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- December, 1993 [Etext #91] Originally a May release of Wiretap
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- TOM SAWYER, DETECTIVE by MARK TWAIN [Samuel Clemens, 1896]
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- Internet Wiretap Edition of
-
- TOM SAWYER, DETECTIVE by MARK TWAIN
-
- Electronic edition by <dell@wiretap.spies.com>
-
-
-
- TOM SAWYER, DETECTIVE
-
- CHAPTER I.
- AN INVITATION FOR TOM AND HUCK
-
- [Footnote: Strange as the incidents of this story are,
- they are not inventions, but facts -- even to the
- public confession of the accused. I take them from an
- old-time Swedish criminal trial, change the actors,
- and transfer the scenes to America. I have added some
- details, but only a couple of them are important
- ones. -- M. T.]
-
- WELL, it was the next spring after me and Tom
- Sawyer set our old nigger Jim free, the time he
- was chained up for a runaway slave down there on
- Tom's uncle Silas's farm in Arkansaw. The frost was
- working out of the ground, and out of the air, too, and
- it was getting closer and closer onto barefoot time every
- day; and next it would be marble time, and next
- mumbletypeg, and next tops and hoops, and next
- kites, and then right away it would be summer and go-
- ing in a-swimming. It just makes a boy homesick to
- look ahead like that and see how far off summer is.
- Yes, and it sets him to sighing and saddening around,
- and there's something the matter with him, he don't
- know what. But anyway, he gets out by himself and
- mopes and thinks; and mostly he hunts for a lone-
- some place high up on the hill in the edge of the woods,
- and sets there and looks away off on the big Mississippi
- down there a-reaching miles and miles around the points
- where the timber looks smoky and dim it's so far off and
- still, and everything's so solemn it seems like everybody
- you've loved is dead and gone, and you 'most wish you
- was dead and gone too, and done with it all.
-
- Don't you know what that is? It's spring fever.
- That is what the name of it is. And when you've got
- it, you want -- oh, you don't quite know what it is you
- DO want, but it just fairly makes your heart ache, you
- want it so! It seems to you that mainly what you want
- is to get away; get away from the same old tedious
- things you're so used to seeing and so tired of, and set
- something new. That is the idea; you want to go and
- be a wanderer; you want to go wandering far away to
- strange countries where everything is mysterious and
- wonderful and romantic. And if you can't do that,
- you'll put up with considerable less; you'll go any-
- where you CAN go, just so as to get away, and be thank-
- ful of the chance, too.
-
- Well, me and Tom Sawyer had the spring fever, and
- had it bad, too; but it warn't any use to think about
- Tom trying to get away, because, as he said, his Aunt
- Polly wouldn't let him quit school and go traipsing off
- somers wasting time; so we was pretty blue. We was
- setting on the front steps one day about sundown talk-
- ing this way, when out comes his aunt Polly with a
- letter in her hand and says:
-
- "Tom, I reckon you've got to pack up and go down
- to Arkansaw -- your aunt Sally wants you."
-
- I 'most jumped out of my skin for joy. I reckoned
- Tom would fly at his aunt and hug her head off; but if
- you believe me he set there like a rock, and never said
- a word. It made me fit to cry to see him act so foolish,
- with such a noble chance as this opening up. Why,
- we might lose it if he didn't speak up and show he was
- thankful and grateful. But he set there and studied
- and studied till I was that distressed I didn't know
- what to do; then he says, very ca'm, and I could a
- shot him for it:
-
- "Well," he says, "I'm right down sorry, Aunt
- Polly, but I reckon I got to be excused -- for the
- present."
-
- His aunt Polly was knocked so stupid and so mad at
- the cold impudence of it that she couldn't say a word
- for as much as a half a minute, and this gave me a
- chance to nudge Tom and whisper:
-
- "Ain't you got any sense? Sp'iling such a noble
- chance as this and throwing it away?"
-
- But he warn't disturbed. He mumbled back:
-
- "Huck Finn, do you want me to let her SEE how bad
- I want to go? Why, she'd begin to doubt, right
- away, and imagine a lot of sicknesses and dangers and
- objections, and first you know she'd take it all back.
- You lemme alone; I reckon I know how to work her."
-
- Now I never would 'a' thought of that. But he was
- right. Tom Sawyer was always right -- the levelest
- head I ever see, and always AT himself and ready for
- anything you might spring on him. By this time his
- aunt Polly was all straight again, and she let fly. She
- says:
-
- "You'll be excused! YOU will! Well, I never
- heard the like of it in all my days! The idea of you
- talking like that to ME! Now take yourself off and
- pack your traps; and if I hear another word out of
- you about what you'll be excused from and what you
- won't, I lay I'LL excuse you -- with a hickory!"
-
- She hit his head a thump with her thimble as we
- dodged by, and he let on to be whimpering as we
- struck for the stairs. Up in his room he hugged me,
- he was so out of his head for gladness because he was
- going traveling. And he says:
-
- "Before we get away she'll wish she hadn't let me
- go, but she won't know any way to get around it now.
- After what she's said, her pride won't let her take it
- back."
-
- Tom was packed in ten minutes, all except what his
- aunt and Mary would finish up for him; then we waited
- ten more for her to get cooled down and sweet and
- gentle again; for Tom said it took her ten minutes to
- unruffle in times when half of her feathers was up, but
- twenty when they was all up, and this was one of the
- times when they was all up. Then we went down,
- being in a sweat to know what the letter said.
-
- She was setting there in a brown study, with it laying
- in her lap. We set down, and she says:
-
- "They're in considerable trouble down there, and
- they think you and Huck'll be a kind of diversion for
- them -- 'comfort,' they say. Much of that they'll get
- out of you and Huck Finn, I reckon. There's a neigh-
- bor named Brace Dunlap that's been wanting to marry
- their Benny for three months, and at last they told him
- point blank and once for all, he COULDN'T; so he has soured
- on them, and they're worried about it. I reckon he's
- somebody they think they better be on the good side
- of, for they've tried to please him by hiring his no-
- account brother to help on the farm when they can't
- hardly afford it, and don't want him around anyhow.
- Who are the Dunlaps?"
-
- "They live about a mile from Uncle Silas's place,
- Aunt Polly -- all the farmers live about a mile apart
- down there -- and Brace Dunlap is a long sight richer
- than any of the others, and owns a whole grist of nig-
- gers. He's a widower, thirty-six years old, without
- any children, and is proud of his money and overbear-
- ing, and everybody is a little afraid of him. I judge he
- thought he could have any girl he wanted, just for the
- asking, and it must have set him back a good deal when
- he found he couldn't get Benny. Why, Benny's only
- half as old as he is, and just as sweet and lovely asQ
- well, you've seen her. Poor old Uncle Silas -- why,
- it's pitiful, him trying to curry favor that way -- so hard
- pushed and poor, and yet hiring that useless Jubiter
- Dunlap to please his ornery brother."
-
- "What a name -- Jubiter! Where'd he get it?"
-
- "It's only just a nickname. I reckon they've forgot
- his real name long before this. He's twenty-seven,
- now, and has had it ever since the first time he ever
- went in swimming. The school teacher seen a round
- brown mole the size of a dime on his left leg above his
- knee, and four little bits of moles around it, when he
- was naked, and he said it minded him of Jubiter and
- his moons; and the children thought it was funny, and
- so they got to calling him Jubiter, and he's Jubiter yet.
- He's tall, and lazy, and sly, and sneaky, and ruther
- cowardly, too, but kind of good-natured, and wears
- long brown hair and no beard, and hasn't got a cent,
- and Brace boards him for nothing, and gives him his old
- clothes to wear, and despises him. Jubiter is a twin."
-
- "What's t'other twin like?"
-
- "Just exactly like Jubiter -- so they say; used to
- was, anyway, but he hain't been seen for seven years.
- He got to robbing when he was nineteen or twenty,
- and they jailed him; but he broke jail and got away --
- up North here, somers. They used to hear about him
- robbing and burglaring now and then, but that was
- years ago. He's dead, now. At least that's what
- they say. They don't hear about him any more."
-
- "What was his name?"
-
- "Jake."
-
- There wasn't anything more said for a considerable
- while; the old lady was thinking. At last she says:
-
- "The thing that is mostly worrying your aunt Sally
- is the tempers that that man Jubiter gets your uncle
- into."
-
- Tom was astonished, and so was I. Tom says:
-
- "Tempers? Uncle Silas? Land, you must be jok-
- ing! I didn't know he HAD any temper."
-
- "Works him up into perfect rages, your aunt Sally
- says; says he acts as if he would really hit the man,
- sometimes."
-
- "Aunt Polly, it beats anything I ever heard of.
- Why, he's just as gentle as mush."
-
- "Well, she's worried, anyway. Says your uncle
- Silas is like a changed man, on account of all this
- quarreling. And the neighbors talk about it, and lay
- all the blame on your uncle, of course, because he's a
- preacher and hain't got any business to quarrel. Your
- aunt Sally says he hates to go into the pulpit he's so
- ashamed; and the people have begun to cool toward
- him, and he ain't as popular now as he used to was."
-
- "Well, ain't it strange? Why, Aunt Polly, he was
- always so good and kind and moony and absent-minded
- and chuckle-headed and lovable -- why, he was just an
- angel! What CAN be the matter of him, do you
- reckon?"
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
- JAKE DUNLAP
-
- WE had powerful good luck; because we got a
- chance in a stern-wheeler from away North which
- was bound for one of them bayous or one-horse rivers
- away down Louisiana way, and so we could go all the
- way down the Upper Mississippi and all the way down
- the Lower Mississippi to that farm in Arkansaw with-
- out having to change steamboats at St. Louis; not so
- very much short of a thousand miles at one pull.
-
- A pretty lonesome boat; there warn't but few
- passengers, and all old folks, that set around, wide
- apart, dozing, and was very quiet. We was four days
- getting out of the "upper river," because we got
- aground so much. But it warn't dull -- couldn't be
- for boys that was traveling, of course.
-
- From the very start me and Tom allowed that there
- was somebody sick in the stateroom next to ourn, be-
- cause the meals was always toted in there by the wait-
- ers. By and by we asked about it -- Tom did and
- the waiter said it was a man, but he didn't look sick.
-
- "Well, but AIN'T he sick?"
-
- "I don't know; maybe he is, but 'pears to me he's
- just letting on."
-
- "What makes you think that?"
-
- "Because if he was sick he would pull his clothes off
- SOME time or other -- don't you reckon he would?
- Well, this one don't. At least he don't ever pull off
- his boots, anyway."
-
- "The mischief he don't! Not even when he goes
- to bed?"
-
- "No."
-
- It was always nuts for Tom Sawyer -- a mystery was.
- If you'd lay out a mystery and a pie before me and
- him, you wouldn't have to say take your choice; it
- was a thing that would regulate itself. Because in my
- nature I have always run to pie, whilst in his nature he
- has always run to mystery. People are made different.
- And it is the best way. Tom says to the waiter:
-
- "What's the man's name?"
-
- "Phillips."
-
- "Where'd he come aboard?"
-
- "I think he got aboard at Elexandria, up on the
- Iowa line."
-
- "What do you reckon he's a-playing?"
-
- "I hain't any notion -- I never thought of it."
-
- I says to myself, here's another one that runs to pie.
-
- "Anything peculiar about him? -- the way he acts or
- talks?"
-
- "No -- nothing, except he seems so scary, and
- keeps his doors locked night and day both, and when
- you knock he won't let you in till he opens the door a
- crack and sees who it is."
-
- "By jimminy, it's int'resting! I'd like to get a
- look at him. Say -- the next time you're going in
- there, don't you reckon you could spread the door
- and --"
-
- "No, indeedy! He's always behind it. He would
- block that game."
-
- Tom studied over it, and then he says:
-
- "Looky here. You lend me your apern and let me
- take him his breakfast in the morning. I'll give you a
- quarter."
-
- The boy was plenty willing enough, if the head
- steward wouldn't mind. Tom says that's all right, he
- reckoned he could fix it with the head steward; and he
- done it. He fixed it so as we could both go in with
- aperns on and toting vittles.
-
- He didn't sleep much, he was in such a sweat to get
- in there and find out the mystery about Phillips; and
- moreover he done a lot of guessing about it all night,
- which warn't no use, for if you are going to find out
- the facts of a thing, what's the sense in guessing out
- what ain't the facts and wasting ammunition? I
- didn't lose no sleep. I wouldn't give a dern to know
- what's the matter of Phillips, I says to myself.
-
- Well, in the morning we put on the aperns and got a
- couple of trays of truck, and Tom he knocked on the
- door. The man opened it a crack, and then he let us in
- and shut it quick. By Jackson, when we got a sight of
- him, we 'most dropped the trays! and Tom says:
-
- "Why, Jubiter Dunlap, where'd YOU come from?"
-
- Well, the man was astonished, of course; and first
- off he looked like he didn't know whether to be scared,
- or glad, or both, or which, but finally he settled down
- to being glad; and then his color come back, though at
- first his face had turned pretty white. So we got to
- talking together while he et his breakfast. And he
- says:
-
- "But I aint Jubiter Dunlap. I'd just as soon tell
- you who I am, though, if you'll swear to keep mum,
- for I ain't no Phillips, either."
-
- Tom says:
-
- "We'll keep mum, but there ain't any need to tell
- who you are if you ain't Jubiter Dunlap."
-
- "Why?"
-
- "Because if you ain't him you're t'other twin, Jake.
- You're the spit'n image of Jubiter."
-
- "Well, I'm Jake. But looky here, how do you
- come to know us Dunlaps?"
-
- Tom told about the adventures we'd had down there
- at his uncle Silas's last summer, and when he see that
- there warn't anything about his folks -- or him either,
- for that matter -- that we didn't know, he opened out
- and talked perfectly free and candid. He never made
- any bones about his own case; said he'd been a hard
- lot, was a hard lot yet, and reckoned he'd be a hard lot
- plumb to the end. He said of course it was a danger-
- ous life, and --
-
- He give a kind of gasp, and set his head like a person
- that's listening. We didn't say anything, and so it
- was very still for a second or so, and there warn't no
- sounds but the screaking of the woodwork and the chug-
- chugging of the machinery down below.
-
- Then we got him comfortable again, telling him about
- his people, and how Brace's wife had been dead three
- years, and Brace wanted to marry Benny and she shook
- him, and Jubiter was working for Uncle Silas, and him
- and Uncle Silas quarreling all the time -- and then he
- let go and laughed.
-
- "Land!" he says, "it's like old times to hear all
- this tittle-tattle, and does me good. It's been seven
- years and more since I heard any. How do they talk
- about me these days?"
-
- "Who?"
-
- "The farmers -- and the family."
-
- "Why, they don't talk about you at all -- at least
- only just a mention, once in a long time."
-
- "The nation!" he says, surprised; "why is that?"
-
- "Because they think you are dead long ago."
-
- "No! Are you speaking true? -- honor bright,
- now." He jumped up, excited.
-
- "Honor bright. There ain't anybody thinks you are
- alive."
-
- "Then I'm saved, I'm saved, sure! I'll go home.
- They'll hide me and save my life. You keep mum.
- Swear you'll keep mum -- swear you'll never, never tell
- on me. Oh, boys, be good to a poor devil that's being
- hunted day and night, and dasn't show his face! I've
- never done you any harm; I'll never do you any, as
- God is in the heavens; swear you'll be good to me
- and help me save my life."
-
- We'd a swore it if he'd been a dog; and so we done
- it. Well, he couldn't love us enough for it or be grate-
- ful enough, poor cuss; it was all he could do to keep
- from hugging us.
-
- We talked along, and he got out a little hand-bag
- and begun to open it, and told us to turn our backs.
- We done it, and when he told us to turn again he was
- perfectly different to what he was before. He had on
- blue goggles and the naturalest-looking long brown
- whiskers and mustashes you ever see. His own
- mother wouldn't 'a' knowed him. He asked us if he
- looked like his brother Jubiter, now.
-
- "No," Tom said; "there ain't anything left that's
- like him except the long hair."
-
- "All right, I'll get that cropped close to my head be-
- fore I get there; then him and Brace will keep my
- secret, and I'll live with them as being a stranger, and
- the neighbors won't ever guess me out. What do you
- think?"
-
- Tom he studied awhile, then he says:
-
- "Well, of course me and Huck are going to keep
- mum there, but if you don't keep mum yourself there's
- going to be a little bit of a risk -- it ain't much, maybe,
- but it's a little. I mean, if you talk, won't people
- notice that your voice is just like Jubiter's; and
- mightn't it make them think of the twin they reckoned
- was dead, but maybe after all was hid all this time
- under another name?"
-
- "By George," he says, "you're a sharp one!
- You're perfectly right. I've got to play deef and
- dumb when there's a neighbor around. If I'd a struck
- for home and forgot that little detail -- However, I
- wasn't striking for home. I was breaking for any
- place where I could get away from these fellows that
- are after me; then I was going to put on this disguise
- and get some different clothes, and --"
-
- He jumped for the outside door and laid his ear
- against it and listened, pale and kind of panting.
- Presently he whispers:
-
- "Sounded like cocking a gun! Lord, what a life to
- lead!"
-
- Then he sunk down in a chair all limp and sick like,
- and wiped the sweat off of his face.
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
- A DIAMOND ROBBERY
-
- FROM that time out, we was with him 'most all the
- time, and one or t'other of us slept in his upper
- berth. He said he had been so lonesome, and it was
- such a comfort to him to have company, and somebody
- to talk to in his troubles. We was in a sweat to find
- out what his secret was, but Tom said the best way was
- not to seem anxious, then likely he would drop into it
- himself in one of his talks, but if we got to asking
- questions he would get suspicious and shet up his shell.
- It turned out just so. It warn't no trouble to see that
- he WANTED to talk about it, but always along at first he
- would scare away from it when he got on the very edge
- of it, and go to talking about something else. The
- way it come about was this: He got to asking us,
- kind of indifferent like, about the passengers down on
- deck. We told him about them. But he warn't satis-
- fied; we warn't particular enough. He told us to de-
- scribe them better. Tom done it. At last, when Tom
- was describing one of the roughest and raggedest ones,
- he gave a shiver and a gasp and says:
-
- "Oh, lordy, that's one of them! They're aboard
- sure -- I just knowed it. I sort of hoped I had got
- away, but I never believed it. Go on."
-
- Presently when Tom was describing another mangy,
- rough deck passenger, he give that shiver again and
- says:
-
- "That's him! -- that's the other one. If it would
- only come a good black stormy night and I could get
- ashore. You see, they've got spies on me. They've
- got a right to come up and buy drinks at the bar
- yonder forrard, and they take that chance to bribe
- somebody to keep watch on me -- porter or boots or
- somebody. If I was to slip ashore without anybody
- seeing me, they would know it inside of an hour."
-
- So then he got to wandering along, and pretty soon,
- sure enough, he was telling! He was poking along
- through his ups and downs, and when he come to that
- place he went right along. He says:
-
- "It was a confidence game. We played it on a julery-
- shop in St. Louis. What we was after was a couple of
- noble big di'monds as big as hazel-nuts, which every-
- body was running to see. We was dressed up fine, and
- we played it on them in broad daylight. We ordered
- the di'monds sent to the hotel for us to see if we
- wanted to buy, and when we was examining them we
- had paste counterfeits all ready, and THEM was the things
- that went back to the shop when we said the water
- wasn't quite fine enough for twelve thousand dollars."
-
- "TwelveQthousandQdollars!" Tom says. "Was
- they really worth all that money, do you reckon?"
-
- "Every cent of it."
-
- "And you fellows got away with them?"
-
- "As easy as nothing. I don't reckon the julery
- people know they've been robbed yet. But it wouldn't
- be good sense to stay around St. Louis, of course, so
- we considered where we'd go. One was for going one
- way, one another, so we throwed up, heads or tails,
- and the Upper Mississippi won. We done up the
- di'monds in a paper and put our names on it and put
- it in the keep of the hotel clerk, and told him not to
- ever let either of us have it again without the others was
- on hand to see it done; then we went down town, each
- by his own self -- because I reckon maybe we all had
- the same notion. I don't know for certain, but I
- reckon maybe we had."
-
- "What notion?" Tom says.
-
- "To rob the others."
-
- "What -- one take everything, after all of you had
- helped to get it?"
-
- "Cert'nly."
-
- It disgusted Tom Sawyer, and he said it was the
- orneriest, low-downest thing he ever heard of. But
- Jake Dunlap said it warn't unusual in the profession.
- Said when a person was in that line of business he'd
- got to look out for his own intrust, there warn't no-
- body else going to do it for him. And then he went
- on. He says:
-
- "You see, the trouble was, you couldn't divide up
- two di'monds amongst three. If there'd been three --
- But never mind about that, there warn't three. I
- loafed along the back streets studying and studying.
- And I says to myself, I'll hog them di'monds the first
- chance I get, and I'll have a disguise all ready, and I'll
- give the boys the slip, and when I'm safe away I'll put
- it on, and then let them find me if they can. So I got
- the false whiskers and the goggles and this countrified
- suit of clothes, and fetched them along back in a hand-
- bag; and when I was passing a shop where they sell all
- sorts of things, I got a glimpse of one of my pals
- through the window. It was Bud Dixon. I was glad,
- you bet. I says to myself, I'll see what he buys. So
- I kept shady, and watched. Now what do you reckon
- it was he bought?"
-
- "Whiskers?" said I.
-
- "No."
-
- "Goggles?"
-
- "No."
-
- "Oh, keep still, Huck Finn, can't you, you're only
- just hendering all you can. What WAS it he bought,
- Jake?"
-
- "You'd never guess in the world. It was only just
- a screwdriver -- just a wee little bit of a screwdriver."
-
- "Well, I declare! What did he want with that?"
-
- "That's what I thought. It was curious. It clean
- stumped me. I says to myself, what can he want with
- that thing? Well, when he come out I stood back out
- of sight, and then tracked him to a second-hand slop-
- shop and see him buy a red flannel shirt and some old
- ragged clothes -- just the ones he's got on now, as
- you've described. Then I went down to the wharf and
- hid my things aboard the up-river boat that we had
- picked out, and then started back and had another
- streak of luck. I seen our other pal lay in HIS stock
- of old rusty second-handers. We got the di'monds
- and went aboard the boat.
-
- "But now we was up a stump, for we couldn't go
- to bed. We had to set up and watch one another.
- Pity, that was; pity to put that kind of a strain on us,
- because there was bad blood between us from a
- couple of weeks back, and we was only friends in the
- way of business. Bad anyway, seeing there was only
- two di'monds betwixt three men. First we had supper,
- and then tramped up and down the deck together
- smoking till most midnight; then we went and set
- down in my stateroom and locked the doors and looked
- in the piece of paper to see if the di'monds was all
- right, then laid it on the lower berth right in full sight;
- and there we set, and set, and by-and-by it got to be
- dreadful hard to keep awake. At last Bud Dixon he
- dropped off. As soon as he was snoring a good regular
- gait that was likely to last, and had his chin on his
- breast and looked permanent, Hal Clayton nodded
- towards the di'monds and then towards the outside
- door, and I understood. I reached and got the paper,
- and then we stood up and waited perfectly still; Bud
- never stirred; I turned the key of the outside door
- very soft and slow, then turned the knob the same
- way, and we went tiptoeing out onto the guard, and
- shut the door very soft and gentle.
-
- "There warn't nobody stirring anywhere, and the
- boat was slipping along, swift and steady, through the
- big water in the smoky moonlight. We never said a
- word, but went straight up onto the hurricane-deck and
- plumb back aft, and set down on the end of the sky-
- light. Both of us knowed what that meant, without
- having to explain to one another. Bud Dixon would
- wake up and miss the swag, and would come straight
- for us, for he ain't afeard of anything or anybody, that
- man ain't. He would come, and we would heave him
- overboard, or get killed trying. It made me shiver,
- because I ain't as brave as some people, but if I
- showed the white feather -- well, I knowed better than
- do that. I kind of hoped the boat would land somers,
- and we could skip ashore and not have to run the risk
- of this row, I was so scared of Bud Dixon, but she
- was an upper-river tub and there warn't no real chance
- of that.
-
- "Well, the time strung along and along, and that
- fellow never come! Why, it strung along till dawn
- begun to break, and still he never come. 'Thunder,' I
- says, 'what do you make out of this? -- ain't it sus-
- picious?' 'Land!' Hal says, 'do you reckon he's
- playing us? -- open the paper!' I done it, and by
- gracious there warn't anything in it but a couple of
- little pieces of loaf-sugar! THAT'S the reason he could
- set there and snooze all night so comfortable. Smart?
- Well, I reckon! He had had them two papers all fixed
- and ready, and he had put one of them in place of
- t'other right under our noses.
-
- "We felt pretty cheap. But the thing to do, straight
- off, was to make a plan; and we done it. We would
- do up the paper again, just as it was, and slip in, very
- elaborate and soft, and lay it on the bunk again, and
- let on WE didn't know about any trick, and hadn't any
- idea he was a-laughing at us behind them bogus snores
- of his'n; and we would stick by him, and the first
- night we was ashore we would get him drunk and
- search him, and get the di'monds; and DO for him,
- too, if it warn't too risky. If we got the swag, we'd
- GOT to do for him, or he would hunt us down and do for
- us, sure. But I didn't have no real hope. I knowed
- we could get him drunk -- he was always ready for
- that -- but what's the good of it? You might search
- him a year and never find --
-
- "Well, right there I catched my breath and broke
- off my thought! For an idea went ripping through my
- head that tore my brains to rags -- and land, but I felt
- gay and good! You see, I had had my boots off, to
- unswell my feet, and just then I took up one of them
- to put it on, and I catched a glimpse of the heel-
- bottom, and it just took my breath away. You re-
- member about that puzzlesome little screwdriver?"
-
- "You bet I do," says Tom, all excited.
-
- "Well, when I catched that glimpse of that boot
- heel, the idea that went smashing through my head
- was, I know where he's hid the di'monds! You look
- at this boot heel, now. See, it's bottomed with a steel
- plate, and the plate is fastened on with little screws.
- Now there wasn't a screw about that feller anywhere
- but in his boot heels; so, if he needed a screwdriver,
- I reckoned I knowed why."
-
- "Huck, ain't it bully!" says Tom.
-
- "Well, I got my boots on, and we went down and
- slipped in and laid the paper of sugar on the berth,
- and sat down soft and sheepish and went to listening to
- Bud Dixon snore. Hal Clayton dropped off pretty
- soon, but I didn't; I wasn't ever so wide awake in my
- life. I was spying out from under the shade of my
- hat brim, searching the floor for leather. It took me a
- long time, and I begun to think maybe my guess was
- wrong, but at last I struck it. It laid over by the
- bulkhead, and was nearly the color of the carpet. It
- was a little round plug about as thick as the end of your
- little finger, and I says to myself there's a di'mond in
- the nest you've come from. Before long I spied out
- the plug's mate .
-
- "Think of the smartness and coolness of that
- blatherskite! He put up that scheme on us and
- reasoned out what we would do, and we went ahead
- and done it perfectly exact, like a couple of pudd'n-
- heads. He set there and took his own time to un-
- screw his heelplates and cut out his plugs and stick in
- the di'monds and screw on his plates again . He
- allowed we would steal the bogus swag and wait all
- night for him to come up and get drownded, and by
- George it's just what we done! I think it was power-
- ful smart."
-
- "You bet your life it was!" says Tom, just full of
- admiration.
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
- THE THREE SLEEPERS
-
- WELL, all day we went through the humbug of
- watching one another, and it was pretty sickly
- business for two of us and hard to act out, I can tell
- you. About night we landed at one of them little
- Missouri towns high up toward Iowa, and had supper
- at the tavern, and got a room upstairs with a cot and a
- double bed in it, but I dumped my bag under a deal
- table in the dark hall while we was moving along it to
- bed, single file, me last, and the landlord in the lead
- with a tallow candle. We had up a lot of whisky, and
- went to playing high-low-jack for dimes, and as soon
- as the whisky begun to take hold of Bud we stopped
- drinking, but we didn't let him stop. We loaded him
- till he fell out of his chair and laid there snoring.
-
- "We was ready for business now. I said we better
- pull our boots off, and his'n too, and not make any
- noise, then we could pull him and haul him around and
- ransack him without any trouble. So we done it. I
- set my boots and Bud's side by side, where they'd be
- handy. Then we stripped him and searched his seams
- and his pockets and his socks and the inside of his
- boots, and everything, and searched his bundle. Never
- found any di'monds. We found the screwdriver, and
- Hal says, 'What do you reckon he wanted with that?'
- I said I didn't know; but when he wasn't looking I
- hooked it. At last Hal he looked beat and discour-
- aged, and said we'd got to give it up. That was what
- I was waiting for. I says:
-
- "'There's one place we hain't searched.'
-
- "'What place is that?' he says.
-
- "'His stomach.'
-
- "'By gracious, I never thought of that! NOW we're
- on the homestretch, to a dead moral certainty. How'll
- we manage?'
-
- "'Well,' I says, 'just stay by him till I turn out and
- hunt up a drug store, and I reckon I'll fetch something
- that'll make them di'monds tired of the company
- they're keeping.'
-
- "He said that's the ticket, and with him looking
- straight at me I slid myself into Bud's boots instead of
- my own, and he never noticed. They was just a shade
- large for me, but that was considerable better than be-
- ing too small. I got my bag as I went a-groping
- through the hall, and in about a minute I was out the
- back way and stretching up the river road at a five-mile
- gait.
-
- "And not feeling so very bad, neither -- walking on
- di'monds don't have no such effect. When I had gone
- fifteen minutes I says to myself, there's more'n a mile
- behind me, and everything quiet. Another five minutes
- and I says there's considerable more land behind me
- now, and there's a man back there that's begun to
- wonder what's the trouble. Another five and I says to
- myself he's getting real uneasy -- he's walking the floor
- now. Another five, and I says to myself, there's two
- mile and a half behind me, and he's AWFUL uneasy -- be-
- ginning to cuss, I reckon. Pretty soon I says to my-
- self, forty minutes gone -- he KNOWS there's something
- up! Fifty minutes -- the truth's a-busting on him
- now! he is reckoning I found the di'monds whilst we
- was searching, and shoved them in my pocket and never
- let on -- yes, and he's starting out to hunt for me.
- He'll hunt for new tracks in the dust, and they'll as
- likely send him down the river as up.
-
- "Just then I see a man coming down on a mule, and
- before I thought I jumped into the bush. It was
- stupid! When he got abreast he stopped and waited
- a little for me to come out; then he rode on again.
- But I didn't feel gay any more. I says to myself I've
- botched my chances by that; I surely have, if he meets
- up with Hal Clayton.
-
- "Well, about three in the morning I fetched Elex-
- andria and see this stern-wheeler laying there, and was
- very glad, because I felt perfectly safe, now, you know.
- It was just daybreak. I went aboard and got this state-
- room and put on these clothes and went up in the pilot-
- house -- to watch, though I didn't reckon there was
- any need of it. I set there and played with my
- di'monds and waited and waited for the boat to start,
- but she didn't. You see, they was mending her
- machinery, but I didn't know anything about it, not
- being very much used to steamboats.
-
- "Well, to cut the tale short, we never left there till
- plumb noon; and long before that I was hid in this
- stateroom; for before breakfast I see a man coming,
- away off, that had a gait like Hal Clayton's, and it
- made me just sick. I says to myself, if he finds out
- I'm aboard this boat, he's got me like a rat in a trap.
- All he's got to do is to have me watched, and wait --
- wait till I slip ashore, thinking he is a thousand miles
- away, then slip after me and dog me to a good place
- and make me give up the di'monds, and then he'll --
- oh, I know what he'll do! Ain't it awful -- awful!
- And now to think the OTHER one's aboard, too! Oh,
- ain't it hard luck, boys -- ain't it hard! But you'll help
- save me, WON'T you? -- oh, boys, be good to a poor
- devil that's being hunted to death, and save me -- I'll
- worship the very ground you walk on!"
-
- We turned in and soothed him down and told him
- we would plan for him and help him, and he needn't
- be so afeard; and so by and by he got to feeling kind
- of comfortable again, and unscrewed his heelplates and
- held up his di'monds this way and that, admiring them
- and loving them; and when the light struck into them
- they WAS beautiful, sure; why, they seemed to kind of
- bust, and snap fire out all around. But all the same I
- judged he was a fool. If I had been him I would a
- handed the di'monds to them pals and got them to go
- ashore and leave me alone. But he was made differ-
- ent. He said it was a whole fortune and he couldn't
- bear the idea.
-
- Twice we stopped to fix the machinery and laid a
- good while, once in the night; but it wasn't dark
- enough, and he was afeard to skip. But the third
- time we had to fix it there was a better chance. We
- laid up at a country woodyard about forty mile above
- Uncle Silas's place a little after one at night, and it was
- thickening up and going to storm. So Jake he laid for
- a chance to slide. We begun to take in wood. Pretty
- soon the rain come a-drenching down, and the wind
- blowed hard. Of course every boat-hand fixed a
- gunny sack and put it on like a bonnet, the way they
- do when they are toting wood, and we got one for
- Jake, and he slipped down aft with his hand-bag and
- come tramping forrard just like the rest, and walked
- ashore with them, and when we see him pass out of the
- light of the torch-basket and get swallowed up in the
- dark, we got our breath again and just felt grateful and
- splendid. But it wasn't for long. Somebody told, I
- reckon; for in about eight or ten minutes them two
- pals come tearing forrard as tight as they could jump
- and darted ashore and was gone. We waited plumb
- till dawn for them to come back, and kept hoping they
- would, but they never did. We was awful sorry and
- low-spirited. All the hope we had was that Jake had
- got such a start that they couldn't get on his track, and
- he would get to his brother's and hide there and be
- safe.
-
- He was going to take the river road, and told us to
- find out if Brace and Jubiter was to home and no
- strangers there, and then slip out about sundown and
- tell him. Said he would wait for us in a little bunch of
- sycamores right back of Tom's uncle Silas's tobacker
- field on the river road, a lonesome place.
-
- We set and talked a long time about his chances, and
- Tom said he was all right if the pals struck up the
- river instead of down, but it wasn't likely, because
- maybe they knowed where he was from; more likely
- they would go right, and dog him all day, him not
- suspecting, and kill him when it come dark, and take
- the boots. So we was pretty sorrowful.
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
- A TRAGEDY IN THE: WOODS
-
- WE didn't get done tinkering the machinery till away
- late in the afternoon, and so it was so close to
- sundown when we got home that we never stopped on
- our road, but made a break for the sycamores as tight
- as we could go, to tell Jake what the delay was, and
- have him wait till we could go to Brace's and find out
- how things was there. It was getting pretty dim by the
- time we turned the corner of the woods, sweating and
- panting with that long run, and see the sycamores thirty
- yards ahead of us; and just then we see a couple of
- men run into the bunch and heard two or three terrible
- screams for help. "Poor Jake is killed, sure," we
- says. We was scared through and through, and broke
- for the tobacker field and hid there, trembling so our
- clothes would hardly stay on; and just as we skipped
- in there, a couple of men went tearing by, and into the
- bunch they went, and in a second out jumps four men
- and took out up the road as tight as they could go,
- two chasing two.
-
- We laid down, kind of weak and sick, and listened
- for more sounds, but didn't hear none for a good while
- but just our hearts. We was thinking of that awful
- thing laying yonder in the sycamores, and it seemed
- like being that close to a ghost, and it give me the cold
- shudders. The moon come a-swelling up out of the
- ground, now, powerful big and round and bright, be-
- hind a comb of trees, like a face looking through prison
- bars, and the black shadders and white places begun to
- creep around, and it was miserable quiet and still and
- night-breezy and graveyardy and scary. All of a sud-
- den Tom whispers:
-
- "Look! -- what's that?"
-
- "Don't!" I says. "Don't take a person by sur-
- prise that way. I'm 'most ready to die, anyway, with-
- out you doing that."
-
- "Look, I tell you. It's something coming out of
- the sycamores."
-
- "Don't, Tom!"
-
- "It's terrible tall!"
-
- "Oh, lordy-lordy! let's --"
-
- "Keep still -- it's a-coming this way."
-
- He was so excited he could hardly get breath enough
- to whisper. I had to look. I couldn't help it. So
- now we was both on our knees with our chins on a
- fence rail and gazing -- yes, and gasping too. It was
- coming down the road -- coming in the shadder of the
- trees, and you couldn't see it good; not till it was
- pretty close to us; then it stepped into a bright splotch
- of moonlight and we sunk right down in our tracks --
- it was Jake Dunlap's ghost! That was what we said
- to ourselves.
-
- We couldn't stir for a minute or two; then it was
- gone We talked about it in low voices. Tom
- says:
-
- "They're mostly dim and smoky, or like they're
- made out of fog, but this one wasn't."
-
- "No," I says; "I seen the goggles and the whiskers
- perfectly plain."
-
- "Yes, and the very colors in them loud countrified
- Sunday clothes -- plaid breeches, green and black --"
-
- "Cotton velvet westcot, fire-red and yaller squares --"
-
- "Leather straps to the bottoms of the breeches legs
- and one of them hanging unbottoned --"
-
- "Yes, and that hat --"
-
- "What a hat for a ghost to wear!"
-
- You see it was the first season anybody wore that
- kind -- a black sitff-brim stove-pipe, very high, and
- not smooth, with a round top -- just like a sugar-loaf.
-
- "Did you notice if its hair was the same, Huck?"
-
- "No -- seems to me I did, then again it seems to me
- I didn't."
-
- "I didn't either; but it had its bag along, I noticed
- that."
-
- "So did I. How can there be a ghost-bag, Tom?"
-
- "Sho! I wouldn't be as ignorant as that if I was
- you, Huck Finn. Whatever a ghost has, turns to ghost-
- stuff. They've got to have their things, like anybody
- else. You see, yourself, that its clothes was turned to
- ghost-stuff. Well, then, what's to hender its bag from
- turning, too? Of course it done it."
-
- That was reasonable. I couldn't find no fault with
- it. Bill Withers and his brother Jack come along by,
- talking, and Jack says:
-
- "What do you reckon he was toting?"
-
- "I dunno; but it was pretty heavy."
-
- "Yes, all he could lug. Nigger stealing corn from
- old Parson Silas, I judged."
-
- "So did I. And so I allowed I wouldn't let on to
- see him."
-
- "That's me, too."
-
- Then they both laughed, and went on out of hearing.
- It showed how unpopular old Uncle Silas had got to be
- now. They wouldn't 'a' let a nigger steal anybody
- else's corn and never done anything to him.
-
- We heard some more voices mumbling along towards
- us and getting louder, and sometimes a cackle of a
- laugh. It was Lem Beebe and Jim Lane. Jim Lane
- says:
-
- "Who? -- Jubiter Dunlap?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Oh, I don't know. I reckon so. I seen him spad-
- ing up some ground along about an hour ago, just be-
- fore sundown -- him and the parson. Said he guessed
- he wouldn't go to-night, but we could have his dog if
- we wanted him."
-
- "Too tired, I reckon."
-
- "Yes -- works so hard!"
-
- "Oh, you bet!"
-
- They cackled at that, and went on by. Tom said we
- better jump out and tag along after them, because they
- was going our way and it wouldn't be comfortable to
- run across the ghost all by ourselves. So we done it,
- and got home all right.
-
- That night was the second of September -- a Satur-
- day. I sha'n't ever forget it. You'll see why, pretty
- soon .
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
- PLANS TO SECURE THE DIAMONDS
-
- WE tramped along behind Jim and Lem till we come
- to the back stile where old Jim's cabin was that
- he was captivated in, the time we set him free, and here
- come the dogs piling around us to say howdy, and
- there was the lights of the house, too; so we warn't
- afeard any more, and was going to climb over, but
- Tom says:
-
- "Hold on; set down here a minute. By George!"
-
- "What's the matter?" says I.
-
- "Matter enough!" he says. "Wasn't you expect-
- ing we would be the first to tell the family who it is
- that's been killed yonder in the sycamores, and all
- about them rapscallions that done it, and about the
- di'monds they've smouched off of the corpse, and paint
- it up fine, and have the glory of being the ones that
- knows a lot more about it than anybody else?"
-
- "Why, of course. It wouldn't be you, Tom Sawyer,
- if you was to let such a chance go by. I reckon it
- ain't going to suffer none for lack of paint," I says,
- "when you start in to scollop the facts."
-
- "Well, now," he says, perfectly ca'm, "what would
- you say if I was to tell you I ain't going to start in at
- all?"
-
- I was astonished to hear him talk so. I says:
-
- "I'd say it's a lie. You ain't in earnest, Tom
- Sawyer?"
-
- "You'll soon see. Was the ghost barefooted?"
-
- "No, it wasn't. What of it?"
-
- "You wait -- I'll show you what. Did it have its
- boots on?"
-
- "Yes. I seen them plain."
-
- "Swear it?"
-
- "Yes, I swear it."
-
- "So do I. Now do you know what that means?"
-
- "No. What does it mean?"
-
- "Means that them thieves DIDN'T GET THE DI'MONDS."
-
- "Jimminy! What makes you think that?"
-
- "I don't only think it, I know it. Didn't the
- breeches and goggles and whiskers and hand-bag and
- every blessed thing turn to ghost-stuff? Everything it
- had on turned, didn't it? It shows that the reason its
- boots turned too was because it still had them on after
- it started to go ha'nting around, and if that ain't proof
- that them blatherskites didn't get the boots, I'd like to
- know what you'd CALL proof."
-
- Think of that now. I never see such a head as that
- boy had. Why, I had eyes and I could see things, but
- they never meant nothing to me. But Tom Sawyer
- was different. When Tom Sawyer seen a thing it just
- got up on its hind legs and TALKED to him -- told him
- everything it knowed. I never see such a head.
-
- "Tom Sawyer," I says, "I'll say it again as I've
- said it a many a time before: I ain't fitten to black
- your boots. But that's all right -- that's neither here
- nor there. God Almighty made us all, and some He
- gives eyes that's blind, and some He gives eyes that
- can see, and I reckon it ain't none of our lookout what
- He done it for; it's all right, or He'd 'a' fixed it some
- other way. Go on -- I see plenty plain enough, now,
- that them thieves didn't get way with the di'monds.
- Why didn't they, do you reckon?"
-
- "Because they got chased away by them other two
- men before they could pull the boots off of the corpse."
-
- "That's so! I see it now. But looky here, Tom,
- why ain't we to go and tell about it?"
-
- "Oh, shucks, Huck Finn, can't you see? Look at
- it. What's a-going to happen? There's going to be
- an inquest in the morning. Them two men will tell
- how they heard the yells and rushed there just in time
- to not save the stranger. Then the jury'll twaddle
- and twaddle and twaddle, and finally they'll fetch in a
- verdict that he got shot or stuck or busted over the
- head with something, and come to his death by the in-
- spiration of God. And after they've buried him they'll
- auction off his things for to pay the expenses, and
- then's OUR chance."
- "How, Tom?"
-
- "Buy the boots for two dollars!"
-
- Well, it 'most took my breath.
-
- "My land! Why, Tom, WE'LL get the di'monds!"
-
- "You bet. Some day there'll be a big reward
- offered for them -- a thousand dollars, sure. That's
- our money! Now we'll trot in and see the folks.
- And mind you we don't know anything about any
- murder, or any di'monds, or any thieves -- don't you
- forget that."
-
- I had to sigh a little over the way he had got it fixed.
- I'd 'a' SOLD them di'monds -- yes, sir -- for twelve
- thousand dollars; but I didn't say anything. It
- wouldn't done any good. I says:
-
- "But what are we going to tell your aunt Sally has
- made us so long getting down here from the village,
- Tom?"
-
- "Oh, I'll leave that to you," he says. "I reckon
- you can explain it somehow."
-
- He was always just that strict and delicate. He
- never would tell a lie himself.
-
- We struck across the big yard, noticing this, that,
- and t'other thing that was so familiar, and we so glad
- to see it again, and when we got to the roofed big
- passageway betwixt the double log house and the
- kitchen part, there was everything hanging on the wall
- just as it used to was, even to Uncle Silas's old faded
- green baize working-gown with the hood to it, and rag-
- gedy white patch between the shoulders that always
- looked like somebody had hit him with a snowball; and
- then we lifted the latch and walked in. Aunt Sally she
- was just a-ripping and a-tearing around, and the
- children was huddled in one corner, and the old man
- he was huddled in the other and praying for help in
- time of need. She jumped for us with joy and tears
- running down her face and give us a whacking box on
- the ear, and then hugged us and kissed us and boxed
- us again, and just couldn't seem to get enough of it,
- she was so glad to see us; and she says:
-
- "Where HAVE you been a-loafing to, you good-for-
- nothing trash! I've been that worried about you I
- didn't know what to do. Your traps has been here
- ever so long, and I've had supper cooked fresh about
- four times so as to have it hot and good when you
- come, till at last my patience is just plumb wore out,
- and I declare I -- I -- why I could skin you alive! You
- must be starving, poor things! -- set down, set down,
- everybody; don't lose no more time."
-
- It was good to be there again behind all that noble
- corn-pone and spareribs, and everything that you could
- ever want in this world. Old Uncle Silas he peeled off
- one of his bulliest old-time blessings, with as many
- layers to it as an onion, and whilst the angels was haul-
- ing in the slack of it I was trying to study up what to
- say about what kept us so long. When our plates was
- all loadened and we'd got a-going, she asked me, and
- I says:
-
- "Well, you see, -- er -- Mizzes --"
-
- "Huck Finn! Since when am I Mizzes to you?
- Have I ever been stingy of cuffs or kisses for you since
- the day you stood in this room and I took you for Tom
- Sawyer and blessed God for sending you to me, though
- you told me four thousand lies and I believed every
- one of them like a simpleton? Call me Aunt Sally --
- like you always done."
-
- So I done it. And I says:
-
- "Well, me and Tom allowed we would come along
- afoot and take a smell of the woods, and we run across
- Lem Beebe and Jim Lane, and they asked us to go with
- them blackberrying to-night, and said they could bor-
- row Jubiter Dunlap's dog, because he had told them
- just that minute --"
-
- "Where did they see him?" says the old man; and
- when I looked up to see how HE come to take an intrust
- in a little thing like that, his eyes was just burning into
- me, he was that eager. It surprised me so it kind of
- throwed me off, but I pulled myself together again and
- says:
-
- "It was when he was spading up some ground along
- with you, towards sundown or along there."
-
- He only said, "Um," in a kind of a disappointed
- way, and didn't take no more intrust. So I went on.
- I says:
-
- "Well, then, as I was a-saying --"
-
- "That'll do, you needn't go no furder." It was
- Aunt Sally. She was boring right into me with her
- eyes, and very indignant. "Huck Finn," she says,
- "how'd them men come to talk about going a-black-
- berrying in September -- in THIS region?"
-
- I see I had slipped up, and I couldn't say a word.
- She waited, still a-gazing at me, then she says:
-
- "And how'd they come to strike that idiot idea of
- going a-blackberrying in the night?"
-
- "Well, m'm, they -- er -- they told us they had a
- lantern, and --"
-
- "Oh, SHET up -- do! Looky here; what was they
- going to do with a dog? -- hunt blackberries with it?"
-
- "I think, m'm, they --"
-
- "Now, Tom Sawyer, what kind of a lie are you fix-
- ing YOUR mouth to contribit to this mess of rubbage?
- Speak out -- and I warn you before you begin, that
- I don't believe a word of it. You and Huck's been up
- to something you no business to -- I know it perfectly
- well; I know you, BOTH of you. Now you explain that
- dog, and them blackberries, and the lantern, and the
- rest of that rot -- and mind you talk as straight as a
- string -- do you hear?"
-
- Tom he looked considerable hurt, and says, very
- dignified:
-
- "It is a pity if Huck is to be talked to that way, just
- for making a little bit of a mistake that anybody could
- make."
-
- "What mistake has he made?"
-
- "Why, only the mistake of saying blackberries when
- of course he meant strawberries."
-
- "Tom Sawyer, I lay if you aggravate me a little
- more, I'll --"
-
- "Aunt Sally, without knowing it -- and of course
- without intending it -- you are in the wrong. If you'd
- 'a' studied natural history the way you ought, you
- would know that all over the world except just here in
- Arkansaw they ALWAYS hunt strawberries with a dog --
- and a lantern --"
-
- But she busted in on him there and just piled into
- him and snowed him under. She was so mad she
- couldn't get the words out fast enough, and she gushed
- them out in one everlasting freshet. That was what
- Tom Sawyer was after. He allowed to work her up
- and get her started and then leave her alone and let her
- burn herself out. Then she would be so aggravated
- with that subject that she wouldn't say another word
- about it, nor let anybody else. Well, it happened just
- so. When she was tuckered out and had to hold up,
- he says, quite ca'm:
-
- "And yet, all the same, Aunt Sally --"
-
- "Shet up!" she says, "I don't want to hear
- another word out of you."
-
- So we was perfectly safe, then, and didn't have no
- more trouble about that delay. Tom done it elegant.
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
- A NIGHT'S VIGIL
-
- BENNY she was looking pretty sober, and she sighed
- some, now and then; but pretty soon she got to
- asking about Mary, and Sid, and Tom's aunt Polly,
- and then Aunt Sally's clouds cleared off and she got in
- a good humor and joined in on the questions and was
- her lovingest best self, and so the rest of the supper
- went along gay and pleasant. But the old man he
- didn't take any hand hardly, and was absent-minded
- and restless, and done a considerable amount of sigh-
- ing; and it was kind of heart-breaking to see him so
- sad and troubled and worried.
-
- By and by, a spell after supper, come a nigger and
- knocked on the door and put his head in with his old
- straw hat in his hand bowing and scraping, and said his
- Marse Brace was out at the stile and wanted his
- brother, and was getting tired waiting supper for him,
- and would Marse Silas please tell him where he was?
- I never see Uncle Silas speak up so sharp and fractious
- before. He says:
-
- "Am I his brother's keeper?" And then he kind
- of wilted together, and looked like he wished he hadn't
- spoken so, and then he says, very gentle: "But you
- needn't say that, Billy; I was took sudden and irritable,
- and I ain't very well these days, and not hardly respon-
- sible. Tell him he ain't here."
-
- And when the nigger was gone he got up and
- walked the floor, backwards and forwards, mumbling
- and muttering to himself and plowing his hands through
- his hair. It was real pitiful to see him. Aunt Sally she
- whispered to us and told us not to take notice of him,
- it embarrassed him. She said he was always thinking
- and thinking, since these troubles come on, and she
- allowed he didn't more'n about half know what he was
- about when the thinking spells was on him; and she
- said he walked in his sleep considerable more now than
- he used to, and sometimes wandered around over the
- house and even outdoors in his sleep, and if we catched
- him at it we must let him alone and not disturb him.
- She said she reckoned it didn't do him no harm, and
- may be it done him good. She said Benny was the
- only one that was much help to him these days. Said
- Benny appeared to know just when to try to soothe
- him and when to leave him alone.
-
- So he kept on tramping up and down the floor and
- muttering, till by and by he begun to look pretty tired;
- then Benny she went and snuggled up to his side and
- put one hand in his and one arm around his waist and
- walked with him; and he smiled down on her, and
- reached down and kissed her; and so, little by little
- the trouble went out of his face and she persuaded him
- off to his room. They had very petting ways together,
- and it was uncommon pretty to see.
-
- Aunt Sally she was busy getting the children ready
- for bed; so by and by it got dull and tedious, and me
- and Tom took a turn in the moonlight, and fetched up
- in the watermelon-patch and et one, and had a good
- deal of talk. And Tom said he'd bet the quarreling
- was all Jubiter's fault, and he was going to be on hand
- the first time he got a chance, and see; and if it was
- so, he was going to do his level best to get Uncle Silas
- to turn him off.
-
- And so we talked and smoked and stuffed water-
- melons much as two hours, and then it was pretty late,
- and when we got back the house was quiet and dark,
- and everybody gone to bed.
-
- Tom he always seen everything, and now he see that
- the old green baize work-gown was gone, and said it
- wasn't gone when he went out; so he allowed it was
- curious, and then we went up to bed.
-
- We could hear Benny stirring around in her room,
- which was next to ourn, and judged she was worried a
- good deal about her father and couldn't sleep. We
- found we couldn't, neither. So we set up a long time,
- and smoked and talked in a low voice, and felt pretty
- dull and down-hearted. We talked the murder and the
- ghost over and over again, and got so creepy and
- crawly we couldn't get sleepy nohow and noway.
-
- By and by, when it was away late in the night and all
- the sounds was late sounds and solemn, Tom nudged
- me and whispers to me to look, and I done it, and there
- we see a man poking around in the yard like he didn't
- know just what he wanted to do, but it was pretty dim
- and we couldn't see him good. Then he started for
- the stile, and as he went over it the moon came out
- strong, and he had a long-handled shovel over his
- shoulder, and we see the white patch on the old work-
- gown. So Tom says:
-
- "He's a-walking in his sleep. I wish we was
- allowed to follow him and see where he's going to.
- There, he's turned down by the tobacker-field. Out
- of sight now. It's a dreadful pity he can't rest no
- better."
-
- We waited a long time, but he didn't come back any
- more, or if he did he come around the other way; so
- at last we was tuckered out and went to sleep and had
- nightmares, a million of them. But before dawn we
- was awake again, because meantime a storm had come
- up and been raging, and the thunder and lightning
- was awful, and the wind was a-thrashing the trees
- around, and the rain was driving down in slanting
- sheets, and the gullies was running rivers. Tom says:
-
- "Looky here, Huck, I'll tell you one thing that's
- mighty curious. Up to the time we went out last night
- the family hadn't heard about Jake Dunlap being mur-
- dered. Now the men that chased Hal Clayton and
- Bud Dixon away would spread the thing around in a
- half an hour, and every neighbor that heard it would
- shin out and fly around from one farm to t'other and
- try to be the first to tell the news. Land, they don't
- have such a big thing as that to tell twice in thirty year!
- Huck, it's mighty strange; I don't understand it."
-
- So then he was in a fidget for the rain to let up, so
- we could turn out and run across some of the people
- and see if they would say anything about it to us.
- And he said if they did we must be horribly surprised
- and shocked.
-
- We was out and gone the minute the rain stopped.
- It was just broad day then. We loafed along up the
- road, and now and then met a person and stopped and
- said howdy, and told them when we come, and how we
- left the folks at home, and how long we was going to
- stay, and all that, but none of them said a word about
- that thing; which was just astonishing, and no mistake.
- Tom said he believed if we went to the sycamores we
- would find that body laying there solitary and alone,
- and not a soul around. Said he believed the men
- chased the thieves so far into the woods that the thieves
- prob'ly seen a good chance and turned on them at last,
- and maybe they all killed each other, and so there
- wasn't anybody left to tell.
-
- First we knowed, gabbling along that away, we was
- right at the sycamores. The cold chills trickled down
- my back and I wouldn't budge another step, for all
- Tom's persuading. But he couldn't hold in; he'd GOT
- to see if the boots was safe on that body yet. So he
- crope in -- and the next minute out he come again with
- his eyes bulging he was so excited, and says:
-
- "Huck, it's gone!"
-
- I WAS astonished! I says:
-
- "Tom, you don't mean it."
-
- "It's gone, sure. There ain't a sign of it. The
- ground is trampled some, but if there was any blood
- it's all washed away by the storm, for it's all puddles
- and slush in there."
-
- At last I give in, and went and took a look myself;
- and it was just as Tom said -- there wasn't a sign of a
- corpse.
-
- "Dern it," I says, "the di'monds is gone. Don't
- you reckon the thieves slunk back and lugged him off,
- Tom?"
-
- "Looks like it. It just does. Now where'd they
- hide him, do you reckon?"
-
- "I don't know," I says, disgusted, "and what's
- more I don't care. They've got the boots, and that's
- all I cared about. He'll lay around these woods a
- long time before I hunt him up."
-
- Tom didn't feel no more intrust in him neither, only
- curiosity to know what come of him; but he said we'd
- lay low and keep dark and it wouldn't be long till the
- dogs or somebody rousted him out.
-
- We went back home to breakfast ever so bothered
- and put out and disappointed and swindled. I warn't
- ever so down on a corpse before.
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
- TALKING WITH THE GHOST
-
- IT warn't very cheerful at breakfast. Aunt Sally she
- looked old and tired and let the children snarl and
- fuss at one another and didn't seem to notice it was
- going on, which wasn't her usual style; me and Tom
- had a plenty to think about without talking; Benny she
- looked like she hadn't had much sleep, and whenever
- she'd lift her head a little and steal a look towards her
- father you could see there was tears in her eyes; and
- as for the old man, his things stayed on his plate and
- got cold without him knowing they was there, I reckon,
- for he was thinking and thinking all the time, and never
- said a word and never et a bite.
-
- By and by when it was stillest, that nigger's head
- was poked in at the door again, and he said his Marse
- Brace was getting powerful uneasy about Marse Jubiter,
- which hadn't come home yet, and would Marse Silas
- please --
-
- He was looking at Uncle Silas, and he stopped there,
- like the rest of his words was froze; for Uncle Silas he
- rose up shaky and steadied himself leaning his fingers
- on the table, and he was panting, and his eyes was set
- on the nigger, and he kept swallowing, and put his
- other hand up to his throat a couple of times, and at
- last he got his words started, and says:
-
- "Does he -- does he -- think -- WHAT does he think!
- Tell him -- tell him --" Then he sunk down in his
- chair limp and weak, and says, so as you could hardly
- hear him: "Go away -- go away!"
-
- The nigger looked scared and cleared out, and we
- all felt -- well, I don't know how we felt, but it was
- awful, with the old man panting there, and his eyes set
- and looking like a person that was dying. None of us
- could budge; but Benny she slid around soft, with her
- tears running down, and stood by his side, and nestled
- his old gray head up against her and begun to stroke it
- and pet it with her hands, and nodded to us to go
- away, and we done it, going out very quiet, like the
- dead was there.
-
- Me and Tom struck out for the woods mighty
- solemn, and saying how different it was now to what it
- was last summer when we was here and everything was
- so peaceful and happy and everybody thought so much
- of Uncle Silas, and he was so cheerful and simple-
- hearted and pudd'n-headed and good -- and now look
- at him. If he hadn't lost his mind he wasn't muck
- short of it. That was what we allowed.
-
- It was a most lovely day now, and bright and sun.
- shiny; and the further and further we went over the
- hills towards the prairie the lovelier and lovelier the
- trees and flowers got to be and the more it seemed
- strange and somehow wrong that there had to be
- trouble in such a world as this. And then all of a
- sudden I catched my breath and grabbed Tom's arm, and
- all my livers and lungs and things fell down into my legs.
-
- "There it is!" I says. We jumped back behind a
- bush shivering, and Tom says:
-
- "'Sh! -- don't make a noise."
-
- It was setting on a log right in the edge of a little
- prairie, thinking. I tried to get Tom to come away,
- but he wouldn't, and I dasn't budge by myself. He
- said we mightn't ever get another chance to see one,
- and he was going to look his fill at this one if he died
- for it. So I looked too, though it give me the fan-
- tods to do it. Tom he HAD to talk, but he talked low.
- He says:
-
- "Poor Jakey, it's got all its things on, just as he
- said he would. NOW you see what we wasn't certain
- about -- its hair. It's not long now the way it was:
- it's got it cropped close to its head, the way he said he
- would. Huck, I never see anything look any more
- naturaler than what It does."
-
- "Nor I neither," I says; "I'd recognize it any-
- wheres."
-
- "So would I. It looks perfectly solid and genu-
- wyne, just the way it done before it died."
-
- So we kept a-gazing. Pretty soon Tom says:
-
- "Huck, there's something mighty curious about this
- one, don't you know? IT oughtn't to be going around
- in the daytime."
-
- "That's so, Tom -- I never heard the like of it
- before."
-
- "No, sir, they don't ever come out only at night --
- and then not till after twelve. There's something
- wrong about this one, now you mark my words. I
- don't believe it's got any right to be around in the
- daytime. But don't it look natural! Jake was going
- to play deef and dumb here, so the neighbors wouldn't
- know his voice. Do you reckon it would do that if we
- was to holler at it?"
-
- "Lordy, Tom, don't talk so! If you was to holler
- at it I'd die in my tracks."
-
- "Don't you worry, I ain't going to holler at it.
- Look, Huck, it's a-scratching its head -- don't you see?"
-
- "Well, what of it?"
-
- "Why, this. What's the sense of it scratching its
- head? There ain't anything there to itch; its head is
- made out of fog or something like that, and can't itch.
- A fog can't itch; any fool knows that."
-
- "Well, then, if it don't itch and can't itch, what in
- the nation is it scratching it for? Ain't it just habit,
- don't you reckon?"
-
- "No, sir, I don't. I ain't a bit satisfied about the
- way this one acts. I've a blame good notion it's a
- bogus one -- I have, as sure as I'm a-sitting here.
- Because, if it -- Huck!"
-
- "Well, what's the matter now?"
-
- "YOU CAN'T SEE THE BUSHES THROUGH IT!"
-
- "Why, Tom, it's so, sure! It's as solid as a cow.
- I sort of begin to think --"
-
- "Huck, it's biting off a chaw of tobacker! By
- George, THEY don't chaw -- they hain't got anything to
- chaw WITH. Huck!"
-
- "I'm a-listening."
-
- "It ain't a ghost at all. It's Jake Dunlap his own
- self!"
-
- "Oh your granny!" I says.
-
- "Huck Finn, did we find any corpse in the syca-
- mores?"
-
- "No."
-
- "Or any sign of one?"
-
- "No."
-
- "Mighty good reason. Hadn't ever been any corpse
- there."
-
- "Why, Tom, you know we heard --"
-
- "Yes, we didJ-- heard a howl or two. Does that
- prove anybody was killed? Course it don't. And we
- seen four men run, then this one come walking out and
- we took it for a ghost. No more ghost than you are.
- It was Jake Dunlap his own self, and it's Jake Dunlap
- now. He's been and got his hair cropped, the way he
- said he would, and he's playing himself for a stranger,
- just the same as he said he would. Ghost? Hum! --
- he's as sound as a nut."
-
- Then I see it all, and how we had took too much for
- granted. I was powerful glad he didn't get killed, and
- so was Tom, and we wondered which he would like the
- best -- for us to never let on to know him, or how?
- Tom reckoned the best way would be to go and ask
- him. So he started; but I kept a little behind, because
- I didn't know but it might be a ghost, after all. When
- Tom got to where he was, he says:
-
- "Me and Huck's mighty glad to see you again,
- and you needn't be afeared we'll tell. And if you
- think it'll be safer for you if we don't let on to know
- you when we run across you, say the word and you'll
- see you can depend on us, and would ruther cut our
- hands off than get you into the least little bit of
- danger."
-
- First off he looked surprised to see us, and not very
- glad, either; but as Tom went on he looked pleasanter,
- and when he was done he smiled, and nodded his head
- several times, and made signs with his hands, and says:
-
- "Goo-goo -- goo-goo," the way deef and dummies
- does.
-
- Just then we see some of Steve Nickerson's people
- coming that lived t'other side of the prairie, so Tom
- says:
-
- "You do it elegant; I never see anybody do it
- better. You're right; play it on us, too; play it on
- us same as the others; it'll keep you in practice and
- prevent you making blunders. We'll keep away from
- you and let on we don't know you, but any time we
- can be any help, you just let us know."
-
- Then we loafed along past the Nickersons, and of
- course they asked if that was the new stranger yonder,
- and where'd he come from, and what was his name,
- and which communion was he, Babtis' or Methodis',
- and which politics, Whig or Democrat, and how long
- is he staying, and all them other questions that humans
- always asks when a stranger comes, and animals does,
- too. But Tom said he warn't able to make anything
- out of deef and dumb signs, and the same with goo-
- gooing. Then we watched them go and bullyrag Jake;
- because we was pretty uneasy for him. Tom said it
- would take him days to get so he wouldn't forget he
- was a deef and dummy sometimes, and speak out be-
- fore he thought. When we had watched long enough
- to see that Jake was getting along all right and working
- his signs very good, we loafed along again, allowing to
- strike the schoolhouse about recess time, which was a
- three-mile tramp.
-
- I was so disappointed not to hear Jake tell about the
- row in the sycamores, and how near he come to get-
- ting killed, that I couldn't seem to get over it, and
- Tom he felt the same, but said if we was in Jake's fix
- we would want to go careful and keep still and not take
- any chances.
-
- The boys and girls was all glad to see us again, and
- we had a real good time all through recess. Coming
- to school the Henderson boys had come across the new
- deef and dummy and told the rest; so all the scholars
- was chuck full of him and couldn't talk about anything
- else, and was in a sweat to get a sight of him because
- they hadn't ever seen a deef and dummy in their lives,
- and it made a powerful excitement.
-
- Tom said it was tough to have to keep mum now;
- said we would be heroes if we could come out and tell
- all we knowed; but after all, it was still more heroic to
- keep mum, there warn't two boys in a million could do
- it. That was Tom Sawyer's idea about it, and
- reckoned there warn't anybody could better it.
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
- FINDING OF JUBITER DUNLAP
-
- IN the next two or three days Dummy he got to be
- powerful popular. He went associating around with
- the neighbors, and they made much of him, and was
- proud to have such a rattling curiosity among them.
- They had him to breakfast, they had him to dinner,
- they had him to supper; they kept him loaded up
- with hog and hominy, and warn't ever tired staring at
- him and wondering over him, and wishing they knowed
- more about him, he was so uncommon and romantic.
- His signs warn't no good; people couldn't under-
- stand them and he prob'ly couldn't himself, but he
- done a sight of goo-gooing, and so everybody was sat-
- isfied, and admired to hear him go it. He toted a
- piece of slate around, and a pencil; and people wrote
- questions on it and he wrote answers; but there warn't
- anybody could read his writing but Brace Dunlap.
- Brace said he couldn't read it very good, but he could
- manage to dig out the meaning most of the time. He
- said Dummy said he belonged away off somers and
- used to be well off, but got busted by swindlers which
- he had trusted, and was poor now, and hadn't any way
- to make a living.
-
- Everybody praised Brace Dunlap for being so good
- to that stranger. He let him have a little log-cabin all
- to himself, and had his niggers take care of it, and fetch
- him all the vittles he wanted.
-
- Dummy was at our house some, because old Uncle
- Silas was so afflicted himself, these days, that anybody
- else that was afflicted was a comfort to him. Me and
- Tom didn't let on that we had knowed him before, and
- he didn't let on that he had knowed us before. The
- family talked their troubles out before him the same as
- if he wasn't there, but we reckoned it wasn't any harm
- for him to hear what they said. Generly he didn't
- seem to notice, but sometimes he did.
-
- Well, two or three days went along, and everybody
- got to getting uneasy about Jubiter Dunlap. Every-
- body was asking everybody if they had any idea what
- had become of him. No, they hadn't, they said: and
- they shook their heads and said there was something
- powerful strange about it. Another and another day
- went by; then there was a report got around that praps
- he was murdered. You bet it made a big stir! Every-
- body's tongue was clacking away after that. Saturday
- two or three gangs turned out and hunted the woods to
- see if they could run across his remainders. Me and
- Tom helped, and it was noble good times and exciting.
- Tom he was so brimful of it he couldn't eat nor rest.
- He said if we could find that corpse we would be
- celebrated, and more talked about than if we got
- drownded.
-
- The others got tired and give it up; but not Tom
- Sawyer -- that warn't his style. Saturday night he
- didn't sleep any, hardly, trying to think up a plan;
- and towards daylight in the morning he struck it. He
- snaked me out of bed and was all excited, and says:
-
- "Quick, Huck, snatch on your clothes -- I've got
- it! Bloodhound!"
-
- In two minutes we was tearing up the river road in
- the dark towards the village. Old Jeff Hooker had a
- bloodhound, and Tom was going to borrow him. I
- says:
-
- "The trail's too old, Tom -- and besides, it's rained,
- you know."
-
- "It don't make any difference, Huck. If the body's
- hid in the woods anywhere around the hound will find
- it. If he's been murdered and buried, they wouldn't
- bury him deep, it ain't likely, and if the dog goes over
- the spot he'll scent him, sure. Huck, we're going to
- be celebrated, sure as you're born!"
-
- He was just a-blazing; and whenever he got afire he
- was most likely to get afire all over. That was the way
- this time. In two minutes he had got it all ciphered
- out, and wasn't only just going to find the corpse --
- no, he was going to get on the track of that murderer
- and hunt HIM down, too; and not only that, but he
- was going to stick to him till --
-
- "Well," I says, "you better find the corpse first; I
- reckon that's a-plenty for to-day. For all we know,
- there AIN'T any corpse and nobody hain't been mur-
- dered. That cuss could 'a' gone off somers and not
- been killed at all."
-
- That graveled him, and he says:
-
- "Huck Finn, I never see such a person as you to
- want to spoil everything. As long as YOU can't see
- anything hopeful in a thing, you won't let anybody
- else. What good can it do you to throw cold water on
- that corpse and get up that selfish theory that there
- ain't been any murder? None in the world. I don't
- see how you can act so. I wouldn't treat you like
- that, and you know it. Here we've got a noble good
- opportunity to make a ruputation, and --"
-
- "Oh, go ahead," I says. "I'm sorry, and I take it
- all back. I didn't mean nothing. Fix it any way
- you want it. HE ain't any consequence to me. If
- he's killed, I'm as glad of it as you are; and if he --"
-
- "I never said anything about being glad; I only --"
-
- "Well, then, I'm as SORRY as you are. Any way
- you druther have it, that is the way I druther have it.
- He --"
-
- "There ain't any druthers ABOUT it, Huck Finn; no-
- body said anything about druthers. And as for --"
-
- He forgot he was talking, and went tramping along,
- studying. He begun to get excited again, and pretty
- soon he says:
-
- "Huck, it'll be the bulliest thing that ever happened
- if we find the body after everybody else has quit look-
- ing, and then go ahead and hunt up the murderer. It
- won't only be an honor to us, but it'll be an honor to
- Uncle Silas because it was us that done it. It'll set
- him up again, you see if it don't."
-
- But Old Jeff Hooker he throwed cold water on the
- whole business when we got to his blacksmith shop and
- told him what we come for.
-
- "You can take the dog," he says, "but you ain't
- a-going to find any corpse, because there ain't any
- corpse to find. Everybody's quit looking, and they're
- right. Soon as they come to think, they knowed there
- warn't no corpse. And I'll tell you for why. What
- does a person kill another person for, Tom Sawyer? --
- answer me that."
-
- "Why, he -- er --"
-
- "Answer up! You ain't no fool. What does he kill
- him FOR?"
-
- "Well, sometimes it's for revenge, and --"
-
- "Wait. One thing at a time. Revenge, says you;
- and right you are. Now who ever had anything agin
- that poor trifling no-account? Who do you reckon
- would want to kill HIM? -- that rabbit!"
-
- Tom was stuck. I reckon he hadn't thought of a
- person having to have a REASON for killing a person be-
- fore, and now he sees it warn't likely anybody would
- have that much of a grudge against a lamb like Jubiter
- Dunlap. The blacksmith says, by and by:
-
- "The revenge idea won't work, you see. Well,
- then, what's next? Robbery? B'gosh, that must 'a'
- been it, Tom! Yes, sirree, I reckon we've struck it
- this time. Some feller wanted his gallus-buckles, and
- so he --"
-
- But it was so funny he busted out laughing, and just
- went on laughing and laughing and laughing till he was
- 'most dead, and Tom looked so put out and cheap that
- I knowed he was ashamed he had come, and he wished
- he hadn't. But old Hooker never let up on him. He
- raked up everything a person ever could want to kill
- another person about, and any fool could see they
- didn't any of them fit this case, and he just made no
- end of fun of the whole business and of the people
- that had been hunting the body; and he said:
-
- "If they'd had any sense they'd 'a' knowed the lazy
- cuss slid out because he wanted a loafing spell after all
- this work. He'll come pottering back in a couple of
- weeks, and then how'll you fellers feel? But, laws
- bless you, take the dog, and go and hunt his re-
- mainders. Do, Tom."
-
- Then he busted out, and had another of them forty-
- rod laughs of hisn. Tom couldn't back down after all
- this, so he said, "All right, unchain him;" and the
- blacksmith done it, and we started home and left that
- old man laughing yet.
-
- It was a lovely dog. There ain't any dog that's got
- a lovelier disposition than a bloodhound, and this one
- knowed us and liked us. He capered and raced
- around ever so friendly, and powerful glad to be free
- and have a holiday; but Tom was so cut up he couldn't
- take any intrust in him, and said he wished he'd stopped
- and thought a minute before he ever started on such a
- fool errand. He said old Jeff Hooker would tell every-
- body, and we'd never hear the last of it.
-
- So we loafed along home down the back lanes, feel-
- ing pretty glum and not talking. When we was pass-
- ing the far corner of our tobacker field we heard the
- dog set up a long howl in there, and we went to the
- place and he was scratching the ground with all his
- might, and every now and then canting up his head
- sideways and fetching another howl.
-
- It was a long square, the shape of a grave; the rain
- had made it sink down and show the shape. The
- minute we come and stood there we looked at one
- another and never said a word. When the dog had
- dug down only a few inches he grabbed something and
- pulled it up, and it was an arm and a sleeve. Tom
- kind of gasped out, and says:
-
- "Come away, Huck -- it's found."
-
- I just felt awful. We struck for the road and
- fetched the first men that come along. They got a
- spade at the crib and dug out the body, and you never
- see such an excitement. You couldn't make anything
- out of the face, but you didn't need to. Everybody
- said:
-
- "Poor Jubiter; it's his clothes, to the last rag!"
-
- Some rushed off to spread the news and tell the
- justice of the peace and have an inquest, and me and
- Tom lit out for the house. Tom was all afire and 'most
- out of breath when we come tearing in where Uncle
- Silas and Aunt Sally and Benny was. Tom sung
- out:
-
- "Me and Huck's found Jubiter Dunlap's corpse all
- by ourselves with a bloodhound, after everybody else
- had quit hunting and given it up; and if it hadn't a
- been for us it never WOULD 'a' been found; and he WAS
- murdered too -- they done it with a club or something
- like that; and I'm going to start in and find the mur-
- derer, next, and I bet I'll do it!"
-
- Aunt Sally and Benny sprung up pale and astonished,
- but Uncle Silas fell right forward out of his chair on to
- the floor and groans out:
-
- "Oh, my God, you've found him NOW!"
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
- THE ARREST OF UNCLE SILAS
-
- THEM awful words froze us solid. We couldn't
- move hand or foot for as much as half a minute.
- Then we kind of come to, and lifted the old man up
- and got him into his chair, and Benny petted him and
- kissed him and tried to comfort him, and poor old
- Aunt Sally she done the same; but, poor things, they
- was so broke up and scared and knocked out of their
- right minds that they didn't hardly know what they was
- about. With Tom it was awful; it 'most petrified him
- to think maybe he had got his uncle into a thousand
- times more trouble than ever, and maybe it wouldn't
- ever happened if he hadn't been so ambitious to get
- celebrated, and let the corpse alone the way the others
- done. But pretty soon he sort of come to himself
- again and says:
-
- "Uncle Silas, don't you say another word like that.
- It's dangerous, and there ain't a shadder of truth in it."
-
- Aunt Sally and Benny was thankful to hear him say
- that, and they said the same; but the old man he
- wagged his head sorrowful and hopeless, and the tears
- run down his face, and he says;
-
- "No -- I done it; poor Jubiter, I done it!"
-
- It was dreadful to hear him say it. Then he went
- on and told about it, and said it happened the day
- me and Tom come -- along about sundown. He said
- Jubiter pestered him and aggravated him till he was so
- mad he just sort of lost his mind and grabbed up a stick
- and hit him over the head with all his might, and
- Jubiter dropped in his tracks. Then he was scared and
- sorry, and got down on his knees and lifted his head
- up, and begged him to speak and say he wasn't dead;
- and before long he come to, and when he see who it
- was holding his head, he jumped like he was 'most
- scared to death, and cleared the fence and tore into the
- woods, and was gone. So he hoped he wasn't hurt
- bad.
-
- "But laws," he says, "it was only just fear that
- gave him that last little spurt of strength, and of course
- it soon played out and he laid down in the bush, and
- there wasn't anybody to help him, and he died."
-
- Then the old man cried and grieved, and said he was
- a murderer and the mark of Cain was on him, and he
- had disgraced his family and was going to be found
- out and hung. But Tom said:
-
- "No, you ain't going to be found out. You DIDN'T
- kill him. ONE lick wouldn't kill him. Somebody else
- done it."
-
- "Oh, yes," he says, "I done it -- nobody else.
- Who else had anything against him? Who else COULD
- have anything against him?"
-
- He looked up kind of like he hoped some of us could
- mention somebody that could have a grudge against
- that harmless no-account, but of course it warn't no
- use -- he HAD us; we couldn't say a word. He
- noticed that, and he saddened down again, and I never
- see a face so miserable and so pitiful to see. Tom
- had a sudden idea, and says:
-
- "But hold on! -- somebody BURIED him. Now
- who --"
-
- He shut off sudden. I knowed the reason. It give
- me the cold shudders when he said them words, because
- right away I remembered about us seeing Uncle Silas
- prowling around with a long-handled shovel away in
- the night that night. And I knowed Benny seen him,
- too, because she was talking about it one day. The
- minute Tom shut off he changed the subject and went
- to begging Uncle Silas to keep mum, and the rest of us
- done the same, and said he MUST, and said it wasn't his
- business to tell on himself, and if he kept mum nobody
- would ever know; but if it was found out and any
- harm come to him it would break the family's hearts
- and kill them, and yet never do anybody any good.
- So at last he promised. We was all of us more com-
- fortable, then, and went to work to cheer up the old
- man. We told him all he'd got to do was to keep still,
- and it wouldn't be long till the whole thing would blow
- over and be forgot. We all said there wouldn't any-
- body ever suspect Uncle Silas, nor ever dream of such
- a thing, he being so good and kind, and having such a
- good character; and Tom says, cordial and hearty, he
- says:
-
- "Why, just look at it a minute; just consider.
- Here is Uncle Silas, all these years a preacher -- at his
- own expense; all these years doing good with all his
- might and every way he can think of -- at his own ex-
- pense, all the time; always been loved by everybody,
- and respected; always been peaceable and minding his
- own business, the very last man in this whole deestrict
- to touch a person, and everybody knows it. Suspect
- HIM? Why, it ain't any more possible than --"
-
- "By authority of the State of Arkansaw, I arrest
- you for the murder of Jubiter Dunlap!" shouts the
- sheriff at the door.
-
- It was awful. Aunt Sally and Benny flung themselves
- at Uncle Silas, screaming and crying, and hugged him
- and hung to him, and Aunt Sally said go away, she
- wouldn't ever give him up, they shouldn't have him,
- and the niggers they come crowding and crying to the
- door and -- well, I couldn't stand it; it was enough to
- break a person's heart; so I got out.
-
- They took him up to the little one-horse jail in the
- village, and we all went along to tell him good-bye;
- and Tom was feeling elegant, and says to me, "We'll
- have a most noble good time and heaps of danger some
- dark night getting him out of there, Huck, and it'll be
- talked about everywheres and we will be celebrated;"
- but the old man busted that scheme up the minute he
- whispered to him about it. He said no, it was his duty
- to stand whatever the law done to him, and he would
- stick to the jail plumb through to the end, even if
- there warn't no door to it. It disappointed Tom
- and graveled him a good deal, but he had to put up
- with it.
-
- But he felt responsible and bound to get his uncle
- Silas free; and he told Aunt Sally, the last thing, not
- to worry, because he was going to turn in and work
- night and day and beat this game and fetch Uncle Silas
- out innocent; and she was very loving to him and
- thanked him and said she knowed he would do his very
- best. And she told us to help Benny take care of the
- house and the children, and then we had a good-bye
- cry all around and went back to the farm, and left her
- there to live with the jailer's wife a month till the trial
- in October.
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
- TOM SAWYER DISCOVERS THE MURDERERS
-
- WELL, that was a hard month on us all. Poor
- Benny, she kept up the best she could, and me
- and Tom tried to keep things cheerful there at the
- house, but it kind of went for nothing, as you may say.
- It was the same up at the jail. We went up every day
- to see the old people, but it was awful dreary, because
- the old man warn't sleeping much, and was walking in
- his sleep considerable and so he got to looking fagged
- and miserable, and his mind got shaky, and we all got
- afraid his troubles would break him down and kill him.
- And whenever we tried to persuade him to feel cheer-
- fuler, he only shook his head and said if we only
- knowed what it was to carry around a murderer's load
- in your heart we wouldn't talk that way. Tom and all
- of us kept telling him it WASN'T murder, but just acci-
- dental killing! but it never made any difference -- it was
- murder, and he wouldn't have it any other way. He
- actu'ly begun to come out plain and square towards
- trial time and acknowledge that he TRIED to kill the man.
- Why, that was awful, you know. It made things seem
- fifty times as dreadful, and there warn't no more com-
- fort for Aunt Sally and Benny. But he promised he
- wouldn't say a word about his murder when others
- was around, and we was glad of that.
-
- Tom Sawyer racked the head off of himself all that
- month trying to plan some way out for Uncle Silas, and
- many's the night he kept me up 'most all night with
- this kind of tiresome work, but he couldn't seem to get
- on the right track no way. As for me, I reckoned a
- body might as well give it up, it all looked so blue and
- I was so downhearted; but he wouldn't. He stuck to
- the business right along, and went on planning and
- thinking and ransacking his head.
-
- So at last the trial come on, towards the middle of
- October, and we was all in the court. The place was
- jammed, of course. Poor old Uncle Silas, he looked
- more like a dead person than a live one, his eyes was so
- hollow and he looked so thin and so mournful. Benny
- she set on one side of him and Aunt Sally on the other,
- and they had veils on, and was full of trouble. But
- Tom he set by our lawyer, and had his finger in every-
- wheres, of course. The lawyer let him, and the judge
- let him. He 'most took the business out of the law-
- yer's hands sometimes; which was well enough, be-
- cause that was only a mud-turtle of a back-settlement
- lawyer and didn't know enough to come in when it
- rains, as the saying is.
-
- They swore in the jury, and then the lawyer for the
- prostitution got up and begun. He made a terrible
- speech against the old man, that made him moan and
- groan, and made Benny and Aunt Sally cry. The way
- HE told about the murder kind of knocked us all stupid
- it was so different from the old man's tale. He said
- he was going to prove that Uncle Silas was SEEN to
- kill Jubiter Dunlap by two good witnesses, and done it
- deliberate, and SAID he was going to kill him the very
- minute he hit him with the club; and they seen him hide
- Jubiter in the bushes, and they seen that Jubiter was
- stone-dead. And said Uncle Silas come later and
- lugged Jubiter down into the tobacker field, and two
- men seen him do it. And said Uncle Silas turned out,
- away in the night, and buried Jubiter, and a man seen
- him at it.
-
- I says to myself, poor old Uncle Silas has been lying
- about it because he reckoned nobody seen him and he
- couldn't bear to break Aunt Sally's heart and Benny's;
- and right he was: as for me, I would 'a' lied the
- same way, and so would anybody that had any feeling,
- to save them such misery and sorrow which THEY warn't
- no ways responsible for. Well, it made our lawyer
- look pretty sick; and it knocked Tom silly, too, for a
- little spell, but then he braced up and let on that he
- warn't worried -- but I knowed he WAS, all the same.
- And the people -- my, but it made a stir amongst
- them!
-
- And when that lawyer was done telling the jury what
- he was going to prove, he set down and begun to work
- his witnesses.
-
- First, he called a lot of them to show that there was
- bad blood betwixt Uncle Silas and the diseased; and
- they told how they had heard Uncle Silas threaten the
- diseased, at one time and another, and how it got
- worse and worse and everybody was talking about it,
- and how diseased got afraid of his life, and told two or
- three of them he was certain Uncle Silas would up and
- kill him some time or another.
-
- Tom and our lawyer asked them some questions;
- but it warn't no use, they stuck to what they said.
-
- Next, they called up Lem Beebe, and he took the
- stand. It come into my mind, then, how Lem and Jim
- Lane had come along talking, that time, about borrow-
- ing a dog or something from Jubiter Dunlap; and that
- brought up the blackberries and the lantern; and that
- brought up Bill and Jack Withers, and how they passed
- by, talking about a nigger stealing Uncle Silas's corn;
- and that fetched up our old ghost that come along
- about the same time and scared us so -- and here HE
- was too, and a privileged character, on accounts of his
- being deef and dumb and a stranger, and they had fixed
- him a chair inside the railing, where he could cross his
- legs and be comfortable, whilst the other people was all
- in a jam so they couldn't hardly breathe. So it all
- come back to me just the way it was that day; and it
- made me mournful to think how pleasant it was up to
- then, and how miserable ever since.
-
- LEM BEEBE, sworn, said -- "I was a-coming along,
- that day, second of September, and Jim Lane was with
- me, and it was towards sundown, and we heard loud
- talk, like quarrelling, and we was very close, only
- the hazel bushes between (that's along the fence);
- and we heard a voice say, 'I've told you more'n once
- I'd kill you,' and knowed it was this prisoner's
- voice; and then we see a club come up above the
- bushes and down out of sight again. and heard a
- smashing thump and then a groan or two: and then we
- crope soft to where we could see, and there laid
- Jupiter Dunlap dead, and this prisoner standing over
- him with the club; and the next he hauled the dead
- man into a clump of bushes and hid him, and then we
- stooped low, to be cut of sight, and got away."
-
- Well, it was awful. It kind of froze everybody's
- blood to hear it, and the house was 'most as still whilst
- he was telling it as if there warn't nobody in it. And
- when he was done, you could hear them gasp and sigh,
- all over the house, and look at one another the same
- as to say, "Ain't it perfectly terrible -- ain't it awful!"
-
- Now happened a thing that astonished me. All the
- time the first witnesses was proving the bad blood and
- the threats and all that, Tom Sawyer was alive and lay-
- ing for them; and the minute they was through, he
- went for them, and done his level best to catch them in
- lies and spile their testimony. But now, how different.
- When Lem first begun to talk, and never said anything
- about speaking to Jubiter or trying to borrow a dog
- off of him, he was all alive and laying for Lem, and you
- could see he was getting ready to cross-question him to
- death pretty soon, and then I judged him and me would
- go on the stand by and by and tell what we heard him
- and Jim Lane say. But the next time I looked at Tom
- I got the cold shivers. Why, he was in the brownest
- study you ever see -- miles and miles away. He warn't
- hearing a word Lem Beebe was saying; and when he
- got through he was still in that brown-study, just the
- same. Our lawyer joggled him, and then he looked up
- startled, and says, "Take the witness if you want him.
- Lemme alone -- I want to think."
-
- Well, that beat me. I couldn't understand it. And
- Benny and her mother -- oh, they looked sick, they
- was so troubled. They shoved their veils to one side
- and tried to get his eye, but it warn't any use, and I
- couldn't get his eye either. So the mud-turtle he
- tackled the witness, but it didn't amount to nothing;
- and he made a mess of it.
-
- Then they called up Jim Lane, and he told the very
- same story over again, exact. Tom never listened to
- this one at all, but set there thinking and thinking, miles
- and miles away. So the mud-turtle went in alone
- again and come out just as flat as he done before. The
- lawyer for the prostitution looked very comfortable,
- but the judge looked disgusted. You see, Tom was
- just the same as a regular lawyer, nearly, because it
- was Arkansaw law for a prisoner to choose anybody he
- wanted to help his lawyer, and Tom had had Uncle
- Silas shove him into the case, and now he was botching
- it and you could see the judge didn't like it much.
- All that the mud-turtle got out of Lem and Jim was
- this: he asked them:
-
- "Why didn't you go and tell what you saw?"
-
- "We was afraid we would get mixed up in it our-
- selves. And we was just starting down the river
- a-hunting for all the week besides; but as soon as we
- come back we found out they'd been searching for the
- body, so then we went and told Brace Dunlap all
- about it."
-
- "When was that?"
-
- "Saturday night, September 9th."
-
- The judge he spoke up and says:
-
- "Mr. Sheriff, arrest these two witnesses on suspicions
- of being accessionary after the fact to the murder."
-
- The lawyer for the prostitution jumps up all excited,
- and says:
-
- "Your honor! I protest against this extraordi --"
-
- "Set down!" says the judge, pulling his bowie and
- laying it on his pulpit. "I beg you to respect the
- Court."
-
- So he done it. Then he called Bill Withers.
-
- BILL WITHERS, sworn, said: "I was coming along
- about sundown, Saturday, September 2d, by the
- prisoner's field, and my brother Jack was with me
- and we seen a man toting off something heavy on
- his back and allowed it was a nigger stealing
- corn; we couldn't see distinct; next we made out
- that it was one man carrying another; and the way
- it hung, so kind of limp, we judged it was
- somebody that was drunk; and by the man's walk we
- said it was Parson Silas, and we judged he had
- found Sam Cooper drunk in the road, which he was
- always trying to reform him, and was toting him
- out of danger."
-
- It made the people shiver to think of poor old Uncle
- Silas toting off the diseased down to the place in his
- tobacker field where the dog dug up the body, but
- there warn't much sympathy around amongst the faces,
- and I heard one cuss say "'Tis the coldest blooded
- work I ever struck, lugging a murdered man around
- like that, and going to bury him like a animal, and him
- a preacher at that."
-
- Tom he went on thinking, and never took no notice;
- so our lawyer took the witness and done the best he
- could, and it was plenty poor enough.
-
- Then Jack Withers he come on the stand and told the
- same tale, just like Bill done.
-
- And after him comes Brace Dunlap, and he was look-
- ing very mournful, and most crying; and there was a
- rustle and a stir all around, and everybody got ready to
- listen, and lost of the women folks said, "Poor cretur,
- poor cretur," and you could see a many of them wip-
- ing their eyes.
-
- BRACE DUNLAP, sworn, said: "I was in considerable
- trouble a long time about my poor brother, but I
- reckoned things warn't near so bad as he made out,
- and I couldn't make myself believe anybody would
- have the heart to hurt a poor harmless cretur like
- that" -- [by jings, I was sure I seen Tom give a
- kind of a faint little start, and then look
- disappointed again] -- "and you know I COULDN'T
- think a preacher would hurt him -- it warn't natural
- to think such an onlikely thing -- so I never paid
- much attention, and now I sha'n't ever, ever
- forgive myself; for if I had a done different, my
- poor brother would be with me this day, and not
- laying yonder murdered, and him so harmless." He
- kind of broke down there and choked up, and waited
- to get his voice; and people all around said the
- most pitiful things, and women cried; and it was
- very still in there, and solemn, and old Uncle Silas,
- poor thing, he give a groan right out so everybody
- heard him. Then Brace he went on, "Saturday,
- September 2d, he didn't come home to supper.
- By-and-by I got a little uneasy, and one of my
- niggers went over to this prisoner's place, but come
- back and said he warn't there. So I got uneasier
- and uneasier, and couldn't rest. I went to bed, but
- I couldn't sleep; and turned out, away late in the
- night, and went wandering over to this prisoner's
- place and all around about there a good while, hoping
- I would run across my poor brother, and never
- knowing he was out of his troubles and gone to a
- better shore --" So he broke down and choked up again,
- and most all the women was crying now. Pretty soon
- he got another start and says: "But it warn't no use;
- so at last I went home and tried to get some sleep,
- but couldn't. Well, in a day or two everybody was
- uneasy, and they got to talking about this prisoner's
- threats, and took to the idea, which I didn't take
- no stock in, that my brother was murdered so they
- hunted around and tried to find his body, but
- couldn't and give it up. And so I reckoned he was
- gone off somers to have a little peace, and would
- come back to us when his troubles was kind of healed.
- But late Saturday night, the 9th, Lem Beebe and
- Jim Lane come to my house and told me all -- told me
- the whole awful 'sassination, and my heart was
- broke. And THEN I remembered something that hadn't
- took no hold of me at the time, because reports said
- this prisoner had took to walking in his sleep and
- doing all kind of things of no consequence, not
- knowing what he was about. I will tell you what that
- thing was that come back into my memory. Away late
- that awful Saturday night when I was wandering
- around about this prisoner's place, grieving and
- troubled, I was down by the corner of the tobacker-
- field and I heard a sound like digging in a gritty
- soil; and I crope nearer and peeped through the
- vines that hung on the rail fence and seen this
- prisoner SHOVELING -- shoveling with a long-handled
- shovel -- heaving earth into a big hole that was
- most filled up; his back was to me, but it was
- bright moonlight and I knowed him by his old green
- baize work-gown with a splattery white patch in
- the middle of the back like somebody had hit him
- with a snowball. HE WAS BURYING THE MAN HE'D MURDERED!"
-
- And he slumped down in his chair crying and sob-
- bing, and 'most everybody in the house busted out
- wailing, and crying, and saying, "Oh, it's awful --
- awful -- horrible! and there was a most tremendous ex-
- citement, and you couldn't hear yourself think; and
- right in the midst of it up jumps old Uncle Silas, white
- as a sheet, and sings out:
-
- "IT'S TRUE, EVERY WORD -- I MURDERED HIM IN COLD
- BLOOD!"
-
- By Jackson, it petrified them! People rose up wild
- all over the house, straining and staring for a better look
- at him, and the judge was hammering with his mallet
- and the sheriff yelling "Order -- order in the court --
- order!"
-
- And all the while the old man stood there a-quaking
- and his eyes a-burning, and not looking at his wife and
- daughter, which was clinging to him and begging him
- to keep still, but pawing them off with his hands and
- saying he WOULD clear his black soul from crime, he
- WOULD heave off this load that was more than he could
- bear, and he WOULDN'T bear it another hour! And
- then he raged right along with his awful tale, every-
- body a-staring and gasping, judge, jury, lawyers, and
- everybody, and Benny and Aunt Sally crying their
- hearts out. And by George, Tom Sawyer never
- looked at him once! Never once -- just set there
- gazing with all his eyes at something else, I couldn't
- tell what. And so the old man raged right along,
- pouring his words out like a stream of fire:
-
- "I killed him! I am guilty! But I never had the
- notion in my life to hurt him or harm him, spite of all
- them lies about my threatening him, till the very
- minute I raised the club -- then my heart went cold! --
- then the pity all went out of it, and I struck to kill! In
- that one moment all my wrongs come into my mind;
- all the insults that that man and the scoundrel his
- brother, there, had put upon me, and how they laid in
- together to ruin me with the people, and take away
- my good name, and DRIVE me to some deed that would
- destroy me and my family that hadn't ever done THEM
- no harm, so help me God! And they done it in a mean
- revenge -- for why? Because my innocent pure girl
- here at my side wouldn't marry that rich, insolent,
- ignorant coward, Brace Dunlap, who's been sniveling
- here over a brother he never cared a brass farthing
- for -- "[I see Tom give a jump and look glad THIS time,
- to a dead certainty]" -- and in that moment I've told
- you about, I forgot my God and remembered only my
- heart's bitterness, God forgive me, and I struck to kill.
- In one second I was miserably sorry -- oh, filled with
- remorse; but I thought of my poor family, and I MUST
- hide what I'd done for their sakes; and I did hide that
- corpse in the bushes; and presently I carried it to the
- tobacker field; and in the deep night I went with my
- shovel and buried it where --"
-
- Up jumps Tom and shouts:
-
- "NOW, I've got it!" and waves his hand, oh, ever
- so fine and starchy, towards the old man, and says:
-
- "Set down! A murder WAS done, but you never
- had no hand in it!"
-
- Well, sir, you could a heard a pin drop. And the
- old man he sunk down kind of bewildered in his seat
- and Aunt Sally and Benny didn't know it, because they
- was so astonished and staring at Tom with their
- mouths open and not knowing what they was about.
- And the whole house the same. I never seen people
- look so helpless and tangled up, and I hain't ever seen
- eyes bug out and gaze without a blink the way theirn
- did. Tom says, perfectly ca'm:
-
- "Your honor, may I speak?"
-
- "For God's sake, yes -- go on!" says the judge, so
- astonished and mixed up he didn't know what he was
- about hardly.
-
- Then Tom he stood there and waited a second or two
- -- that was for to work up an "effect," as he calls it
- -- then he started in just as ca'm as ever, and says:
-
- "For about two weeks now there's been a little bill
- sticking on the front of this courthouse offering two
- thousand dollars reward for a couple of big di'monds
- -- stole at St. Louis. Them di'monds is worth twelve
- thousand dollars. But never mind about that till I get
- to it. Now about this murder. I will tell you all
- about it -- how it happened -- who done it -- every
- DEtail."
-
- You could see everybody nestle now, and begin to
- listen for all they was worth.
-
- "This man here, Brace Dunlap, that's been sniveling
- so about his dead brother that YOU know he never
- cared a straw for, wanted to marry that young girl
- there, and she wouldn't have him. So he told Uncle
- Silas he would make him sorry. Uncle Silas knowed
- how powerful he was, and how little chance he had
- against such a man, and he was scared and worried, and
- done everything he could think of to smooth him over
- and get him to be good to him: he even took his no-
- account brother Jubiter on the farm and give him wages
- and stinted his own family to pay them; and Jubiter
- done everything his brother could contrive to insult
- Uncle Silas, and fret and worry him, and try to drive
- Uncle Silas into doing him a hurt, so as to injure Uncle
- Silas with the people. And it done it. Everybody
- turned against him and said the meanest kind of things
- about him, and it graduly broke his heart -- yes, and
- he was so worried and distressed that often he warn't
- hardly in his right mind.
-
- "Well, on that Saturday that we've had so much
- trouble about, two of these witnesses here, Lem Beebe
- and Jim Lane, come along by where Uncle Silas and
- Jubiter Dunlap was at work -- and that much of what
- they've said is true, the rest is lies. They didn't hear
- Uncle Silas say he would kill Jubiter; they didn't hear
- no blow struck; they didn't see no dead man, and they
- didn't see Uncle Silas hide anything in the bushes.
- Look at them now -- how they set there, wishing they
- hadn't been so handy with their tongues; anyway,
- they'll wish it before I get done.
-
- "That same Saturday evening Bill and Jack Withers
- DID see one man lugging off another one. That much
- of what they said is true, and the rest is lies. First off
- they thought it was a nigger stealing Uncle Silas's corn
- -- you notice it makes them look silly, now, to find out
- somebody overheard them say that. That's because
- they found out by and by who it was that was doing
- the lugging, and THEY know best why they swore here
- that they took it for Uncle Silas by the gait -- which it
- WASN'T, and they knowed it when they swore to that lie.
-
- "A man out in the moonlight DID see a murdered
- person put under ground in the tobacker field -- but it
- wasn't Uncle Silas that done the burying. He was in
- his bed at that very time.
-
- "Now, then, before I go on, I want to ask you if
- you've ever noticed this: that people, when they're
- thinking deep, or when they're worried, are most always
- doing something with their hands, and they don't know
- it, and don't notice what it is their hands are doing.
- some stroke their chins; some stroke their noses; some
- stroke up UNDER their chin with their hand; some twirl
- a chain, some fumble a button, then there's some that
- draws a figure or a letter with their finger on their
- cheek, or under their chin or on their under lip. That's
- MY way. When I'm restless, or worried, or thinking
- hard, I draw capital V's on my cheek or on my under
- lip or under my chin, and never anything BUT capital
- V's -- and half the time I don't notice it and don't
- know I'm doing it."
-
- That was odd. That is just what I do; only I make
- an O. And I could see people nodding to one another,
- same as they do when they mean "THAT's so."
-
- "Now, then, I'll go on. That same Saturday -- no,
- it was the night before -- there was a steamboat laying
- at Flagler's Landing, forty miles above here, and it
- was raining and storming like the nation. And there
- was a thief aboard, and he had them two big di'monds
- that's advertised out here on this courthouse door;
- and he slipped ashore with his hand-bag and struck
- out into the dark and the storm, and he was a-hoping
- he could get to this town all right and be safe. But he
- had two pals aboard the boat, hiding, and he knowed
- they was going to kill him the first chance they got and
- take the di'monds; because all three stole them, and
- then this fellow he got hold of them and skipped.
-
- "Well, he hadn't been gone more'n ten minutes be-
- fore his pals found it out, and they jumped ashore and
- lit out after him. Prob'ly they burnt matches and
- found his tracks. Anyway, they dogged along after
- him all day Saturday and kept out of his sight; and
- towards sundown he come to the bunch of sycamores
- down by Uncle Silas's field, and he went in there to
- get a disguise out of his hand-bag and put it on before
- he showed himself here in the town -- and mind you he
- done that just a little after the time that Uncle Silas was
- hitting Jubiter Dunlap over the head with a club -- for
- he DID hit him.
-
- "But the minute the pals see that thief slide into the
- bunch of sycamores, they jumped out of the bushes
- and slid in after him.
-
- "They fell on him and clubbed him to death.
-
- "Yes, for all he screamed and howled so, they never
- had no mercy on him, but clubbed him to death. And
- two men that was running along the road heard him
- yelling that way, and they made a rush into the syca- i
- more bunch -- which was where they was bound for,
- anyway -- and when the pals saw them they lit out and
- the two new men after them a-chasing them as tight as
- they could go. But only a minute or two -- then these
- two new men slipped back very quiet into the syca-
- mores.
-
- "THEN what did they do? I will tell you what they
- done. They found where the thief had got his disguise
- out of his carpet-sack to put on; so one of them strips
- and puts on that disguise."
-
- Tom waited a little here, for some more "effect" --
- then he says, very deliberate:
-
- "The man that put on that dead man's disguise was
- -- JUBITER DUNLAP!"
-
- "Great Scott!" everybody shouted, all over the
- house, and old Uncle Silas he looked perfectly
- astonished.
-
- "Yes, it was Jubiter Dunlap. Not dead, you see.
- Then they pulled off the dead man's boots and put
- Jubiter Dunlap's old ragged shoes on the corpse and put
- the corpse's boots on Jubiter Dunlap. Then Jubiter
- Dunlap stayed where he was, and the other man lugged
- the dead body off in the twilight; and after midnight
- he went to Uncle Silas's house, and took his old green
- work-robe off of the peg where it always hangs in the
- passage betwixt the house and the kitchen and put it on,
- and stole the long-handled shovel and went off down
- into the tobacker field and buried the murdered man."
-
- He stopped, and stood half a minute. Then --
-
- "And who do you reckon the murdered man WAS?
- It was -- JAKE Dunlap, the long-lost burglar!"
-
- "Great Scott!"
-
- "And the man that buried him was -- BRACE Dunlap,
- his brother!"
-
- "Great Scott!"
-
- "And who do you reckon is this mowing idiot here
- that's letting on all these weeks to be a deef and dumb
- stranger? It's -- JUBITER Dunlap!"
-
- My land, they all busted out in a howl, and you
- never see the like of that excitement since the day you
- was born. And Tom he made a jump for Jubiter and
- snaked off his goggles and his false whiskers, and there
- was the murdered man, sure enough, just as alive as
- anybody! And Aunt Sally and Benny they went to
- hugging and crying and kissing and smothering old
- Uncle Silas to that degree he was more muddled and
- confused and mushed up in his mind than he ever was
- before, and that is saying considerable. And next,
- people begun to yell:
-
- "Tom Sawyer! Tom Sawyer! Shut up every-
- body, and let him go on! Go on, Tom Sawyer!"
-
- Which made him feel uncommon bully, for it was
- nuts for Tom Sawyer to be a public character that-
- away, and a hero, as he calls it. So when it was all
- quiet, he says:
-
- "There ain't much left, only this. When that man
- there, Bruce Dunlap, had most worried the life and
- sense out of Uncle Silas till at last he plumb lost his
- mind and hit this other blatherskite, his brother, with a
- club, I reckon he seen his chance. Jubiter broke for
- the woods to hide, and I reckon the game was for him
- to slide out, in the night, and leave the country.
- Then Brace would make everybody believe Uncle Silas
- killed him and hid his body somers; and that would
- ruin Uncle Silas and drive HIM out of the country --
- hang him, maybe; I dunno. But when they found
- their dead brother in the sycamores without knowing
- him, because he was so battered up, they see they had
- a better thing; disguise BOTH and bury Jake and dig
- him up presently all dressed up in Jubiter's clothes,
- and hire Jim Lane and Bill Withers and the others to
- swear to some handy lies -- which they done. And
- there they set, now, and I told them they would be
- looking sick before I got done, and that is the way
- they're looking now.
-
- "Well, me and Huck Finn here, we come down on
- the boat with the thieves, and the dead one told us all
- about the di'monds, and said the others would murder
- him if they got the chance; and we was going to help
- him all we could. We was bound for the sycamores
- when we heard them killing him in there; but we was
- in there in the early morning after the storm and
- allowed nobody hadn't been killed, after all. And
- when we see Jubiter Dunlap here spreading around in
- the very same disguise Jake told us HE was going to
- wear, we thought it was Jake his own self -- and he was
- goo-gooing deef and dumb, and THAT was according to
- agreement.
-
- "Well, me and Huck went on hunting for the corpse
- after the others quit, and we found it. And was proud,
- too; but Uncle Silas he knocked us crazy by telling us
- HE killed the man. So we was mighty sorry we found
- the body, and was bound to save Uncle Silas's neck if
- we could; and it was going to be tough work, too,
- because he wouldn't let us break him out of prison the
- way we done with our old nigger Jim.
-
- "I done everything I could the whole month to think
- up some way to save Uncle Silas, but I couldn't strike
- a thing. So when we come into court to-day I come
- empty, and couldn't see no chance anywheres. But
- by and by I had a glimpse of something that set me
- thinking -- just a little wee glimpse -- only that, and
- not enough to make sure; but it set me thinking hard
- -- and WATCHING, when I was only letting on to think;
- and by and by, sure enough, when Uncle Silas was pil-
- ing out that stuff about HIM killing Jubiter Dunlap, I
- catched that glimpse again, and this time I jumped up
- and shut down the proceedings, because I KNOWED
- Jubiter Dunlap was a-setting here before me. I knowed
- him by a thing which I seen him do -- and I remem-
- bered it. I'd seen him do it when I was here a year
- ago."
-
- He stopped then, and studied a minute -- laying for
- an "effect" -- I knowed it perfectly well. Then he
- turned off like he was going to leave the platform, and
- says, kind of lazy and indifferent:
-
- "Well, I believe that is all."
-
- Why, you never heard such a howl! -- and it come
- from the whole house:
-
- "What WAS it you seen him do? Stay where you
- are, you little devil! You think you are going to
- work a body up till his mouth's a-watering and stop
- there? What WAS it he done?"
-
- That was it, you see -- he just done it to get an
- "effect "; you couldn't 'a' pulled him off of that plat-
- form with a yoke of oxen.
-
- "Oh, it wasn't anything much," he says. "I seen
- him looking a little excited when he found Uncle Silas
- was actuly fixing to hang himself for a murder that
- warn't ever done; and he got more and more nervous
- and worried, I a-watching him sharp but not seeming
- to look at him -- and all of a sudden his hands begun
- to work and fidget, and pretty soon his left crept up
- and HIS FINGER DRAWED A CROSS ON HIS CHEEK, and then I
- HAD him!"
-
- Well, then they ripped and howled and stomped and
- clapped their hands till Tom Sawyer was that proud
- and happy he didn't know what to do with him-
- self.
-
- And then the judge he looked down over his pulpit
- and says:
-
- "My boy, did you SEE all the various details of this
- strange conspiracy and tragedy that you've been de-
- scribing?"
-
- "No, your honor, I didn't see any of them."
-
- "Didn't see any of them! Why, you've told the
- whole history straight through, just the same as if
- you'd seen it with your eyes. How did you manage
- that?"
-
- Tom says, kind of easy and comfortable:
-
- "Oh, just noticing the evidence and piecing this and
- that together, your honor; just an ordinary little bit of
- detective work; anybody could 'a' done it."
-
- "Nothing of the kind! Not two in a million could
- 'a' done it. You are a very remarkable boy."
-
- Then they let go and give Tom another smashing
- round, and he -- well, he wouldn't 'a' sold out for a
- silver mine. Then the judge says:
-
- "But are you certain you've got this curious history
- straight?"
-
- "Perfectly, your honor. Here is Brace Dunlap --
- let him deny his share of it if he wants to take the
- chance; I'll engage to make him wish he hadn't said
- anything...... Well, you see HE'S pretty quiet. And
- his brother's pretty quiet, and them four witnesses that
- lied so and got paid for it, they're pretty quiet. And
- as for Uncle Silas, it ain't any use for him to put in
- his oar, I wouldn't believe him under oath!"
-
- Well, sir, that fairly made them shout; and even the
- judge he let go and laughed. Tom he was just feeling
- like a rainbow. When they was done laughing he
- looks up at the judge and says:
-
- "Your honor, there's a thief in this house."
-
- "A thief?"
-
- "Yes, sir. And he's got them twelve-thousand-
- dollar di'monds on him."
-
- By gracious, but it made a stir! Everybody went
- shouting:
-
- "Which is him? which is him? p'int him out!"
-
- And the judge says:
-
- "Point him out, my lad. Sheriff, you will arrest
- him. Which one is it?"
-
- Tom says:
-
- "This late dead man here -- Jubiter Dunlap."
-
- Then there was another thundering let-go of astonish-
- ment and excitement; but Jubiter, which was astonished
- enough before, was just fairly putrified with astonish-
- ment this time. And he spoke up, about half crying,
- and says:
-
- "Now THAT'S a lie. Your honor, it ain't fair; I'm
- plenty bad enough without that. I done the other
- things -- Brace he put me up to it, and persuaded me,
- and promised he'd make me rich, some day, and I done
- it, and I'm sorry I done it, and I wisht I hadn't; but I
- hain't stole no di'monds, and I hain't GOT no di'monds;
- I wisht I may never stir if it ain't so. The sheriff can
- search me and see."
-
- Tom says:
-
- "Your honor, it wasn't right to call him a thief, and
- I'll let up on that a little. He did steal the di'monds,
- but he didn't know it. He stole them from his brother
- Jake when he was laying dead, after Jake had stole them
- from the other thieves; but Jubiter didn't know he was
- stealing them; and he's been swelling around here with
- them a month; yes, sir, twelve thousand dollars' worth
- of di'monds on him -- all that riches, and going around
- here every day just like a poor man. Yes, your honor,
- he's got them on him now."
-
- The judge spoke up and says:
-
- "Search him, sheriff."
-
- Well, sir, the sheriff he ransacked him high and low,
- and everywhere: searched his hat, socks, seams, boots,
- everything -- and Tom he stood there quiet, laying for
- another of them effects of hisn. Finally the sheriff he
- give it up, and everybody looked disappointed, and
- Jubiter says:
-
- "There, now! what'd I tell you?"
-
- And the judge says:
-
- "It appears you were mistaken this time, my
- boy."
-
- Then Tom took an attitude and let on to be studying
- with all his might, and scratching his head. Then all
- of a sudden he glanced up chipper, and says:
-
- "Oh, now I've got it ! I'd forgot."
-
- Which was a lie, and I knowed it. Then he says:
-
- "Will somebody be good enough to lend me a little
- small screwdriver? There was one in your brother's
- hand-bag that you smouched, Jubiter. but I reckon
- you didn't fetch it with you."
-
- "No, I didn't. I didn't want it, and I give it
- away."
-
- "That's because you didn't know what it was
- for."
-
- Jubiter had his boots on again, by now, and when
- the thing Tom wanted was passed over the people's
- heads till it got to him, he says to Jubiter:
-
- "Put up your foot on this chair." And he kneeled
- down and begun to unscrew the heel-plate, everybody
- watching; and when he got that big di'mond out of
- that boot-heel and held it up and let it flash and blaze
- and squirt sunlight everwhichaway, it just took every-
- body's breath; and Jubiter he looked so sick and sorry
- you never see the like of it. And when Tom held up
- the other di'mond he looked sorrier than ever. Land!
- he was thinking how he would 'a' skipped out and been
- rich and independent in a foreign land if he'd only had
- the luck to guess what the screwdriver was in the
- carpet-bag for.
-
- Well, it was a most exciting time, take it all around,
- and Tom got cords of glory. The judge took the
- di'monds, and stood up in his pulpit, and cleared his
- throat, and shoved his spectacles back on his head, and
- says:
-
- "I'll keep them and notify the owners; and when
- they send for them it will be a real pleasure to me to
- hand you the two thousand dollars, for you've earned
- the money -- yes, and you've earned the deepest and
- most sincerest thanks of this community besides, for
- lifting a wronged and innocent family out of ruin and
- shame, and saving a good and honorable man from a
- felon's death, and for exposing to infamy and the pun-
- ishment of the law a cruel and odious scoundrel and his
- miserable creatures!"
-
- Well, sir, if there'd been a brass band to bust out
- some music, then, it would 'a' been just the perfectest
- thing I ever see, and Tom Sawyer he said the same.
-
- Then the sheriff he nabbed Brace Dunlap and his
- crowd, and by and by next month the judge had them
- up for trial and jailed the whole lot. And everybody
- crowded back to Uncle Silas's little old church, and was
- ever so loving and kind to him and the family and
- couldn't do enough for them; and Uncle Silas he
- preached them the blamedest jumbledest idiotic sermons
- you ever struck, and would tangle you up so you
- couldn't find your way home in daylight; but the peo-
- ple never let on but what they thought it was the clear-
- est and brightest and elegantest sermons that ever was;
- and they would set there and cry, for love and pity;
- but, by George, they give me the jim-jams and the fan-
- tods and caked up what brains I had, and turned them
- solid; but by and by they loved the old man's intellects
- back into him again, and he was as sound in his skull as
- ever he was, which ain't no flattery, I reckon. And
- so the whole family was as happy as birds, and nobody
- could be gratefuler and lovinger than what they was to
- Tom Sawyer; and the same to me, though I hadn't
- done nothing. And when the two thousand dollars
- come, Tom give half of it to me, and never told any-
- body so, which didn't surprise me, because I knowed
- him.
-
- END OF "TOM SAWYER, DETECTIVE".
-
-