Rex Stout - Target Practice

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Target Practice: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Target Practice
All-Story Magazine,

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After this explanation, of our acquaintance and friendship with the Hawkins family, you will understand the curiosity that Dal Willett and I felt that afternoon when the stranger Gruber appeared to request a rig and the way to the Hawkins farm. As Dal had observed, the fellow had the appearance of a backdoor politician. We speculated at length on the possible nature of his errand, as two gossiping males will, but of course fruitlessly. The mere sight of Gruber was enough to make a decent man apprehensive, and it was perhaps that fact, rather than any particular premonition of trouble, that caused me to walk back down to the livery stable that night after supper. It was after ten o’clock when Gruber drove in, left the rig and paid for it, and went off with his shuffling gait toward Main Street.

When I got to my office the following morning I found John Hawkins there waiting for me.

The old man was standing in the hallway in front of the locked door; it was rather dark there and I didn’t recognize him at once. He didn’t speak as I approached, but merely moved to one side so I could get at the keyhole; as he turned I saw his face, and an ejaculation of amazement escaped me at sight of it.

“Why, it’s John Hawkins,” I exclaimed.

He nodded and mumbled, “Yes, I want to see you on some business.”

I opened the door and we entered. In the light from the windows I gazed at him in astonishment; in the week since I had seen him last the man had apparently aged twenty years. He trembled as he walked over to a chair and sank down in it, and though the old grimness had not entirely departed from his face it was almost obliterated by a new look of despair and unmistakable fear. That was my most vivid impression, that he was terribly in fear of something. After I had unlocked my desk and pulled up a chair I asked him what the trouble was.

His eyes blinked rapidly and he opened his lips two or three times before he could get any words out. I barely caught his stammering reply:

“I want to get some money.”

I glanced at him sharply.

“How much?”

“Eight thousand dollars.”

That rather stunned me. Eight thousand dollars! In Holton County that’s a pretty good-sized sum.

“Eight thousand,” I repeated stupidly.

The old man leaned forward in his chair. “Yes, I’ve got to have it,” he said. His voice suddenly became firmer and more distinct. “You can see I’m in trouble, Harry, but don’t ask me any questions, because I can’t answer them. I’ve got to have eight thousand dollars right away. There oughtn’t to be much trouble about it. I only paid six thousand for the farm, but it’s worth easy twice that much now and there ain’t a cent owing on it. If I have to I’ll give a mortgage on the stock, too, and my chickens. They’re worth a lot of money. I thought maybe you could see Mr. Rogers and fix it up today. That’s why I came in so early.”

I looked at him awhile in silence. Twenty questions were on the tip of my tongue, and of course the stranger Gruber was in my mind. But all I said was:

“You’re sure that you’ve got to have this money?”

There was a flash from his eyes. “Would I be asking for it if I didn’t?” he exclaimed with a touch of angry exasperation. Then also instantly he stretched a trembling hand out to me. “I didn’t mean anything, Harry. But I’ve got to have it.”

“It’s not so easy as it sounds,” I replied slowly. “You know when anybody makes a loan, especially one of that size, they want to know what it’s to be used for. You’d have to explain why you want it. The farmers around here have been getting a little reckless, buying automobiles, and so on, and Rogers has shut down on them.”

Again the old man’s eyes flashed. “I’m an honest man,” he said. “And the farm’s worth it. I didn’t think there’d be any trouble.”

“There probably won’t be,” I agreed, “if you’ll explain what you want it for.”

There was a little silence, while the farmer regarded me with a growing expression of despair, and then suddenly a look of shrewdness came into his face.

“It’s a debt I owe,” he declared almost triumphantly. “To a man—” he hesitated a second, then went on — “a man named Gruber. I’ve owed it over five years now, before I came here.”

I nodded. “I saw Gruber yesterday. I was at Dal Willett’s when he came there to hire a rig to go out to your place. Funny-looking man, that Gruber. I may be only a country lawyer, Mr. Hawkins, but one look at his face is enough. And besides, you’re not a man to be ashamed of any honest debt. There’s only one thing you could want to give money to this Gruber for, and that’s blackmail.”

The old farmer started a little and I saw his hand grip the arm of the chair. He was surprised out of his shrewdness, too, for he merely repeated stubbornly, after a moment, “I tell you it’s a debt, Harry.” In another second he added, “What could he blackmail me for?” Then a sudden look of fear drove everything else from his face and he half rose out of his chair as he repeated in a shrill trembling voice:

“What could he blackmail me for?”

I got up and crossed over to lay my hand on his shoulder. Under my touch I could feel a tremor all over his frame.

“That’s just what you’re going to tell me,” I said quietly. “Listen to me. I’m a lawyer, and this sort of thing is my business. Maybe we can find a way out and maybe we can’t, but at any rate if you expect me to help you, you must tell me about it. A decent lawyer doesn’t betray a confidence, and I think I may say I’m decent. Why do you have to give this Gruber eight thousand dollars?”

In the end he told me. Garrulous, old men may be as a rule, but John Hawkins’s words came hard that morning. He hung off for more than an hour, and when he finally told his story I could see that every word was wringing blood from his heart, where the thing had been so long locked up. But though it was sad enough there was nothing really base in it, and the old man’s tough reluctance may be charged to his blind adoration of his daughter. It may be set down here baldly in a few words.

Six years before, John Hawkins, whose real name was Timothy Ryder, had been proprietor of a saloon in New York. His wife had died at the birth of their daughter; and Janet, spoiled by her father and not properly looked after, had gotten into bad company. There were details here that Hawkins passed over; he swore that Janet had not done anything really wrong, but through the misdeeds and treachery of her companions had been arrested and sentenced to three years at Bedford. I, who knew Janet, believed him. Hawkins had sold his saloon, spent half the proceeds in arranging his daughter’s escape, and come west with her.

“Gruber — Nosey Gruber we called him — is a ward-heeler and a crook,” said the old man toward the end. “I chased him out of the district once. I would have killed him last night, only there was no way. Unless I give him ten thousand dollars tomorrow he’s going to telegraph the New York police. I’ve got about two thousand in the bank that I’ve made off of my chickens. It was through them he found out about me; he was in Denver and saw my picture that I showed you in the paper.”

I remember as Hawkins finished the thought in the front of my brain was one of wonder at a man like Gruber reading a copy of the Utah Poultry Bulletin, and happening on that particular copy. My mind caught at that, I suppose, in an instinctive avoidance of the greater problem, how to save this old man from ruin, for I saw at once that the thing was insoluble. Nothing practicable could be done. We sat in silence, Hawkins with his fingers endlessly kneading themselves together and unfastening again, with so bitter a despair in his eyes as they met mine that I looked away.

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