“Come on, Billy Button.”
“O, Gid Noonin, I can’t.”
“Why not? Got the cramp?”
“Look here, Gid.”
“Well, I’m looking.”
“Now, Gid Noonin!”
“Yes; that’s my name!”
“I shan’t go a step!”
“So I wouldn’t,” returned Gid, coolly.
“I only asked you for fun.”
“O h! H’m! Are you
going to swim in the brook or the river?”
“Brook, you goosie. Prime
place down there by the old willow tree.
Don’t you wish I’d let you go?”
“No; for my mother says ”
“O, does she, though?”
“My mother says ”
“Lor, now, Billy Button!”
“Hush, Gid; my mother says ”
“A pretty talking woman your
mother is!” struck in Gid, squinting his eyes.
What a witty creature Gid was! Willy could hardly
keep from laughing.
“Can’t you let me speak, Gid Noonin?
My mother says she won’t ”
“Says she won’t?
That’s real wicked kind of talk! I’m
ashamed of your mother!”
Willy laughed. Gid did have such a way
of making up faces!
“Come on, you little girl-baby!
Guess I will take you, if you won’t cry.”
Willy laughed again. It was not
at all painful, but extremely funny, to hear Gid call
names, for he never did it in a provoking way at all.
“Come along, you little tip end of a top o’
my thumb.”
“No, sir. Shan’t go a step!”
Willy was a boy that meant to mind his mother.
“But I s’pose you’ll have to go
if I take you.”
Willy caught himself by the left ear.
He felt the need of holding on by something; still
he was somehow afraid he should have to go in spite
of his ears. Was there ever such a boy as Gid
for teasing?
“Why, Gid Noonin, I told you my mother said ”
“No, you didn’t!
You haven’t told me a thing! You stutter
so I can’t understand a word.”
At the idea of his stuttering, Willy
laughed outright; and during that moment of weakness
was picked up and set astride of Gid’s shoulders.
“You put me down! My mother
says I shan’t play with you; so there!”
cried Willy, struggling manfully, yet a little pleased,
I must confess, to think he couldn’t possibly
help himself.
“Ride away, ride away.
Billy shall ride,” sang Gid, bouncing his burden
up and down.
Willy felt like a dry leaf in an eddy,
which is whirled round and round, yet is all the while
making faster and faster for the hungry dimple in
the middle, where there is no getting out again.
“O, dear, Gid’s such a
great big boy, and I’m only just eight,”
thought he, jolting up and down like a bag of meal
on horseback. Well, it would be good fun, after
all, to go in swimming, splendid fun, when
there was somebody to hold you up, and keep you from
drowning. If you could forget that your mother
had told you not to play with Gid Noonin!
“If you get the string of that
medal wet you’ll catch it,” said Gid.
“Better take it off and put it in your pocket.”
“Just a-going to,” said Willy. “D’you
think I’s a fool?”
Well, wasn’t it nice! The water feeling
so ticklish all over you, and
Why, no, it wasn’t nice at all;
it was just frightful! After two or three dives,
Gid had snapped his fingers in his face, and gone off
and left him. Willy couldn’t swim any more
than a fish-hook. Where was Gid?
“The water’s up to my chin. Come,
Gid, quick!”
What would Seth and Stephen say if
they knew how he was abused? No his
mother? No Love, and Caleb, and Liddy?
How they would feel! There wasn’t any bottom
to this brook, or if there ever had been it had dropped
out.
“O, Gid, I can’t stand up.”
Gid was in plain sight now, on the
bank, pretending to skip stones. Gid was like
a Chinese juggler; he could make believe do one thing,
while he was really doing another.
“Quick! Quick! Quick! I shall
dro ow own!”
Gid took his own time; but as he swam
slowly back to his trembling little playmate, he was
“rolling a sweet morsel under his tongue,”
which tasted very much like a silver medal with
the string taken out.
“What d’you go off for?” gasped
Willy.
“For fun, you outrageous little
ninny!” mumbled Gid, tickling Willy under the
arms. “I’m going to get you out, now,
and dress you, and send you home to your mother.”
“Dress me, I guess!”
“Well, you’d better scamper!”
said Gid, hurriedly, as they got into their clothes.
“Your mother’ll have a fit about you.”
“My mother? No, she won’t.
She don’t spect the codfish and mackerel till
most supper-time. She said I might play, but she
wasn’t willing I should play with you, though,
Gid Noonin,” said little Willy, squeezing the
water out of his hair.
“But you did, you little scamp!
Now run along home. I can’t stop to talk.
Got to saw wood.”
“Then what made you creep so
awful slow when I called to you?” asked Willy,
indignantly.
“O, because I’ve got such
a sore throat,” wheezed Gideon. “Off
with you! Scamper!”
Upon that Gid took to his heels, and
left Master Willy staring at him, and wondering what
a sore throat had to do with swimming, and what made
Gid in such a hurry all in a minute.
“He’s a queer fellow Gid
is! Can’t spell worth a cent. Should
think he’d be ashamed to see a little boy like
me wear the medal. Glad I didn’t wet it,
for the color would have washed out of the string.”
With that Willy put his hand in his pocket.
“Out here and show yourself, sir.”
This to the medal.
“What! Why, what’s this?”
He felt in the other pocket.
“Why! Why!”
He drew out junks of blue clay, wads
of twine, a piece of chalk, a fish-hook, and various
other articles more or less wound up in a wad; but
no medal.
“Guess there’s a hole in my pocket, and
the medal fell through.”
And without stopping to examine the
pocket, he ran back all the way to the brook.
Nowhere to be found. Not in the grass on either
side of the road; not on the bank.
Then he remembered to look at his
pockets; turned them all three inside out four times.
No hole there.
“Well, I never! Look
here, you Oze Wiggins; did you pick up anything in
the grass?”
“Noffin’ but a toadstool,”
replied little Ozem, innocently; and Willy wondered
if he wasn’t a half-fool to make such an answer
as that.
“Where can that medal be?” said he, with
a dry sob.
He did not once suspect that Gideon Noonin had taken
it.
“I’ll go home and tell my mother.
O, dear! O, dear!”
He was still at the tender age when
little boys believe their mammas can help them out
of any kind of trouble. True, he had been naughty
and disobedient; but if he said he was sorry, wouldn’t
her arms open to take him in? He was sorry now, no
doubt of that, and was running home with
all speed, when the sight of his father in the distance
reminded him of his errand, and he rushed back to
the store for the codfish and mackerel.
“What makes your hair so wet,
bubby?” asked Daddy Wiggins, rolling the fish
in brown paper. “Haven’t been in swimming have
you?”
“Don’ know,” stammered Willy, darting
out of the store.
If his hair was wet it wouldn’t
do to go home till it was dry; for his father would
find out that he had been in the brook, and the next
thing in order would be a whipping. It was hard
enough to lose the medal; Willy thought a whipping
would be more than he could bear, for it was always
given with a horsewhip out in the barn; and the unlucky
boy could never help envying the cows, as they looked
on, chewing their cuds with such an air of content
and unconcern. Cows never were punished, nor
sheep either. Good times they had that’s
a fact. Sheep wouldn’t mind a real heavy
horse-whipping, they were done up so in wool; but when
a little boy had to take off his jacket, why, there
wasn’t much over his skin to keep off the smart.
Ugh! how it did hurt!
There was another advantage in being
a sheep, or a cow, or a hen; animals of that sort
never lost anything didn’t have medals
to lose.
“And this wasn’t mine,”
groaned Willy. “What’ll the mistress
do to me? Don’ know; blister both hands,
I s’pose!”
Willy had intended to play ball with
the little boys, but it was not to be thought of now.
Putting his fish behind a tree, he ran to the brook
again and poked with a stick as far as he could reach;
then waded in up to his knees, for the medal might
have rolled out of his pocket.
“No, it couldn’t; for
my breeches were tucked in up there between two rocks.”
Suddenly he recollected Gideon’s going back
to the bank.
“That wicked, mean boy!”
almost screamed Willy. “He stole my medal!
I’ll go right off and tell mother!”
Mrs. Parlin had on her afternoon cap,
and was sitting alone in the well-sanded “fore-room,”
doing the mending, and singing,
“While shepherds watched
their flocks by night,
All seated on
the ground,”
when Willy, with his pantaloons tucked
up to his knees, and his head dripping with water,
rushed wildly into the room.
“My medal’s gone! Gid Noonin stole
it!”
“My son! What do you mean?”
“Yes, ma’am; Gid Noonin
stole it! Made me go in swimming, and then he
stole it!”
“Gideon Noonin?” said
Mrs. Parlin, with a meaning glance. “That
boy? Made you go swimming, my son?”
Willy hung his head.
“Yes, ma’am! Marched me off down
to the brook pickaback, he did!”
“Poor, little baby!” said
Mrs. Parlin, in the soft, pitiful tone she would have
used to an infant. “Poor little baby!”
Willy’s head sank lower yet,
and the blush of shame crept into his cheeks.
“Why, mother, he’s as
strong’s a moose; he could most lift you!”
“‘My son, if sinners entice thee, consent
thou not.’”
“Well, but I ”
“You consented in your heart,
Willy, or Gideon could not have made you go swimming.”
What a very bright woman! Willy
was amazed. How could she guess that while riding
on Gid’s back he had been a little glad
to think he could not help it? He had hardly
known himself that he was glad, it was such a wee
speck of a feeling, and so covered up with other feelings.
“But I tried not to go, mother.
I tell you I squirmed awf’ly!”
“Well, you didn’t try
hard enough in the first place, Willy. Come here,
and sit in my lap, and let us talk it over. Do
you know, my son, if you had tried hard enough,
the Lord would have helped you?”
Willy raised his eyes wonderingly.
Had God been looking on all the while, just ready
to be spoken to? He had not thought of that.
“O, mamma,” said he solemnly,
“I will mind, next time, see ’f I don’t.
But there’s that medal; why, what’ll I
do?”
“If Gideon will not return it,
you must pay Miss Judkins a quarter of a dollar.”
“With a hole in,” sighed
Willy. “Why, I’ve only got two cents
in this world.”
“O, well,” said Mrs. Parlin,
hopefully, “perhaps you can hire out to papa,
and earn the rest.”
“O, if he’ll only
let me! Won’t you please ask him, mamma?”
cried Willy, filled with a new hope. “Ask
him, and get Love to ask him, too. I shouldn’t
dare do it, you know.”