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<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns:epub="http://www.idpf.org/2007/ops" epub:prefix="z3998: http://www.daisy.org/z3998/2012/vocab/structure/, se: https://standardebooks.org/vocab/1.0" xml:lang="en-US">
<head>
<title>Shoes</title>
<link href="../css/core.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"/>
<link href="../css/local.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"/>
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<body epub:type="bodymatter z3998:fiction">
<section id="shoes" epub:type="volume se:short-story">
<h2 epub:type="title">Shoes</h2>
<p>John De Graffenreid Atwood ate of the lotus, root, stem, and flower. The tropics gobbled him up. He plunged enthusiastically into his work, which was to try to forget Rosine.</p>
<p>Now, they who dine on the lotus rarely consume it plain. There is a sauce <i xml:lang="es">au diable</i> that goes with it; and the distillers are the chefs who prepare it. And on Johnnys menu card it read “brandy.” With a bottle between them, he and Billy Keogh would sit on the porch of the little consulate at night and roar out great, indecorous songs, until the natives, slipping hastily past, would shrug a shoulder and mutter things to themselves about the “<i xml:lang="es">Americanos diablos</i>.”</p>
<p>One day Johnnys <i xml:lang="es">mozo</i> brought the mail and dumped it on the table. Johnny leaned from his hammock, and fingered the four or five letters dejectedly. Keogh was sitting on the edge of the table chopping lazily with a paper knife at the legs of a centipede that was crawling among the stationery. Johnny was in that phase of lotus-eating when all the world tastes bitter in ones mouth.</p>
<p>“Same old thing!” he complained. “Fool people writing for information about the country. They want to know all about raising fruit, and how to make a fortune without work. Half of em dont even send stamps for a reply. They think a consul hasnt anything to do but write letters. Slit those envelopes for me, old man, and see what they want. Im feeling too rocky to move.”</p>
<p>Keogh, acclimated beyond all possibility of ill-humour, drew his chair to the table with smiling compliance on his rose-pink countenance, and began to slit open the letters. Four of them were from citizens in various parts of the United States who seemed to regard the consul at Coralio as a cyclopaedia of information. They asked long lists of questions, numerically arranged, about the climate, products, possibilities, laws, business chances, and statistics of the country in which the consul had the honour of representing his own government.</p>
<p>“Write em, please, Billy,” said that inert official, “just a line, referring them to the latest consular report. Tell em the State Department will be delighted to furnish the literary gems. Sign my name. Dont let your pen scratch, Billy; itll keep me awake.”</p>
<p>“Dont snore,” said Keogh, amiably, “and Ill do your work for you. You need a corps of assistants, anyhow. Dont see how you ever get out a report. Wake up a minute!—heres one more letter—its from your own town, too—Dalesburg.”</p>
<p>“That so?” murmured Johnny showing a mild and obligatory interest. “Whats it about?”</p>
<p>“Postmaster writes,” explained Keogh. “Says a citizen of the town wants some facts and advice from you. Says the citizen has an idea in his head of coming down where you are and opening a shoe store. Wants to know if you think the business would pay. Says hes heard of the boom along this coast, and wants to get in on the ground floor.”</p>
<p>In spite of the heat and his bad temper, Johnnys hammock swayed with his laughter. Keogh laughed too; and the pet monkey on the top shelf of the bookcase chattered in shrill sympathy with the ironical reception of the letter from Dalesburg.</p>
<p>“Great bunions!” exclaimed the consul. “Shoe store! Whatll they ask about next, I wonder? Overcoat factory, I reckon. Say, Billy—of our 3,000 citizens, how many do you suppose ever had on a pair of shoes?”</p>
<p>Keogh reflected judicially.</p>
<p>“Lets see—theres you and me and—”</p>
<p>“Not me,” said Johnny, promptly and incorrectly, holding up a foot encased in a disreputable deerskin <i xml:lang="es">zapato</i>. “I havent been a victim to shoes in months.”</p>
<p>“But youve got em, though,” went on Keogh. “And theres Goodwin and Blanchard and Geddie and old Lutz and Doc Gregg and that Italian thats agent for the banana company, and theres old Delgado—no; he wears sandals. And, oh, yes; theres Madama Ortiz, what kapes the hotel—she had on a pair of red slippers at the baile the other night. And Miss Pasa, her daughter, that went to school in the States—she brought back some civilized notions in the way of footgear. And theres the comandantes sister that dresses up her feet on feast-days—and <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Geddie, who wears a two with a Castilian instep—and thats about all the ladies. Lets see—dont some of the soldiers at the cuartel—no: thats so; theyre allowed shoes only when on the march. In barracks they turn their little toeses out to grass.”</p>
<p>Bout right,” agreed the consul. “Not over twenty out of the three thousand ever felt leather on their walking arrangements. Oh, yes; Coralio is just the town for an enterprising shoe store—that doesnt want to part with its goods. Wonder if old Patterson is trying to jolly me! He always was full of things he called jokes. Write him a letter, Billy. Ill dictate it. Well jolly him back a few.”</p>
<p>Keogh dipped his pen, and wrote at Johnnys dictation. With many pauses, filled in with smoke and sundry travellings of the bottle and glasses, the following reply to the Dalesburg communication was perpetrated:</p>
<blockquote epub:type="letter">
<p><abbr>Mr.</abbr> Obadiah Patterson, Dalesburg, Ala.</p>
<p><span epub:type="z3998:salutation">Dear Sir</span>: In reply to your favour of July 2nd, I have the honour to inform you that, according to my opinion, there is no place on the habitable globe that presents to the eye stronger evidence of the need of a first-class shoe store than does the town of Coralio. There are 3,000 inhabitants in the place, and not a single shoe store! The situation speaks for itself. This coast is rapidly becoming the goal of enterprising business men, but the shoe business is one that has been sadly overlooked or neglected. In fact, there are a considerable number of our citizens actually without shoes at present.</p>
<p>Besides the want above mentioned, there is also a crying need for a brewery, a college of higher mathematics, a coal yard, and a clean and intellectual Punch and Judy show. I have the honour to be, sir,</p>
<footer>
<p epub:type="z3998:valediction">Your Obt. Servant,</p>
<p class="signature" epub:type="z3998:sender">John De Graffenreid Atwood,</p>
<p><abbr class="initialism">US</abbr> Consul at Coralio.</p>
</footer>
<p epub:type="z3998:postscript"><abbr>P.S.</abbr>—Hello! Uncle Obadiah. Hows the old burg racking along? What would the government do without you and me? Look out for a green-headed parrot and a bunch of bananas soon, from your old friend</p>
<p class="signature" epub:type="z3998:sender">Johnny</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“I throw in that postscript,” explained the consul, “so Uncle Obadiah wont take offence at the official tone of the letter! Now, Billy, you get that correspondence fixed up, and send Pancho to the post-office with it. The <i epub:type="se:name.vessel.ship">Ariadne</i> takes the mail out tomorrow if they make up that load of fruit today.”</p>
<p>The night programme in Coralio never varied. The recreations of the people were soporific and flat. They wandered about, barefoot and aimless, speaking lowly and smoking cigar or cigarette. Looking down on the dimly lighted ways one seemed to see a threading maze of brunette ghosts tangled with a procession of insane fireflies. In some houses the thrumming of lugubrious guitars added to the depression of the triste night. Giant tree-frogs rattled in the foliage as loudly as the end mans “bones” in a minstrel troupe. By nine oclock the streets were almost deserted.</p>
<p>Nor at the consulate was there often a change of bill. Keogh would come there nightly, for Coralios one cool place was the little seaward porch of that official residence.</p>
<p>The brandy would be kept moving; and before midnight sentiment would begin to stir in the heart of the self-exiled consul. Then he would relate to Keogh the story of his ended romance. Each night Keogh would listen patiently to the tale, and be ready with untiring sympathy.</p>
<p>“But dont you think for a minute”—thus Johnny would always conclude his woeful narrative—“that Im grieving about that girl, Billy. Ive forgotten her. She never enters my mind. If she were to enter that door right now, my pulse wouldnt gain a beat. Thats all over long ago.”</p>
<p>“Dont I know it?” Keogh would answer. “Of course youve forgotten her. Proper thing to do. Wasnt quite OK of her to listen to the knocks that—er—Dink Pawson kept giving you.”</p>
<p>“Pink Dawson!”—a world of contempt would be in Johnnys tones—“Poor white trash! Thats what he was. Had five hundred acres of farming land, though; and that counted. Maybe Ill have a chance to get back at him some day. The Dawsons werent anybody. Everybody in Alabama knows the Atwoods. Say, Billy—did you know my mother was a De Graffenreid?”</p>
<p>“Why, no,” Keogh would say; “is that so?” He had heard it some three hundred times.</p>
<p>“Fact. The De Graffenreids of Hancock County. But I never think of that girl any more, do I, Billy?”</p>
<p>“Not for a minute, my boy,” would be the last sounds heard by the conqueror of Cupid.</p>
<p>At this point Johnny would fall into a gentle slumber, and Keogh would saunter out to his own shack under the calabash tree at the edge of the plaza.</p>
<p>In a day or two the letter from the Dalesburg postmaster and its answer had been forgotten by the Coralio exiles. But on the 26th day of July the fruit of the reply appeared upon the tree of events.</p>
<p>The <i epub:type="se:name.vessel.ship">Andador</i>, a fruit steamer that visited Coralio regularly, drew into the offing and anchored. The beach was lined with spectators while the quarantine doctor and the customhouse crew rowed out to attend to their duties.</p>
<p>An hour later Billy Keogh lounged into the consulate, clean and cool in his linen clothes, and grinning like a pleased shark.</p>
<p>“Guess what?” he said to Johnny, lounging in his hammock.</p>
<p>“Too hot to guess,” said Johnny, lazily.</p>
<p>“Your shoe-store mans come,” said Keogh, rolling the sweet morsel on his tongue, “with a stock of goods big enough to supply the continent as far down as Terra del Fuego. Theyre carting his cases over to the customhouse now. Six barges full they brought ashore and have paddled back for the rest. Oh, ye saints in glory! wont there be regalements in the air when he gets onto the joke and has an interview with <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Consul? Itll be worth nine years in the tropics just to witness that one joyful moment.”</p>
<p>Keogh loved to take his mirth easily. He selected a clean place on the matting and lay upon the floor. The walls shook with his enjoyment. Johnny turned half over and blinked.</p>
<p>“Dont tell me,” he said, “that anybody was fool enough to take that letter seriously.”</p>
<p>“Four-thousand-dollar stock of goods!” gasped Keogh, in ecstasy. “Talk about coals to Newcastle! Why didnt he take a shipload of palm-leaf fans to Spitzbergen while he was about it? Saw the old codger on the beach. You ought to have been there when he put on his specs and squinted at the five hundred or so barefooted citizens standing around.”</p>
<p>“Are you telling the truth, Billy?” asked the consul, weakly.</p>
<p>“Am I? You ought to see the buncoed gentlemans daughter he brought along. Looks! She makes the brick-dust señoritas here look like tar-babies.”</p>
<p>“Go on,” said Johnny, “if you can stop that asinine giggling. I hate to see a grown man make a laughing hyena of himself.”</p>
<p>“Name is Hemstetter,” went on Keogh. “Hes a—Hello! whats the matter now?”</p>
<p>Johnnys moccasined feet struck the floor with a thud as he wriggled out of his hammock.</p>
<p>“Get up, you idiot,” he said, sternly, “or Ill brain you with this inkstand. Thats Rosine and her father. Gad! what a drivelling idiot old Patterson is! Get up, here, Billy Keogh, and help me. What the devil are we going to do? Has all the world gone crazy?”</p>
<p>Keogh rose and dusted himself. He managed to regain a decorous demeanour.</p>
<p>“Situation has got to be met, Johnny,” he said, with some success at seriousness. “I didnt think about its being your girl until you spoke. First thing to do is to get them comfortable quarters. You go down and face the music, and Ill trot out to Goodwins and see if <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Goodwin wont take them in. Theyve got the decentest house in town.”</p>
<p>“Bless you, Billy!” said the consul. “I knew you wouldnt desert me. The worlds bound to come to an end, but maybe we can stave it off for a day or two.”</p>
<p>Keogh hoisted his umbrella and set out for Goodwins house. Johnny put on his coat and hat. He picked up the brandy bottle, but set it down again without drinking, and marched bravely down to the beach.</p>
<p>In the shade of the customhouse walls he found <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter and Rosine surrounded by a mass of gaping citizens. The customs officers were ducking and scraping, while the captain of the <i epub:type="se:name.vessel.ship">Andador</i> interpreted the business of the new arrivals. Rosine looked healthy and very much alive. She was gazing at the strange scenes around her with amused interest. There was a faint blush upon her round cheek as she greeted her old admirer. <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter shook hands with Johnny in a very friendly way. He was an oldish, impractical man—one of that numerous class of erratic business men who are forever dissatisfied, and seeking a change.</p>
<p>“I am very glad to see you, John—may I call you John?” he said. “Let me thank you for your prompt answer to our postmasters letter of inquiry. He volunteered to write to you on my behalf. I was looking about for something different in the way of a business in which the profits would be greater. I had noticed in the papers that this coast was receiving much attention from investors. I am extremely grateful for your advice to come. I sold out everything that I possess, and invested the proceeds in as fine a stock of shoes as could be bought in the North. You have a picturesque town here, John. I hope business will be as good as your letter justifies me in expecting.”</p>
<p>Johnnys agony was abbreviated by the arrival of Keogh, who hurried up with the news that <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Goodwin would be much pleased to place rooms at the disposal of <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter and his daughter. So there <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter and Rosine were at once conducted and left to recuperate from the fatigue of the voyage, while Johnny went down to see that the cases of shoes were safely stored in the customs warehouse pending their examination by the officials. Keogh, grinning like a shark, skirmished about to find Goodwin, to instruct him not to expose to <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter the true state of Coralio as a shoe market until Johnny had been given a chance to redeem the situation, if such a thing were possible.</p>
<p>That night the consul and Keogh held a desperate consultation on the breezy porch of the consulate.</p>
<p>“Send em back home,” began Keogh, reading Johnnys thoughts.</p>
<p>“I would,” said Johnny, after a little silence; “but Ive been lying to you, Billy.”</p>
<p>“All right about that,” said Keogh, affably.</p>
<p>“Ive told you hundreds of times,” said Johnny, slowly, “that I had forgotten that girl, havent I?”</p>
<p>“About three hundred and seventy-five,” admitted the monument of patience.</p>
<p>“I lied,” repeated the consul, “every time. I never forgot her for one minute. I was an obstinate ass for running away just because she said No once. And I was too proud a fool to go back. I talked with Rosine a few minutes this evening up at Goodwins. I found out one thing. You remember that farmer fellow who was always after her?”</p>
<p>“Dink Pawson?” asked Keogh.</p>
<p>“Pink Dawson. Well, he wasnt a hill of beans to her. She says she didnt believe a word of the things he told her about me. But Im sewed up now, Billy. That tomfool letter we sent ruined whatever chance I had left. Shell despise me when she finds out that her old father has been made the victim of a joke that a decent school boy wouldnt have been guilty of. Shoes! Why he couldnt sell twenty pairs of shoes in Coralio if he kept store here for twenty years. You put a pair of shoes on one of these Caribs or Spanish brown boys and whatd he do? Stand on his head and squeal until hed kicked em off. None of em ever wore shoes and they never will. If I send em back home Ill have to tell the whole story, and whatll she think of me? I want that girl worse than ever, Billy, and now when shes in reach Ive lost her forever because I tried to be funny when the thermometer was at 102.”</p>
<p>“Keep cheerful,” said the optimistic Keogh. “And let em open the store. Ive been busy myself this afternoon. We can stir up a temporary boom in footgear anyhow. Ill buy six pairs when the doors open. Ive been around and seen all the fellows and explained the catastrophe. Theyll all buy shoes like they was centipedes. Frank Goodwin will take cases of em. The Geddies want about eleven pairs between em. Clancy is going to invest the savings of weeks, and even old Doc Gregg wants three pairs of alligator-hide slippers if theyve got any tens. Blanchard got a look at Miss Hemstetter; and as hes a Frenchman, no less than a dozen pairs will do for him.”</p>
<p>“A dozen customers,” said Johnny, “for a $4,000 stock of shoes! It wont work. Theres a big problem here to figure out. You go home, Billy, and leave me alone. Ive got to work at it all by myself. Take that bottle of Three-star along with you—no, sir; not another ounce of booze for the United States consul. Ill sit here tonight and pull out the think stop. If theres a soft place on this proposition anywhere Ill land on it. If there isnt therell be another wreck to the credit of the gorgeous tropics.”</p>
<p>Keogh left, feeling that he could be of no use. Johnny laid a handful of cigars on a table and stretched himself in a steamer chair. When the sudden daylight broke, silvering the harbour ripples, he was still sitting there. Then he got up, whistling a little tune, and took his bath.</p>
<p>At nine oclock he walked down to the dingy little cable office and hung for half an hour over a blank. The result of his application was the following message, which he signed and had transmitted at a cost of $33:</p>
<blockquote>
<p><span epub:type="z3998:salutation">To Pinkney Dawson</span>, Dalesburg, Ala.</p>
<p>Draft for $100 comes to you next mail. Ship me immediately 500 pounds stiff, dry cockleburrs. New use here in arts. Market price twenty cents pound. Further orders likely. <span class="signature">Rush.</span></p>
</blockquote>
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