Now we have got to go back to Pony
Baker again. The summer went along till it got
to be September, and the fellows were beginning to
talk about when school would take up. It was
almost too cold to go in swimming; that is, the air
made you shiver when you came out, and before you got
your clothes on; but if you stood in the water up
to your chin, it seemed warmer than it did on the
hottest days of summer. Only now you did not want
to go in more than once a day, instead of four or
five times. The fellows were gathering chinquapin
acorns most of the time, and some of them were getting
ready to make wagons to gather walnuts in. Once
they went out to the woods for pawpaws, and found
about a bushel; they put them in cornmeal to grow,
but they were so green that they only got rotten.
The boys found an old shanty in the woods where the
farmer made sugar in the spring, and some of the big
fellows said they were coming out to sleep in it,
the first night they got.
It was this that put Jim Leonard in
mind of Pony’s running off again. All the
way home he kept talking to Pony about it, and Pony
said he was going to do it yet, some time, but when
Jim Leonard wanted him to tell the time, he would
only say, “You’ll see,” and wag his
head.
Then Jim Leonard mocked him and dared
him to tell, and asked him if he would take a dare.
After that he made up with him, and said if Pony would
run off he would run off, too; and that the way for
them to do would be to take the boards of that shanty
in the woods and build a raft. They could do
it easily, because the boards were just leaned up against
the ridge-pole, and they could tie them together with
pawpaw switches, they were so tough, and then some
night carry the raft to the river, after the water
got high in the fall, and float down on it to the city.
“Why, does the river go past the city?”
Pony asked.
“Of course it does,” said
Jim Leonard, and he laughed at Pony. “It
runs into the Ohio there. Where’s your
geography?”
Pony was ashamed to say that he did
not suppose that geography had anything to do with
the river at the Boy’s Town, for it was not down
on the map, like Behring Straits and the Isthmus of
Suez. But he saw that Jim Leonard really knew
something. He did not see the sense of carrying
the raft two miles through the woods when you could
get plenty of drift-wood on the river shore to make
a raft of. But he did not like to say it for
fear Jim Leonard would think he was afraid to be in
the woods after dark, and after that he came under
him more than ever. Most of the fellows just
made fun of Jim Leonard, because they said he was a
brag, but Pony began to believe everything he said
when he found out that he knew where the river went
to; Pony had never even thought.
Jim was always talking about their
plan of running off together, now; and he said they
must fix everything so that it would not fail this
time. If they could only get to the city once,
they could go for cabin-boys on a steamboat that was
bound for New Orleans; and down the Mississippi they
could easily hide on some ship that was starting for
the Spanish Main, and then they would be all right.
Jim knew about the Spanish Main from a book of pirate
stories that he had. He had a great many books
and he was always reading them. One was about
Indians, and one was about pirates, and one was about
dreams and signs, and one was full of curious stories,
and one told about magic and how to do jugglers’
tricks; the other was a fortune-telling book.
Jim Leonard had a paper from the city, with long stories
in, and he had read a novel once; he could not tell
the boys exactly what a novel was, but that was what
it said on the back.
After Pony and he became such friends
he told him everything that was in his books, and
once, when Pony went to his house, he showed him the
books. Pony was a little afraid of Jim Leonard’s
mother; she was a widow woman, and took in washing;
she lived in a little wood-colored house down by the
river-bank, and she smoked a pipe. She was a very
good mother to Jim, and let him do whatever he pleased — go
in swimming as much as he wanted to, stay out of school,
or anything. He had to catch drift-wood for her
to burn when the river was high; once she came down
to the river herself and caught drift-wood with a
long pole that had a nail in the end of it to catch
on with.
By the time school took up Pony and
Jim Leonard were such great friends that they asked
the teacher if they might sit together, and they both
had the same desk. When Pony’s mother heard
that, it seemed as if she were going to do something
about it. She said to his father:
“I don’t like Pony’s
going with Jim Leonard so much. He’s had
nobody else with him for two weeks, and now he’s
sitting with him in school.”
Pony’s father said, “I
don’t believe Jim Leonard will hurt Pony.
What makes you like him, Pony?”
Pony said, “Oh, nothing,” and his father
laughed.
“It seems to be a case of pure
affection. What do you talk about together?”
“Oh, dreams, and magic, and pirates,”
said Pony.
His father laughed, but his mother
said, “I know hell put mischief in the child’s
head,” and then Pony thought how Jim Leonard
always wanted him to run off, and he felt ashamed;
but he did not think that running off was mischief,
or else all the boys would not be wanting to do it,
and so he did not say anything.
His father said, “I don’t
believe there’s any harm in the fellow.
He’s a queer chap.”
“He’s so low down,” said Pony’s
mother.
“Well, he has a chance to rise,
then,” said Pony’s father. “We
may all be hurrahing for him for President some day.”
Pony could not always tell when his father was joking,
but it seemed to him he must be joking now. “I
don’t believe Pony will get any harm from sitting
with him in school, at any rate.”
After that Pony’s mother did
not say anything, but he knew that she had taken a
spite to Jim Leonard, and when he brought him home
with him after school he did not bring him into the
woodshed as he did with the other boys, but took him
out to the barn. That got them to playing in the
barn most of the time, and they used to stay in the
hay-loft, where Jim Leonard told Pony the stories
out of his books. It was good and warm there,
and now the days were getting chilly towards evenings.
Once, when they were lying in the
hay together, Jim Leonard said, all of a sudden, “I’ve
thought of the very thing, Pony Baker.”
Pony asked, “What thing?”
“How to get ready for running
off,” said Jim Leonard, and at that Pony’s
heart went down, but he did not like to show it, and
Jim Leonard went on: “We’ve got to
provision the raft, you know, for maybe we’ll
catch on an island and be a week getting to the city.
We’ve got to float with the current, anyway.
Well, now, we can make a hole in the hay here and hide
the provisions till we’re ready to go. I
say we’d better begin hiding them right away.
Let’s see if we can make a place. Get away,
Trip.”
He was speaking to Pony’s dog,
that always came out into the barn with him and stayed
below in the carriage-room, whining and yelping till
they helped him up the ladder into the loft.
Then he always lay in one corner, with his tongue
out, and looking at them as if he knew what they were
saying. He got up when Jim Leonard bade him, and
Jim pulled away the hay until he got down to the loft
floor.
“Yes, it’s the very place.
It’s all solid, and we can put the things down
here and cover them up with hay and nobody will notice.
Now, to-morrow you bring out a piece of bread-and-butter
with meat between, and I will, too, and then we will
see how it will do.”
Pony brought his bread-and-butter
the next day. Jim said he intended to bring some
hard-boiled eggs, but his mother kept looking, and
he had no chance.
“Let’s see whether the
butter’s sweet, because if it ain’t the
provisions will spoil before we can get off.”
He took a bite, and he said, “My,
that’s nice!” and the first thing he knew
he ate the whole piece up. “Well, never
mind,” he said, “we can begin to-morrow
just as well.”
The next day Jim Leonard brought a
ham-bone, to cook greens with on the raft. He
said it would be first-rate; and Pony brought bread-and-butter,
with meat between. Then they hid them in the hay,
and drove Trip away from the place. The day after
that, when they were busy talking, Trip dug the provisions
up, and, before they noticed, he ate up Pony’s
bread-and-butter and was gnawing Jim Leonard’s
ham-bone. They cuffed his ears, but they could
not make him give it up, and Jim Leonard said:
“Well, let him have it.
It’s all spoilt now, anyway. But I’ll
tell you what, Pony — we’ve got to
do something with that dog. He’s found out
where we keep our provisions, and now he’ll
always eat them. I don’t know but what
we’ll have to kill him.”
“Oh no!” said Pony. “I couldn’t
kill Trip!”
“Well, I didn’t mean kill
him, exactly; but do something. I’ll tell
you what — train him not to follow you to
the barn when he sees you going.”
Pony thought that would be a good
plan, and he began the next day at noon. Trip
tried to follow him to the barn, and Pony kicked at
him, and motioned to stone him, and said: “Go
home, sir! Home with you! Home, I say!”
till his mother came to the back door.
“Why, what in the world makes
you so cross with poor Trip, Pony?” she asked.
“I’ll teach him not to
tag me round everywhere,” said Pony.
His mother said: “Why,
I thought you liked to have him with you?”
“I’m tired of it,”
said Pony; but when he put his mother off that way
he felt badly, as if he had told her a lie, and he
let Trip come with him and began to train him again
the next day.
It was pretty hard work, and Trip
looked at him so mournfully when he drove him back
that he could hardly bear to do it; but Jim Leonard
said it was the only way, and he must keep it up.
At last Trip got so that he would not follow Pony
to the barn. He would look at him when Pony started
and wag his tail wistfully, and half jump a little,
and then when he saw Pony frown he would let his tail
drop and stay still, or walk off to the woodshed and
keep looking around at Pony to see if he were in earnest.
It made Pony’s heart ache, for he was truly
fond of Trip; but Jim Leonard said it was the only
way, and so Pony had to do it.
They provisioned themselves a good
many times, but after they talked a while they always
got hungry, or Jim Leonard did, and then they dug up
their provisions and ate them. Once when he came
to spend Saturday afternoon with Pony he had great
news to tell him. One of the boys had really
run off. He was a boy that Pony had never seen,
though he had heard of him. He lived at the other
end of the town, below the bridge, and almost at the
Sycamore Grove. He had the name of being a wild
fellow; his father was a preacher, but he could not
do anything with him.
Now, Jim Leonard said, Pony must run
off right away, and not wait for the river to rise,
or anything. As soon as the river rose, Jim would
follow him on the raft; but Pony must start first,
and he must take the pike for the city, and sleep
in fence corners. They must provision him, and
not eat any of the things before he started.
He must not take a bundle or anything, because if
he did people would know he was running off, or maybe
they would think he was a runaway slave from Kentucky,
he was so dark-complexioned. At first Pony did
not like it, because it seemed to him that Jim Leonard
was backing out; but Jim Leonard said that if two of
them started off at the same time, people would just
know they were running off, and the constable would
take them up before they could get across the corporation
line. He said that very likely it would rain in
less than a week, and then he could start after Pony
on the raft, and be at the Ohio River almost as soon
as Pony was.
He said, “Why, you ain’t
afraid, are you, Pony?” And Pony said he was
not afraid; for if there was anything that a Boy’s
Town boy hated, it was to be afraid, and Pony hated
it the worst of any, because he was sometimes afraid
that he was afraid.
They fixed it that Pony was to sleep
the next Friday night in the barn, and the next morning,
before it was light, he was to fill his pockets with
the provisions and run off.
Every afternoon he took out a piece
of bread-and-butter with meat between and hid it in
the hay, and Jim Leonard brought some eggs. He
said he had no chance to boil them without his mother
seeing, but he asked Pony if he did not know that
raw eggs were first-rate, and when Pony said no, he
said, “Well, they are.” They broke
one of the eggs when they were hiding them, and it
ran over the bread-and-butter, but they wiped it off
with hay as well as they could, and Jim Leonard said
maybe it would help to keep it, anyway.
When he came round to Pony’s
house the next Friday afternoon from school he asked
him if he had heard the news, and when Pony said no,
he said that the fellow that ran off had been taken
up in the city by the watchman. He was crying
on the street, and he said he had nowhere to sleep,
and had not had anything to eat since the night before.
Pony’s heart seemed to be standing
still. He had always supposed that as soon as
he ran off he should be free from all the things that
hindered and vexed him; and, although he expected
to be sorry for his father and mother, he expected
to get along perfectly well without them. He had
never thought about where he should sleep at night
after he got to the city, or how he should get something
to eat.
“Now, you see, Pony,”
said Jim Leonard, “what a good thing it was that
I thought about provisioning you before you started.
What makes you look so?”
Pony said, “I’m not looking!”
Jim Leonard said, “You’re
not afraid, are you, just because that fellow got
took up? You’re not such a cowardy-calf
as to want to back out now?”
The tears came into Pony’s eyes.
“Cowardy-calf yourself, Jim Leonard! You’ve
backed out long ago!”
“You’ll see whether I’ve
backed out,” said Jim Leonard. “I’m
coming round to sleep in the barn with you to-night,
and help you to get a good start in the morning.
And maybe I’ll start myself to-morrow. I
will if I can get anybody to help me make the raft
and bring it through the woods. Now let’s
go up into the loft and see if the provisions are all
safe.”
They dug the provisions up out of
the hay and Jim Leonard broke one of the eggs against
the wall. It had a small chicken in it, and he
threw it away. Another egg smelt so that they
could hardly stand it.
“I don’t believe these
eggs are very good,” said Jim Leonard. “I
got them out of a nest that the hen had left; mother
said I might have them all.” He broke them
one after another, and every one had a chicken in it,
or else it was bad. “Well, never mind,”
he said. “Let’s see what the bread-and-butter’s
like.” He bit into a piece, but he did not
swallow any. “Tastes kind of musty; from
the hay, I reckon; and the meat seems kind of old.
But they always give the sailors spoilt provisions,
and this bread-and-butter will do you first-rate,
Pony. You’ll be so hungry you can eat anything.
Say, you ain’t afraid now, are you, Pony?”
“No, not now,” said Pony,
but he did not fire up this time as he did before
at the notion of his being afraid.
Jim Leonard said, “Because,
maybe I can’t get mother to let me come here
again. If she takes a notion, she won’t.
But I’m going to watch out, and as soon as supper’s
over, and I’ve got the cow into the lot, and
the morning’s wood in, I’m going to try
to hook off. If I don’t get here to stay
all night with you I’ll be around bright and
early in the morning, to wake you and start you.
It won’t be light now much before six, anyway.”