Bud turned his face slightly to one side. "How about stopping; I'll have

to feed her some oil--and it wouldn't hurt to fill the gas tank again.

These heavy roads eat up a lot of extra power. What's her average

mileage on a gallon, Foster?"

"How the deuce should I know?" Foster snapped, just coming out of a

doze.

"You ought to know, with your own car--and gas costing what it does."

"Oh!--ah--what was it you asked?" Foster yawned aloud. "I musta been

asleep."

"I guess you musta been, all right," Bud grunted. "Do you want breakfast

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here, or don't you? I've got to stop for gas and oil; that's what I was

asking?"

The two consulted together, and finally told Bud to stop at the first

garage and get his oil and gas. After that he could drive to a drug

store and buy a couple of thermos bottles, and after that he could go to

the nearest restaurant and get the bottles filled with black coffee, and

have lunch put up for six people. Foster and his friend would remain in

the car.

Bud did these things, revising the plan to the extent of eating his own

breakfast at the counter in the restaurant while the lunch was being

prepared in the kitchen.

From where he sat he could look across at the muddy car standing before

a closed millinery-and-drygoods store. It surely did not look much like

the immaculate machine he had gloated over the evening before, but it

was a powerful, big brute of a car and looked its class in every line.

Bud was proud to drive a car like that. The curtains were buttoned down

tight, and he thought amusedly of the two men huddled inside, shivering

and hungry, yet refusing to come in and get warmed up with a decent

breakfast. Foster, he thought, must certainly be scared of his wife, if

he daren't show himself in this little rube town. For the first time Bud

had a vagrant suspicion that Foster had not told quite all there was to

tell about this trip. Bud wondered now if Foster was not going to meet

a "Jane" somewhere in the South. That terrifying Mann Act would account

for his caution much better than would the business deal of which Foster

had hinted.

Of course, Bud told himself while the waiter refilled his coffee cup, it

was none of his business what Foster had up his sleeve. He wanted to get

somewhere quickly and quietly, and Bud was getting him there. That was

all he need to consider. Warmed and once more filled with a sense of

well-being, Bud made himself a cigarette before the lunch was ready,

and with his arms full of food he went out and across the street. Just

before he reached the car one of the thermos bottles started to slide

down under his elbow. Bud attempted to grip it against his ribs, but the

thing had developed a slipperiness that threatened the whole load, so he

stopped to rearrange his packages, and got an irritated sentence or two

from his passengers.




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