter what happens to me, if you will lead that way, you will,

      an' there's nothin' else to it."

      "I guess I kept straight before I met you," she came back with a

      toss of the head. "And I kept straight after I met you, which is

      going some if anybody should ask you."

      Hot words were on Bert's tongue, but Saxon intervened and brought

      about peace. She was concerned over the outcome of their

      marriage. Both were highstrung, both were quick and irritable,

      and their continual clashes did not augur well for their future.

      The safety razor was a great achievement for Saxon. Privily she

      conferred with a clerk she knew in Pierce's hardware store and

      made the purchase. On Sunday morning, after breakfast, when Billy

      was starting to go to the barber shop, she led him into the

      bedroom, whisked a towel aside, and revealed the razor box,

      shaving mug, soap, brush, and lather all ready. Billy recoiled,

      then came back to make curious investigation. He gazed pityingly

      at the safety razor.

      "Huh! Call that a man's tool!"

      "It'll do the work," she said. "It does it for thousands of men

      every day."

      But Billy shook his head and backed away.

      "You shave three times a week," she urged. "That's forty-five

      cents. Call it half a dollar, and there are fifty-two weeks in

      the year. Twenty-six dollars a year just for shaving. Come on,

      dear, and try it. Lots of men swear by it."

      He shook his head mutinously, and the cloudy deeps of his eyes

      grew more cloudy. She loved that sullen handsomeness that made

      him look so boyish, and, laughing and kissing him, she forced him

      into a chair, got off his coat, and unbuttoned shirt and

      undershirt and turned them in.

      Threatening him with, "If you open your mouth to kick I'll shove

      it in," she coated his face with lather.

      "Wait a minute," she checked him, as he reached desperately for

      the razor. "I've been watching the barbers from the sidewalk.

      This is what they do after the lather is on."

      And thereupon she proceeded to rub the lather in with her

      fingers.

      "There," she said, when she had coated his face a second time.

      "You're ready to begin. Only remember, I'm not always going to do

      this for you. I'm just breaking you in, you see."

      With great outward show of rebellion, half genuine, half

      facetious, he made several tentative scrapes with the razor. He

      winced violently, and violently exclaimed:

      "Holy jumping Jehosaphat!"

      He examined his face in the glass, and a streak of blood showed

      in the midst of the lather.

      "Cut!--by a safety razor, by God! Sure, men swear by it. Can't

      blame 'em. Cut! By a safety!"

      "But wait a second," Saxon pleaded. "They have to be regulated.

      The clerk told me. See those little screws. There. . . . That's

      it . . . turn them around."

      Again Billy applied the blade to his face. After a couple of

      scrapes, be looked at himself closely in the mirror, grinned, and

      went on shaving. With swiftness and dexterity he scraped his face

      clean of lather. Saxon clapped her hands.

      "Fine," Billy approved. "Great! Here. Give me your hand. See what

      a good job it made."

      He started to rub her hand against his cheek. Saxon jerked away

      with a little cry of disappointment, then examined him closely.

      "It hasn't shaved at all," she said.

      "It's a fake, that's what it is. It cuts the hide, but not the

      hair. Me for the barber."

      But Saxon was persistent.

      "You haven't given it a fair trial yet. It was regulated too

     
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