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Zone Policeman 88; a close range study of the Panama canal and its workers by Harry Alverson Franck
page 78 of 214 (36%)
even if they would.

I, too, had gradually worked my way high up among the nondescript
cabins on the upper rim of Paraiso that seem on the very verge of
pitching headlong into the noisy, smoky canal far below with the
jar of the next explosion, when one sunny mid-afternoon I caught
sight of Renson dejectedly trudging down across what might be
called the "Maiden" of Paraiso, back of the two-story lodge-hall.
I took leave of my ebony hostess and descended. Renson's troubles
were indeed disheartening. Back in the jungled fringe of the town
he had fallen into a swarm of Martiniques, and Renson's French
being nothing more than an unstudied mixture of English and
Spanish, he had not gathered much information. Moreover negro
women from the French isles are enough to frighten any virtuous
young Marine.

"What's the sense o' me tryin' to chew the fat in French?" asked
Renson, with tears in his voice. "I ain't in no condition to work
at this census business any longer anyway. I ain't got to bed
before three in the morning this week"--in his air was open
suggestion that it was some one else's fault--"Some day I'll be
gettin' in bad, too. This mornin' a fool nigger woman asked me if
I didn't want her black pickaninny I was enumeratin', thinkin' it
was a good joke. You know how these bush kids is runnin' around
all over the country before a white man's brat could walk on its
hind legs. 'Yes,' I says, 'if I was goin' alligator huntin' an'
needed bait!' I come near catchin' the brat up by the feet an'
beatin' its can off. I'm out o' luck any way, an'--"

The fact is Renson was aching to be "fired." More than thirty days
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