Meanwhile the author of all this misery
had come upon the scene. He was a young man,
whose rifle and well-filled game-bag showed that he
had been hunting, and his face expressed the liveliest
sorrow for what he had so unwittingly done.
“I didn’t know I was firing
at your pet,” he said to Toby as he laid his
hand on his shoulder and endeavored to make him look
up. “I only saw a little patch of fur through
the trees, and, thinking it was some wild animal,
I fired. Forgive me, won’t you, and let
me put the poor brute out of his misery?”
Toby looked up fiercely at the murderer
of his pet and asked, savagely, “Why don’t
you go away? Don’t you see that you have
killed Mr. Stubbs, an’ you’ll be hung
for murder?”
“I wouldn’t have done
it under any circumstances,” said the young man,
pitying Toby’s grief most sincerely. “Come
away, and let me put the poor thing out of its agony.”
“How can you do it?” asked
Toby, bitterly. “He’s dying already.”
“I know it, and it will be a
kindness to put a bullet through his head.”
If Toby had been big enough perhaps
there might really have been a murder committed, for
he looked up at the man who so coolly proposed to
kill the poor monkey after he had already received
his death-wound that the young man stepped back quickly,
as if really afraid that in his desperation the boy
might do him some injury.
“Go ‘way off,” said
Toby, passionately, “an’ don’t ever
come here again. You’ve killed all I ever
had in this world of my own to love me, an’ I
hate you - I hate you!”
Then, turning again to the monkey,
he put his hands on each side of his head, and, leaning
down, kissed the little brown lips as tenderly as a
mother would kiss her child.
The monkey was growing more and more
feeble, and when Toby had shown this act of affection
he reached up his tiny paws, grasped Toby’s
finger, half-raised himself from the ground, and then
with a convulsive struggle fell back dead, while the
tiny fingers slowly relaxed their hold of the boy’s
hand.
Toby feared that it was death, and
yet hoped that he was mistaken; he looked into the
half-open, fast-glazing eyes, put his hand over his
heart, to learn if it were still beating; and getting
no responsive look from the dead eyes, feeling no
heart-throbs from under that gory breast, he knew
that his pet was really dead, and flung himself by
his side in all the childish abandonment of grief.
He called the monkey by name, implored
him to look at him, and finally bewailed that he had
ever left the circus, where at least his pet’s
life was safe, even if his own back received its daily
flogging.
The young man, who stood a silent
spectator of this painful scene, understood everything
from Toby’s mourning. He knew that a boy
had run away from the circus, for Messrs. Lord and
Castle had stayed behind one day, in the hope of capturing
the fugitive, and they had told their own version
of Toby’s flight.
For nearly an hour Toby lay by the
dead monkey’s side, crying as if his heart would
break, and the young man waited until his grief should
have somewhat exhausted itself, and then approached
the boy again.
“Won’t you believe that
I didn’t mean to do this cruel thing?”
he asked, in a kindly voice. “And won’t
you believe that I would do anything in my power to
bring your pet back to life?”
Toby looked at him a moment earnestly,
and then said, slowly, “Yes, I’ll try
to.”
“Now will you come with me,
and let me talk to you? for I know who you are, and
why you are here.”
“How do you know that?”
“Two men stayed behind after
the circus had left, and they hunted everywhere for
you.”
“I wish they had caught me,”
moaned Toby; “I wish they had caught me, for
then Mr. Stubbs wouldn’t be here dead.”
And Toby’s grief broke out afresh
as he again looked at the poor little stiff form that
had been a source of so much comfort and joy to him.
“Try not to think of that now,
but think of yourself, and of what you will do,”
said the man, soothingly, anxious to divert Toby’s
mind from the monkey’s death as much as possible.
“I don’t want to think
of myself, and I don’t care what I’ll do,”
sobbed the boy, passionately.
“But you must; you can’t
stay here always, and I will try to help you to get
home, or wherever it is you want to go, if you will
tell me all about it.”
It was some time before Toby could
be persuaded to speak or think of anything but the
death of his pet; but the young man finally succeeded
in drawing his story from him, and then tried to induce
him to leave that place and accompany him to the town.
“I can’t leave Mr. Stubbs,”
said the boy, firmly; “he never left me the
night I got thrown out of the wagon an’ he thought
I was hurt.”
Then came another struggle to induce
him to bury his pet; and finally Toby, after realizing
the fact that he could not carry a dead monkey anywhere
with him, agreed to it; but he would not allow the
young man to help him in any way, or even to touch
the monkey’s body.
He dug a grave under a little fir-tree
near by, and lined it with wild flowers and leaves,
and even then hesitated to cover the body with the
earth. At last he bethought himself of the fanciful
costume which the skeleton and his wife had given
him, and in this he carefully wrapped his dead pet.
He had not one regret at leaving the bespangled suit,
for it was the best he could command, and surely nothing
could be too good for Mr. Stubbs.
Tenderly he laid him in the little
grave, and, covering the body with flowers, said,
pausing a moment before he covered it over with earth,
and while his voice was choked with emotion, “Good-bye,
Mr. Stubbs, good-bye! I wish it had been me instead
of you that died, for I’m an awful sorry little
boy now that you’re dead!”
Even after the grave had been filled,
and a little mound made over it, the young man had
the greatest difficulty to persuade Toby to go with
him; and when the boy did consent to go at last he
walked very slowly away, and kept turning his head
to look back just so long as the little grave could
be seen.
Then, when the trees shut it completely
out from sight, the tears commenced again to roll
down Toby’s cheeks, and he sobbed out, “I
wish I hadn’t left him. Oh, why didn’t
I make him lie down by me? an’ then he’d
be alive now; an’ how glad he’d be to know
that we was getting out of the woods at last!”
But the man who had caused Toby this
sorrow talked to him about other matters, thus taking
his mind from the monkey’s death as much as
possible, and by the time the boy reached the village
he had told his story exactly as it was, without casting
any reproaches on Mr. Lord, and giving himself the
full share of censure for leaving his home as he did.
Mr. Lord and Mr. Castle had remained
in the town but one day, for they were told that a
boy had taken the night train that passed through the
town about two hours after Toby had escaped, and they
had set off at once to act on that information.
Therefore Toby need have no fears
of meeting either of them just then, and he could
start on his homeward journey in peace.
The young man who had caused the monkey’s
death tried first to persuade Toby to remain a day
or two with him, and, failing in that, he did all
he could toward getting the boy home as quickly and
safely as possible. He insisted on paying for
his ticket on the steamboat, although Toby did all
he could to prevent him, and he even accompanied Toby
to the next town, where he was to take the steamer.
He had not only paid for Toby’s
ticket, but he had paid for a state-room for him;
and when the boy said that he could sleep anywhere,
and that there was no need of such expense, the man
replied, “Those men who were hunting for you
have gone down the river, and will be very likely to
search the boat, when they discover that they started
on the wrong scent. They will never suspect that
you have got a state-room; and if you are careful
to remain in it during the trip, you will get through
safely.”
Then, when the time came for the steamer
to start, the young man said to Toby, “Now,
my boy, you won’t feel hard at me for shooting
the monkey, will you? I would have done anything
to have brought him to life; but, as I could not do
that, helping you to get home was the next best thing
I could do.”
“I know you didn’t mean
to shoot Mr. Stubbs,” said Toby, with moistening
eyes as he spoke of his pet, “an’ I’m
sorry I said what I did to you in the woods.”
Before there was time to say any more
the warning whistle was sounded, the plank pulled
in, the great wheels commenced to revolve, and Toby
was really on his way to Uncle Daniel and Guilford.
It was then but five o’clock
in the afternoon, and he could not expect to reach
home until two or three o’clock in the afternoon
of the next day; but he was in a tremor of excitement
as he thought that he should walk through the streets
of Guilford once more, see all the boys, and go home
to Uncle Daniel.
And yet, whenever he thought of that
home, of meeting those boys, of going once more to
all those old familiar places, the memory of all that
he had planned when he should take the monkey with
him would come into his mind and damp even his joy,
great as it was.
That night he had considerable difficulty
in falling asleep, but did finally succeed in doing
so; and when he awoke the steamer was going up the
river, whose waters seemed like an old friend, because
they had flowed right down past Guilford on their
way to the sea.
At each town where a landing was made
Toby looked eagerly out on the pier, thinking that
by chance some one from his home might be there and
he would see a familiar face again. But all this
time he heeded the advice given him and remained in
his room, where he could see and not be seen; and
it was well for him that he did so, for at one of the
landings he saw both Mr. Lord and Mr. Castle come on
board the boat.
Toby’s heart beat fast and furious,
and he expected every moment to hear them at the door
demanding admittance, for it seemed to him that they
must know exactly where he was secreted.
But no such misfortune occurred.
The men had evidently only boarded the boat to search
for the boy, for they landed again before the steamer
started, and Toby had the satisfaction of seeing their
backs as they walked away from the pier. It was
some time before he recovered from the fright which
the sight of them gave him; but when he did his thoughts
and hopes far outstripped the steamer which, it seemed,
was going so slowly, and he longed to see Guilford
with an impatience that could hardly be restrained.
At last he could see the spire of
the little church on the hill, and when the steamer
rounded the point, affording a full view of the town,
and sounded her whistle as a signal for those on the
shore to come to the pier, Toby could hardly restrain
himself from jumping up and down and shouting in his
delight.
He was at the gang-plank ready to
land fully five minutes before the steamer was anywhere
near the wharf, and when he recognized the first face
on the pier what a happy boy he was!
He was at home! The dream of
the past ten weeks was at length realized, and neither
Mr. Lord nor Mr. Castle had any terrors for him now.
He ran down the gang-plank before
it was ready and clasped every boy he saw there round
the neck, and would have kissed them, if they had shown
an inclination to let him do so.
Of course he was overwhelmed with
questions, but before he would answer any he asked
for Uncle Daniel and the others at home.
Some of the boys ventured to predict
that Toby would get a jolly good whipping for running
away, and the only reply which the happy Toby made
to that was,
“I hope I will, an’ then
I’ll feel as if I had kinder paid for runnin’
away. If Uncle Dan’l will only let me stay
with him again he may whip me every mornin’,
an’ I won’t open my mouth to holler.”
The boys were impatient to hear the
story of Toby’s travels, but he refused to tell
it them, saying,
“I’ll go home; an’
if Uncle Dan’l forgives me for bein’ so
wicked I’ll sit down this afternoon an’
tell you all you want to know about the circus.”
Then, far more rapidly than he had
run away from it, Toby ran toward the home which he
had called his ever since he could remember, and his
heart was full almost to bursting as he thought that
perhaps he would be told that he had forfeited all
claim to it, and that he could never more call it
“home” again.
When he entered the old familiar sitting-room
Uncle Daniel was seated near the window, alone, looking
out wistfully - as Toby thought - across
the fields of yellow waving grain.
Toby crept softly in, and, going up
to the old man, knelt down and said, very humbly,
and with his whole soul in the words, “Oh, Uncle
Dan’l! if you’ll only forgive me for bein’
so wicked an’ runnin’ away, an’ let
me stay here again - for it’s all the
home I ever had - I’ll do everything
you tell me to, an’ never whisper in meetin’
or do anything bad.”
And then he waited for the words which
would seal his fate. They were not long in coming.
“My poor boy,” said Uncle
Daniel, softly, as he stroked Toby’s refractory
red hair, “my love for you was greater than I
knew, and when you left me I cried aloud to the Lord
as if it had been my own flesh and blood that had
gone afar from me. Stay here, Toby, my son, and
help to support this poor old body as it goes down
into the dark valley of the shadow of death; and then,
in the bright light of that glorious future, Uncle
Daniel will wait to go with you into the presence of
Him who is ever a father to the fatherless.”
And in Uncle Daniel’s kindly care we may safely
leave Toby Tyler.