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CHAPTER XVII
 One night Dag Daughtry sat at a table in the saloon called the Pile-drivers’ Home.  He was in a parlous1 predicament.  Harder than ever had it been to secure odd jobs, and he had reached the end of his savings2.  Earlier in the evening he had had a telephone conference with the Ancient Mariner3, who had reported only progress with an exceptionally strong nibble4 that very day from a retired5 quack6 doctor.  
“Let me pawn7 my rings,” the Ancient Mariner had urged, not for the first time, over the telephone.
 
“No, sir,” had been Daughtry’s reply.  “We need them in the business.  They’re stock in trade.  They’re atmosphere.  They’re what you call a figure of speech.  I’ll do some thinking to-night an’ see you in the morning, sir.  Hold on to them rings an’ don’t be no more than casual in playin’ that doctor.  Make ’m come to you.  It’s the only way.  Now you’re all right, an’ everything’s hunkydory an’ the goose hangs high.  Don’t you worry, sir.  Dag Daughtry never fell down yet.”
 
But, as he sat in the Pile-drivers’ Home, it looked as if his fall-down was very near.  In his pocket was precisely8 the room-rent for the following week, the advance payment of which was already three days overdue9 and clamorously demanded by the hard-faced landlady10.  In the rooms, with care, was enough food with which to pinch through for another day.  The Ancient Mariner’s modest hotel bill had not been paid for two weeks—a prodigious11 sum under the circumstances, being a first-class hotel; while the Ancient Mariner had no more than a couple of dollars in his pocket with which to make a sound like prosperity in the ears of the retired doctor who wanted to go a-treasuring.
 
Most catastrophic of all, however, was the fact that Dag Daughtry was three quarts short of his daily allowance and did not dare break into the rent money which was all that stood between him and his family and the street.  This was why he sat at the beer table with Captain Jorgensen, who was just returned with a schooner12-load of hay from the Petaluma Flats.  He had already bought beer twice, and evinced no further show of thirst.  Instead, he was yawning from long hours of work and waking and looking at his watch.  And Daughtry was three quarts short!  Besides, Hanson had not yet been smashed, so that the cook-job on the schooner still lay ahead an unknown distance in the future.
 
In his desperation, Daughtry hit upon an idea with which to get another schooner of steam beer.  He did not like steam beer, but it was cheaper than lager.
 
“Look here, Captain,” he said.  “You don’t know how smart that Killeny Boy is.  Why, he can count just like you and me.”
 
“Hoh!” rumbled13 Captain Jorgensen.  “I seen ’em do it in side shows.  It’s all tricks.  Dogs an’ horses can’t count.”
 
“This dog can,” Daughtry continued quietly.  “You can’t fool ’m.  I bet you, right now, I can order two beers, loud so he can hear and notice, and then whisper to the waiter to bring one, an’, when the one comes, Killeny Boy’ll raise a roar with the waiter.”
 
“Hoh!  Hoh!  How much will you bet?”
 
The steward14 fingered a dime15 in his pocket.  If Killeny failed him it meant that the rent-money would be broken in upon.  But Killeny couldn’t and wouldn’t fail him, he reasoned, as he answered:
 
“I’ll bet you the price of two beers.”
 
The waiter was summoned, and, when he had received his secret instructions, Michael was called over from where he lay at Kwaque’s feet in a corner.  When Steward placed a chair for him at the table and invited him into it, he began to key up.  Steward expected something of him, wanted him to show off.  And it was not because of the showing off that he was eager, but because of his love for Steward.  Love and service were one in the simple processes of Michael’s mind.  Just as he would have leaped into fire for Steward’s sake, so would he now serve Steward in any way Steward desired.  That was what love meant to him.  It was all love meant to him—service.
 
“Waiter!” Steward called; and, when the waiter stood close at hand: “Two beers.—Did you get that, Killeny?  Two beers.”
 
Michael squirmed in his chair, placed an impulsive16 paw on the table, and impulsively17 flashed out his ribbon of tongue to Steward’s close-bending face.
 
“He will remember,” Daughtry told the scow-schooner captain.
 
“Not if we talk,” was the reply.  “Now we will fool your bow-wow.  I will say that the job is yours when I smash Hanson.  And you will say it is for me to smash Hanson now.  And I will say Hanson must give............
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