HEPPNER GAZETTE TIMES, HEPPNgR, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOV. 5, 1925. PAGE THREE "Oliver October" (Continued from Firit Page) brother-in-law, her husband, alio of liopmnsville." Everybody bowed. i "How ia your dear brother, Mr ooocn, inquired Mr. Sage. "I didn't know there waa anything We matter with Oliver. "There isn't anything the matter with him," aaid Mri. gage, "that a good, stiff drink of whiskey won't cure." "Ahem I" coughed her husband. He had the worried manner of one who never knew what is coming next. His wife looked up into hit face and smiled a lovely, good-humored smile that waa slowly transformed Into a mischievous grimace. "I'm always making breaks, am I not, Herby dear? It's a terrible strain, Mr. Gooch, being a parson's wire." "Umph!" grunted Mr. Gooch. At this juncture the sitting room aoor opened and the proud father. followed by Serepta Grimes, entered the room. Beaming, he surveyed the assembled gathering. "He's got the finest head you ever saw," he announced. "Got a head like a statesman." Reverend Sage had moved over to one of the windows, while the other occupants of the room surrounded Baxter, and waa gaiing out between the curtains across the gale-swept porch Into the blackness beyond. He shivered a little, poor chap, at the thought of going out again into the bitter, unbelievable night at the thought of his cold little home at the farther end of the village. He was thinking, too, of his wife and the mile walk she would have to take with him into the very teeth of the buffeting gale when this visit was over. She had come to this wretched little town from a great city, where houses and flats were warm and snug. He thought of the warm little room on the third floor of the boarding house, where he had lived and studied for two full years. It was in this house that he had met Josephine Judge. She was the daughter of the kindly widow who conducted the boarding house a tall, slim girl who used slang and was gay and blithe some, and had ambitions! Ambitions? She wanted to become an actress. She was stage-struck. He was not a theater-going youth He had been brought up with an ab horrence of the stage and all its in iquities. So he devoted himself, heart and soul, to the saving of the mis guided maiden, with astonishing re sults. They fell in love with each other and were married. He pressed his face against the cold pane, striving to rid hia mind of the doubts and worries that beset It. Suddenly he drew back with an ex clamation. The light fell full upon a face close to the window pane, a face so startling and so vivid that it did not appear to be real. A pair of dark, gleaming eyes met his for a few seconds; then swiftly the face was withdrawn. He leaned forward and peered intently. Two indistinct figures took shape in the unreliable darkness at the corner of the porch two women, he made out. "Joseph," he called, "there are two strange women on the porch. Per haps you " "Go see who, it is, Joe," command ed Mrs, Grimes crisply. Sikes hasetned to obey, and re turned presently in great excitement. "Say, Ollie," he burst out, "there's a couple of women out here from that gypsy camp. They claim to be fortune tellers. One of 'em wants to tell the baby's fortune. She says she knowed a couple of weeks ago that he was going to be born today, that's what she says." "Well, I'm not going to allow any gypsy women to get nigh that in fant," cried Mrs. Grimes. "She says it ain't necessary to even see the baby. She says the only re liable and genuine way to tell a ba by's fortune Is to read the father's hnnd." Mr. Baxter arose. "Bring Her in, Joe. Now, don't kick, Sercpty. My mind's made up, I'm going to know my son's future." ' Mr. Sikes rushed from the room. A moment later, he returned, follow ed by two shivering women who step ped Just inside the door. The host, with a nervous sort of geniality, beckoned to the strangers. "Better come down to the fire, Queen," he said. The elder woman fixed an anxious look upon Mr. Baxter. "I am the queen of the gypsies, mister, but how come you to know it?" she asked in a hoarse, not un musical voice. "Always best to be on the safe side," said Baxter. "But look here, do you mean to say, Queen, that you can look into my hand and tell what's ahead of my boy upstairs?" "First, you must cross my palm with silver." The company drew their chairs close as Baxter dropped some coins into the gypsy's palm. Silence per vaded the room. Every eye was on the dark, impressive face of the fortune-teller, as she seized Ollie's hand and began: "I see a wonderful child. He is strong and sturdy. I can see this aon of yours, mister, as a great leader of men. Great honor is in store for him, and great wealth. I see men In uniform following your son many men, mister, and all of them armed. I see him as a successful man, as the head of great undertakings, He has been out of college but a few years." "That will please his mother," said Baxter, snifllling. "Shi" put in Mr. Sikes, testily. "I see him," continued the for tune teller, "as he is noarlng thirty. Rich, respected and admired. He will hnve many affairs of the heart. I see two dark women and one, two yes, three fair women," , "That would seem to show that he's going to be a purty good-looking sort of a feller, wouldn't It?" said Baxter proudly. "He will grow up the imago of his father, mister." The gypsy leaned back In her chair, sproudlng hor hands In a gestura of finality. "I see no more,'' aha aaid. "Is that all?" Mr. Baxter sniffed. "Well, Queen, I guesa you took u ail In purty neatly." Outraged royalty turned on him. "You scoff at ma. For that you shall have the truth. All that I have told you will come true. But I did not tell you the end that I saw for him. Hark ye! This son of yours will go to the gallows. He will swing from the end of a rope for a crime of which he is not guilty." She was now speaking in a high, shrill voice her hearers tat open-mouthed, as if under a spell that could not be shaken off. "It is all at plain at the noon day sun. He will never reach the age of thirty. That is all. That is the end. I have spoken the truth. You forced me to do it. I go." CHAPTER II Ten Years Later. rT,EN years passed, years of change and growth. Rumley had not stood still during the decade. It was the proud boast of its most en terprising citizen, Silas Link, that it had done a great deal better than Chicago; it had tripled its popula tion. Oliver Baxter, Sr., owned one of the new business "blocks" on Clay street. It was known as the Baxter block, erected in 1896. Mary Baxter died of typhoid fever when young Oliver was nearinjr sev en. Her untimely demise revived the half-forgotten prophecy of the gypsy fortune-teller. People looked se verely at each other, and in hushed tones discussed the inexorable ways of fate. It was the first "sign" that young Oliver's fortune was coming true. Of an entirely different nature was the agitation created by the unright eous behavior of Josephine Sage, who had finally succumbed to the lure of the stage, leaving her husband and child, in order to gratify her life's ambition. Half the women in town on learning that she was going to Chicago for a brief visit with her folks, went around to the parsonage to kiss her good-by. Excoriation and a stream of "I told you ao s ' were bestowed upon the pretty young wife and mother when it became known that she was not coming back. Herbert Sage was stunned, bewil dered. . . . She wrote him from Chicago at the end of the first week of what was to have been a fort night's visit with her mother. She was leaving at once for New York, where she had been promised a trial by one of the greatest American pro ducers. A month later came a tele gram from her saying she was re hearsing a part in a new piece that was sure to be the "hit of the season." "You will be proud of me, Herby,1 she wrote, "because I will take mighty good care that you never have any reason to be ashamed of me or for me to be ashamed of myself. You know what I mean. I don't suppose I will say my prayers as often as I did when you were around to remind me of them, but I will be a good girl just the same." That was four years ago. Her con fidence In herself had been justified, and, for all we know, the same may be said of Herbert Sage s confidence in her. She had the talent, the voice, the beauty, and above all, the mag netism, and so there was no holding her back. For two successive seasons she ap peared in a Chicago theater, follow ing New York runs of the pieces in which she was playing. Finally, in one of her letters an nouncing a prospective engagement in London, she put the question to him: "Do you want a' divorce from me, Herby?" His reply was terse and brought from her the following undignified but manifestly sincere tel egram: "Neither do I, so we'll stick till the cows come home. Sailing Friday. Will cable. Much love." She made a "hit" in London In the big musical success of that season. They liked her so well over there that they wouldn't let her come back to the States. She was greatly missed by little Oliver October. For some reason perhaps she did not explain it her self at any rate, she did not go to the trouble of speculating; she had token a tremendous fancy to the child. This small boy of five or six was the only being in town with whom she could play to her heart's content, and she made the most of him. Her own tiny baby, Jane, Inter ested but did not amuse her. Oliver was always to have a warm corner In his heart for the gay Aunt Josephine, but new diverting games reduced his passionate loneing for her to a mild but pleasant memory. remaps, too, her own daughter had something to do with Josephine's fad- ng from Oliver's mind. For Janle Sage, at the age of six. was by far the prettiest and the most-8ught-after young lady in Rum- ley. Oliver was her chosen swain, and many were the battles he fought in her defense. The time came when Oliver Oc tober Baxter, age ten, had to be told what was In Btore for him if he did not mend his ways. For, be it here recorded, Oliver not only possessed a quick temper, but a surprisingly san guinary way of making it felt. He was a rugged, freckle-faced youngster with curly brown hair, a pair of stout legs, and a couple of hard fists, with which he made his temper felt. It was after witnessing a particu larly ferocious battle between Oliver and Sammy Parr, that Joseph Sikes and Silas Link decided that the boy must be warned of the fate that awaited him if his awful temper was not curbed. And so it came to pass that vonnn- Oliver October learned what was in store for him If his "fortune" came true. In the presence of his fa ther, his good friend, Mr, Sage, who had opposed tolling the boy, and the Messrs. Link and Sikes, ho was made to realize the vastnesa of the dark and terrifying shadow that hung over him. When they had finished, he cleared his throat, "I wish my ma was here," he said, his lip trembling. "Amen to that," snid Mr, Saee; fer vently. "Amonl" repented Mr. Link In his most professional voice. Mr. Sage laid a hand on the boy's shoulder, "Do you say your prayers every night, Oliver?" "Yes, sir I do." "Well er If Brother Baxter doet- n't mind, and if you gentlemen will excuse me, I think I will go upstairs with Oliver and and listen to his prayer." A little later on, the tall, spare pas tor sat on the side of young Oliver's trundle bed and talked in a confi dential whisper. "I am going to tell you something, Oliver, and I want you to believe it, Nobody on this earth can fortell the future. All that talk about your be ing hung tome day is poppycock pure poppycock. Don't you belive a word of it. I came upstairs with you just for the purpose of telling you this not really to hear your pray ers. Now don't you feel better?" "Yes, tir," taid Oliver. "I do." "What I want you to do, Oliver, is to go on leading a er regular boy's life. Do the things that are right and square, be honest and fearless and no harm will ever come to you. Now, turn over and go to aleep, there't a good boy." And the kind-hearted minister went downstairs feeling that he had given the poor lad something besdies the gallows to think biut. It is not the purpose of the narra tor of this story to deal at length with the deeds, exploits, mishaps and sensations of Oliver as a child. He was seventeen when he left Rumley high school and became a freshman at the state university. The last of the three decades allotted to him by the gypsy was shorn of its first twelve months when he received his degree. As Mr. Sikes announced to Reverend Sage at the conclusion of the commencement exercises, he had less than nine more years to live at the very outside a gloomy state ment that drew from the proud and happy minister an unusually harsh rejoinder. You ought to be kicked all the way home for saying such a thing as that, Joe Sikes." Turning to the slim, pretty girl who walked beside him across the June-warmed campus, he said comfortingly: "Don't mind this old croaker, Jane, dear." A word in passing about Jane Sage. Slender, graceful, slightly above me dium height, just turning into young womanhood, she was an extremely pretty girl. She adored Oliver October. There had been a time when the was his sweetheart, but that was aget ago when both of them were young! Now he was supposed to be engaged to a girl in the graduating class and Jane was going to be an old maid to tbe childish romance was over. Late in the fall of 1911 young Ol iver, having passed the age of twenty-one, packed hia bag and trunk, shook the dust of Rumley from his feet, and accepted a position in the construction department of a Chi cago engineering and investment con cern. Early in 1913 he was tent to China by his company on, a mission that kept him in the Orient for nearly a year and a half. A week before Christmas, 1914, the Rumley Dispatch came out with the announcement under a double, head that Oliver Oc tober Baxter was returning from the Far East, where he had been engaged in the most stupendous enterprise ev er undertaken by American capital. When he arrived he was met at the depot by a delegation. "I can't believe my eyes no, tir, I can't,'! cried old Oliver, quaveringly, as she wrung his son's hand. "You're back again, alive and sound." You bet I'm alive," answered Oli ver October, laying his arm over the old man's shoulder and patitng his back. "It's mighty good to see you, and it's wonderful to be back In the old town again. Hello, Uncle Joe! Well, you see they haven't hung me yet." And they ain't going to if I csn help it," roared Mr. Sikes, pumping Oliver s arm vigorously. "Not on your life! It's all fixed, Oliver. Wa ve got you the appointment of city civil engineer of Rumley." You needn t worry about that. father. I'll not accept the position." Mr. Baxter brightened. "You won't? Good for you! That'll show Joe Sikes and Silas Link that they can't run everything." Presently they drew up in front of the Baxter residence, and as they did so an uncommonly pretty girl opened the front door. Hello, Oliver!" she cried. Hello, Jane!" he shouted back, as he ran up the steps. "Geel It's great to see you. And, my goodness, what a big girl you are." He was holding her warm, strong hands in his own; they wore looking straight into each other's eyes. "You haven't grown much." she said slowly, "Except that you are a man and not a boy." That's it," he cried. "The differ ence in you is that you're a woman and not a girl." "Come in," she said, with a queer dignity that she herself did not understand. When he came downstairs after hav ing unpacked his bags and scattered the contents all over the room, he found the "company" already assem bled. As might have been expected, the guests including Rev. Mr. Sage, Mr. Sikes and Mr. Link, and one out- lder, the mayor of Rumley, Mr. Sam uel Belding. "What's this I hear?" demanded the latter sternly, as he shook hands with the young man. "Your father's ust been telling us you won't accent tho distinguished honor of the city of Bum ley has conferred upon you. What's the matter with it." The truth of the matter is." Oliver nswered seriously, "I have other plans. I'm going Over There in Feb ruary with the Canadians. It's all settled, I'm to have my aid job back when the war is over." "But it's not our war!" cried Mr. Sikes. "It's everybody's war," spoke youni Oliver out of the very depths of hit soul. "Wt will be in it tome day. Oh, I'll come back, never fear. You see, Undo Joe, I've just got to pull through allvo and well, to that I can bo hung when my time comes." 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