On the other hand, why did he choose a spree as a relief from his

particular bunch of ghosts? Trading one misery for another was all

you could call it. Doing exactly the things that Marie's mother had

predicted he would do, committing the very sins that Marie was always

a little afraid he would commit--there must be some sort of twisted

revenge in that, he thought, but for the life of him he could not quite

see any real, permanent satisfaction in it--especially since Marie and

her mother would never get to hear of it.

For that matter, he was not so sure that they would not get to hear.

He remembered meeting, just on the first edge of his spree, one Joe De

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Barr, a cigar salesman whom he had known in San Jose. Joe knew Marie--in

fact, Joe had paid her a little attention before Bud came into her life.

Joe had been in Alpine between trains, taking orders for goods from the

two saloons and the hotel. He had seen Bud drinking. Bud knew perfectly

well how much Joe had seen him drinking, and he knew perfectly well

that Joe was surprised to the point of amazement--and, Bud suspected,

secretly gratified as well. Wherefore Bud had deliberately done what

he could do to stimulate and emphasize both the surprise and the

gratification. Why is it that most human beings feel a sneaking

satisfaction in the downfall of another? Especially another who is, or

has been at sometime, a rival in love or in business?

Bud had no delusions concerning Joe De Barr. If Joe should happen to

meet Marie, he would manage somehow to let her know that Bud was going

to the dogs--on the toboggan--down and out--whatever it suited Joe to

declare him. It made Bud sore now to think of Joe standing so smug and

so well dressed and so immaculate beside the bar, smiling and twisting

the ends of his little brown mustache while he watched Bud make such

a consummate fool of himself. At the time, though, Bud had taken a

perverse delight in making himself appear more soddenly drunken, more

boisterous and reckless than he really was.

Oh, well, what was the odds? Marie couldn't think any worse of him than

she already thought. And whatever she thought, their trails had parted,

and they would never cross again--not if Bud could help it. Probably

Marie would say amen to that. He would like to know how she was getting

along--and the baby, too. Though the baby had never seemed quite real

to Bud, or as if it were a permanent member of the household. It was a

leather-lunged, red-faced, squirming little mite, and in his heart of

hearts Bud had not felt as though it belonged to him at all. He had

never rocked it, for instance, or carried it in his arms. He had been

afraid he might drop it, or squeeze it too hard, or break it somehow

with his man's strength. When he thought of Marie he did not necessarily

think of the baby, though sometimes he did, wondering vaguely how much

it had grown, and if it still hollered for its bottle, all hours of the

day and night.




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