Short Fiction O. Henry (comprehension books TXT) š
- Author: O. Henry
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I beg you will excuse any conversational breaks that I makeā āthanks, I knew you wouldā āgot that sneaking little respect and agreeable feeling toward even an X, havenāt you? You see, a tainted bill doesnāt have much chance to acquire a correct form of expression. I never knew a really cultured and educated person that could afford to hold a ten-spot any longer than it would take to do an Arthur Duffy to the nearest Thatās All! sign or delicatessen store.
For a six-year-old, Iāve had a lively and gorgeous circulation. I guess Iāve paid as many debts as the man who dies. Iāve been owned by a good many kinds of people. But a little old ragged, damp, dingy five-dollar silver certificate gave me a jar one day. I was next to it in the fat and bad-smelling purse of a butcher.
āHey, you Sitting Bull,ā says I, ādonāt scrouge so. Anyhow, donāt you think itās about time you went in on a customs payment and got reissued? For a series of 1899 youāre a sight.ā
āOh, donāt get crackly just because youāre a Buffalo bill,ā says the fiver. āYouād be limp, too, if youād been stuffed down in a thick cotton-and-lisle-thread under an elastic all day, and the thermometer not a degree under 85 in the store.ā
āI never heard of a pocketbook like that,ā says I. āWho carried you?ā
āA shopgirl,ā says the five-spot.
āWhatās that?ā I had to ask.
āYouāll never know till their millennium comes,ā says the fiver.
Just then a two-dollar bill behind me with a George Washington head, spoke up to the fiver:
āAw, cut out yer kicks. Aināt lisle thread good enough for yer? If you was under all cotton like Iāve been today, and choked up with factory dust till the lady with the cornucopia on me sneezed half a dozen times, youād have some reason to complain.ā
That was the next day after I arrived in New York. I came in a $500 package of tens to a Brooklyn bank from one of its Pennsylvania correspondentsā āand I havenāt made the acquaintance of any of the five and two spotās friendsā pocketbooks yet. Silk for mine, every time.
I was lucky money. I kept on the move. Sometimes I changed hands twenty times a day. I saw the inside of every business; I fought for my ownerās every pleasure. It seemed that on Saturday nights I never missed being slapped down on a bar. Tens were always slapped down, while ones and twos were slid over to the bartenders folded. I got in the habit of looking for mine, and I managed to soak in a little straight or some spilled Martini or Manhattan whenever I could. Once I got tied up in a great greasy roll of bills in a pushcart peddlerās jeans. I thought I never would get in circulation again, for the future department store owner lived on eight centsā worth of dog meat and onions a day. But this peddler got into trouble one day on account of having his cart too near a crossing, and I was rescued. I always will feel grateful to the cop that got me. He changed me at a cigar store near the Bowery that was running a crap game in the back room. So it was the Captain of the precinct, after all, that did me the best turn, when he got his. He blew me for wine the next evening in a Broadway restaurant; and I really felt as glad to get back again as an Astor does when he sees the lights of Charing Cross.
A tainted ten certainly does get action on Broadway. I was alimony once, and got folded in a little dogskin purse among a lot of dimes. They were bragging about the busy times there were in Ossining whenever three girls got hold of one of them during the ice cream season. But itās Slow Moving Vehicles Keep to the Right for the little Bok tips when you think of the way we bison plasters refuse to stick to anything during the rush lobster hour.
The first I ever heard of tainted money was one night when a good thing with a Van to his name threw me over with some other bills to buy a stack of blues.
About midnight a big, easygoing man with a fat face like a monkās and the eye of a janitor with his wages raised took me and a lot of other notes and rolled us into what is termed a āwadā among the money tainters.
āTicket me for five hundred,ā said he to the banker, āand look out for everything, Charlie. Iām going out for a stroll in the glen before the moonlight fades from the brow of the cliff. If anybody finds the roof in their way thereās $60,000 wrapped in a comic supplement in the upper left-hand corner of the safe. Be bold; everywhere be bold, but be not bowled over. āNight.ā
I found myself between two $20 gold certificates. One of āem says to me:
āWell, old shorthorn, youāre in luck tonight. Youāll see something of life. Old Jackās going to make the Tenderloin look like a hamburg steak.ā
āExplain,ā says I. āIām used to joints, but I donāt care for filet mignon with the kind of sauce you serve.ā
āāāXcuse me,ā said the twenty. āOld Jack is the proprietor of this gambling house. Heās going on a whiz tonight because he offered $50,000 to a church and it refused to accept it because they said his money was tainted.ā
āWhat is a church?ā I asked.
āOh, I forgot,ā says the twenty, āthat I was talking to a tenner. Of course you donāt know. Youāre too much to put into the contribution basket, and not enough to buy anything at
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