The band stopped playing. Throughout the “big top”
there fell one of those pauses which always precede a major act on the bill—a
sort of preliminary silence which arrests the attention of the spectators and
contributes in a subtle manner to the nerve-tension which the amusement-seeking
public now considers synonymous with getting their money's worth.
High up on a spidery tower, midway of the tent,
and directly in front of the reserved section, movement occurred. A man arose
and approached a black square on which shone polished levers. A second figure
arose, cast off a robe which shrouded its outlines, and stood revealed as a
girl in pale pink fleshings about supple, pliant torso and limbs.
Viewed from below she looked small, dainty, young
and blonde in a gold-and-crimson way. She took up a sort of wand and advanced
to the edge of the tower's top, from which a wire stretched down at a slight
angle from an upright, beside a little ladder like set of steps.
The ringmaster raised his hands. The silence
continued. All other acts in the three rings below, and on the wires and
trapeze above, came to a halt. The announcer's megaphone rang out to all parts
of the monster tent:
“Ladies and gentlemen! Mlle. Mitchi Maya in her
daring performance on the Live Wire! There are five thousand volts of deadly
current passing through the wire upon which she works. Five thousand volts!
Enough to strike a dozen men dead. A slip—a misstep—ah! Permit me to ask you
all to maintain absolute silence during this exceedingly hazardous act. Are you
ready, Mlle. Maya? Then—go!”
With a crackling sputter, two large arc-lights,
one green on the tower, one red above the net where the wire ran down and ended,
leaped into life as the man on the tower pushed a shining lever home. The girl
bowed. She ran up the little steps to a level with the wire. She bowed again,
poised like a diver; then—she stepped out on the wire itself.
A burst of flame came from under her shoe at the
contact. The side of her body above the limb she stood on sprang into an
outline of tiny parti-colored lights. She advanced a step. Again a flash of
blue fire marked her action. Lights outlined the limb and girdled her slender
waist on the opposite side.
She put down both feet and stood drawn in colored
light. She walked, she ran, she danced on the deadly thing beneath her, turned
and ran back to the ladder-like steps, and so down to the tower-top.
Already her assistant was busy. As the avid crowd
sighed its relief and gaped for more, he led her to the edge, this time beneath
the wire.
She turned back her face and seized something in
her mouth. On her back the man was fastening something, one could not just see
what; but in a moment one understood. She lifted her naked arms. The wings of a
giant butterfly sprang into view. They waved as in preparation for flight,
and—she was off!
Hanging by her teeth, arms outstretched, the wings
and her body a mass of scintillating brilliance, the wheel upon which she slid
and beneath which she clung throwing off sparks like the flare of a trolley
from a charged wire!
She flashed down the wire, landed in the net and
stood bowing to the wave of applause which greeted her having accomplished the
thing once more. Then she slid to the ground on a rope, ran from the ring and
so back to the “trapping-room.”
The “Human Butterfly” act of the Barnaby Shows was
ended.
It was a genuine “thriller.” I, who was press
agent of Barnaby's Shows, knew all about it. I knew that it had already been
the indirect cause of a man's death, and of a wedding; and that it had nearly
killed the woman who had just performed it anew and was making her way out of
the ring while the audience rustled back to a casual interest in less sensational
numbers of the bill.
I glanced into her face and nodded as she passed
me in the fly of the big top. She nodded back with a smile. She was as winsome,
as fresh near at hand as she looked on the tower. She was young, and seemingly
happy.
I remembered the night when her petite body lay
unconscious in the net. For the wire on which she worked was really charged as
the announcer had claimed. The act was risky. It was genuine—no fake.
Forget that I am a press agent, because the story
of the thing is true, on my honor as a man.
We of the circus know that about once every so
often the public must have a thrill in their bill of entertainment. Human
nature stays pretty much the same from year to year. The Romans had
gladiatorial combats, and the old barons and such, knightly tournaments. Folks
got hurt in those affairs.
Nowadays people like to see men and women go up in
balloons and jump off with a few yards of canvas between them and kingdom come,
or else see a loop-the-loop, or an airman fly upside down—anything where a
mishap will mean sudden death. I don't know why, but it's so. You know it.
And so we amusement-venders have to pull a
dangerous stunt now and then. That is how Pitkin came to dope out the
“Butterfly” in the first place. He was our electrician. We have a new one now.
But he fixed this “thriller” and it gave one audience, at least, a sensation
not down on the bill.
Pitkin was nuts on electricity—had all sorts of
funny notions about what it could do—was always experimenting with the “juice,”
and he certainly knew how to make it do what he wanted it to.
He figured that a big act like this, full of blue
sparks and things, would make a big hit, and he put it straight up to old man
Barnaby himself.
At first Barnaby was shy of the thing. Then his
need of a new act and the scheme of the thing itself took hold on him. Pitkin
assured him that he could make it as safe as a church during Lent, and he fell
for the act and had it built.
Now in itself, the act is all right—if something
don't go wrong. That's the whole thing with most of the big stunts, however.
It's the thing which sometimes gives the dear public something not down, and
it's because of the off chance of something going wrong that they all hold
their breaths and hope. But they're not hoping it will.
In working, Mitchi wore insulated shoes and her
tights were rubber, too. The mouthpiece of her pulley was made of soft rubber
into which she bit. Unless she were to brush the wire with her naked arms or
her face she was pretty safe.
She had to be quick at the net, of course, so as
to hit it right and not fall against the wire. But that's nothing much for the
trained acrobat which she was.
Still, when it came to getting a woman for the act
after it was built, Pitkin and Barnaby had some trouble, until they picked up
Mitchi Maya out of an aerial troupe.
She'd been with the show for some time and was
about the neatest little gymnast you ever saw. She had blue eyes like the
flowers of wild flax, and a little straight nose, and a clear, fine skin, with
a figure as supple and pliant as a spring. And she had a nerve to match her
good looks, which isn't always the rule by a long shot.
The old Hungarian who was head of the aerial
troupe had picked her up as a baby, adopted and trained her, and he always kept
her with him. There was some story about a widowed mother in the old country,
and I know Mitchi used to send money somewhere over there.
Well, when she heard about the “Butterfly” going
begging for a woman, I guess she got a bug she could save a lot more money out
of the job. They pay big for such stunts. She thought if she earned enough she
could get the old dame over here and sort of look after her first hand instead
of by correspondence.
First off she had a long powwow with the old
Magyar who had raised her, and though he put up some kick about her leaving his
act, he gave in in the end like we all do for a pretty woman. Next she goes to
the “old man” and says she'll sign on for the big bill; and the first thing we
knew Pitkin and she were working the thing up between shows and before
performances, after the big top was up.
The act created a good deal of excitement, even
among our crowd themselves. I remember we all stood around mighty shaky the
first time it got a try-out.
Some of the women got pretty pale the first time
that little kid stepped out on that hell-spitting wire in her little pink
tights, and I know I felt sort of lumpy in the throat myself.
But Mitchi was as cool as a nice icy grapefruit,
and she got by with the trial in great shape. Then, too, Pitkin swore there
wasn't any real danger.
He explained all about it. It seems that the
balancing-wand she carried, with a big brass knob on the end, was a sort of
safety device. At least that is what I gathered from his line of talk. He said
the knob collected all the surplus electricity which wasn't taken care of by
her shoes and suit.
It was something like some sort of jar—Leyden jar
he called it. Anyway, as I understood it, it was a sort of fancy lightning-rod
she carried, which caught up all the diffused currents and made her safe. As
for the slide, it only lasted a few seconds, and the rubber mouthpiece was
built so that she couldn't get hurt.
Still, it sure looked fierce to see that kid
frolicking around on the thing. It gave me the willies the first time, and it
sort of gets me fussed up now and again, even now. You see I can't just forget
what happened—once.
After the trial we all congratulated them, and
Mitchi laughed, with her little red mouth open so you could see her strong
white teeth. She said it was a lot easier in fact than the trapeze act of the
old Magyar's she had left. As for Pitkin, he grunted and let it go at that.
Nobody expected anything else from him.
He was a funny fellow, dark as Mitchi was light,
and wiry, with a sort of sallow skin and a great mop of black hair which he
wore so long it curled up at the back like a duck's tail. He had black eyes, or
at least black-brown, and a half-way discouraged mustache. By his own tell he
was a Russian who had left the old homestead on the jump, about a hose-length
ahead of a Siberian excursion the Czar was getting up for some undesirable
“cits.”
Pitkin made a getaway and beat the police to the
frontier. He'd been what he called a student with progressive thinks in his
tank. He had a sort of slow, quiet way about him and wasn't much of a mixer.
He'd rather get off by himself and mope around half a day than join a friendly
gabfest or a game of cards. But he sure was studious when it came to using the
“juice” for funny effects.
Oh, he was bright all right—only, to look at the
chap, you wouldn't ever have thought he had a live wire of feeling coiled up in
himself. He just gloomed around and we rather let him alone, most of the time.
But he was human under all his reserve—human in a
wild, untrained sort of way, for all his being a student. Dogs, you know, are
said to be domesticated wolves, and Pitkin was human the same way that a wolf
is a dog.
I fancy the Czar was right—the chap wasn't safe to
run with ordinary mutts like the rest of our crowd. We found that out later,
too, and it all came about through the butterfly act.
Being with Mitchi like he was, in trying out the
act and working it up he saw a lot of the girl. As a matter of fact I don't
blame him for getting stuck on that pretty little kid. She was pretty, and
game, and on top of that she was a sweet-dispositioned little thing and a prime
favorite with our bunch.
The upshot of it was that the Russky fell head
over heels in love and wanted to get married right away. Mitchi told him
straight out that she didn't care for him that way and that she wouldn't marry
any man unless she loved him. He took it mighty badly and grew more sullen than
ever.
He was one of those people who have to have what
they want, no matter how they get it; and he wouldn't take no for an answer.
Every now and then he'd come back with his proposal. And each time he got the
same answer he grew a trifle more grouchy about it. He used to go mooning
around with his big eyes, black and mournful, except when he was looking at
Mitchi, and then they seemed to snap, and dance, and sparkle.
I've seen him stand and eye her, and after a while
spread out his fingers like claws and shut them as if he imagined he could grab
her and drag her to him. He'd get a sort of hungry wolf-look on him at times
like that.
But Pitkin wasn't the only person who had found
Mitchi attractive. Before she left her own to go into Pitkin's act, Mitchi had
been a member of a Hungarian family. It wasn't a family, really, like some of
them are, but a bunch the old Magyar who ran it had picked up here and there
and trained. One of them was a young fellow named Collins whom the old man had
grabbed just before Barnaby signed the troupe.
He was a mighty good aerialist, was Tom Collins,
but instead of a Hungarian he was Irish, with brown hair, blue eyes, and a
mighty well set-up figure. Before she left the act he did one of those flying
swings and catches with Mitchi. One of the fellows would grab her by the heels
and swing head downward with her. After a bit he'd let go and toss her to Tom,
who was hanging by his knees from his bar.
It was a trick calling for a cool head and a sure
eye for distance, because the Magyar people worked without a net, and it's a
long ways from the bars to the ground. Their apparatus was placed 'way up
toward the canvas of the big top, higher even than the top of the tower for the
Butterfly number, and a miss would have spelled good night for Mitchi. Tom,
like Pitkin, was human—in a more human fashion. He was a good old-dog-Tray sort
of human, though his nerve showed up all right when it was needed and made him
a bit of the wolf for a time.
You can't expect a man to go on catching a pretty
girl in his arms twice a day for months, without noticing what sort of a girl
she is. Collins got so he had a hungry look in his eyes, too, those days.
He had a rather romantic respect for the girl,
which made his love a wholly different thing from Pitkin's. Just the same we
folks knew he was crazy about her, and Pitkin knew it, too—trust a man like him
to sense it!
The result was that one day when Mitchi turned him
down pretty sharply and told him to cut out his nagging in the future, he up
and accused her of liking Collins better than she did him.
Mitchi rather lost her head for a minute and told
him he was a pretty good guesser, though up to that time, as I know now, Tom
had never told her a word about how he felt. I guess maybe the girl spoke on
impulse, right out of her heart. She'd had a chance to notice big-hearted Tom,
all right, the same as he had her, and she was a lot nearer his age and more
his sort.
Anyway that's what she said, and Pitkin blew up.
He swore that before Tom should have her he'd kill him, and added, if that
wasn't enough he'd kill her.
Mitchi told him to stop talking foolish because
Tom hadn't showed any signs of wanting to marry anybody that she knew of; and
she certainly wouldn't marry a man unless he asked her, and not always then.
But Pitkin was too crazy mad to have any sense.
“You want to marry zat peeg, Collins!” he
sputtered. “You haf say eet—but you s'all not. I swear it. Me you s'all marry
an' no uzzer. Say zat you weel marry me, Mitchi, or I s'all keel zis Collins. I
weel keel—keel—even you, Mitchi, my heart—even you!”
He lifted his hands and, clutching into his mane
of black hair, waggled his head around and groaned.
At least that's what the ringmaster, who happened
to be passing says he did. The ringmaster jumped in and called him down pretty
swift, and he moped off.
Of course the thing leaked during the day, and Tom
heard all about it. That night in the trapping-room, while everybody was
dressing, he walked over to the Russian right before the whole male end of the
show and put it to him straight, to let the girl alone. Of course he didn't
mention Mitchi's name—Tom wouldn't—but we all knew what he meant.
“Look here, Pitkin,” he began. “I've heard a lot
of stuff you've pulled about bumpin' me off. Now that's all right. Any time you
want to get busy—why, start. But that ain't all. I ain't goin' to mention
names, but I'm hep to what's eatin' you, my boy, and I want to tell you that
maybe that sort of work goes where you come from, but it's too raw for over
here. You want to be careful how you spill any more chatter like that while
you're runnin' with this bunch, bo.”
For a minute Pitkin didn't answer. He stood with
his black eyes snapping, breathing hard, and a look on him like a dog getting
ready to jump at your throat, then—
“I say w'at I mean, Misser Collins,” he got out
between gasps.
Tom gave him back stare for stare.
“I hope not, Pitkin,” he says rather slow,
“because if I hear of your trying any more of this hazing—of these threats—oh,
not about me, Pitkin—but on somebody else—I'll break your —— neck.”
Pitkin yelled out in Russian and jumped for him. I
was there and saw it. Tom just put out a hand and shoved him back. The boy
wasn't looking for trouble.
After a bit we got Pitkin quieted down and the
thing blew over for the night; but as it happened later Tom was a bit of a
prophet without really meaning to be.
When he was dressed for his act, which went on
before Mitchi's, Tom hunted her up, however, and cautioned her to be careful of
the Russian, and told her, if she found herself needing help, to call on him. Mother
Boone, our “circus mother,” says they talked mighty low for a spell after that,
and that Mitchi laughed in a rather embarrassed fashion and ran back into the
women's section of the tent, while Tom walked off whistling in a rather
self-satisfied way.
After that Mitchi began to spend a lot of time
with Collins, and Pitkin got so that he went around muttering and mumbling to
himself. I think he really was touched a little. It's the only way I can
explain the thing he planned to do. I noticed, too, that Tom used to watch the
Russian every time the act went off after that.
The aerial act with which he worked, although
beginning before the butterfly, stopped while the big act was on. Tom's bar was
nearest the tower, perhaps twenty feet away and higher than its top.
Well, he'd sit on his trapeze during the
interruption and watch every move the Russian made, and though none of us knew
it then, he had planned it all out in case anything should happen while the
butterfly act was on.
We made a couple of jumps after the two men had
their run-in in the trapping-room, and nothing happened. Everything went
smooth, and most of us had about let the matter slip out of our minds. And then
the thing hit us like a shock of Pitkin's own “juice” and knocked us off our pins.
We were playing a two-day stand and the business
was tremendous. Every performance packed the big top to the canvas. The
Butterfly was simply going immense.
It was the last night of the stand. Collins was
dressing for his turn when Pitkin rushed into the trapping-room and began to
rummage about in his own trunk like a dog clawing for a buried bone. All the
time he was mumbling away and sort of chuckling to himself.
At the time Tom didn't give much attention to him,
but afterward he remembered and spoke of it to me.
Tom finished dressing and went out to the fly of
the big top to wait for his troupe's signal. There he found Mitchi, wrapped in
her cloak, waiting for the Russian to join her before they should get their
call. Quite as a matter of course, Tom stopped and spoke to the girl.
She seemed rather nervous and hardly herself. He
asked her what was the matter.
“I'm afraid, Tom,” she told him without any feminine
fencing. She'd come to trust Collins pretty fully. “Boris—” Pitkin's name was
Boris—“has been awfully queer all day. He's asked me to marry him twice since
morning.” She laughed in a forced fashion, and went on: “That's a record. Once
a day has been his limit. But ever since the last time, this afternoon, he's
gone around muttering to himself—and I don't like his looks. Honest, Tom, I
don't believe he's just right. I believe he's crazy——”
Collins grinned.
“He's crazy about you, all right,” he said.
“I meant crazy—about me,” said Mitchi. “And he's
been threatening again, Tom. He says—he'll kill you—unless I do what he wants.”
“I ain't nervous,” Tom assured her. “He talks too
much. Your bad man talks after, not before. But if he don't stop pesterin' you,
why—I'll have to marry you myself.”
Mitchi laughed in a nervous fashion.
“Then if he keeps it up I'll have a right to break
his neck,” Collins went on, rather carried away by his words and the girl's
demeanor and nearness, and his own love for every atom of her. “I told him I
would once.”
Mitchi gave him a smile.
“It's all right to joke,” said she, “but I'm
really nervous tonight, Tom. If you'd seen Boris' eyes——”
Tom rather lost his head for a minute.
“I ain't joking, Mitchi,” he informed her in a way
which brought her eyes up to his. “An' I tell you what you do. After tonight go
to the old man and put it to him straight. He'll call this guy off or tie a can
on him. Or—if you'd rather, marry me, Mitchi. As my wife, your bughouse Russky
wouldn't have a leg left to stand on. Can't you think of worse things than
bein' Mrs. Collins?”
I don't know what Mitchi would have answered to
that, because just then Tom's act was called and he had to leave on the jump.
Even love has to step down when your number is called in the circus. He joined
his troupe, trotted in and was pulled up to his bar.
Later he told me that it wasn't till after that,
when the act was really started, that he really began to feel worried. Then it
came to him all at once that something was due to happen.
Just why it should be that night he didn't know.
All along Pitkin's threats had gone for nothing. In fact Tom rather felt that
the man was afraid to start any trouble. But now it hit him all at once that
trouble was due.
He says he went through his own act by instinct
pure and simple, and all the time something kept telling him to grab a rope and
slide down and stop things before the Butterfly was called.
But he didn't. Circus people are pretty loyal to
the show, as a class. They know the performance has to go on, no matter what
happens; and most of them will suffer a lot of pain, or worry, or sickness,
before they'll drop out of their act or make a holler of any sort. And the
Butterfly is the big number, of course.
Tom told himself he was foolish; that just because
he loved the girl so much he was nervous about her; that Pitkin was merely
trying to scare her into the marriage, and he felt better—or at least he
decided there was no cause for worry. Still, all the time he was worrying.
He says now that he knew something was coming,
only he wouldn't admit it to himself because he couldn't believe anybody would
attempt a thing as fiendish as the thing Pitkin did.
Just the same, when Mitchi and Pitkin came in, Tom
watched the girl climb the tower, and all his love took hold on him afresh. She
was little, and slender, and sweet, and he could see her face looked worried,
too.
When the band stopped, and the megaphone barked,
and his own and all the other acts in the rings came to a pause, he says now,
he had all he could do to keep from yelling out and telling them to stop right
there.
All he did do, however, was to draw himself up and
sit on his bar, watching Pitkin and Mitchi's little pink figure, with every
muscle in him tight with watching.
The act began all right. Mitchi did her stunts on
the wire and came back for the slide. Pitkin took her to the edge after he'd
fastened on her wings, and held the mouthpiece for her. They did it that way
then, though now she always takes the mouthpiece in her teeth first. And
there's a reason for that.
Well, Pitkin, who always wore rubber gloves,
lifted the mouthpiece for her to bite, and Tom saw him speak to her when he did
it. Mitchi shook her head and shrugged her shoulders. The Russian frowned and
sort of nodded his head.
Mitchi flapped her wings and tilted back her
pretty little face. Even then Tom never suspected anything except that Pitkin
had proposed again, which he had—the last time, too, as it happened. I guess in
his crazy mind he thought he was giving the girl a final chance.
All at once Mitchi goes up on her toes and grips
the rubber bit in her mouth, and then, right before the whole tent, she
stiffens and seems to stretch out in a sort of spasm. And before anybody could
lift a hand, Pitkin pushes her off the tower and down she goes.
You know how a current will produce a spasm of the
muscles. Well, that's what happened. When the current hit her through the jaws,
they locked into the rubber and she couldn't let go or fall off. Pitkin knew
that and figured on it to give the current time to kill her.
She flashed along the wire, hit the net and lay
still under the wire, with the bit still fast in her teeth. And she never
moved.
It sure was awful. When she hit, some of the lamps
she wore broke and cut through her tights, but she never felt it. She just lay
there and cooked. She was unconscious.
I gave one look at her poor little huddled shape
in the net and turned away—sick.
Then I looked up at the tower. Pitkin stood there
with his arms folded and his head back, and the most awful, hellish grin on his
face I ever saw.
The whole tent was in an uproar. Several men ran
toward the tower as if to climb up and shut off the current. Women were
screaming and fainting all over the place, and men were yelling and cursing in
excitement.
The ringmaster was trying to prevent a panic in
the crowd. Through the megaphone he began barking at Pitkin over the shrieks
and yells:
“Turn off the juice! Turn off the juice!”
Pitkin seemed to wake up at that, and looked down.
The smile on his devil's face got wider, it seemed. He waved a hand toward poor
little Mitchi and pointed to himself, as if to say he had meant to do it, and
had succeeded, and defied us to do anything in time to save the life he was
taking.
By that time one of the boys was half way up the
tower, but he never would have made it in time. Even if he'd got up, he'd have
had to fight Pitkin before he could reach the switch.
Right there the band began playing, by orders, to
quiet the crowd. It seemed ghastly, too. There they were banging out ragtime,
with that girl burning to death before everybody's eyes. I felt sick all over,
believe me. It was fierce.
It was Tom Collins, the man who really loved her,
who saw the only way out and took it on the jump. While we were yelling at
Pitkin to cut off the current, and he was grinning his hellish triumph, Tom got
busy. He let himself down from his bar by his arms and began to swing.
He gave himself a pretty strong momentum and
forced himself to wait until it was sufficient. Then he let go. I've mentioned
that his bar was higher than the tower and twenty feet beyond it.
When Collins let go, he came down in a straight
foot-dive for the top of the tower itself, where Pitkin stood waving his hands
and beginning a sort of fiendish clog-dance, right on the edge.
Pitkin's back was toward Tom and he didn't see him
coming. I did. I saw him leave the bar and come down like an arrow, holding
both feet together. Right in the middle of Pitkin's insane dancing Tom hit the
tower, tried to straighten up, and staggered, lurching full into the Russian's
back.
Pitkin yelled out once. He screamed like a wounded
animal sometimes will—a wild, hoarse, unhuman-like screech. Then, thrown
completely off his feet by Collins' impact, he plunged out from the tower's
edge and fell over and over into the ring below, to lie awfully still with his
black head bent back under his shoulders.
Collins paid no attention to that. He was at the
switch. When he bumped into Pitkin it stopped his own fall and straightened him
up.
In one leap he reached the switchboard and pulled
out the lever.
The lamps sputtered and died, and poor little
Mitchi relaxed in the net. I think everybody in the tent sighed at once. It
sounded like a gust of wind.
Two of the tent-men were already swarming up ropes
to the net, and Tom was racing down the tower. By the time they lowered Mitchi
over the edge of the net, he was there to take her in his arms. He caught her
and cuddled her up on his breast and kissed her before the whole tent. Then he
turned and raced for the exit.
The band was still playing and the other acts
started again at the ringmaster's signal. Two hands picked Pitkin up and lugged
him out to the trap-room. Collins with Mitchi in his arms passed me at the fly.
There was a wild, fierce look in the boy's eyes.
Just for that once I saw the old primitive, human-wolf strain look out. He gave
me a glance and ran on into the woman's section of the dressing-tent, without
so much as by your leave.
I think he'd forgotten everything on earth but the
woman rolled in against his heart. He laid her down and began pumping her arms up
and back and down again, like you do those of a man who has drowned. All at
once he spoke:
“Get a doctor—a doctor—for God's sake! Ain't
anybody got any sense? Get a doctor! She ain't dead! She won't die! I won't let
her, I tell you! Get a doctor—quick!”
Some of the girls and Mother Boone tried to get
him to let them take charge, but he wouldn't. As it happened, though, there was
a doctor in the crowd, and by that time he was coming into the dressing-tent
door. He came in and took hold in good shape as soon as Tom would let him.
At first the boy was so rattled he wouldn't let
anybody touch her; just knelt there beside her little pink body and snarled,
and worked her arms up and down.
I went up and told him the man was a physician,
and because he knew me he listened. He looked up at the doctor; then staggered
to his feet.
“Take me away, Bill,” he mumbled.
I took him by the arm and led him outside the door
of the girls' section.
There he balked. He wouldn't go a step farther. We
hung around for a good two hours, and though everything else was loaded up for
the jump, we didn't strike that tent till Mitchi could be moved. Old Barnaby
sure acted white about that. A delay means a lot to show-folks; but Barnaby
sure did the handsome. I guess he felt sort of guilty about having let Pitkin
fix up the act in the first place, for he paid Mitchi's hospital-bill.
It was about one o'clock when the doctor came out
and says he thinks she'll pull through with good care, and that he's going to
call an ambulance. When he heard that, Tom began to laugh all at once.
“I told you she wouldn't die!” he said between
chuckles to me. “I wouldn't let her! She's mine! But Pitkin died, didn't he,
Bill? I told him I'd break his —— neck!”
And with that Tom dropped to the floor in a
genuine faint.
He stayed behind, too, when the show went on. All
the four weeks Mitchi was in the hospital he hung around. By the time she was
ready to come back to the show, the two had decided to sign each other up for a
life-engagement. They went off and got married, and Mitchi came back as Mrs.
Collins.
But they work under her name. They bill as a
brother-and-sister act, and Tom Collins handles the switch.
As for Pitkin, his neck was certainly broken. I
think he deserved it for what he did that night. I've mentioned that the man
was an electrical expert, and he had planned this thing all out. He'd taken an
extra pulley and mouthpiece and soaked the whole thing in a strong copper
solution for days.
That night he switched pulleys and put on his
copper-loaded one. When Mitchi bit it the current jumped into her like
lightning. That, by the way, is why she takes the bite now before her wings go
on.
If any josher tried that stunt again, she'd taste
it or drop on the tower, at least, even if Tom didn't get it first in his bare
hands. He doesn't wear gloves. Tom Collins is sure mighty careful of his wife.
We picked up a new electrician, and nobody wept
for Pitkin. Even the coroner, when he'd heard all the evidence we could give,
decided his death was due to accidental causes, and nobody kicked on that.