As I said, it was in the spring that
Jim Leonard’s hair-breadth escape happened.
But it was late in the summer of that very same year
that he got Pony Baker and all the rest of the boys
into about one of the worst scrapes that the Boy’s
Town boys were ever in.
At first, it was more like a dare
than anything else, for when Jim Leonard said he knew
a watermelon patch that the owner had no use for, the
other boys dared him to tell where it was. He
wagged his head, and said that he knew, and then they
dared him to tell whose patch it was; and all at once
he said it was Bunty Williams’s, and dared them
to come and get the melons with him. None of
the boys in the Boy’s Town would take a dare,
and so they set off with Jim Leonard, one sunny Saturday
morning in September.
Some of the boys had their arms round
one another’s necks, talking as loud as they
could into one another’s faces, and some whooping
and holloing, and playing Indian, and some throwing
stones and scaring cats. They had nearly as many
dogs as there were boys, and there were pretty nearly
all the boys in the neighborhood. There seemed
to be thirty or forty of them, they talked so loud
and ran round so, but perhaps there were only ten or
eleven. Hen Billard was along, and so were Piccolo
Wright and Archie Hawkins, and then a great lot of
little fellows.
Pony Baker was not quite a little
fellow in age; and there was something about him that
always made the big boys let him go with their crowd.
But now, when they passed Pony’s gate and his
mother saw them, and because it was such a warm morning
and she thought they might be going down to the river
and called out to him, “You mustn’t go
in swimming, Pony, dear; you’ll get the ague,”
they began to mock Pony as soon as they got by, and
to hollo, “No, Pony, dear! You mustn’t
get the ague. Keep out of the water if you don’t
want your teeth to rattle, Pony, dear!”
This made Pony so mad that he began
to cry and try to fight them, and they all formed
in a ring round him and danced and whooped till he
broke through and started home. Then they ran
after him and coaxed him not to do it, and said that
they were just in fun. After that they used Pony
first-rate, and he kept on with them.
Jim Leonard was at the head, walking
along and holloing to the fellows to hurry up.
They had to wade the river, and he was showing off
how he could hop, skip, and jump through, when he
stepped on a slippery stone and sat down in the water
and made the fellows laugh. But they acted first-rate
with him when they got across; they helped him to take
off his trousers and wring them out, and they wrung
them so hard that they tore them a little, but they
were a little torn already; and they wrung them so
dry that he said they felt splendid when he got them
on again. One of his feet went through the side
of the trouser leg that was torn before it got to
the end, and made the fellows laugh.
When the boys first started Jim said
he had got to go ahead so as to be sure that they
found the right patch. He now said that Bunty
Williams had two patches, one that he was going to
sell the melons out of, and the other that he was
going to let them go to seed in; and it was the second
melon patch that he had deserted.
But pretty soon after they got over
the river he came back and walked with the rest of
the boys, and when they came to a piece of woods which
they had to go through, he dropped behind. He
said it was just the place for Indian, and he wanted
to be where he could get at them if they started up
when the boys got by, as they would very likely do.
Some of the big fellows called him
a cowardy-calf; but he said he would show them when
the time came, and most of the little boys believed
him and tried to get in front. It was not long
before he stopped and asked, What if he could not
find the right patch? But the big boys said that
they reckoned he could if he looked hard enough, and
they made him keep on.
One of the dogs treed a squirrel,
and Jim offered to climb the tree and shake the squirrel
off; but Hen Billard said his watermelon tooth was
beginning to trouble him, and he had no time for squirrels.
That made all the big boys laugh, and they pulled
Jim Leonard along, although he held back with all
his might and told them to quit it. He began to
cry.
Pony Baker did not know what to make
of him. He felt sorry for him, but it seemed
to him that Jim was acting as if he wanted to get out
of showing the fellows where the patch was. Pony
lent him his handkerchief, and Jim said that he had
the toothache, anyway. He showed Pony the tooth,
and the fellows saw him and made fun, and they offered
to carry him, if his tooth ached so that he could
not walk, and then suddenly Jim rushed ahead of the
whole crowd.
They thought he was trying to run
away from them, and two or three of the big fellows
took after him, and when they caught up with him, the
rest of the boys could see him pointing, and then
the big boys that were with him gave a whoop and waved
their hats, and all the rest of the boys tore along
and tried which could run the fastest and get to the
place the soonest.
They knew it must be something great;
and sure enough it was a watermelon patch of pretty
near an acre, sloping to the south from the edge of
the woods, and all overrun with vines and just bulging
all over with watermelons and muskmelons.
The watermelons were some of the big
mottled kind, with lightish blotches among their darker
green, like Georgia melons nowadays, and some almost
striped in gray and green, and some were those big,
round sugar melons, nearly black. They were all
sizes, but most of them were large, and you need not
“punk” them to see if they were ripe.
Anybody could tell that they were ripe from looking
at them, and the muskmelons, which were the old-fashioned
long kind, were yellow as gold.
Now, the big fellows said, you could
see why Bunty Williams had let this patch go to seed.
It was because they were such bully melons and would
have the best seeds; and the fellows all agreed to
save the seeds for Bunty, and put them where he could
find them. They began to praise Jim Leonard up,
but he did not say anything, and only looked on with
his queer, sleepy eyes, and said his tooth ached,
when the fellows plunged down among the melons and
began to burst them open.
They had lots of fun. At first
they cut a few melons open with their knives, but
that was too slow, and pretty soon they began to jump
on them and split them with sharp-edged rocks, or
anything, to get them open quick. They did not
eat close to the rind, as you do when you have a melon
on the table, but they tore out the core and just ate
that; and in about a minute they forgot all about
saving the seeds for Bunty Williams and putting them
in one place where he could get them.
Some of the fellows went into the
edge of the woods to eat their melons, and then came
back for more; some took them and cracked them open
on the top rail of the fence, and then sat down in
the fence corner and plunged their fists in and tore
the cores out. Some of them squeezed the juice
out of the cores into the shells of the melons and
then drank it out of them.
Piccolo Wright was stooping over to
pull a melon and Archie Hawkins came up behind him
with a big melon that had a seam across it, it was
so ripe; and he brought it down on Piccolo’s
head, and it smashed open and went all over Piccolo.
He was pretty mad at first, but then he saw the fun
of it, and he took one end of the melon and scooped
it all out, and put it on in place of his hat and
wore it like a helmet. Archie did the same thing
with the other end, and then all the big boys scooped
out melons and wore them for helmets. They were
all drabbled with seeds and pulp, and some of the
little fellows were perfectly soaked. None of
them cared very much for the muskmelons.
Somehow Pony would not take any of
the melons, although there was nothing that he liked
so much. The fellows seemed to be having an awfully
good time, and yet somehow it looked wrong to Pony.
He knew that Bunty Williams had given up the patch,
because Jim Leonard said so, and he knew that the
boys had a right to the melons if Bunty had got done
with them; but still the sight of them there, smashing
and gorging, made Pony feel anxious. It almost
made him think that Jim Leonard was better than the
rest because he would not take any of the melons,
but stayed off at one side of the patch near the woods,
where Pony stood with him.
He did not say much, and Pony noticed
that he kept watching the log cabin where Bunty Williams
lived on the slope of the hill about half a mile off,
and once he heard Jim saying, as if to himself:
“No, there isn’t any smoke coming out
of the chimbly, and that’s a sign there ain’t
anybody there. They’ve all gone to market,
I reckon.”
It went through Pony that it was strange
Jim should care whether Bunty was at home or not,
if Bunty had given up the patch, but he did not say
anything; it often happened so with him about the things
he thought strange.
The fellows did not seem to notice
where he was or what he was doing; they were all whooping
and holloing, and now they began to play war with the
watermelon rinds. One of the dogs thought he smelled
a ground-squirrel and began to dig for it, and in
about half a minute all the dogs seemed to be fighting,
and the fellows were yelling round them and sicking
them on; and they were all making such a din that
Pony could hardly hear himself think, as his father
used to say. But he thought he saw some one come
out of Bunty’s cabin, and take down the hill
with a dog after him and a hoe in his hand.
He made Jim Leonard look, and Jim
just gave a screech that rose above the din of the
dogs and the other boys, “Bunty’s coming,
and he’s got his bulldog and his shotgun!”
And then he turned and broke through the woods.
All the boys stood still and stared
at the hill-side, while the dogs fought on. The
next thing they knew they were floundering among the
vines and over the watermelon cores and shells and
breaking for the woods; and as soon as the dogs found
the boys were gone, they seemed to think it was no
use to keep on fighting with nobody to look on, and
they took after the fellows.
The big fellows holloed to the little
fellows to come on, and the little fellows began crying.
They caught their feet in the roots and dead branches
and kept falling down, and some of the big fellows
that were clever, like Hen Billard and Archie Hawkins,
came back and picked them up and started them on again.
Nobody stopped to ask himself or any
one else why they should be afraid of Bunty if he
had done with his melon patch, but they all ran as
if he had caught them stealing his melons, and had
a right to shoot them, or set his dog on them.
They got through the woods to the
shore of the river, and all the time they could hear
Bunty Williams roaring and shouting, and Bunty Williams’s
bulldog barking, and it seemed as if he were right
behind them. After they reached the river they
had to run a long way up the shore before they got
to the ripple where they could wade it, and by that
time they were in such a hurry that they did not stop
to turn up their trousers’ legs; they just splashed
right in and splashed across the best way they could.
Some of them fell down, but everybody had to look
out for himself, and they did not know that they were
all safe over till they counted up on the other side.
Everybody was there but Jim Leonard,
and they did not know what had become of him, but
they were not very anxious. In fact they were
all talking at the tops of their voices, and bragging
what they would have done if Bunty had caught them.
Piccolo Wright showed how he could
have tripped him up, and Archie Hawkins said that
snuff would make a bulldog loosen his grip, because
he would have to keep sneezing. None of them
seemed to have seen either Bunty’s shotgun or
his bulldog, but they all believed that he had them
because Jim Leonard said so, just as they had believed
that Bunty had got done with his melon patch, until
all at once one of them said, “Where is Jim
Leonard, anyway?”
Then they found out that nobody knew,
and the little fellows began to think that maybe Bunty
Williams had caught him, but Hen Billard said:
“Oh, he’s safe enough, somewheres.
I wish I had him here!”
Archie Hawkins asked, “What
would you do to him?” and Hen said: “I’d
show you! I’d make him go back and find
out whether Bunty really had a bulldog with him.
I don’t believe he had.”
Then all the big boys said that none
of them believed so, either, and that they would bet
that any of their dogs could whip Bunty’s dog.
Their dogs did not look much like
fighting. They were wet with running through
the river, and they were lying round with their tongues
hanging out, panting. But it made the boys think
that something ought to be done to Jim Leonard, if
they could ever find him, and some one said that they
ought to look for him right away, but the rest said
they ought to stop and dry their pantaloons first.
Pony began to be afraid they were
going to hurt Jim Leonard if they got hold of him,
and he said he was going home; and the boys tried to
keep him from doing it. They said they were just
going to build a drift-wood fire and dry their clothes
at it, and they told him that if he went off in his
wet trousers he would be sure to get the ague.
But nothing that the boys could do would keep him,
and so the big fellows said to let him go if he wanted
to so much; and he climbed the river bank and left
them kindling a fire.
When he got away and looked back,
all the boys had their clothes off and were dancing
round the fire like Indians, and he would have liked
to turn back after he got to the top, and maybe he
might have done so if he had not found Jim Leonard
hiding in a hole up there and peeping over at the
boys. Jim was crying, and said his tooth ached
awfully, and he was afraid to go home and get something
to put in it, because his mother would whale him as
soon as she caught him.
He said he was hungry, too, and he
wanted Pony to go over into a field with him and get
a turnip, but Pony would not do it. He had three
cents in his pocket — the big old kind that
were as large as half-dollars and seemed to buy as
much in that day — and he offered to let Jim
take them and go and get something to eat at the grocery.
They decided he should buy two smoked
red herrings and a cent’s worth of crackers,
and these were what Jim brought back after he had been
gone so long that Pony thought he would never come.
He had stopped to get some apples off one of the trees
at his mother’s house, and he had to watch his
chance so that she should not see him, and then he
had stopped and taken some potatoes out of a hill
that would be first-rate if they could get some salt
to eat them with, after they had built a fire somewhere
and baked them.
They thought it would be a good plan
to dig one of these little caves just under the edge
of the bank, and make a hole in the top to let the
smoke out; but they would have to go a good way off
so that the other fellows could not see them, and
they could not wait for that. They divided the
herrings between them, and they each had two crackers
and three apples, and they made a good meal.
Then they went to a pump at the nearest
house, where the woman said they might have a drink,
and drank themselves full. They wanted awfully
to ask her for some salt, but they did not dare to
do it for fear she would make them tell what they
wanted it for. So they came away without, and
Jim said they could put ashes on their potatoes the
way the Indians did, and it would be just as good
as salt.
They ran back to the river bank, and
ran along up it till they were out of sight of the
boys on the shore below, and then they made their oven
in it, and started their fire with some matches that
Jim Leonard had in his pocket, so that if he ever
got lost in the woods at night he could make a fire
and keep from freezing. His tooth had stopped
aching now, and he kept telling such exciting stories
about Indians that Pony could not seem to get the
chance to ask why Bunty Williams should take after
the boys with his shotgun and bulldog if he had given
up the watermelon patch and only wanted it for seed.
The question lurked in Pony’s
mind all the time that they were waiting for the potatoes
to bake, but somehow he could not get it out.
He did not feel very well, and he tried to forget
his bad feelings by listening as hard as he could
to Jim Leonard’s stories. Jim kept taking
the potatoes out to see if they were done enough,
and he began to eat them while they were still very
hard and greenish under the skin. Pony ate them,
too, although he was not hungry now, and he did not
think the ashes were as good as salt on them, as Jim
pretended. The potato he ate seemed to make him
feel no better, and at last he had to tell Jim that
he was afraid he was going to be sick.
Jim said that if they could heat some
stones, and get a blanket anywhere, and put it over
Pony and the stones, and then pour water on the hot
stones, they could give him a steam bath the way the
Indians did, and it would cure him in a minute; they
could get the stones easy enough, and he could bring
water from the river in his straw hat, but the thing
of it was to get the blanket.
He stood looking thoughtfully down
at Pony, who was crying now, and begging Jim Leonard
to go home with him, for he did not believe he could
walk on account of the pain that seemed to curl him
right up. He asked Jim if he believed he was
beginning to have the ague, but Jim said it was more
like the yellow janders, although he agreed that Pony
had better go home, for it was pretty late, anyway.
He made Pony promise that if he would
take him home he would let him get a good way off
before he went into the house, so that Pony’s
father and mother should not see who had brought him.
He said that when he had got off far enough he would
hollo, and then Pony could go in. He was first-rate
to Pony on the way home, and helped him to walk, and
when the pain curled him up so tight that he could
not touch his foot to the ground, Jim carried him.
Pony could never know just what to
make of Jim Leonard. Sometimes he was so good
to you that you could not help thinking he was one
of the cleverest fellows in town, and then all of
a sudden he would do something mean. He acted
the perfect coward at times, and at other times he
was not afraid of anything. Almost any of the
fellows could whip him, but once he went into an empty
house that was haunted, and came and looked out of
the garret windows, and dared any of them to come
up.
He offered now, if Pony did not want
to go home and let his folks find out about the melon
patch, to take him to his mother’s log-barn,
and get a witch-doctor to come and tend him; but Pony
said that he thought they had better keep on, and
then Jim trotted and asked him if the jolting did not
do him some good. He said he just wished there
was an Indian medicine-man around somewhere.
They were so long getting to Pony’s
house that it was almost dusk when they reached the
back of the barn, and Jim put him over the fence.
Jim started to run, and Pony waited till he got out
of sight and holloed; then he began to shout, “Father!
Mother! O mother! Come out here! I’m
sick!”
It did not seem hardly a second till
he heard his mother calling back: “Pony!
Pony! Where are you, child? Where are you?”
“Here, behind the barn!” he answered.
Pony’s mother came running out,
and then his father, and when they had put him into
his own bed up-stairs, his mother made his father go
for the doctor. While his father was gone, his
mother got the whole story out of Pony — what
he had been doing all day, and what he had been eating — but
as to who had got him into the trouble, she said she
knew from the start it must be Jim Leonard.
After the doctor came and she told
him what Pony had been eating, without telling all
that he had been doing, the doctor gave him something
to make him feel better. As soon as he said he
felt better she began to talk very seriously to him,
and to tell him how anxious she had been ever since
she had seen him going off in the morning with Jim
Leonard at the head of that crowd of boys.
“Didn’t you know he couldn’t
be telling the truth when he said the man had left
his watermelon patch? Didn’t any of the
boys?”
“No,” said Pony, thoughtfully.
“But when he pretended that
he shouldn’t know the right patch, and wanted
to turn back?”
“We didn’t think anything.
We thought he just wanted to get out of going.
Ought they let him turn back? Maybe he meant to
keep the patch all to himself.”
His mother was silent, and Pony asked,
“Do you believe that a boy has a right to take
anything off a tree or a vine?”
“No; certainly not.”
“Well, that’s what I think, too.”
“Why, Pony,” said his
mother, “is there anybody who thinks such a thing
can be right?”
“Well, the boys say it’s
not stealing. Stealing is hooking a thing out
of a wagon or a store; but if you can knock a thing
off a tree, or get it through a fence, when it’s
on the ground already, then it’s just like gathering
nuts in the woods. That’s what the boys
say. Do you think it is?”
“I think it’s the worst
kind of stealing. I hope my boy doesn’t
do such things.”
“Not very often,” answered
Pony, thoughtfully. “When there’s
a lot of fellows together, you don’t want them
to laugh at you.”
“O Pony, dear!” said his mother, almost
crying.
“Well, anyway, mother,”
Pony said, to cheer her up, “I didn’t take
any of the watermelons to-day, for all Jim said Bunty
had got done with them.”
“I’m so glad to think
you didn’t! And you must promise, won’t
you, never to touch any fruit that doesn’t belong
to you?”
“But supposing an apple was
to drop over the fence onto the sidewalk, what would
you do then?”
“I should throw it right back
over the fence again,” said Pony’s mother.
Pony promised his mother never to
touch other people’s fruit, but he was glad
she did not ask him to throw it back over the fence
if it fell outside, for he knew the fellows would
laugh.
His father came back from going down-stairs
with the doctor, and she told him all that Pony had
told her, and it seemed to Pony that his father could
hardly keep from laughing. But his mother did
not even smile.
“How could Jim Leonard tell
them that a man would give up his watermelon patch,
and how could they believe such a lie, poor, foolish
boys?”
“They wished to believe it,”
said Pony’s father, “and so did Jim, I
dare say.”
“He might have got some of them
killed, if Bunty Williams had fired his gun at them,”
said Pony’s mother; and he could see that she
was not half-satisfied with what his father said.
“Perhaps it was a hoe, after
all. You can’t shoot anybody with a hoe-handle,
and there is nothing to prove that it was a gun but
Jim’s word.”
“Yes, and here poor Pony has
been so sick from it all, and Jim Leonard gets off
without anything.”
“You are always wanting the
tower to fall on the wicked,” said Pony’s
father, laughing. “When it came to the worst,
Jim didn’t take the melons any more than Pony
did. And he seems to have wanted to back out of
the whole affair at one time.”
“Oh! And do you think that excuses him?”
“No, I don’t. But
I think he’s had a worse time, if that’s
any comfort, than Pony has. He has suffered the
fate of all liars. Sooner or later their lies
outwit them and overmaster them, for whenever people
believe a liar he is forced to act as if he had spoken
the truth. That’s worse than having a tower
fall on you, or pains in the stomach.”
Pony’s mother was silent for
a moment as if she could not answer, and then she
said, “Well, all I know is, I wish there was
no such boy in this town as Jim Leonard.”