“It's hell what can happen when you're fifteen days behind on a contract, with county commissioners waiting and anxious to grab off a penalty,” declared the boss, to nobody in particular. “One man bunged, and four to lug him home, and the rest of the crew taking a sympathetic vacation!”
Farr, sauntering, swung off the highway down the lane leading to the temporary bridge.
“Here, you long-horned steer, want a job?” called the contractor from his rostrum on the granite block.
“No, my Sussex shote, I do not!”
“Damnation! You dare to call me names, you hobo?”
“Yes,” returned Farr, quite simply.
“Well, quit it. I need men here. You're husky. Two dollars a day, even if you're not a regular mason.”
“No.”
He drawled both the affirmative and the negative and there was something subtly insolent in his tone—something that aroused more ire than a cruder retort would have accomplished. He turned his back on the cursing man and went on down to the bridge. He waited there for a time and watched the drift of foam on the fretted waters. The steady burbling of the stream made him oblivious to other sounds and he did not hear the two men approach. They leaped on him and seized him. One of his captors was the paunchy man, and his hands were heavy and his fingers gripped viciously.
“No wonder you wouldn't work! You're making your living in an easier way.”