After that Saturday that we made garden,
we tried our best to get out to Old Salem on Saturdays,
but something always happened, except one Saturday.
One time I had to make garden again, one time I had
to help Mitch make garden, another time pa and ma
went to Pleasant Plains to a picnic and I had to stay
and take care of Little Billie, for Myrtle went, because
I had gone with pa and ma somewhere, I forget where
it was, and it was Myrtle’s time. Somehow
Myrtle was always in my way, but ma said I was selfish
and I suppose I was. Finally on the Saturday
before school let out, we went to Old Salem, taking
two shovels and two picks. We didn’t do
much, just looked around, and found a lot of foundations
where buildings had been when the village was there,
and got the lay of the land. We left our tools
with the miller at the mill. He said all right,
but told us to wait for the next rainbow, and then
follow it up and get a bag of gold. “Never
you mind,” said Mitch. “Others have
found treasure and so can we.” He told the
miller we were digging in the woods, because he said
to me if it leaks out we’re after these old
cellars and places, there’ll be a slough of diggers
out here lookin’ for treasure, and they’ll
get it before we do.
But first after school was out something
interfered with our goin’ on. It was this:
Robbins’ Circus had come to town, and his son,
who was awful handsome, was a bareback rider, and
had set the town wild, and Zueline came to Mitch and
made him get up a circus. That took time, for
we had to practice.
We went to the real circus, Mitch
and me, and earned the money ourselves. It was
this way: Pa said, “You boys spend so much
time foolin’ around about treasures, why don’t
you earn some money?” So Mitch’s pa made
up a lot of pop-corn balls and we sold ’em on
the street and got money that way to see the show.
It was the most beautiful circus in the world such
lovely ladies, and a clown who sang “Never Take
the Horseshoe from the Door.”
Then we got to work to get up our
circus. Zueline had her Ayrdale and we cooped
him up for a lion; we put the cat in a box for a tiger,
and the rooster for an ostrich, and Mitch caught a
snake, and I had my pony to play Robbins’ son,
and Myrtle was goin’ to be the woman who et fire.
Mitch practiced for the trapeze, and he had to practice
a lot, for when he was 4 or 5 years old, he cut his
foot in two with an ax and after that the toes were
a little numb and didn’t work as well as they
did before.
Mitch said that in Europe they had
a royal box for queens and princesses, so he built
a kind of box for Zueline to sit in, and see the circus,
and draped it with rag carpets and put a mirror in
it. It was awful pretty.
Mitch was gate-keeper and manager.
We had some bills printed by Onstott, the printer,
which said “Miller & Kirby’s Renowned Circus
and Menagerie” and a lot of things, naming the
performers and all that. But I must say we had
our troubles. First Kit O’Brien and his
gang came down to break up the show. He tried
to come in without payin’, but Mitch settled
old scores this time. He hit Kit a punch in the
mouth and knocked out his baby teeth, which were danglin’
and needed to be pulled anyway. He bled like
a pig and ran up the hill hollerin’, “I’ll
get even.” But that settled that.
Then Myrtle burned her mouth trying
to chew cotton on fire, and Mitch’s toe went
back on him while hangin’ from the trapeze.
He fell, but didn’t hurt himself much; only
the audience laughed, even the princess Zueline in
the box. I rode the pony pretty well, but he was
too big for the ring in the barn, and Charley King
who tried to sing “Never Take the Horseshoe
from the Door” forgot part of it, and had to
back into the corn crib which was the dressin’
room.
Outside of these things, the show
was a success only this was the day Mitch
began to get acquainted with Charley King and George
Heigold, which was a bad thing, as I’ll tell
later.
So the circus was over and we took
up the treasure again. Mitch said we
mustn’t let another thing interfere. And
so we went to work at Old Salem.
As I said, we found a lot of old foundations
and we scraped and dug around in all of ’em,
mostly; and I never see so many snakes. Mitch
could take a snake by the tail and crack his head off
like a whip; but I was afraid to see him do it because
there was hoop snakes around, and their tails is pisen.
Nigger Dick told me he saw one roll down hill one
time and just as it got to an oak tree, it took its
tail out of its mouth and struck the tree with the
stinger of its tail. The next morning all the
leaves on the tree was withered. That is how pisen
a hoop snake is. Well, of course there was lots
of black snakes and they can wrap you. One wrapped
Kit O’Brien once; and he waited till it got itself
so tight that you could see through its skin, then
he touched it with a knife and it bust in two and
fell off of him.
Well, we didn’t find a thing,
though once when we struck some tin cans, I thought
sure we’d hit it.
By and by one day when we was diggin’,
I looked up and saw an old feller standin’ watchin’
us. He was awful old, maybe more than eighty,
and he just looked at Mitch and me and finally said,
“Lost somethin’, boys?” Mitch said:
“I suppose you might say so till we find it.”
Then the old feller said: “I hope you’ll
find it, for you look hot workin’ here in this
hot sun, and you are workin’, I declare.”
Mitch’s face was red and he looked earnest,
and I suppose I did too.
I don’t know whether the old
feller had talked to the miller or what, but finally
he said, “’Tain’t likely you’ll
find any treasure here. It’s all been taken
away long ago. Every place is like a mine, it
produces a certain amount and that’s all.
This place produced great riches, boys, but it’s
a worked out place now. It’s a dead mine.”
Then he stopped a minute and talked to himself a little
and looked around and said: “Yep, this
is the foundation of the Rutledge Tavern where Linkern
lived. Yep, I know because right over there is
where Dr. Allen lived; and over this a way was preacher
Cameron’s house, and here was the road, and down
yonder was Linkern and Berry’s store, and back
thar was Offets store. Yep, it all comes back
to me now. There was more’n twenty houses
here, shops, stores, schoolhouses, and this tavern;
and here Linkern lived, and I’ve seen him many
a time around here. And I’m glad to see
you boys diggin’ here for you might find treasure.
Peter Lukins, the shoemaker had his place just three
houses over, right there, and he was a miser, and
they thought he hid his money sommers around here.”
“Well,” said Mitch, under
his breath, “no more cheating to the county.
Law or no law, if we find it there, your pa will never
know it. We’ve had one experience and that’s
enough.” So he said out loud to the old
feller “Where is Peter Lukins’
place?” And the old feller said: “Climb
out of thar and I’ll show you.”
We walked over about a hundred yards
maybe, and here was another foundation all full of
dead weeds and new weeds, and so grown up you could
hardly see the stones at first, and not a stick of
timber left, except a log lying outside the foundation.
The older feller sat down and began to talk.
“I left this country in ’65,”
he said, “for California, and now I’m back
to Menard County, Illinois, to die and be buried with
my people over at Rock Creek. And I’m goin’
about seein’ the old places onct again.
You see, there ain’t anything left of the village
of Salem, but it all comes back to me, and I can close
my eyes and see the people that used to walk around
here, and see Linkern. And I’ll tell you
a story of a man who found treasure here.”
Mitch looked awful eager and bright-eyed,
and the old feller twisted off some tobacco and began
to chew and get the thread of his story.
“It was this a way,” he
began. “There was a man here who was clerkin’
in one of the stores; and one day a feller drove up
and said ‘hallow’ and this clerk came
out of the store and says, ‘What is it?’
The traveler says, ’Here’s a barl I have
no use for and don’t want to carry on my wagon
any furder, and I’ll sell it to you.’
And the clerk says, ’I ain’t got no use
for the barl.’ ‘Well,’ says
the traveler, ’you can have it for fifty cents,
and it will accommodate me; and besides I don’t
want to just throw it away.’ So the clerk
says all right, and gave him fifty cents and took
the barl in the store and put it in the corner.
It was kind of heavy too had somethin’
in it had treasure in it, as you’ll
see. And after a few days this here clerk took
the barl and turned it upside down and there was treasure.”
“How much?” said Mitch. “Gee,
but that was wonderful.”
“Well,” said the old feller,
“you can believe it or not, it was treasure
too much to count. You’ve heard of a man
bein’ suddenly rich and not realizin’
it, or havin’ somethin’ given to him that
he didn’t know the value of, and findin’
out afterwards. It was just this way.”
“Well,” said Mitch, “why
didn’t he count it, right away, or was it diamonds
or rubies?”
“He couldn’t count it
all right there. It couldn’t be done, because
it had to be weighed and tested and tried out, and
put on the market; for you might say some of it was
rubies, and to know what rubies are worth takes experience
and time and a lot of things.”
Mitch got more and more interested
and I did too. Then the old feller went on.
“But that ain’t sayin’
that this clerk didn’t know it was treasure he
did but it was treasure that he had to put
work on to bring out all its value.”
“Melt it up,” said Mitch, “or polish
it maybe.”
“Yes,” said the old feller,
“melt it up and polish it, and put his elbow
grease on it. And nobody but him could do it.
He couldn’t hire it done. For if he had,
he’d a lost the treasure the cost
of doin’ that would have wasted all the treasure.
And this the clerk knew. That’s why he
didn’t know what it was worth, though he knew
it was worth a lot and he was a happy man.”
“Well,” said Mitch, “what was it tell
me I can’t wait.”
“Books,” said the old
feller “two law books. Blackstone’s
Commentaries.”
“Oh, shucks,” said Mitch.
“Shucks,” said the old
man. “Listen to me. Here you boys dig
in the sun like niggers for treasure, and you’ll
never find it that a way. It ain’t to be
found. And if you did, it wouldn’t amount
to nothin’. But suppose you get a couple
of books into your head like Abe Linkern did, and
become a great lawyer, and a president, and a benefactor
to your fellows, then you have found treasure and
given it too. And it was out of that barl that
Linkern became what he was. He found his treasure
there. He might have found it sommers else; but
at least he found it there. And you can’t
get treasure that’s good that the good of you
wasn’t put into it in getting it. Remember
that. If you dug up treasure here, what have
you put into the getting of that treasure? Just
your work with the shovel and the pick that’s
all and you haven’t got rich doin’
that. The money will go and you’ll be where
you was before. But if there’s good in
you, and you put the good into what you find and make
it all it can be made, then you have found real treasure
like Linkern did.”
Mitch was quiet for a minute and then
said: “Don’t you ’spose the
man who sold the barl to Linkern knew the books was
in there? Of course he did. And if he did,
why didn’t he take the books and study and be
president? He couldn’t, that’s why.
If you call books treasure, they ain’t unless
they mean something to you. But take money or
jewels, who is there that they don’t mean somethin’
to? Nobody. Why there’re hundreds
of books around our house, that would do things if
they meant anything. And I’ve found my
book. It’s ‘Tom Sawyer.’
And till I find another I mean to stick by it, as
fur as that goes. One book at a time.”
I don’t know where Mitch got
all this talk. He was the wonderfulest boy that
ever lived, but besides he heard his pa talk things
all the time, and his pa could talk Greek and knew
everything in the world.
We sat talkin’ to this old feller
till pretty near sundown, when we said we must go.
We threw the tools into Peter Lukins’ cellar
and started off, leavin’ the old feller standin’.
When we got to the edge of the hill which led down
to the road by the river, we turned around and looked,
and saw the old feller standin’ there still,
black like against the light of the sun. Mitch
was awful serious.
“It must be awful to be old
like that,” said Mitch. “Did you hear
what he said come back to Menard County
to be buried with his folks and all his
folks gone. How does a feller live when he comes
to that? Nothin’ to do, nowhere really
to go. Skeeters, sometimes I wisht I was dead.
Even this treasure business, as much fun as it is,
is just a never endin’ trouble and worry.
And I see everybody in the same fix, no matter who
they are, worryin’ about somethin’.
And while it seems I’ve lived for ever and ever,
and it looks thousands of miles back to the time I
cut my foot off, just the same, I seem to be close
to the beginnin’ too, and sometimes I can just
feel myself mixin’ into the earth and bein’
nothin’.”
“Don’t you believe in heaven, Mitch?”
says I.
“No,” he says, “not very clear.”
“And you a preacher’s son!”
“That’s just it,”
says Mitch. “A preacher’s son is like
a circus man’s son, young Robbins who was here.
There’s no mystery about it. Why, young
Robbins paid no attention to the horses, animals, the
band things we went crazy about. And
I see my father get ready for funerals and dig up
his old sermons for funerals and all that, till it
looks just like any trade to me. But besides,
how can heaven be, and what’s the use? No,
sir, I don’t want to be buried with my folks I
want to be lost, like your uncle was, and buried by
the Indians way off where nobody knows.”
Then Mitch switched and began to talk
about Tom Sawyer again. He said we’re the
age of Tom Sawyer; that Linkern was a grown man when
he found the books; that there was a time for everything,
that as far as that’s concerned, Tom might be
working on something else now, having found his treasure.
“Why, lookee, don’t the book end up with
Tom organizing a robbers’ gang to rob the rich not
harm anybody, mind you but really do good take
money away from them that got it wrong and don’t
need it, and give it to the poor that can’t
get it and do need it?”
By this time we was clost to town.
The road ran under a hill where there was the old
graveyard, where lots of soldiers was buried.
“Do you know,” said Mitch, “them
pictures your grandma had of soldiers stay in my mind.
They looked old and grown up with beards and everything;
but after all, they’re not so old and
they went away and was killed and lots of ’em
are buried up there some without names.
Think of it, Skeet. Suppose there should be a
war again and you’d go, and be blown up so no
one could know you, and they’d put you in a grave
with no stone.”
“Ain’t that what you want, Mitch?”
“Yes, but you’re different,
Skeet. And besides, it’s different dyin’
natural and bein’ buried by the Indians in a
lovely place, and bein’ killed like an animal
and dumped with a lot of others and no stone.
If every boy felt as I do, they’d never be another
war. They couldn’t get me into a war except
to defend the country, and it would have to be a real
defense. You know, Skeet, we came here from Missouri,
where there was awful times during the war; and my
pa thinks the war could have been avoided. He
used to blame Linkern, but he don’t no more.
Say, did you think of Linkern while we were diggin’
to-day? I did. I could feel him. The
sky spoke about him, the still air spoke about him,
the meadow larks reminded me of him. Onct I thought
I saw him.”
“No, Mitch.”
“Yes, sir you see
I see things, Skeet, sometimes spirits, and I hear
music most of the time, and the fact is, nobody knows
me.”
“Nor me,” says I.
“I’m a good deal lonelier than you are,
Mitch Miller, and nobody understands me either; and
I have no girl. Girls seem to me just like anything
else dogs or chickens I don’t
mean no disrespect but you know.”
By this time we’d got to Petersburg,
and up to a certain corner, and we’d been talking
about Linkern so much that a lot of things came to
me. And I says: “See this corner,
Mitch? I’ll tell you somethin’ about
it maybe to-morrow.”