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CHAPTER 32
   
And so Michael was ultimately sold to one Jacob Henderson for two thousand dollars.  “And I’m giving him away to you at that,” said Collins.  “If you don’t refuse five thousand for him before six months, I don’t know anything about the show game.  He’ll skin that last arithmetic dog of yours to a finish and you won’t have to show yourself and work every minute of the turn.  And if you don’t insure him for fifty thousand as soon as he’s made good you’ll be a fool.  Why, I wouldn’t ask anything better, if I was young and footloose, than to take him out on the road myself.”
 
Henderson proved totally different from any master Michael had had.  The man was a neutral sort of creature.  He was neither good nor evil.  He neither drank, smoked, nor swore; nor did he go to church or belong to the Y.M.C.A.  He was a vegetarian2 without being a bigoted3 one, liked moving pictures when they were concerned with travel, and spent most of his spare time in reading Swedenborg.  He had no temper whatever.  Nobody had ever witnessed anger in him, and all said he had the patience of Job.  He was even timid of policemen, freight agents, and conductors, though he was not afraid of them.  He was not afraid of anything, any more than was he enamoured of anything save Swedenborg.  He was as colourless of character as the neutral-coloured clothes he wore, as the neutral-coloured hair that sprawled4 upon his crown, as the neutral-coloured eyes with which he observed the world.  Nor was he a fool any more than was he a wise man or a scholar.  He gave little to life, asked little of life, and, in the show business, was a recluse5 in the very heart of life.
 
Michael neither liked nor disliked him, but, rather, merely accepted him.  They travelled the United States over together, and they never had a quarrel.  Not once did Henderson raise his voice sharply to Michael, and not once did Michael snarl6 a warning at him.  They simply endured together, existed together, because the currents of life had drifted them together.  Of course, there was no heart-bond between them.  Henderson was master.  Michael was Henderson’s chattel7.  Michael was as dead to him as he was himself dead to all things.
 
Yet Jacob Henderson was fair and square, business-like and methodical.  Once each day, when not travelling on the interminable trains, he gave Michael a thorough bath and thoroughly8 dried him afterward9.  He was never harsh nor hasty in the bathing.  Michael never was aware whether he liked or disliked the bathing function.  It was all one, part of his own fate in the world as it was part of Henderson’s fate to bathe him every so often.
 
Michael’s own work was tolerably easy, though monotonous10.  Leaving out the eternal travelling, the never-ending jumps from town to town and from city to city, he appeared on the stage once each night for seven nights in the week and for two afternoon performances in the week.  The curtain went up, leaving him alone on the stage in the full set that befitted a bill-topper.  Henderson stood in the wings, unseen by the audience, and looked on.  The orchestra played four of the pieces Michael had been taught by Steward11, and Michael sang them, for his modulated12 howling was truly singing.  He never responded to more than one encore, which was always “Home, Sweet Home.”  After that, while the audience clapped and stamped its approval and delight of the dog Caruso, Jacob Henderson would appear on the stage, bowing and smiling in stereotyped13 gladness and gratefulness, rest his right hand on Michael’s shoulders with a play-acted assumption of comradeliness, whereupon both Henderson and Michael would bow ere the final curtain went down.
 
And yet Michael was a prisoner, a life-prisoner.  Fed well, bathed well, exercised well, he never knew a moment of freedom.  When travelling, days and nights he spent in the cage, which, however, was generous enough to allow him to stand at full height and to turn around without too uncomfortable squirming.  Sometimes, in hotels in country towns, out of the crate14 he shared Henderson’s room with him.  Otherwise, unless other animals were hewing15 on the same circuit time, he had, outside his cage, the freedom of the animal room attached to the particular theatre where he performed for from three days to a week.
 
But there was never a chance, never a moment, when he might run free of a cage about him, of the walls of a room restricting him, of a chain shackled16 to the collar about his throat.  In good weather, in the afternoons, Henderson often took him for a walk.  But always it was at the end of a chain.  And almost always the way led to some park, where Henderson fastened the other end of the chain to the bench on which he sat and browsed17 Swedenborg.  Not one act of free agency was left to Michael.  Other dogs ran free, playing with one another, or behaving bellicosely.  If they approached him for purposes of investigation18 or acquaintance, Henderson invariably ceased from his reading long enough to drive them away.
 
A life prisoner to a lifeless gaoler, life was all grey to Michael.  His moroseness19 changed to a deep-seated melancholy20.  He ceased to be interested in life and in the freedom of life.  Not that he regarded the play of life about him with a jaundiced eye, but, rather, that his eyes became unseeing.  Debarred from life, he ignored life.  He permitted himself to become a sheer puppet slave, eating, taking his baths, travelling in his cage, performing regularly, and sleeping much.
 
He had pride—the pride of the thoroughbred; the pride of the North American Indian enslaved on the plantations22 of the West Indies who died uncomplaining and unbroken.  So Michael.  He submitted to the cage and the iron of the chain because they were too strong for his muscles and teeth.  He did his slave-task of performance and rendered obedience23 to Jacob Henderson; but he neither loved nor feared that master.  And because of this his spirit turned in on itself.  He slept much, brooded much, and suffered unprotestingly a great loneliness.  Had Henderson made a bid for his heart, he would surely have responded; but Henderson had a heart only for the fantastic mental gyrations of Swedenborg, and merely made his living out of Michael.
 
Sometimes there were hardships.  Michael accepted them.  Especially hard did he find railroad travel in winter-time, when, on occasion, fresh from the last night’s performance in a town, he remained for hours in his crate on a truck waiting for the train that would take him to the next town of performance.  There was a night on a station platform in Minnesota, when two dogs of a troupe24, on the next truck to his, froze to death.  He was himself well frosted, and the cold bit abominably25 into his shoulder wounded by the leopard26; but a better constitution and better general care of him enabled him to survive.
 
Compared with other show animals, he was well treated.  And much of the ill-treatment accorded other animals on the same turn with him he did not comprehend or guess.  One turn, with which he played for three months, was a scandal amongst all vaudeville
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