When "the crowd" was with us The Pilot read us all sorts of tales
of adventures in all lands by heroes of all ages, but when we three
sat together by our fire The Pilot would always read us tales of
the heroes of sacred story, and these delighted Bill more than
those of any of the ancient empires of the past. He had his
favorites. Abraham, Moses, Joshua, Gideon, never failed to arouse
his admiration. But Jacob was to him always "a mean cuss," and
David he could not appreciate. Most of all he admired Moses and
the Apostle Paul, whom he called "that little chap." But, when the
reading was about the One Great Man that moved majestic amid the
gospel stories, Bill made no comments; He was too high for
approval.
By and by Bill began to tell these tales to the boys, and one
night, when a quiet mood had fallen upon the company, Bill broke
the silence.
"Say, Pilot, where was it that the little chap got mixed up into
that riot?"
"Riot!" said The Pilot.
"Yes; you remember when he stood off the whole gang from the
stairs?"
"Oh, yes, at Jerusalem!"
"Yes, that's the spot. Perhaps you would read that to the boys.
Good yarn! Little chap, you know, stood up and told 'em they were
all sorts of blanked thieves and cut-throats, and stood 'em off.
Played it alone, too."
Most of the boys failed to recognize the story in its new dress.
There was much interest.
"Who was the duck? Who was the gang? What was the row about?"
"The Pilot here'll tell you. If you'd kind o' give 'em a lead
before you begin, they'd catch on to the yarn better." This last
to The Pilot, who was preparing to read.
"Well, it was at Jerusalem," began The Pilot, when Bill interrupted:
"If I might remark, perhaps it might help the boys on to the trail
mebbe, if you'd tell 'em how the little chap struck his new gait."
So he designated the Apostle's conversion.
Then The Pilot introduced the Apostle with some formality to the
company, describing with such vivid touches his life and early
training, his sudden wrench from all he held dear, under the stress
of a new conviction, his magnificent enthusiasm and courage, his
tenderness and patience, that I was surprised to find myself
regarding him as a sort of hero, and the boys were all ready to
back him against any odds. As The Pilot read the story of the
Arrest at Jerusalem, stopping now and then to picture the scene, we
saw it all and were in the thick of it. The raging crowd hustling
and beating the life out of the brave little man, the sudden thrust
of the disciplined Roman guard through the mass, the rescue, the
pause on the stairway, the calm face of the little hero beckoning
for a hearing, the quieting of the frantic, frothing mob, the
fearless speech--all passed before us. The boys were thrilled.
"Good stuff, eh?"
"Ain't he a daisy?"
"Daisy! He's a whole sunflower patch!"
"Yes," drawled Bill, highly appreciating their marks of approval.
"That's what I call a partickler fine character of a man. There
ain't no manner of insecks on to him."
"You bet!" said Hi.
"I say," broke in one of the boys, who was just emerging from the
tenderfoot stage, "o' course that's in the Bible, ain't it?"
The Pilot assented.
"Well, how do you know it's true?"
The Pilot was proceeding to elaborate his argument when Bill cut in
somewhat more abruptly than was his wont.
"Look here, young feller!" Bill's voice was in the tone of
command. The man looked as he was bid. "How do you know
anything's true? How do you know The Pilot here's true when he
speaks? Can't you tell by the feel? You know by the sound of his
voice, don't you?" Bill paused and the young fellow agreed
readily.
"Well how do you know a blanked son of a she jackass when you see
him?" Again Bill paused. There was no reply.
"Well," said Bill, resuming his deliberate drawl. "I'll give you
the information without extra charge. It's by the sound he makes
when he opens his blanked jaw."
"But," went on the young skeptic, nettled at the laugh that went
round, "that don't prove anything. You know," turning to The
Pilot, "that there are heaps of people who don't believe the
Bible."
The Pilot nodded.
"Some of the smartest, best-educated men are agnostics," proceeded
the young man, warming to his theme, and failing to notice the
stiffening of Bill's lank figure. "I don't know but what I am one
myself."
"That so?" said Bill, with sudden interest.
"I guess so," was the modest reply.
"Got it bad?" went on Bill, with a note of anxiety in his tone.
But the young man turned to The Pilot and tried to open a fresh
argument.
"Whatever he's got," said Bill to the others, in a mild voice,
"it's spoilin' his manners."
"Yes," went on Bill, meditatively, after the slight laugh had died,
"it's ruinin' to the judgment. He don't seem to know when he
interferes with the game. Pity, too."
Still the argument went on.
"Seems as if he ought to take somethin'," said Bill, in a voice
suspiciously mild. "What would you suggest?"
"A walk, mebbe!" said Hi, in delighted expectation.
"I hold the opinion that you have mentioned an uncommonly vallable
remedy, better'n Pain Killer almost."
Bill rose languidly.
"I say," he drawled, tapping the young fellow, "it appears to me a
little walk would perhaps be good, mebbe."
"All right, wait till I get my cap," was the unsuspecting reply.
"I don't think perhaps you won't need it, mebbe. I cherish the
opinion you'll, perhaps, be warm enough." Bill's voice had
unconsciously passed into a sterner tone. Hi was on his feet and
at the door.
"This here interview is private and confidential," said Bill to his
partner.
"Exactly," said Hi, opening the door. At this the young fellow,
who was a strapping six-footer, but soft and flabby, drew back and
refused to go. He was too late. Bill's grip was on his collar and
out they went into the snow, and behind them Hi closed the door.
In vain the young fellow struggled to wrench himself free from the
hands that had him by the shoulder and the back of the neck. I
took it all in from the window. He might have been a boy for all
the effect his plungings had upon the long, sinewy arms that
gripped him so fiercely. After a minute's furious struggle the
young fellow stood quiet, when Bill suddenly shifted his grip from
the shoulder to the seat of his buckskin trousers. Then began a
series of evolutions before the house--up and down, forward and
back, which the unfortunate victim, with hands wildly clutching at
empty air, was quite powerless to resist till he was brought up
panting and gasping, subdued, to a standstill.
"I'll larn you agnostics and several other kinds of ticks," said
Bill, in a terrible voice, his drawl lengthening perceptibly.
"Come round here, will you, and shove your blanked second-handed
trash down our throats?" Bill paused to get words; then, bursting
out in rising wrath:
"There ain't no sootable words for sich conduct. By the livin'
Jeminy--" He suddenly swung his prisoner off his feet, lifted him
bodily, and held him over his head at arm's length. "I've a notion
to--"
"Don't! don't! for Heaven's sake!" cried the struggling wretch,
"I'll stop it! I will!"
Bill at once lowered him and set him on his feet.
"All right! Shake!" he said, holding out his hand, which the other
took with caution.
It was a remarkably sudden conversion and lasting in its effects.
There was no more agnosticism in the little group that gathered
around The Pilot for the nightly reading.
The interest in the reading kept growing night by night.
"Seems as if The Pilot was gittin' in his work," said Bill to me;
and looking at the grave, eager faces, I agreed. He was getting in
his work with Bill, too; though perhaps Bill did not know it. I
remember one night, when the others had gone, The Pilot was reading
to us the Parable of the Talents, Bill was particularly interested
in the servant who failed in his duty.
"Ornery cuss, eh?" he remarked; "and gall, too, eh? Served him
blamed well right, in my opinion!"
But when the practical bearing of the parable became clear to him,
after long silence, he said, slowly:
"Well, that there seems to indicate that it's about time for
me to get a rustle on." Then, after another silence, he said,
hesitatingly, "This here church-buildin' business now, do you think
that'll perhaps count, mebbe? I guess not, eh? 'Tain't much, o'
course, anyway." Poor Bill, he was like a child, and The Pilot
handled him with a mother's touch.
"What are you best at, Bill?"
"Bronco-bustin' and cattle," said Bill, wonderingly; "that's my
line."
"Well, Bill, my line is preaching just now, and piloting, you
know." The Pilot's smile was like a sunbeam on a rainy day, for
there were tears in his eyes and voice. "And we have just got to
be faithful. You see what he says: 'Well done, good and faithful
servant. Thou hast been faithful.'"
Bill was puzzled.
"Faithful!" he repeated. "Does that mean with the cattle, perhaps?"
"Yes, that's just it, Bill, and with everything else that comes
your way."
And Bill never forgot that lesson, for I heard him, with a kind of
quiet enthusiasm, giving it to Hi as a great find. "Now, I call
that a fair deal," he said to his friend; "gives every man a show.
No cards up the sleeve."
"That's so," was Hi's thoughtful reply; "distributes the trumps."
Somehow Bill came to be regarded as an authority upon questions
of religion and morals. No one ever accused him of "gettin'
religion." He went about his work in his slow, quiet way, but he
was always sharing his discoveries with "the boys." And if anyone
puzzled him with subtleties he never rested till he had him face to
face with The Pilot. And so it came that these two drew to each
other with more than brotherly affection. When Bill got into
difficulty with problems that have vexed the souls of men far wiser
than he, The Pilot would either disentangle the knots or would turn
his mind to the verities that stood out sure and clear, and Bill
would be content.
"That's good enough for me," he would say, and his heart would be
at rest.