The Butterfly - James M. Cain [9]
"Where you going?"
"Just for a walk. Get a little air."
"You're coming home."
"Sure. Soon we'll go."
"We're going now."
The man walked over and stepped between us. "Listen, pop, take it easy why don't you? so we don't have any trouble."
"Do you know who I am?"
"You're Kady's father, so she says."
"And I'm taking her home."
"Not unless she wants to go, pop. Now the way she tells me, she feels like taking a walk, and that's what we're going to do. So sit down. Don't get excited. Have yourself a drink, and when her and me get back you're taking her home. But not before."
He put on his hat, one of those black felts turned down on one side like a mountain gunman wears, and looked me in the eye. He was tall and thin, and I could have broke him in two, but that gun was what I kept thinking about. A mine guard is never without it, and he knows how to use it, and he will use it. I could feel the blood pounding in my neck, but I sat down. He turned to his booth and sat down.
While we were having that, she had said something to him about the ladies' room, and gone back there. I sat with my throat pounding heavier all the time, until a door back there opened, and she started walking up to his booth. I don't remember thinking anything about it. But when she was almost to him, I grabbed that booth partition, and pulled, and it crashed down, and there he was, sprawling at my feet. I was on him even before she screamed, and when that gun came out of his pocket, I had it. I brought it down on his head, he crumpled, I aimed, and pulled the trigger. But I had forgot the safety catch, and before I could snap it off, they grabbed me.
"This court, unless compelled, is not going to make a criminal out of a father defending the honor of a daughter. But is not going to overlook, either, a breach of the peace that could have had the most serious consequences. Tyler, do you realize that if these witnesses hadn't prevented it, you would have killed a man, that you would now stand before me accused of the crime of murder, that it would be my unescapable duty to hold you for the grand jury, and that almost certainly you would in due time be found guilty, sentenced, and hanged?"
"Yes sir."
"Do you think that's right?"
"I guess I don't."
"How much money is in your pocket?"
"Fourteen dollars, sir."
"Then just to impress it on your mind that this is more than a passing matter, you can pay the clerk here a fine of ten dollars and costs for disorderly conduct or perhaps you'd rather spend the next ten days in jail?"
"I'd rather pay, sir."
"Young woman, how old are you?"
"Nineteen, sir."
"Have you been drinking?"
"I don't know, sir."
"What do you mean you don't know?"
"Well, I was drinking Coca-Cola, but you know how it is. Sometimes they put a little something in it, just for fun, but tonight I don't know if they did or not."
"Lean over here, so I can smell your breath...How can you have the cheek to tell me you don't know if you've been drinking or not, when you're half shot, right now? Aren't you?"
"Yes, sir."
"Do you realize that I can hold you with no more evidence than that as a wayward minor, and have you committed to a school?"
"I didn't know it, sir."
"There are a great many things you don't seem to know, and my advice to you is that you turn over a new leaf, and do it now. I'm remanding you into the custody of your father, and on the first complaint from him, you're up for commitment. Do you understand that, Tyler? If there's any more trouble like what went on in there tonight, you don't grab a gun and start shooting. You come to me, and the proper steps will be taken."
"Yes, sir, I understand it."
"Next case."
Going home she was laughing at how funny it was, that he hadn't asked her how much money she had,