LD San
Francisco, which is the San Francisco of only the other day, the day before the
Earthquake, was divided midway by the Slot. The Slot was an iron crack that ran
along the center of Market Street, and from the Slot arose the burr of the
ceaseless, endless cable that was hitched at will to the cars it dragged up and
down. In truth, there were two Slots, but, in the quick grammar of the West,
time was saved by calling them, and much more that they stood for, The Slot.
North of the Slot were the theaters, hotels and shopping district, the banks
and the staid, respectable business houses. South of the Slot were the
factories, slums, laundries, machine-shops, boiler-works and the abodes of the
working class.
The Slot was the metaphor that expressed the
class cleavage of Society, and no man crossed this metaphor, back and forth,
more successfully than Freddie Drummond. He made a practice of living in both
worlds and in both worlds he lived signally well. Freddy Drummond was a
professor in the Sociology Department of the University of California, and it
was as a professor of sociology that he first crossed over the Slot, lived for
six months in the great labor ghetto and wrote The Unskilled Laborer—a
book that was hailed everywhere as an able contribution to the Literature of
Progress and as a splendid reply to the Literature of Discontent. Politically
and economically, it was nothing if not orthodox. Presidents of great railway
systems bought whole editions of it to give to their employees. A
manufacturers' association alone distributed fifty thousand copies of it. In
its preachment of thrift and content it ran Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch a
close second.
At first, Freddie Drummond found it monstrously
difficult to get along among the working people. He was not used to their ways,
and they certainly were not used to his. They were suspicious. He had no
antecedents. He could talk of no previous jobs. His hands were soft. His
extraordinary politeness was ominous. His first idea of the rôle he would
play was that of a free and independent American who chose to work with his
hands and no explanations given. But it wouldn't do, as he quickly discovered.
At the beginning they accepted him, very provisionally, as a freak. A little
later, as he began to know his way about better, he insensibly drifted into the
only rôle that he could play with some degree of
plausibility—namely, that of a man who had seen better days, very much
better days, but who was down on his luck, though, to be sure, only
temporarily.
He learned many things and generalized much and
often erroneously, all of which can be found in the pages of The Unskilled
Laborer. He saved himself, however, after the sane and conservative manner of
his kind, by labeling his generalizations as "tentative." One of his
first experiences was in the great Wilmax Cannery, where he was put on
piecework making small packing-cases. A box-factory supplied the parts, and all
Freddie Drummond had to do was to fit the parts into a form and drive in the
wire nails with a light hammer.
It was not skilled labor, but it was piecework.
The ordinary laborers in the cannery got a dollar and a half a day. Freddie
Drummond found the other men on the same job with him jogging along and earning
a dollar and seventy-five cents a day. But the third day he was able to earn
the same. But he was ambitious. He did not care to jog along, and, being
unusually able and fit, on the fourth day earned two dollars. The next day,
having keyed himself up to an exhausting high tension, he earned two dollars
and a half. His fellow-workers favored him with scowls and black looks and made
remarks, slangily witty and which he did not understand, about sucking up to
the boss, and pace-making, and holding her down when the rains set in. He was
astonished at their malingering on piece-work, generalized about the laziness
of the unskilled laborer, and proceeded next day to hammer out three dollars'
worth of boxes.
And that night, coming out of the cannery, he was
interviewed by his fellow-workmen, who were very angry and incoherently slangy.
He failed to comprehend the motive behind their action. The action itself was
strenuous. When he refused to ease down his pace and bleated about freedom of
contract, independent Americanism and the dignity of toil they proceeded to
spoil his pace-making ability. It was a fierce battle, for Drummond was a large
man and an athlete; but the crowd finally jumped on his ribs, walked on his
face and stamped on his fingers, so that it was only after lying in bed for a
week that he was able to get up and look for another job. All of this is duly
narrated in that first book of his, in the chapter entitled The Tyranny of
Labor.
A little later, in another department of the
Wilmax Cannery, lumping as a fruit-distributor among the women, he essayed to
carry two boxes of fruit at a time and was promptly reproached by the other
fruit-lumpers. It was palpable malingering; but he was there, he decided, not
to change conditions, but to observe. So he lumped one box thereafter, and so
well did he study the art of shirking that he wrote a special chapter on it,
with the last several paragraphs devoted to tentative generalizations.
In those six months he worked at many jobs and
developed into a very good imitation of a genuine worker. He was a natural
linguist and he kept notebooks, making a scientific study of the workers' slang
or argot until he could talk quite intelligibly. This language also enabled him
more intimately to follow their mental processes and thereby to gather much
data for a projected chapter in some future book which he planned to entitle
Synthesis of Working-Class Psychology.
Before he arose to the surface from that first
plunge into the underworld, he discovered that he was a good actor and
demonstrated the plasticity of his nature. He was himself astonished at his own
fluidity. Once having mastered the language and conquered numerous fastidious
qualms he found that he could flow into any nook of working-class life and fit
it so snugly as to feel comfortably at home. As he said in the preface to his
second book, The Toiler, he endeavored really to know the working people; and
the only possible way to achieve this was to work beside them, eat their food,
sleep in their beds, be amused with their amusements, think their thoughts and
feel their feelings.
He was not a deep thinker. He had no faith in new
theories. All his norms and criteria were conventional. His Thesis on the
French Revolution was noteworthy in college annals, not merely for its
painstaking and voluminous accuracy, but for the fact that it was the driest,
deadest, most formal and most orthodox screed ever written on the subject. He
was a very reserved man, and his natural inhibition was large in quantity and
steel-like in quality. He had but few friends. He was too undemonstrative, too
frigid. He had no vices, nor had any one ever discovered any temptations.
Tobacco he detested, beer he abhorred, and he was never known to drink anything
stronger than an occasional light wine at dinner.
When a freshman he had been baptized Ice-Box by
his warmer-blooded fellows. As a member of the Faculty he was known as
Cold-Storage. He had but one grief, and that was Freddie. He had earned it when
he played fullback on the Varsity eleven, and his formal soul had never
succeeded in living it down. Freddie he would ever be, except officially, and
through nightmare vistas he looked into a future when his world would speak of
him as Old Freddie.
For he was very young to be a doctor of
sociology—only twenty-seven, and he looked younger. In appearance and
atmosphere he was a strapping big college man, smooth-faced and easy-mannered,
clean and simple and wholesome, with a known record of being a splendid athlete
and an implied vast possession of cold culture of the inhibited sort. He never
talked shop out of class and committee-rooms, except later when his books
showered him with distasteful public notice and he yielded to the extent of
reading occasional papers before certain literary and economic societies.
He did everything right—too right; and in
dress and comportment was inevitably correct. Not that he was a dandy. Far from
it. He was a college man, in dress and carriage as like as a pea to the type
that of late years is being so generously turned out of our institutions of
higher learning. His handshake was satisfyingly strong and stiff. His blue eyes
were coldly blue and convincingly sincere. His voice, firm and masculine, clean
and crisp of enunciation, was pleasant to the ear. The one drawback to Freddie
Drummond was his inhibition. He never unbent. In his football days the higher
the tension of the game the cooler he grew. He was noted as a boxer, but he was
regarded as an automaton, with the inhuman action of a machine judging distance
and timing blows, guarding, blocking and stalling. He was rarely punished
himself, while he rarely punished an opponent. He was too clever and too
controlled to permit himself to put a pound more weight into a punch than he
intended. With him it was a matter of exercise. It kept him fit.
As time went by Freddie Drummond found himself
more frequently crossing the Slot and losing himself in South of Market. His
summer and winter holidays were spent there, and, whether it was a week or a
week-end, he found the time spent there to be valuable and enjoyable. And there
was so much material to be gathered. His third book Mass and Master, became a
textbook in the American universities, and almost before he knew it he was at
work on a fourth one, the Fallacy of the Inefficient.
Somewhere in his make-up there was a strange
twist or quirk. Perhaps it was a recoil from his environment and training or
from the tempered seed of his ancestors, who had been bookmen generation
preceding generation; but, at any rate, he found enjoyment from being down in
the working-class world. In his own world he was Cold-Storage, but down below
he was Big Bill Totts, who could drink and smoke and slang and fight and be an
all-around favorite. Everybody liked Bill, and more than one working-girl made
love to him. At first he had been merely a good actor, but as time went on
simulation became second nature. He no longer played a part, and he loved
sausages—sausages and bacon, than which, in his own proper sphere, there
was nothing more loathsome in the way of food.
From doing the thing for the need's sake he came
to doing the thing for the thing's sake. He found himself regretting it as the
time drew near for him to go back to his lecture-room and his inhibition. And
he often found himself waiting with anticipation for the dreary time to pass
when he could cross the Slot and cut loose and play the devil. He was not
wicked, but as Big Bill Totts he did a myriad things that Freddie Drummond
would never have been permitted to do. Moreover, Freddie Drummond never would
have wanted to do them. That was the strangest part of his discovery. Freddie
Drummond and Bill Totts were two totally different creatures. The desires and
tastes and impulses of each ran counter to the other's. Bill Totts could shirk
at a job with a clear conscience, while Freddie Drummond condemned shirking as
vicious, criminal and un-American, and devoted whole chapters to condemnation
of the vice. Freddie Drummond did not care for dancing, but bill Totts never
missed the nights at the various dancing clubs, such as The Magnolia, The
Western Star, and The Elite; while he won a massive silver cup standing thirty
inches high for being the best-sustained character at the butchers' and
meat-workers' annual grand masked ball. And Bill Totts liked the girls, and the
girls liked him, while Freddie Drummond enjoyed playing the ascetic in this
particular, was open in his opposition to equal suffrage and cynically bitter
in his secret condemnation of co-education.
Freddie Drummond changed his manners with his
dress and without effort. When he entered the obscure little room used for his
transformation scenes he carried himself just a bit too stiffly. He was too
erect, his shoulders were an inch too far back, while his face was grave,
almost harsh, and practically expressionless. But when he emerged in Bill
Totts' clothes he was another creature. Bill Totts did not slouch, but somehow
his whole form limbered up and became graceful. The very sound of the voice was
changed and the laugh was loud and hearty, while loose speech and an occasional
oath were as a matter of course on his lips. Also Bill Totts was a trifle
inclined to late hours, and at times, in saloons, to be good-naturedly
bellicose with other workmen. Then, too, at Sunday picnics or when he displayed
a wit keen and delightful in the flirtatious badinage that was expected of a
good fellow in his class.
So thoroughly was Bill Totts himself, so
thoroughly a workman, a genuine denizen of South of the Slot, that he was as
class-conscious as the average of his kind, and his hatred for a scab even
exceeded that of the average loyal union man. During the water-front strike
Freddie Drummond was somehow able to stand apart from the unique combination,
and, coldly critical, watch Bill Totts hilariously slug scab longshoremen. For
Bill Totts was a dues-paying member of the Longshoremen's Union and had a right
to be indignant with the usurpers of his job. Big Bill Totts was so very big
and so very able that it was big Bill to the front when trouble was brewing.
From acting outraged feelings Freddie Drummond, in the rôle of his other
self, came to experience genuine outrage, and it was only when he returned to
the classic atmosphere of the university that he was able, sanely and
conservatively, to generalize upon his underworld experiences and put them down
on paper as a trained sociologist should. That Bill Totts lacked the
perspective to raise him above the class-consciousness Freddie Drummond clearly
saw. But Bill Totts could not see it. When he saw a scab taking his job away he
saw red at the same time and little else did he see. It was Freddie Drummond,
irreproachably clothed and comforted, seated at his study desk or facing his
class in Sociology 17, who saw Bill Totts and all around Bill Totts, and all
around the whole scab and union-labor problem and its relation to the economic
welfare of the United States in the struggle for the world-market. Bill Totts
wasn't able to see beyond the next meal and the prize-fight the following night
at the Gayety Athletic Club.
It was while gathering material for Women and
Work that Freddie received his first warning of the danger that he was in. He
was too successful at living in both worlds. This strange dualism he had
developed, after all, very unstable, and as he sat in his study and meditated
he saw that it could not endure. It was really a transition stage; and if he
persisted he saw that he would inevitably have to drop one world or the other.
He could not continue in both. And as he looked at the row of volumes that
graced the upper shelf of his revolving bookcase, his volumes, beginning with
his Thesis and ending with Women and Work, he decided that that was the world
he would hold on to and stick by. Bill Totts had served his purpose, but he had
become a too-dangerous accomplice. Bill Totts would have to cease.
Freddie Drummond's fright was due to Mary Condon,
president of the International Glove-Workers' Union No. 974. He had seen her
first from the spectators' gallery at the annual convention of the Northwest
Federation of Labor, and he had seen her though Bill Totts' eyes, and that
individual had been most favorably impressed by her. She was not Freddie
Drummond's sort at all. What if she were a royal-bodied woman, graceful and
sinewy as a panther, with amazing black eyes that could fill with fire or
laughter-love, as the mood might dictate? He detested women with a
too-exuberant vitality and a lack of—well, of inhibition. Freddie
Drummond accepted the doctrine of evolution because it was quite universally
accepted by college men, and he flatly believed that man had climbed up the
ladder of life out of the weltering muck and mess of lower and monstrous
organic things. But he was a trifle ashamed of this genealogy. Wherefore,
probably, he practiced his iron inhibition and preached it to others, and
preferred women of his own type who could shake free of this bestial and
regrettable ancestral line and by discipline and control emphasize the wideness
of the gulf that separated them from what their dim forebears had been.
Bill Totts had none of these considerations. He
had liked Mary Condon from the moment his eyes first rested on her in the
convention hall, and he had made it a point, then and there, to find out who
she was. The next time he met her, and quite by accident, was when he was
driving an express wagon for Pat Morrissey. It was in a lodging-house in
Mission Street, where he had been called to take a trunk into storage. The
landlady's daughter had called him and led him to the little bedroom, the
occupant of which, a glove-maker, had just been removed to a hospital. But Bill
did not know this. He stooped, up-ended the trunk, which was a large one, got
it on his shouldered and struggled to his feet with his back toward the open
door. At that moment he heard a woman's voice.
"Belong to the union?" was the question
asked.
"Aw, what's it to you?" he retorted.
"Run along now, an' git outa my way. I wanta turn 'round."
The next he knew, big as he was, he was whirled
half around and sent reeling backward, the trunk overbalancing him, till he
fetched up with a crash against the wall. He started to swear, but at the same
instant found himself looking into Mary Condon's flashing, angry eyes.
"Of course I b'long to the union," he
said. "I was only kiddin' you."
"Where's your card?" she demanded in
businesslike tones.
"In my pocket. But I can't git it out now.
This trunk's too damn heavy. Come on down to the wagon an' I'll show it to
you."
"Put that trunk down," was the
command.
"What for? I got a card, I'm tellin'
you."
"Put it down, that's all. No scab's going to
handle that trunk. You ought to be ashamed of yourself, you big coward,
scabbing on honest men. Why don't you join the union and be a man?"
Mary Condon's color had left her face and it was
apparent that she was in a white rage.
"To think of a big man like you turning
traitor to his class. I suppose you're aching to join the militia for a chance
to shoot down union drivers the next strike. You may belong to the militia
already, for that matter. You're the sort ——"
"Hold on now; that's too much!" Bill
dropped the trunk to the floor with a bang, straightened up and thrust his hand
into his inside coat pocket. "I told you I was only kiddin'. There, look
at that."
It was a union card properly enough.
"All right, take it along," Mary Condon
said. "And the next time, don't kid."
Her faced relaxed as she noticed the ease with
which he got the big trunk to his shoulder and her eyes glowed as they glanced
over the graceful massiveness of the man. But Bill did not see that. He was too
busy with the trunk.
The next time he saw Mary Condon was during the
laundry strike. The laundry workers, but recently organized, were green at the
business, and had petitioned Mary Condon to engineer the strike. Freddie
Drummond had had an inkling of what was coming and had sent Bill Totts to join
the union and investigate. Bill's job was in the washroom, and the men had been
called out first that morning in order to stiffen the courage of the girls; and
Bill chanced to be near the door to the mangle-room when Mary Condon started to
enter. The superintendent, who was both large and stout, barred her way. He
wasn't going to have his girls called out and he'd teach her a lesson to mind
her own business. And as Mary tried to squeeze past him he thrust her back with
a fat hand on her shoulder. She glanced around and saw Bill.
"Here you, Mr. Totts," she called.
"Lend a hand. I want to get in."
Bill experienced a startle of warm surprise. She
had remembered his name from his union card. The next moment the superintendent
had been plucked from the doorway, raving about rights under the law, and the
girls were deserting their machines. During the rest of that short and
successful strike, Bill constituted himself Mary Condon's henchman and
messenger, and when it was over returned to the university to be Freddie
Drummond and to wonder what Bill Totts could see in such a woman.
Freddie Drummond was entirely safe, but Bill had
fallen in love. There was no getting away from the fact of it, and it was this
fact that had given Freddie Drummond his warning. Well, he had done his work
and his adventures could cease. There was no need for him to cross the Slot
again. All but the last three chapters of his latest, Labor Tactics and
Strategy, was finished, and he had sufficient material on hand adequately to
supply those chapters.
Another conclusion he arrived at was that, in
order to sheet-anchor himself as Freddie Drummond, closer ties and relations in
his own social nook were necessary. It was time that he was married anyway, and
he was fully aware that if Freddie Drummond didn't get married Bill Totts
assuredly would, and the complications were too awful to contemplate. And so
enters Catherine Van Vorst. She was a college woman herself, and her father,
the one wealthy member of the Faculty, was the head of the philosophy
department. It would be a wise marriage from every standpoint, Freddie Drummond
concluded when the engagement was entered into and announced. In appearance,
cold and reserved, aristocratic and wholesomely conservative, Catherine Van
Vorst, though warm in her way, possessed an inhibition equal to Drummond's.
All seemed well with him, but Freddie Drummond
could not quite shake off the call of the underworld, the lure of the free and
open, of the unhampered, irresponsible life South of the Slot. As the time of
his marriage approached he felt that he had indeed sowed wild oats, and he
felt, moreover, what a good thing it would be if he could have but one wild
fling more, play the good fellow and the wastrel one last time ere he settled
down to gray lecture-rooms and sober matrimony. And, further to tempt him, the
very last chapter of Labor Tactics and Strategy remained unwritten for lack of
a trifle more of essential data which he had neglected to gather.
So, Freddie Drummond went down for the last time
as Bill Totts, got his data, and, unfortunately, encountered Mary Condon. Once
more installed in his study it was not a pleasant thing to look back upon. It
made his warning doubly imperative. Bill Totts had behaved abominably. Not only
had he met Mary Condon at the Central Labor Council, but he had stopped in at a
creamery with her, on the way home, and treated her to oysters. And before they
parted at her door his arms had been about her and he had kissed her on the
lips and kissed her repeatedly. And her last words in his ear, words uttered
softly with a catch sob in the throat that was nothing more nor less than a
love-cry, were, "Bill—dear, dear Bill."
Freddie Drummond shuddered at the recollection.
He saw the pit yawning for him. He was not by nature a polygamist, and he was
appalled at the possibilities of the situation. It would have to be put an end
to, and it would end in one only of two ways; either he must become wholly Bill
Totts and be married to Mary Condon, or he must remain wholly Freddie Drummond
and be married to Catherine Van Vorst. Otherwise, his conduct would be horrible
and beneath contempt.
In the several months that followed, San
Francisco was torn with labor strife. The unions and the employers'
associations had locked horns with a determination that looked as if they
intended to settle the matter one way or the other for all time. But Freddie
Drummond corrected proofs, lectured classes and did not budge. He devoted
himself to Catherine Van Vorst and day by day found more to respect and admire
in her—nay, even to love in her. The street-car strike tempted him, but
not so severely as he would have expected; and the great meat strike came on
and left him cold. The ghost of Bill Totts had been successfully laid, and
Freddie Drummond with rejuvenescent zeal tackled a brochure, long planned, on
the topic of Diminishing Returns.
The wedding was two weeks off when, on one
afternoon, in San Francisco, Catherine Van Vorst picked him up and whisked him
away to see a Boys' Club recently instituted by the settlement workers with
whom she was interested. They were in her brothers' machine, but they were
alone except for the chauffeur. At the junction with Kearny Street, Market and
Geary Streets intersect like the sides of a sharp-angled letter V. They, in the
auto, were coming down Market with the intention of negotiating the sharp apex
and going up Geary. But they did not know what was coming down Geary, timed by
Fate to meet them at the apex. While aware from the papers that the meat strike
was on and that it was an exceedingly bitter one, all thought of it at the
moment was farthest from Freddie Drummond's mind. Was he not seated beside
Catherine? And besides, he was carefully expounding to her his views on
settlement work—views that Bill Tott's adventures had played a part in
formulating.
Coming down Geary Street were six meat wagons.
Beside each scab driver sat a policeman. Front and rear, and along each side of
this procession, marched a protecting escort of one hundred police. Behind the
police rear-guard, at a respectful distance, was an orderly but vociferous mob
several blocks in length, that congested the street from sidewalk to sidewalk.
The Beef Trust was making an effort to supply the hotels and, incidentally, to
begin breaking of the strike. The St. Francis had already been supplied at a
cost of many broken windows and broken heads, and the expedition was marching
to the relief of the Palace Hotel.
All unwitting, Drummond sat beside Catherine
talking settlement work as the auto, honking methodically and dodging traffic,
swung in a wide curve to get around the apex. A big coal wagon, loaded with
lump coal and drawn by four huge horses, just debouching from Kearny Street as
though to turn down Market, blocked their way. The driver of the wagon seemed
undecided, and the chauffeur, running slow but disregarding some shouted
warning from the policemen, swerved the auto to the left, violating the traffic
rules in order to pass in front of the wagon.
At that moment Freddie Drummond discontinued his
conversation. Nor did he resume it again, for the situation was developing with
the rapidity of a transformation scene. He heard the roar of the mob at the
rear and caught a glimpse of the helmeted police and the lurching meat wagons.
At the same moment, laying on his whip and standing up to his task, the
coal-driver rushed horses and wagon squarely in front of the advancing
procession, pulled the horses up sharply and put on the brake. Then he made his
lines fast to the brake-handle and sat down with the air of one who had stopped
to stay. The auto had been brought to a stop, too, by his big, panting
leaders.
Before the chauffeur could back clear, an old
Irishman, driving a rickety express wagon and lashing his one horse to a
gallop, had locked wheels with the auto. Drummond recognized both horse and
wagon, for he had driven them often himself. The Irishman was Pat Morrissey. On
the other side a brewery wagon was locking with the coal wagon, and an
east-bound Kearny Street car, wildly clanging its gong, the motorman shouting
defiance at the crossing policemen, was dashing forward to complete the
blockade. And wagon after wagon was locking and blocking and adding to the
confusion. The meat wagons halted. The police were trapped. The roar at the
rear increased as the mob came on to the attack, while the vanguard of the
police charged the obstructing wagons.
"We're in for it," Drummond remarked
coolly to Catherine.
"Yes," she nodded with equal coolness.
"What savages they are!"
His admiration for her doubled on itself. She was
indeed his sort. He would have been satisfied with her even if she had screamed
and clung to him, but this—this was magnificent. She sat in that
storm-center as calmly as if it had been no more than a block of carriages at
the opera.
The police were struggling to clear a passage.
The driver of the coal wagon, a big man in shirt sleeves, lighted a pipe and
sat smoking. He glanced down complacently at a captain of police who was raving
and cursing at him, and his only acknowledgement was a shrug of the shoulders.
From the rear arose the rat-tat-tat of clubs on heads and a pandemonium of
cursing, yelling and shouting. A violent accession of noise proclaimed that the
mob had broken through and was dragging a scab from a wagon. The police captain
was reënforced from his vanguard and the mob at the rear was repelled.
Meanwhile, window after window in the high office-building on the right had
been opened and the class-conscious clerks were raining a shower of office
furniture down on the heads of police and scabs. Waste-baskets, ink-bottles,
paper-weights, typewriters—anything and everything that came to hand was
filling the air.
A policeman, under orders from his captain,
clambered to the lofty seat of the coal wagon to arrest the driver. And the
driver, rising leisurely and peacefully to meet him, suddenly crumpled him in
his arms and threw him down on top of the captain. The driver was a young
giant, and when he climbed on top his load and poised a lump of coal in both
hands a policeman, who was just scaling the wagon from the side, let go and
dropped back to earth. The captain order half a dozen of his men to take the
wagon. The teamster, scrambling over the load from side to side, beat them down
with huge lumps of coal.
The crowd on the sidewalks and the teamsters on
the locked wagons roared encouragement and their own delight. The motorman,
smashing helmets with his controller-bar, was beaten into insensibility and
dragged from his platform. The captain of the police, beside himself at the
repulse of his men, led the next assault on the coal wagon. A score of police
were swarming up the tall-sided fortress. But the teamster multiplied himself.
At times there were six or eight policemen rolling on the pavement and under
the wagon. Engaged in repulsing an attack on the rear end of his fortress the
teamster turned about to see the captain just in the act of stepping on the
seat from the front end. He was still in the air and in most unstable
equilibrium when the teamster hurled a thirty-pound lump of coal. It caught the
captain fairly on the chest and he went over backward, striking on a wheeler's
back, tumbling to the ground and jamming against the rear wheel of the
auto.
Catherine thought he was dead, but he picked
himself up and charged back. She reached out her gloved hand and patted the
flank of the snorting, quivering horse. But Drummond did not notice the action.
He had eyes for nothing save the battle of the coal wagon, while somewhere in
his complicated psychology one Bill Totts was heaving and straining in an
effort to come to life. Drummond believed in law and order and the maintenance
of the established; but this riotous savage within him would have none of it.
Then, if ever, did Freddie Drummond call upon his iron inhibition to save it.
But it is written that the house divided against itself must fall. And Freddie
Drummond found that he had divided all the will and force of him with Bill
Totts, and between them the entity that constituted the pair of them was being
wrenched in twain.
Freddie Drummond sat in the auto quite composed,
alongside Catherine Van Vorst; but looking out of Freddie Drummond's eyes was
Bill Totts, and somewhere behind those eyes, battling for control of their
mutual body, was Freddie Drummond, the sane and conservative sociologist, and
Bill Totts, the class-conscious and bellicose union working-man. It was Bill
Totts looking out of those eyes who saw the inevitable end of the battle on the
coal wagon. He saw a policeman gain the top of the load, a second and a third.
They lurched clumsily on the loose footing, but their long riot-clubs were out
and swinging. One blow caught the teamster on the head. A second he dodged,
receiving it on the shoulder. For him the game was plainly up. He dashed in
suddenly, clutched two policemen in his arms, and hurled himself a prisoner to
the pavement.
Catherine Van Vorst was sick and faint at sight
of the blood and brutal fighting. But her qualms were vanquished by the
sensational and most unexpected happening that followed. The man beside her
emitted an unearthly yell and rose to his feet. She saw him spring over the
front seat, leap to the broad rump of the wheeler and from there gain the
wagon. His onslaught was like a whirlwind. Before the bewildered officer on top
the load could guess the errand of this conventionally-clad but excited-seeming
gentleman he was the recipient of a punch that arched him back through the air
to the pavement. A kick in the face led an ascending policeman to follow his
example A rush of three more gained the top and locked with Bill Totts in a
gigantic clinch, during which his scalp was opened up by a club, and coat, vest
and half his starched shirt were torn from him. But the three policemen were
flung wide and far, and Bill Totts, raining down lumps of coal, held the
fort.
The captain let gallantly to the attack, but was
bowled over by a chunk of coal that burst on his head in black baptism. The
need of the police was to break the blockade in front before the mob could
break in at the rear, and Bill Totts' need was to hold the wagon till the mob
did break through. So the battle of the coal went on.
The crowd had recognized its champion. Big Bill,
as usual, had come to the front, and Catherine Van Vorst was bewildered by the
cries of "Bill! Oh, you Bill!" that arose on every hand. Pat
Morrissey, on his wagon-seat, was jumping and screaming in an ecstasy:
"Eat 'em, Bill! Eat 'em! Eet 'em alive!" From the sidewalk she heard
a woman's voice cry out, "Look out, Bill—front end!" Bill took
the warning, and with well-directed coal, cleaned the front end of the wagon of
assailants. Catherine Van Vorst turned her head and saw on the curb of sidewalk
a woman with vivid coloring and flashing black eyes who was staring with all
her soul at the man who had been Freddie Drummond a few minutes before.
The windows of the office-building became
vociferous with applause. The mob had broken through on one side the line of
wagons and was advancing, each segregated policeman the center of a fighting
group. The scabs were torn from their seats, the traces of the horses cut and
the frightened animals put in flight. Many policemen crawled under the coal
wagon for safety, while the loose horses, with here and there a policeman on
their backs or struggling at their heads to hold them, surged across the
sidewalk opposite the jam and broke into Market Street.
Catherine Van Vorst heard the woman's voice
calling in warning. She was back on the curb again and crying out:
"Beat it, Bill! Now's your time! Beat
it!"
The police for the moment had been swept away.
Bill Totts leaped to the pavement and made his way to the woman on the
sidewalk. Catherine Van Vorst saw her throw her arms around him and kiss him on
the lips; and Catherine Van Vorst watched him curiously as he went on down the
sidewalk, one arm around the woman, both talking and laughing, and he with a
volubility and abandon she could never have dreamed possible.
The police were back again and clearing the jam
while waiting for reënforcements and new drivers and horses. The mob had
done its work and was scattering, and Catherine Van Vorst, still watching,
could see the man she had known as Freddie Drummond. He towered a head above
the crowd. His am was still about the woman. And she in the motor car,
watching, saw the pair cross Market Street, cross the Slot and disappear down
Third Street into the labor ghetto.
In the years that followed no more lectures were given in the University of California by one Drummond and no more books on economics and the labor question appeared over the name of Frederick A. Drummond. On the other hand, there arose a new labor leader, William Totts by name. He it was who married Mary Condon, president of the International Glove-Workers' Union No. 974, and he it was who called the notorious cooks and waiters' strike, which, before its successful termination, brought out with it scores of other unions, among which, of the more remotely allied, were the chicken-pickers and the undertakers.
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