It was the morning of the Fourth,
and Frank was so anxious to get through with his wood-sawing,
and begin celebrating with the rest of the boys, that
he hardly knew what to do. He had a levvy (as
the old Spanish real used to be called in southern
Ohio) in his pocket, and he was going to buy a pack
of shooting-crackers for ten cents, and spend the other
two cents for powder. He had no pistol, but he
knew a fellow that would lend him his pistol part
of the time, and he expected to have about the best
Fourth he ever had. He had been up since three
o’clock watching the men fire the old six-pounder
on the river-bank; and he was going to get his mother
to let him go up to the fireworks in the court-house
yard after dark.
But now it did not seem as if he could
get wood enough sawed. Twice he asked his mother
if she thought he had enough, but she said “Not
near,” and just as Jake Milrace rode up the
saw caught in a splinter of the tough oak log Frank
was sawing and bumped back against Frank’s nose;
and he would have cried if it had not been for what
Jake began to say.
He said he was going to Pawpaw Bottom
to spend the Fourth at a fellow’s named Dave
Black, and he told Frank he ought to go too; for there
were plenty of mulberries on Dave’s father’s
farm, and the early apples were getting ripe enough
to eat, if you pounded them on a rock; and you could
go in swimming, and everything. Jake said there
was the greatest swimming-hole at Pawpaw Bottom you
ever saw, and they had a log in the water there that
you could have lots of fun with. Frank ran into
the house to ask his mother if he might go, and he
hardly knew what to do when she asked him if there
was wood enough yet to get dinner and supper.
But his Aunt Manda was spending the summer with his
mother, and she said she reckoned she could pick up
chips to do all the cooking they needed, such a hot
day; and Frank ran out to the cow-house, where they
kept the pony, because the Bakers had no stable, and
saddled him, and was off with Jake Milrace in about
a minute.
The pony was short and fat and lazy,
and he had to be whipped to make him keep up with
Jake’s horse. It was not exactly Jake’s
horse; it was his sister’s husband’s horse,
and he had let Jake have it because he would not be
using it himself on the Fourth of July. It was
tall and lean, and it held its head so high up that
it was no use to pull on the bridle when it began
to jump and turn round and round, which it did every
time Frank whipped his pony to keep even with Jake.
It would shy and sidle, and dart so far ahead that
the pony would get discouraged and would lag back,
and have to be whipped up again; and then the whole
thing would have to be gone through with the same
as at first. The boys did not have much chance
to talk, but they had a splendid time riding along,
and when they came to a cool, dark place in the woods
they pretended there were Indians; and at the same
time they kept a sharp eye out for squirrels.
If they had seen any, and had a gun with them, they
could have shot one easily, for squirrels are not
afraid of you when you are on horseback; and, as it
was, Jake Milrace came pretty near killing a quail
that they saw in the road by a wheat-field. He
dropped his bridle and took aim with his forefinger,
and pulled back his thumb like a trigger; and if his
horse had not jumped, and his finger had been loaded,
he would surely have killed the quail, it was so close
to him. They could hear the bob-whites whistling
all through the stubble and among the shocks of wheat.
Jake did not know just where Dave
Black’s farm was, but after a while they came
to a blacksmith’s shop, and the blacksmith told
them to take a lane that they would come to on the
left, and then go through a piece of woods and across
a field till they came to a creek; then ford the creek
and keep straight on, and they would be in sight of
the house. It did not seem strange to Frank that
they should be going to visit a boy without knowing
where he lived, but afterwards he was not surprised
when Dave Black’s folks did not appear to expect
them. They kept on, and did as the blacksmith
told them, and soon enough they got to a two-story
log-cabin, with a man in front of it working at a
wheat-fan, for it was nearly time to thresh the wheat.
The man said he was Dave Black’s father; he did
not act as if he was very glad to see them, but he
told them to put their horses in the barn, and he
said that Dave was out in the pasture hauling rails.
Frank thought that was a queer way
of spending the Fourth of July, but he did not say
anything, and on their way out to the pasture Jake
explained that Dave’s father was British, and
did not believe much in the Fourth of July, anyway.
They found Dave easily enough, and he answered Jake’s
“Hello!” with another when the boys came
up. He had a two-horse wagon, and he was loading
it with rails from a big pile; there were two dogs
with him, and when they saw the boys they came towards
them snarling and ruffling the hair on their backs.
Jake said not to mind them — they would not
bite; but they snuffed so close to Frank’s bare
legs that he wished Dave would call them off.
They slunk away, though, when they heard him speak
to the boys; and then Jake Milrace told Dave Black
who Frank was, and they began to feel acquainted,
especially when Jake said they had come to spend the
Fourth of July with Dave.
He said, “First rate,”
and he explained that he had his foot tied up the
way they saw because he had a stone-bruise which he
had got the first day he began to go barefoot in the
spring; but now it was better. He said there
was a bully swimming-hole in the creek, and he would
show them where it was as soon as he had got done
hauling his rails. The boys took that for a kind
of hint, and they pulled off their roundabouts and
set to work with him.
Frank thought it was not exactly like
the Fourth, but he did not say anything, and they
kept loading up the rails and hauling them to the edge
of the field where Dave’s father was going to
build the fence, and then unloading them, and going
back to the pile for more. It seemed to Frank
that there were about a thousand rails in that pile,
and they were pretty heavy ones — oak and
hickory and walnut — and you had to be careful
how you handled them, or you would get your hands
stuck full of splinters. He wondered what Jake
Milrace was thinking, and whether it was the kind of
Fourth he had expected to have; but Jake did not say
anything, and he hated to ask him. Sometimes
it appeared to Frank that sawing wood was nothing
to it; but they kept on loading rails, and unloading
them in piles about ten feet apart, where they were
wanted; and then going back to the big pile for more.
They worked away in the blazing sun till the sweat
poured off their faces, and Frank kept thinking what
a splendid time the fellows were having with pistols
and shooting-crackers up in the Boy’s Town;
but still he did not say anything, and pretty soon
he had his reward. When they got half down through
the rail-pile they came to a bumblebees’ nest,
which the dogs thought was a rat-hole at first.
One of them poked his nose into it, but he pulled
it out quicker than wink and ran off howling and pawing
his face and rubbing his head in the ground or against
the boys’ legs. Even when the dogs found
out that it was not rats they did not show any sense.
As soon as they rubbed a bee off they would come yelping
and howling back for more; and hopping round and barking;
and then when they got another bee, or maybe a half-dozen
(for the bees did not always fight fair), they would
streak off again and jump into the air, and roll on
the ground till the boys almost killed themselves laughing.
The boys went into the woods, and
got pawpaw branches, and came back and fought the
bumblebees till they drove them off. It was just
like the battle of Bunker Hill; but Frank did not
say so, because Dave’s father was British, till
Dave said it himself, and then they all pretended the
bees were Mexicans; it was just a little while after
the Mexican War. When they drove the bees off,
they dug their nest out; it was beautifully built in
regular cells of gray paper, and there was a little
honey in it; about a spoonful for each boy.
Frank was glad that he had not let
out his disappointment with the kind of Fourth they
were having; and just then the horn sounded from the
house for dinner, and the boys all got into the wagon,
and rattled off to the barn. They put out the
horses and fed them, and as soon as they could wash
themselves at the rain-barrel behind the house, they
went in and sat down with the family at dinner.
It was a farmer’s dinner, as it used to be in
southern Ohio fifty years ago: a deep dish of
fried salt pork swimming in its own fat, plenty of
shortened biscuit and warm green-apple sauce, with
good butter. The Boy’s Town boys did not
like the looks of the fat pork, but they were wolf-hungry,
and the biscuit were splendid. In the middle of
the table there was a big crock of buttermilk, all
cold and dripping from the spring-house where it had
been standing in the running water; then there was
a hot apple-pie right out of the oven; and they made
a pretty fair meal, after all.
After dinner they hauled more rails,
and when they had hauled all the rails there were,
they started for the swimming-hole in the creek.
On the way they came to a mulberry-tree in the edge
of the woods-pasture, and it was so full of berries
and they were so ripe that the grass which the cattle
had cropped short was fairly red under the tree.
The boys got up into the tree and gorged themselves
among the yellow-hammers and woodpeckers; and Frank
and Jake kept holloing out to each other how glad
they were they had come; but Dave kept quiet, and told
them to wait till they came to the swimming-hole.
It was while they were in the tree
that something happened which happened four times
in all that day, if it really happened: nobody
could say afterwards whether it had or not. Frank
was reaching out for a place in the tree where the
berries seemed thicker than anywhere else, when a
strong blaze of light flashed into his eyes, and blinded
him.
“Oh, hello, Dave Black!”
he holloed. “That’s mean! What
are you throwin’ that light in my face for?”
But he laughed at the joke, and he
laughed more when Dave shouted back, “I ain’t
throwin’ no light in your face.”
“Yes, you are; you’ve
got a piece of look-in’-glass, and you’re
flashin’ it in my face.”
“Wish I may die, if I have,”
said Dave, so seriously that Frank had to believe
him.
“Well, then, Jake Milrace has.”
“I hain’t, any such thing,”
said Jake, and then Dave Black roared back, laughing:
“Oh, I’ll tell you! It’s one
of the pieces of tin we strung along that line in
the corn-field to keep the crows off, corn-plantin’
time.”
The boys shouted together at the joke
on Frank, and Dave parted the branches for a better
look at the corn-field.
“Well, well! Heigh there!”
he called towards the field. “Oh, he’s
gone now!” he said to the other boys, craning
their necks out to see, too. “But he was
doing it, Frank. If I could ketch that feller!”
“Somebody you know? Let’s
get him to come along,” said Jake and Frank,
one after the other.
“I couldn’t tell,”
said Dave. “He slipped into the woods when
he heard me holler. If it’s anybody I know,
he’ll come out again. Don’t seem to
notice him; that’s the best way.”
For a while, though, they stopped
to look, now and then; but no more flashes came from
the corn-field, and the boys went on cramming themselves
with berries; they all said they had got to stop, but
they went on till Dave said: “I don’t
believe it’s going to do us any good to go in
swimming if we eat too many of these mulberries.
I reckon we better quit, now.”
The others said they reckoned so,
too, and they all got down from the tree, and started
for the swimming-hole. They had to go through
a piece of woods to get to it, and in the shadow of
the trees they did not notice that a storm was coming
up till they heard it thunder. By that time they
were on the edge of the woods, and there came a flash
of lightning and a loud thunder-clap, and the rain
began to fall in big drops. The boys saw a barn
in the field they had reached, and they ran for it;
and they had just got into it when the rain came down
with all its might. Suddenly Jake said:
“I’ll tell you what! Let’s take
off our clothes and have a shower-bath!” And
in less than a minute they had their clothes off, and
were out in the full pour, dancing up and down, and
yelling like Indians. That made them think of
playing Indians, and they pretended the barn was a
settler’s cabin, and they were stealing up on
it through the tall shocks of wheat. They captured
it easily, and they said if the lightning would only
strike it and set it on fire so it would seem as if
the Indians had done it, it would be great; but the
storm was going round, and they had to be satisfied
with being settlers, turn about, and getting scalped.
It was easy to scalp Frank, because
he wore his hair long, as the town boys liked to do
in those days, but Jake lived with his sister, and
he had to do as she said. She said a boy had
no business with long hair; and she had lately cropped
his close to his skull. Dave’s father cut
his hair round the edges of a bowl, which he had put
on Dave’s head for a pattern; the other boys
could get a pretty good grip of it, if they caught
it on top, where the scalp-lock belongs; but Dave
would duck and dodge so that they could hardly get
their hands on it. All at once they heard him
call out from around the corner of the barn, where
he had gone to steal up on them, when it was their
turn to be settlers: “Aw, now, Jake Milrace,
that ain’t fair! I’m an Indian, now.
You let go my hair.”
“Who’s touchin’
your old hair?” Jake shouted back, from the inside
of the barn. “You must be crazy. Hurry
up, if you’re ever goin’ to attack us.
I want to get out in the rain, myself, awhile.”
Frank was outside, pretending to be
at work in the field, and waiting for the Indians
to creep on him, and when Jake shouted for Dave to
hurry, he looked over his shoulder and saw a white
figure, naked like his own, flit round the left-hand
corner of the barn. Then he had to stoop over,
so that Dave could tomahawk him easily, and he did
not see anything more, but Jake yelled from the barn:
“Oh, you got that fellow with you, have you?
Then he’s got to be settler next time.
Come on, now. Oh, do hurry up!”
Frank raised his head to see the other
boy, but there was only Dave Black, coming round the
right-hand corner of the barn.
“You’re crazy yourself,
Jake. There ain’t nobody here but me and
Frank.”
“There is, too!” Jake
retorted. “Or there was, half a second ago.”
But Dave was busy stealing on Frank,
who was bending over, pretending to hoe, and after
he had tomahawked Frank, he gave the scalp-halloo,
and Jake came running out of the barn, and had to
be chased round it twice, so that he could fall breathless
on his own threshold, and be scalped in full sight
of his family. Then Dave pretended to be a war-party
of Wyandots, and he gathered up sticks, and pretended
to set the barn on fire. By this time Frank and
Jake had come to life, and were Wyandots, too, and
they all joined hands and danced in front of the barn.
“There! There he is again!”
shouted Jake. “Who’s crazy now,
I should like to know?”
“Where? Where?” yelled both the other
boys.
“There! Right in the barn
door. Or he was, quarter of a second ago,”
said Jake, and they all dropped one another’s
hands, and rushed into the barn and began to search
it.
They could not find anybody, and Dave
Black said: “Well, he’s the quickest
feller! Must ‘a’ got up into the mow,
and jumped out of the window, and broke for the woods
while we was lookin’ down here. But if I
get my hands onto him, oncet!”
They all talked and shouted and quarrelled
and laughed at once; but they had to give the other
fellow up; he had got away for that time, and they
ran out into the rain again to let it wash off the
dust and chaff, which they had got all over them in
their search. The rain felt so good and cool
that they stood still and took it without playing any
more, and talked quietly. Dave decided that the
fellow who had given them the slip was a new boy whose
folks had come into the neighborhood since school had
let out in the spring, so that he had not got acquainted
yet; but Dave allowed that he would teach him a few
tricks as good as his own when he got at him.
The storm left a solid bank of clouds
in the east for a while after it was all blue in the
western half of the sky, and a rainbow came out against
the clouds. It looked so firm and thick that Dave
said you could cut it with a scythe. It seemed
to come solidly down to the ground in the woods in
front of the hay-mow window, and the boys said it would
be easy to get the crock of gold at the end of it
if they were only in the woods. “I’ll
bet that feller’s helpin’ himself,”
said Dave, and they began to wonder how many dollars
a crock of gold was worth, anyhow; they decided about
a million. Then they wondered how much of a crock
full of gold a boy could get into his pockets; and
they all laughed when Jake said he reckoned it would
depend upon the size of the crock. “I don’t
believe that fellow could carry much of it away if
he hain’t got more on than he had in front of
the barn.” That put Frank in mind of the
puzzle about the three men that found a treasure in
the road when they were travelling together: the
blind man saw it, and the man without arms picked it
up, and the naked man put it in his pocket. It
was the first time Dave had heard the puzzle, and
he asked, “Well, what’s the answer?”
But before Frank could tell him, Jake started up and
pointed to the end of the rainbow, where it seemed
to go into the ground against the woods.
“Oh! look! look!” he panted
out, and they all looked, but no one could see anything
except Jake. It made him mad. “Why,
you must be blind!” he shouted, and he kept
pointing. “Don’t you see him?
There, there! Oh, now, the rainbow’s going
out, and you can’t see him any more. He’s
gone into the woods again. Well, I don’t
know what your eyes are good for, anyway.”
He tried to tell them what he had
seen; he could only make out that it must be the same
boy, but now he had his clothes on: white linen
pantaloons and roundabout, like what you had on May
day, or the Fourth if you were going to the Sunday-school
picnic. Dave wanted him to tell what he looked
like, but Jake could not say anything except that he
was very smiling-looking, and seemed as if he would
like to be with him; Jake said he was just going to
hollo for him to come over when the rainbow began to
go out; and then the fellow slipped back into the woods;
it was more like melting into the woods.
“And how far off do you think
you could see a boy smile?” Dave asked, scornfully.
“How far off can you say a rainbow is?”
Jake retorted.
“I can say how far off that
piece of woods is,” said Dave, with a laugh.
He got to his feet, and began to pull at the other
boys, to make them get up. “Come along,
if you’re ever goin’ to the swimmin’-hole.”
The sun was bright and hot, and the
boys left the barn, and took across the field to the
creek. The storm must have been very heavy, for
the creek was rushing along bank-full, and there was
no sign left of Dave’s swimming-hole. But
they had had such a glorious shower-bath that they
did not want to go in swimming, anyway, and they stood
and watched the yellow water pouring over the edge
of a mill-dam that was there, till Dave happened to
think of building a raft and going out on the dam.
Jake said, “First rate!” and they all
rushed up to a place where there were some boards
on the bank; and they got pieces of old rope at the
mill, and tied the boards together, till they had
a good raft, big enough to hold them, and then they
pushed it into the water and got on it. They said
they were on the Ohio River, and going from Cincinnati
to Louisville. Dave had a long pole to push with,
like the boatmen on the keel-boats in the early times,
and Jake had a board to steer with; Frank had another
board to paddle with, on the other side of the raft
from Dave; and so they set on their journey.
The dam was a wide, smooth sheet of
water, with trees growing round the edge, and some
of them hanging so low over it that they almost touched
it. The boys made trips back and forth across
the dam, and to and from the edge of the fall, till
they got tired of it, and they were wanting something
to happen, when Dave stuck his pole deep into the muddy
bottom, and set his shoulder hard against the top
of the pole, with a “Here she goes, boys, over
the Falls of the Ohio!” and he ran along the
edge of the raft from one end to the other.
Frank and Dave had both straightened
up to watch him. At the stern of the raft Dave
tried to pull up his pole for another good push, but
it stuck fast in the mud at the bottom of the dam,
and before Dave knew what he was about, the raft shot
from under his feet, and he went overboard with his
pole in his hand, as if he were taking a flying leap
with it. The next minute he dropped into the
water heels first, and went down out of sight.
He came up blowing water from his mouth, and holloing
and laughing, and took after the raft, where the other
fellows were jumping up and down, and bending back
and forth, and screaming and yelling at the way he
looked hurrying after his pole, and then dangling
in the air, and now showing his black head in the
water like a musk-rat swimming for its hole. They
were having such a good time mocking him that they
did not notice how his push had sent the raft swiftly
in under the trees by the shore, and the first thing
they knew, one of the low branches caught them, and
scraped them both off the raft into the water, almost
on top of Dave. Then it was Dave’s turn
to laugh, and he began: “What’s the
matter, boys? Want to help find the other end
of that pole?”
Jake was not under the water any longer
than Dave had been, but Frank did not come up so soon.
They looked among the brush by the shore, to see if
he was hiding there and fooling them, but they could
not find him. “He’s stuck in some
snag at the bottom,” said Dave; “we got
to dive for him”; but just then Frank came up,
and swam feebly for the shore. He crawled out
of the water, and after he got his breath, he said,
“I got caught, down there, in the top of an
old tree.”
“Didn’t I tell you so?” Dave shouted
into Jake’s ear.
“Why, Jake was there till I
got loose,” said Frank, looking stupidly at
him.
“No, I wasn’t,”
said Jake. “I was up long ago, and I was
just goin’ to dive for you; so was Dave.”
“Then it was that other fellow,”
said Frank. “I thought it didn’t look
overmuch like Jake, anyway.”
“Oh, pshaw!” Dave jeered.
“How could you tell, in that muddy water?”
“I don’t know,”
Frank answered. “It was all light round
him. Looked like he had a piece of the rainbow
on him, or foxfire.”
“I reckon if I find him,”
said Dave, “I’ll take his piece of rainbow
off’n him pretty quick. That’s the
fourth time that feller’s fooled us to-day.
Where d’you s’pose he came up? Oh,
I know! He got out on the other side under
them trees, while we was huntin’ for Frank, and
not noticin’. How’d he look, anyway?”
“I don’t know; I just
saw him half a second. Kind of smiling, and like
he wanted to play.”
“Well, I know him,” said
Dave. “It’s the new boy, and the next
time I see him — Oh, hello! There goes
our raft!”
It was drifting slowly down towards
the edge of the dam, and the boys all three plunged
into the water again, and swam out to it, and climbed
up on it.
They had the greatest kind of a time,
and when they had played castaway sailors, Frank and
Jake wanted to send the raft over the edge of the dam;
but Dave said it might get into the head-race of the
mill and tangle itself up in the wheel, and spoil
the wheel.
So they took the raft apart and carried
the boards on shore, and then tried to think what
they would do next. The first thing was to take
off their clothes and see about drying them.
But they had no patience for that; and so they wrung
them out as dry as they could and put them on again;
they had left their roundabouts at Dave’s house,
anyway, and so had nothing on but a shirt and trousers
apiece. The sun was out hot after the rain, and
their clothes were almost dry by the time they got
to Dave’s house. They went with him to
the woods-pasture on the way, and helped him drive
home the cows, and they wanted him to get his mother
to make his father let him go up to the Boy’s
Town with them and see the fireworks; but he said
it would be no use; and then they understood that if
a man was British, of course he would not want his
boy to celebrate the Fourth of July by going to the
fireworks. They felt sorry for Dave, but they
both told him that they had had more fun than they
ever had in their lives before, and they were coming
the next Fourth and going to bring their guns with
them. Then they could shoot quails or squirrels,
if they saw any, and the firing would celebrate the
Fourth at the same time, and his father could not
find any fault.
It seemed to Frank that it was awful
to have a father that was British; but when they got
to Dave’s house, and his father asked them how
they had spent the afternoon, he did not seem to be
so very bad. He asked them whether they had got
caught in the storm, and if that was what made their
clothes wet, and when they told him what had happened,
he sat down on the wood-pile and laughed till he shook
all over.
Then Frank and Jake thought they had
better be going home, but Dave’s mother would
not let them start without something to eat; and she
cut them each a slice of bread the whole width and
length of the loaf, and spread the slices with butter,
and then apple-butter, and then brown sugar. The
boys thought they were not hungry, but when they began
to eat they found out that they were, and before they
knew it they had eaten the slices all up. Dave’s
mother said they must come and see Dave again some
time, and she acted real clever; she was an American,
anyway.
They got their horses and started
home. It was almost sundown now, and they heard
the turtle-doves cooing in the woods, and the bob-whites
whistling from the stubble, and there were so many
squirrels among the trees in the woods-pastures, and
on the fences, that Frank could hardly get Jake along;
and if it had not been for Jake’s horse, that
ran whenever Frank whipped up his pony, they would
not have got home till dark. They smelt ham frying
in some of the houses they passed, and that made them
awfully hungry; one place there was coffee, too.
When they reached Frank’s house
he found that his mother had kept supper hot for him,
and she came out and said Jake must come in with him,
if his family would not be uneasy about him; and Jake
said he did not believe they would. He tied his
horse to the outside of the cow-house, and he came
in, and Frank’s mother gave them as much baked
chicken as they could hold, with hot bread to sop
in the gravy; and she had kept some coffee hot for
Frank, so that they made another good meal. They
told her what a bully time they had had, and how they
had fallen into the dam; but she did not seem to think
it was funny; she said it was a good thing they were
not all drowned, and she believed they had taken their
deaths of cold, anyway. Frank was afraid she
was going to make him go up stairs and change his
clothes, when he heard the boys begin to sound their
call of “Ee-o-wee” at the front door,
and he and Jake snatched their hats and ran out.
There was a lot of boys at the gate; Hen Billard was
there, and Archy Hawkins and Jim Leonard; there were
some little fellows, and Frank’s cousin Pony
was there; he said his mother had said he might stay
till his father came for him.
Hen Billard had his thumb tied up
from firing too big a load out of his brass pistol.
The pistol burst, and the barrel was all curled back
like a dandelion stem in water; he had it in his pocket
to show. Archy Hawkins’s face was full
of little blue specks from pouring powder on a coal
and getting it flashed up into his face when he was
blowing the coal; some of his eye-winkers were singed
off. Jim Leonard had a rag round his hand, and
he said a whole pack of shooting-crackers had gone
off in it before he could throw them away, and burned
the skin off; the fellows dared him to let them see
it, but he would not; and then they mocked him.
They all said there had never been such a Fourth of
July in the Boy’s Town before; and Frank and
Jake let them brag as much as they wanted to, and when
the fellows got tired, and asked them what they had
done at Pawpaw Bottom, and they said, “Oh, nothing
much; just helped Dave Black haul rails,” they
set up a jeer that you could hear a mile.
Then Jake said, as if he just happened
to think of it, “And fought bumblebees.”
And Frank put in, “And took
a shower-bath in the thunder-storm.”
And Jake said, “And eat mulberries.”
And Frank put in again, “And built a raft.”
And Jake said, “And Dave got pulled into the
mill-dam.”
And Frank wound up, “And Jake and I got swept
overboard.”
By that time the fellows began to
feel pretty small, and they crowded round and wanted
to hear every word about it. Then Jake and Frank
tantalized them, and said of course it was no Fourth
at all, it was only just fun, till the fellows could
not stand it any longer, and then Frank jumped up
from where he was sitting on his front steps, and holloed
out, “I’ll show you how Dave looked when
his pole pulled him in,” and he acted it all
out about Dave’s pole pulling him into the water.
Jake waited till he was done, and
then he jumped up and said, “I’ll show
you how Frank and me looked when we got swept overboard,”
and he acted it out about the limb of the tree scraping
them off the raft while they were laughing at Dave
and not noticing.
As soon as they got the boys to yelling,
Jake and Frank both showed how they fought the bumblebees,
and how the dogs got stung, and ran round trying to
rub the bees off against the ground, and your legs,
and everything, till the boys fell down and rolled
over, it made them laugh so. Jake and Frank showed
how they ran out into the rain from the barn, and
stood in it, and told how good and cool it felt; and
they told about sitting up in the mulberry-tree, and
how twenty boys could not have made the least hole
in the berries. They told about the quails and
the squirrels; and they showed how Frank had to keep
whipping up his pony, and how Jake’s horse kept
wheeling and running away; and some of the fellows
said they were going with them the next Fourth.
Hen Billard tried to turn it off,
and said: “Pshaw! You can have that
kind of a Fourth any day in the country. Who’s
going up to the court-house yard to see the fireworks?”
He and Archy Hawkins and the big boys
ran off, whooping, and the little fellows felt awfully,
because their mothers had said they must not go.
Just then, Pony Baker’s father came for him,
and he said he guessed they could see the fireworks
from Frank’s front steps; and Jake stayed with
Frank, and Frank’s father came out, and his aunt
and mother leaned out of the window, and watched,
while the Roman candles shot up, and the rockets climbed
among the stars.
They were all so much taken up in
watching that they did not notice one of the neighbor
women who had come over from her house and joined them,
till Mrs. Baker happened to see her, and called out:
“Why, Mrs. Fogle, where did you spring from?
Do come in here with Manda and me. I didn’t
see you, in your black dress.”
“No, I’m going right back,”
said Mrs. Fogle. “I just come over a minute
to see the fireworks — for Wilford; you can’t
see them from my side.”
“Oh,” said Mrs. Baker,
softly. “Well, I’m real glad you came.
You ought to have heard the boys, here, telling about
the kind of Fourth they had at Pawpaw Bottom.
I don’t know when I’ve laughed so much.”
“Well, I reckon it’s just
as well I wasn’t here. I couldn’t
have helped in the laughing much. It seems pretty
hard my Wilford couldn’t been having a good
time with the rest to-day. He was always such
a Fourth-of-July boy.”
“But he’s happy where
he is, Mrs. Fogle,” said Mrs. Baker, gently.
“Well, I know he’d give
anything to been here with the boys to-day — I
don’t care where he is. And he’s been
here, too; I just know he has; I’ve felt
him, all day long, teasing at me to let him go off
with your Frank and Jake, here; he just fairly loved
to be with them, and he never done any harm.
Oh, my, my! I don’t see how I used to deny
him.”
She put up her apron to her face,
and ran sobbing across the street again to her own
house; they heard the door close after her in the dark.
“I declare,” said Mrs.
Baker, “I’ve got half a mind to go over
to her.”
“Better not,” said Pony Baker’s
father.
“Well, I reckon you’re right, Henry,”
Mrs. Baker assented.
They did not talk gayly any more;
when the last rocket had climbed the sky, Jake Milrace
rose and said in a whisper he must be going.
After he was gone, Frank told, as
if he had just thought of it, about the boy that had
fooled them so, at Pawpaw Bottom; and he was surprised
at the way his mother and his Uncle Henry questioned
him up about it.
“Well, now,” she said,
“I’m glad poor Mrs. Fogle wasn’t
here, or — ” She stopped, and her brother-in-law
rose, with the hand of his sleepy little son in his
own.
“I think Pony had better say
good-night now, while he can. Frank, you’ve
had a remarkable Fourth. Good-night, all.
I wish I had spent the day at Pawpaw Bottom myself.”
Before they slept that night, Pony’s
mother said: “Well, I’d just as soon
you’d kept that story to yourself till morning,
Henry. I shall keep thinking about it, and not
sleep a wink. How in the world do you account
for it?”
“I don’t account for it,” said Pony’s
father.
“Now, that won’t do! What do you
think?”
“Well, if it was one
boy that saw the fourth boy it might be a simple case
of lying.”
“Frank Baker never told a lie in his life.
He couldn’t.”
“Perhaps Jake could, or Dave.
But as they all three saw the boy at different times,
why, it’s — ”
“What?”
“It’s another thing.”
“Now, you can’t get out
of it that way, Henry. Do you believe that the
child longed so to be back here that — ”
“Ah, who knows? There’s
something very strange about all that. But we
can’t find our way out, except by the short-cut
of supposing that nothing of the kind happened.”
“You can’t suppose that,
though, if all three of the boys say it did.”
“I can suppose that they think
it happened, or made each other think so.”
Pony’s mother drew a long sigh.
“Well, I know what I shall always think,”
she said.