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The Studs Lonigan Trilogy - James T. Farrell [282]

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‘em are playing the ponies and that’s just up Phil’s alley. I don’t envy him his luck, though. He’s a nice lad. I was talking to him a few minutes. Nice lad. I never associated it, Studs, that you and Husk were his brother-in-laws,” Allison said.

Studs Lonigan, Phil Rolfe’s brother-in-law. That it would ever come to the time that he was known this way, instead of Phil being known as Studs’ brother-in-law. He suddenly felt out of everything. A new corner. A new bunch. Out of it. Others pushing along, to be where he used to be. He looked from face to face: Martin, cocky and surly; Pat, jolly; that snotty puss of Bryan. O’Doul, simpering, showing off, standing there all dressed up and no place to go, trying to act like hot stuff, just as he used to back at the corner of Fifty-eighth and Prairie. The world could change, but not Kodak Kid O’Doul, Studs thought, sneering. And Allison, bigger, younger, more powerful-looking than himself. Out of it. These lads, knowing him as Phil Rolfe’s brother-in-law. His old contempt for Phil rose. Before he got through. Well, he had to take nobody’s. He had his investment, didn’t he..

“Well, are we or ain’t we?” asked Bryan impatiently.

“Count me out. I’m tired, and I’m going home to hit the hay early,” Pat said.

“How about you, Lonigan?” Don asked.

“No, thanks. Not tonight,” Studs answered.

“Don, can’t you see that this gang is as full of vim, vigor, vitality, and ambition as a sleeping alligator?” O’Grady said.

“Well, I’m ready,” Martin said.

“And try walking home on your own feet tonight to see how it feels,” Studs said to Martin, smiling.

“Don’t worry about me there, foxy grandpa,” said Martin.

“Well, I’ll see you again, fellows,” Studs said.

“Take care of yourself, Studs, and don’t take any rubber dimes,” Pat said as Studs walked to the chain drug store entrance to go in for a malted milk.

VI

“You missed Amos and Andy tonight. Golly, they were funny,” Lonigan said as Studs entered the parlor.

“I was talking to some fellows I know,” Studs said, unfolding his copy of the morning’s Chicago Questioner and letting his eyes run over the headlines.

ALBANIAN SLAIN IN WEST SIDE HOLDUP

Aged Newsdealer Shot

To Death Battling Robbers

REDS BATTLE COPS

Anarchistic Literature Seized

Patrolman O’Houlihan

Seriously Injured

Scores Arrested; Fifteen

In Hospital

MILK STRIKE RIOTS IN EAST

Scores Injured

BUS PASSENGER SHOT AS AUTOIST IN

CRASH FIRES

BLAME AGITATORS FOR MINE STRIKE

Governor Invites Inquiry

JOBLESS FATHER SLAYS FAMILY OF SIX

BANKER PRAISES HOOVER

Predicts New Boom in Next Six Months

SHOTGUN BANDITS COW 19

Get $4,000

MOVIE STAR WINS FREEDOM

Names Society Woman Correspondent

SOLOMON IMBRAY PREDICTS GREATER

CHICAGO

After Depression City Will Grow

CATHOLIC PRIEST ASSAILS SOVIET

Moscow Atheistic and Pagan

Father Dooligan Finds

Russia Unfit for Society

of Civilized Nations

“Anything in the papers, Bill?”

“Not much. A couple of holdups. And a Red riot on the west side. A cop was beaten up and taken to the hospital with a broken leg,” said Studs casually.

“They ought to put a stop to those damn Reds, starting trouble when the country has its hands full as it is. The cops aren’t even safe with them any more. I tell you, there ought to be a law against ‘em, and they ought to be put at hard labor on an island like that Devil’s Island the French got,” Lonigan said with a rising self-righteousness that drew blood to his face.

“Yes, and it says here that some university professor named Lovett has protested to the mayor against police brutality.”

“He must be an atheist. What does he want, the cops to stand there and let their legs get broken? They haven’t got any respect for law, these atheistic university professors and Reds,” Lonigan said.

Studs read the account of an interview with Solomon Imbray.

“The depression is only temporary, and the process of shrinkage and deflation of values has reached rock bottom. We can now expect and prepare for a period of expansion, during which we will know greater prosperity than we have ever known before. Of this, I am absolutely confident. And this new wave will carry Chicago forward to an unprecedented development. One day Chicago will be the queen of cities, the world over,

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