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r his fightin' blood, and partly so I could be sure I had a good grip on my own temper, I let him get in a few facers on me. Then I opens up with the side remarks I'd been thinkin' over. "Say, Langy," says I, sidesteppin' one of his swings for my jaw, "s'posin' you'd hit some of them people, eh? S'posin' that car of yours had caught one of them old women--biff!--like that?" and I lets go a jolt that fetches him on the cheek bone. "Ugh!" says Langdon, real surprised. But he shakes his head and comes back at me. "Ever stop to think," says I, "how one of them kids would look after you'd got him--so?" and I shoots the left into that bull neck of his. "S-s-s-say!" sputters Langdon. "What do you think you're doing, anyway?" "Me?" says I. "I'm tryin' to get a few points on the bubble business. Is it more fun to smash 'em in the ribs--bang!--like that? Or to slug 'em in the head--biff!--so? That's right, son; come in for more. It's waitin'. There! Jarred your nut a bit, that one did, eh? Yes, here's the mate to it. There's plenty more on tap. Oh, never mind the nose claret. It'll wipe off. Keep your guard up. Careful, now! You're swingin' wide. And, as I was sayin'--there, you ran into that one--this bubble scorchin' must be great sport. When you don't--biff!--get 'em--biff! you can scare 'em to death, eh? Wabbly on your feet, are you? That's the stuff! Keep it up. That eye's all right. One's all you need to see with. Gosh! Now you've got a pair of 'em." If it hadn't been for his comin' in so ugly and strong I never could have done it. I'd have weakened and let up on him long before he'd got half what was owin'. But he was bound to have it all, and there's no sayin' he wa'n't game about it. At the last I tried to tell him he'd had enough; but as long as he could keep on his pins he kept hopin' to get in just one on me; so I finally has to drop him with a stiff one behind the ear. Course, if we'd had ring gloves on he'd looked like he'd been on the choppin' block; but with the pillows you can't get hurt bad. Inside of ten minutes I has him all washed off and up in a chair, lookin' not much worse than before, except for the eye swellin's. And what do you guess is the first thing he does? "Say, McCabe," says he, shovin' out his paw, "you're all right, you are." "So?" says I. "If I thought you was any judge that might carry weight." "I know," says he. "Nobody likes me." "Oh
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