Produced by Ken Smidge





PENROD AND SAM

By Booth Tarkington




Contents

     I.     Penrod and Sam
     II.    The Bonded Prisoner
     III.   The Militarist
     IV.    Bingism
     V.     The In-Or-In
     VI.    Georgie Becomes a Member
     VII.   Whitey
     VIII.  Salvage
     IX.    Reward of Merit
     X.     Conscience
     XI.    The Tonic
     XII.   Gipsy
     XIII.  Concerning Trousers
     XIV.   Camera Work in the Jungle
     XV.    A Model Letter to a Friend
     XVI.   Wednesday Madness
     XVII.  Penrod's Busy Day
     XVIII. On Account of the Weather
     XIX.   Creative Art
     XX.    The Departing Guest
     XXI.   Yearnings
     XXII.  The Horn of Fame
     XXIII. The Party
     XXIV.  The Heart of Marjorie Jones




CHAPTER I. PENROD AND SAM

During the daylight hours of several autumn Saturdays there had been
severe outbreaks of cavalry in the Schofield neighbourhood. The sabres
were of wood; the steeds were imaginary, and both were employed in a
game called "bonded pris'ner" by its inventors, Masters Penrod Schofield
and Samuel Williams. The pastime was not intricate. When two enemies
met, they fenced spectacularly until the person of one or the other was
touched by the opposing weapon; then, when the ensuing claims of foul
play had been disallowed and the subsequent argument settled, the
combatant touched was considered to be a prisoner until such time as
he might be touched by the hilt of a sword belonging to one of his own
party, which effected his release and restored to him the full enjoyment
of hostile activity. Pending such rescue, however, he was obliged to
accompany the forces of his captor whithersoever their strategical
necessities led them, which included many strange places. For the game
was exciting, and, at its highest pitch, would sweep out of an alley
into a stable, out of that stable and into a yard, out of that yard and
into a house, and through that house with the sound (and effect upon
furniture) of trampling herds. In fact, this very similarity must have
been in the mind of the distressed coloured woman in Mrs. Williams's
kitchen, when she declared that she might "jes' as well try to cook
right spang in the middle o' the stock-yards."

All up and down the neighbourhood the campaigns were waged, accompanied
by the martial clashing of wood upon wood and by many clamorous
arguments.

"You're a pris'ner, Roddy Bitts!"

"I am not!"

"You are, too! I touched you."

"Where, I'd like to know!"

"On the sleeve."

"You did not! I never felt it. I guess I'd 'a' felt it, wouldn't I?"

"What if you didn't? I touched you, and you're bonded. I leave it to Sam
Williams."

"Yah! Course you would! He's on your side! _I_ leave it to Herman."

"No, you won't! If you can't show any SENSE about it, we'll do it over,
and I guess you'll see whether you feel it or not! There! NOW, I guess
you--"

"Aw, squash!"

Strangely enough, the undoubted champion proved to be the youngest and
darkest of all the combatants, one Verman, coloured, brother to Herman,
and substantially under the size to which his nine years entitled him.
Verman was unfortunately tongue-tied, but he was valiant beyond all
others, and, in spite of every handicap, he became at once the chief
support of his own party and the despair of the opposition.

On the third Saturday this opposition had been worn down by the
successive captures of Maurice Levy and Georgie Bassett until it
consisted of only Sam Williams and Penrod. Hence, it behooved these
two to be wary, lest they be wiped out altogether; and Sam was dismayed
indeed, upon cautiously scouting round a corner of his own stable, to
find himself face to face with the valorous and skilful Verman, who was
acting as an outpost, or picket, of the enemy.

Verman immediately fell upon Sam, horse and foot, and Sam would
have fled but dared not, for fear he might be touched from the rear.
Therefore, he defended himself as best he could, and there followed a
lusty whacking, in the course of which Verman's hat, a relic and too
large, fell from his head, touching Sam's weapon in falling.

"There!" panted Sam, desisting immediately. "That counts! You're bonded,
Verman."

"Aim meewer!" Verman protested.

Interpreting this as "Ain't neither", Sam invented a law to suit the
occasion. "Yes, you are; that's the rule, Verman. I touched your hat
with my sword, and your hat's just the same as you."

"Imm mop!" Verman insisted.

"Yes, it is," said Sam, already warmly convinced (by his own statement)
that he was in the right. "Listen here! If I hit you on the shoe, it
would be the same as hitting YOU, wouldn't it? I guess it'd count if I
hit you on the shoe, wouldn't it? Well, a hat's just the same as shoes.
Honest, that's the rule, Verman, and you're a pris'ner."

Now, in the arguing part of the game, Verman's impediment cooperated
with a native amiability to render him far less effective than in the
actual combat. He chuckled, and ceded the point.

"Aw wi," he said, and cheerfully followed his captor to a hidden place
among some bushes in the front yard, where Penrod lurked.

"Looky what _I_ got!" Sam said importantly, pushing his captive into
this retreat. "NOW, I guess you won't say I'm not so much use any more!
Squat down, Verman, so's they can't see you if they're huntin' for us.
That's one o' the rules--honest. You got to squat when we tell you to."

Verman was agreeable. He squatted, and then began to laugh uproariously.

"Stop that noise!" Penrod commanded. "You want to betray us? What you
laughin' at?"

"Ep mack im mimmup," Verman giggled.

"What's he mean?" Sam asked.

Penrod was more familiar with Verman's utterance, and he interpreted.

"He says they'll get him back in a minute."

"No, they won't. I'd just like to see--"

"Yes, they will, too," Penrod said. "They'll get him back for the main
and simple reason we can't stay here all day, can we? And they'd find us
anyhow, if we tried to. There's so many of 'em against just us two, they
can run in and touch him soon as they get up to us--and then HE'LL be
after us again and--"

"Listen here!" Sam interrupted. "Why can't we put some REAL bonds on
him? We could put bonds on his wrists and around his legs--we could put
'em all over him, easy as nothin'. Then we could gag him--"

"No, we can't," said Penrod. "We can't, for the main and simple reason
we haven't got any rope or anything to make the bonds with, have we? I
wish we had some o' that stuff they give sick people. THEN, I bet they
wouldn't get him back so soon!"

"Sick people?" Sam repeated, not comprehending.

"It makes 'em go to sleep, no matter what you do to 'em," Penrod
explained. "That's the main and simple reason they can't wake up, and
you can cut off their ole legs--or their arms, or anything you want to."

"Hoy!" exclaimed Verman, in a serious tone. His laughter ceased
instantly, and he began to utter a protest sufficiently intelligible.

"You needn't worry," Penrod said gloomily. "We haven't got any o' that
stuff; so we can't do it."

"Well, we got to do sumpthing," Sam said.

His comrade agreed, and there was a thoughtful silence; but presently
Penrod's countenance brightened.

"I know!" he exclaimed. "_I_ know what we'll do with him. Why, I thought
of it just as EASY! I can most always think of things like that, for the
main and simple reason--well, I thought of it just as soon--"

"Well, what is it?" Sam demanded crossly. Penrod's reiteration of his
new-found phrase, "for the main and simple reason", had been growing
more and more irksome to his friend all day, though Sam was not
definitely aware that the phrase was the cause of his annoyance. "WHAT
are we goin' to do with him, you know so much?"

Penrod rose and peered over the tops of the bushes, shading his eyes
with his hand, a gesture that was unnecessary but had a good appearance.
He looked all round about him in this manner, finally vouchsafing a
report to the impatient Sam.

"No enemies in sight--just for the main and simple reason I expect
they're all in the alley and in Georgie Bassett's backyard."

"I bet they're not!" Sam said scornfully, his irritation much increased.
"How do YOU know so much about it?"

"Just for the main and simple reason," Penrod replied, with dignified
finality.

And at that, Sam felt a powerful impulse to do violence upon the person
of his comrade-in-arms. The emotion that prompted this impulse was so
primitive and straightforward that it almost resulted in action; but Sam
had a vague sense that he must control it as long as he could.

"Bugs!" he said.

Penrod was sensitive, and this cold word hurt him. However, he was
under the domination of his strategic idea, and he subordinated private
grievance to the common weal. "Get up!" he commanded. "You get up, too,
Verman. You got to--it's the rule. Now here I'll SHOW you what we're
goin' to do. Stoop over, and both o' you do just exackly like _I_ do.
You watch ME, because this biz'nuss has got to be done RIGHT!"

Sam muttered something; he was becoming more insurgent every moment, but
he obeyed. Likewise, Verman rose to his feet, ducked his head between
his shoulders, and trotted out to the sidewalk at Sam's heels, both
following Penrod and assuming a stooping position in imitation of him.
Verman was delighted with this phase of the game, and, also, he was
profoundly amused by Penrod's pomposity. Something dim and deep within
him perceived it to be cause for such merriment that he had ado to
master himself, and was forced to bottle and cork his laughter with both
hands. They proved insufficient; sputterings burst forth between his
fingers.

"You stop that!" Penrod said, looking back darkly upon the prisoner.

Verman endeavoured to oblige, though giggles continued to leak from him
at intervals, and the three boys stole along the fence in single file,
proceeding in this fashion until they reached Penrod's own front gate.
Here the leader ascertained, by a reconnaissance as far as the
corner, that the hostile forces were still looking for them in another
direction. He returned in a stealthy but important manner to his
disgruntled follower and the hilarious captive.

"Well," said Sam impatiently, "I guess I'm not goin' to stand around
here all day, I guess! You got anything you want to do, why'n't you go
on and DO it?"

Penrod's brow was already contorted to present the appearance of
detached and lofty concentration--a histrionic failure, since it did not
deceive the audience. He raised a hushing hand.

"SH!" he murmured. "I got to think."

"Bugs!" the impolite Mr. Williams said again.

Verman bent double, squealing and sputtering; indeed, he was ultimately
forced to sit upon the ground, so exhausting was the mirth to which he
now gave way. Penrod's composure was somewhat affected and he showed
annoyance.

"Oh, I guess you won't laugh quite so much about minute from now, ole
Mister Verman!" he said severely. "You get up from there and do like I
tell you."

"Well, why'n't you TELL him why he won't laugh so much, then?" Sam
demanded, as Verman rose. "Why'n't you do sumpthing and quit talkin' so
much about it?"

Penrod haughtily led the way into the yard.

"You follow me," he said, "and I guess you'll learn a little sense!"

Then, abandoning his hauteur for an air of mystery equally irritating
to Sam, he stole up the steps of the porch, and, after a moment's
manipulation of the knob of the big front door, contrived to operate the
fastenings, and pushed the door open.

"Come on," he whispered, beckoning. And the three boys mounted the
stairs to the floor above in silence--save for a belated giggle on
the part of Verman, which was restrained upon a terrible gesture from
Penrod. Verman buried his mouth as deeply as possible in a ragged
sleeve, and confined his demonstrations to a heaving of the stomach and
diaphragm.

Penrod led the way into the dainty room of his nineteen-year-old sister,
Margaret, and closed the door.

"There," he said, in a low and husky voice, "I expect you'll see what
I'm goin' to do now!"

"Well, what?" the skeptical Sam asked. "If we stay here very long your
mother'll come and send us downstairs. What's the good of--"

"WAIT, can't you?" Penrod wailed, in a whisper. "My goodness!" And going
to an inner door, he threw it open, disclosing a clothes-closet hung
with pretty garments of many kinds, while upon its floor were two rows
of shoes and slippers of great variety and charm.

A significant thing is to be remarked concerning the door of this
somewhat intimate treasury: there was no knob or latch upon the inner
side, so that, when the door was closed, it could be opened only from
the outside.

"There!" said Penrod. "You get in there, Verman, and I'll bet they won't
get to touch you back out o' bein' our pris'ner very soon, NOW! Oh, I
guess not!"

"Pshaw!" said Sam. "Is that all you were goin' to do? Why, your
mother'll come and make him get out the first--"

"No, she won't. She and Margaret have gone to my aunt's in the country,
and aren't goin' to be back till dark. And even if he made a lot o'
noise, it's kind of hard to hear anything from in there, anyway, when
the door's shut. Besides, he's got to keep quiet--that's the rule,
Verman. You're a pris'ner, and it's the rule you can't holler or
nothin'. You unnerstand that, Verman?"

"Aw wi," said Verman.

"Then go on in there. Hurry!"

The obedient Verman marched into the closet and sat down among the shoes
and slippers, where he presented an interesting effect of contrast. He
was still subject to hilarity--though endeavouring to suppress it by
means of a patent-leather slipper--when Penrod closed the door.

"There!" said Penrod, leading the way from the room. "I guess NOW you
see!"

Sam said nothing, and they came out to the open air and reached their
retreat in the Williams' yard again, without his having acknowledged
Penrod's service to their mutual cause.

"I thought of that just as easy!" Penrod remarked, probably prompted
to this odious bit of complacency by Sam's withholding the praise that
might naturally have been expected. And he was moved to add, "I guess
it'd of been a pretty long while if we'd had to wait for you to think of
something as good as that, Sam."

"Why would it?" Sam asked. "Why would it of been such a long while?"

"Oh," Penrod responded airily, "just for the main and simple reason!"

Sam could bear it no longer. "Oh, hush up!" he shouted.

Penrod was stung. "Do you mean ME?" he demanded.

"Yes, I do!" the goaded Sam replied.

"Did you tell ME to hush up?"

"Yes, I did!"

"I guess you don't know who you're talkin' to," Penrod said ominously.
"I guess I just better show you who you're talkin' to like that. I guess
you need a little sumpthing, for the main and simple--"

Sam uttered an uncontrollable howl and sprang upon Penrod, catching him
round the waist. Simultaneously with this impact, the wooden swords spun
through the air and were presently trodden underfoot as the two boys
wrestled to and fro.

Penrod was not altogether surprised by the onset of his friend. He had
been aware of Sam's increasing irritation (though neither boy could
have clearly stated its cause) and that very irritation produced a
corresponding emotion in the bosom of the irritator. Mentally, Penrod
was quite ready for the conflict--nay, he welcomed it--though, for the
first few moments, Sam had the physical advantage.

However, it is proper that a neat distinction be drawn here. This was
a conflict; but neither technically nor in the intention of the
contestants was it a fight. Penrod and Sam were both in a state of high
exasperation, and there was great bitterness; but no blows fell and no
tears. They strained, they wrenched, they twisted, and they panted and
muttered: "Oh, no, you don't!" "Oh, I guess I do!" "Oh, you will, will
you?" "You'll see what you get in about a minute!" "I guess you'll learn
some sense this time!"

Streaks and blotches began to appear upon the two faces, where colour
had been heightened by the ardent application of a cloth sleeve or
shoulder, while ankles and insteps were scraped and toes were trampled.
Turf and shrubberies suffered, also, as the struggle went on, until
finally the wrestlers pitched headlong into a young lilac bush, and came
to earth together, among its crushed and sprawling branches.

"OOCH!" and "WUF!" were the two exclamations which marked this episode,
and then, with no further comment, the struggle was energetically
continued upon a horizontal plane. Now Penrod was on top, now Sam; they
rolled, they squirmed, they suffered. And this contest endured. It went
on and on, and it was impossible to imagine its coming to a definite
termination. It went on so long that to both the participants it seemed
to be a permanent thing, a condition that had always existed and that
must always exist perpetually.

And thus they were discovered by a foray of the hostile party, headed
by Roddy Bitts and Herman (older brother to Verman) and followed by the
bonded prisoners, Maurice Levy and Georgie Bassett. These and others
caught sight of the writhing figures, and charged down upon them with
loud cries of triumph.

"Pris'ner! Pris'ner! Bonded pris'ner!" shrieked Roddy Bitts, and touched
Penrod and Sam, each in turn, with his sabre. Then, seeing that they
paid no attention and that they were at his mercy, he recalled the fact
that several times, during earlier stages of the game, both of them had
been unnecessarily vigorous in "touching" his own rather plump person.
Therefore, the opportunity being excellent, he raised his weapon again,
and, repeating the words "bonded pris'ner" as ample explanation of his
deed, brought into play the full strength of his good right arm. He used
the flat of the sabre.

WHACK! WHACK! Roddy was perfectly impartial. It was a cold-blooded
performance and even more effective than he anticipated. For one thing,
it ended the civil war instantly. Sam and Penrod leaped to their feet,
shrieking and bloodthirsty, while Maurice Levy capered with joy, Herman
was so overcome that he rolled upon the ground, and Georgie Bassett
remarked virtuously:

"It serves them right for fighting."

But Roddy Bitts foresaw that something not within the rules of the game
was about to happen.

"Here! You keep away from me!" he quavered, retreating. "I was just
takin' you pris'ners. I guess I had a right to TOUCH you, didn't I?"

Alas! Neither Sam nor Penrod was able to see the matter in that light.
They had retrieved their own weapons, and they advanced upon Roddy with
a purposefulness that seemed horrible to him.

"Here! You keep away from me!" he said, in great alarm. "I'm goin'
home."

He did go home--but only subsequently. What took place before his
departure had the singular solidity and completeness of systematic
violence; also, it bore the moral beauty of all actions that lead to
peace and friendship, for, when it was over, and the final vocalizations
of Roderick Magsworth Bitts, Junior, were growing faint with increasing
distance, Sam and Penrod had forgotten their differences and felt well
disposed toward each other once more. All their animosity was exhausted,
and they were in a glow of good feeling, though probably they were not
conscious of any direct gratitude to Roddy, whose thoughtful opportunism
was really the cause of this happy result.



CHAPTER II. THE BONDED PRISONER

After such rigorous events, every one comprehended that the game of
bonded prisoner was over, and there was no suggestion that it should or
might be resumed. The fashion of its conclusion had been so consummately
enjoyed by all parties (with the natural exception of Roddy Bitts) that
a renewal would have been tame; hence, the various minds of the company
turned to other matters and became restless. Georgie Bassett withdrew
first, remembering that if he expected to be as wonderful as usual,
to-morrow, in Sunday-school, it was time to prepare himself, though
this was not included in the statement he made alleging the cause of
his departure. Being detained bodily and pressed for explanation, he
desperately said that he had to go home to tease the cook--which had
the rakehelly air he thought would insure his release, but was not
considered plausible. However, he was finally allowed to go, and, as
first hints of evening were already cooling and darkening the air,
the party broke up, its members setting forth, whistling, toward their
several homes, though Penrod lingered with Sam. Herman was the last to
go from them.

"Well, I got git 'at stove-wood f' suppuh," he said, rising and
stretching himself. "I got git 'at lil' soap-box wagon, an' go on ovuh
wheres 'at new house buil'in' on Secon' Street; pick up few shingles an'
blocks layin' roun'."

He went through the yard toward the alley, and, at the alley gate,
remembering something, he paused and called to them. The lot was a
deep one, and they were too far away to catch his meaning. Sam shouted,
"Can't HEAR you!" and Herman replied, but still unintelligibly; then,
upon Sam's repetition of "Can't HEAR you!" Herman waved his arm in
farewell, implying that the matter was of little significance, and
vanished. But if they had understood him, Penrod and Sam might have
considered his inquiry of instant importance, for Herman's last shout
was to ask if either of them had noticed "where Verman went."

Verman and Verman's whereabouts were, at this hour, of no more concern
to Sam and Penrod than was the other side of the moon. That unfortunate
bonded prisoner had been long since utterly effaced from their fields
of consciousness, and the dark secret of their Bastille troubled them
not--for the main and simple reason that they had forgotten it.

They drifted indoors, and found Sam's mother's white cat drowsing on
a desk in the library, the which coincidence obviously inspired the
experiment of ascertaining how successfully ink could be used in making
a clean white cat look like a coach-dog. There was neither malice
nor mischief in their idea; simply, a problem presented itself to the
biological and artistic questionings beginning to stir within them.
They did not mean to do the cat the slightest injury or to cause her any
pain. They were above teasing cats, and they merely detained this one
and made her feel a little wet--at considerable cost to themselves from
both the ink and the cat. However, at the conclusion of their efforts,
it was thought safer to drop the cat out of the window before anybody
came, and, after some hasty work with blotters, the desk was moved to
cover certain sections of the rug, and the two boys repaired to the
bathroom for hot water and soap. They knew they had done nothing wrong;
but they felt easier when the only traces remaining upon them were the
less prominent ones upon their garments.

These precautions taken, it was time for them to make their appearance
at Penrod's house for dinner, for it had been arranged, upon petition
earlier in the day, that Sam should be his friend's guest for the
evening meal. Clean to the elbows and with light hearts, they set forth.
They marched, whistling--though not producing a distinctly musical
effect, since neither had any particular air in mind--and they found
nothing wrong with the world; they had not a care. Arrived at their
adjacent destination, they found Miss Margaret Schofield just entering
the front door.

"Hurry, boys!" she said. "Mamma came home long before I did, and I'm
sure dinner is waiting. Run on out to the dining-room and tell them I'll
be right down."

And, as they obeyed, she mounted the stairs, humming a little tune and
unfastening the clasp of the long, light-blue military cape she wore.
She went to her own quiet room, lit the gas, removed her hat and placed
it and the cape upon the bed; after which she gave her hair a push,
subsequent to her scrutiny of a mirror; then, turning out the light, she
went as far as the door. Being an orderly girl, she returned to the bed
and took the cape and the hat to her clothes-closet. She opened the
door of this sanctuary, and, in the dark, hung her cape upon a hook and
placed her hat upon the shelf. Then she closed the door again, having
noted nothing unusual, though she had an impression that the place
needed airing. She descended to the dinner table.

The other members of the family were already occupied with the meal, and
the visitor was replying politely, in his non-masticatory intervals, to
inquiries concerning the health of his relatives. So sweet and assured
was the condition of Sam and Penrod that Margaret's arrival from her
room meant nothing to them. Their memories were not stirred, and they
continued eating, their expressions brightly placid.

But from out of doors there came the sound of a calling and questing
voice, at first in the distance, then growing louder--coming nearer.

"Oh, Ver-er-man! O-o-o-oh, Ver-er-ma-a-an!"

It was the voice of Herman.

"OO-O-O-O-OH, VER-ER-ER-MA-A-A-AN!"

And then two boys sat stricken at that cheerful table and ceased to eat.
Recollection awoke with a bang!

"Oh, my!" Sam gasped.

"What's the matter?" Mr. Schofield said. "Swallow something the wrong
way, Sam?"

"Ye-es, sir."

"OO-O-O-O-OH, VER-ER-ER-MA-A-A-AN!"

And now the voice was near the windows of the dining-room.

Penrod, very pale, pushed back his chair and jumped up.

"What's the matter with YOU?" his father demanded. "Sit down!"

"It's Herman--that coloured boy lives in the alley," Penrod said
hoarsely. "I expect--I think--"

"Well, what's the matter?"

"I think his little brother's maybe got lost, and Sam and I better go
help look--"

"You'll do nothing of the kind," Mr. Schofield said sharply. "Sit down
and eat your dinner."

In a palsy, the miserable boy resumed his seat. He and Sam exchanged a
single dumb glance; then the eyes of both swung fearfully to Margaret.
Her appearance was one of sprightly content, and, from a certain point
of view, nothing could have been more alarming. If she had opened her
closet door without discovering Verman, that must have been because
Verman was dead and Margaret had failed to notice the body. (Such were
the thoughts of Penrod and Sam.) But she might not have opened the
closet door. And whether she had or not, Verman must still be there,
alive or dead, for if he had escaped he would have gone home, and their
ears would not be ringing with the sinister and melancholy cry that now
came from the distance, "Oo-o-oh, Ver-er-ma-an!"

Verman, in his seclusion, did not hear that appeal from his brother;
there were too many walls between them. But he was becoming impatient
for release, though, all in all, he had not found the confinement
intolerable or even very irksome. His character was philosophic, his
imagination calm; no bugaboos came to trouble him. When the boys closed
the door upon him, he made himself comfortable upon the floor and, for
a time, thoughtfully chewed a patent-leather slipper that had come under
his hand. He found the patent leather not unpleasant to his palate,
though he swallowed only a portion of what he detached, not being hungry
at that time. The soul-fabric of Verman was of a fortunate weave; he was
not a seeker and questioner. When it happened to him that he was at
rest in a shady corner, he did not even think about a place in the sun.
Verman took life as it came.

Naturally, he fell asleep. And toward the conclusion of his slumbers, he
had this singular adventure: a lady set her foot down within less than
half an inch of his nose--and neither of them knew it. Verman slept on,
without being wakened by either the closing or the opening of the
door. What did rouse him was something ample and soft falling upon
him--Margaret's cape, which slid from the hook after she had gone.

Enveloped in its folds, Verman sat up, corkscrewing his knuckles
into the corners of his eyes. Slowly he became aware of two important
vacuums--one in time and one in his stomach. Hours had vanished
strangely into nowhere; the game of bonded prisoner was something cloudy
and remote of the long, long ago, and, although Verman knew where
he was, he had partially forgotten how he came there. He perceived,
however, that something had gone wrong, for he was certain that he ought
not to be where he found himself.

WHITE-FOLKS' HOUSE! The fact that Verman could not have pronounced these
words rendered them no less clear in his mind; they began to stir
his apprehension, and nothing becomes more rapidly tumultuous than
apprehension once it is stirred. That he might possibly obtain release
by making a noise was too daring a thought and not even conceived,
much less entertained, by the little and humble Verman. For, with the
bewildering gap of his slumber between him and previous events, he did
not place the responsibility for his being in White-Folks' House upon
the white folks who had put him there. His state of mind was that of the
stable-puppy who knows he MUST not be found in the parlour. Not thrice
in his life had Verman been within the doors of White-Folks' House, and,
above all things, he felt that it was in some undefined way vital to him
to get out of White-Folks' House unobserved and unknown. It was in his
very blood to be sure of that.

Further than this point, the processes of Verman's mind become
mysterious to the observer. It appears, however, that he had a definite
(though somewhat primitive) conception of the usefulness of disguise;
and he must have begun his preparations before he heard footsteps in the
room outside his closed door.

These footsteps were Margaret's. Just as Mr. Schofield's coffee was
brought, and just after Penrod had been baffled in another attempt to
leave the table, Margaret rose and patted her father impertinently upon
the head.

"You can't bully ME that way!" she said. "I got home too late to dress,
and I'm going to a dance. 'Scuse!"

And she began her dancing on the spot, pirouetting herself swiftly out
of the room, and was immediately heard running up the stairs.

"Penrod!" Mr. Schofield shouted. "Sit down! How many times am I going to
tell you? What IS the matter with you to-night?"

"I GOT to go," Penrod gasped. "I got to tell Margaret sumpthing."

"What have you 'got' to tell her?"

"It's--it's sumpthing I forgot to tell her."

"Well, it will keep till she comes downstairs," Mr. Schofield said
grimly. "You sit down till this meal is finished."

Penrod was becoming frantic.

"I got to tell her--it's sumpthing Sam's mother told me to tell her,"
he babbled. "Didn't she, Sam? You heard her tell me to tell her; didn't
you, Sam?"

Sam offered prompt corroboration.

"Yes, sir; she did. She said for us both to tell her. I better go, too,
I guess, because she said--"

He was interrupted. Startlingly upon their ears rang shriek on shriek.
Mrs. Schofield, recognizing Margaret's voice, likewise shrieked, and Mr.
Schofield uttered various sounds; but Penrod and Sam were incapable of
doing anything vocally. All rushed from the table.

Margaret continued to shriek, and it is not to be denied that there
was some cause for her agitation. When she opened the closet door, her
light-blue military cape, instead of hanging on the hook where she had
left it, came out into the room in a manner that she afterward described
as "a kind of horrible creep, but faster than a creep." Nothing was to
be seen except the creeping cape, she said, but, of course, she could
tell there was some awful thing inside of it. It was too large to be a
cat, and too small to be a boy; it was too large to be Duke, Penrod's
little old dog, and, besides, Duke wouldn't act like that. It crept
rapidly out into the upper hall, and then, as she recovered the use of
her voice and began to scream, the animated cape abandoned its creeping
for a quicker gait--"a weird, heaving flop," she defined it.

The Thing then decided upon a third style of locomotion, evidently, for
when Sam and Penrod reached the front hall, a few steps in advance of
Mr. and Mrs. Schofield, it was rolling grandly down the stairs.

Mr. Schofield had only a hurried glimpse of it as it reached the bottom,
close by the front door.

"Grab that thing!" he shouted, dashing forward. "Stop it! Hit it!"

It was at this moment that Sam Williams displayed the presence of mind
that was his most eminent characteristic. Sam's wonderful instinct for
the right action almost never failed him in a crisis, and it did not
fail him now. Leaping to the door, at the very instant when the rolling
cape touched it, Sam flung the door open--and the cape rolled on. With
incredible rapidity and intelligence, it rolled, indeed, out into the
night.

Penrod jumped after it, and the next second reappeared in the doorway
holding the cape. He shook out its folds, breathing hard but acquiring
confidence. In fact, he was able to look up in his father's face and
say, with bright ingenuousness:

"It was just laying there. Do you know what I think? Well, it couldn't
have acted that way itself. I think there must have been sumpthing kind
of inside of it!"

Mr. Schofield shook his head slowly, in marvelling admiration.

"Brilliant--oh, brilliant!" he murmured, while Mrs. Schofield ran to
support the enfeebled form of Margaret at the top of the stairs.

... In the library, after Margaret's departure to her dance, Mr. and
Mrs. Schofield were still discussing the visitation, Penrod having
accompanied his homeward-bound guest as far as the front gate.

"No; you're wrong," Mrs. Schofield said, upholding a theory, earlier
developed by Margaret, that the animated behaviour of the cape could be
satisfactorily explained on no other ground than the supernatural. "You
see, the boys saying they couldn't remember what Mrs. Williams wanted
them to tell Margaret, and that probably she hadn't told them anything
to tell her, because most likely they'd misunderstood something she
said--well, of course, all that does sound mixed-up and peculiar;
but they sound that way about half the time, anyhow. No; it couldn't
possibly have had a thing to do with it. They were right there at the
table with us all the time, and they came straight to the table the
minute they entered the house. Before that, they'd been over at Sam's
all afternoon. So, it COULDN'T have been the boys." Mrs. Schofield
paused to ruminate with a little air of pride; then added: "Margaret has
often thought--oh, long before this!--that she was a medium. I mean--if
she would let her self. So it wasn't anything the boys did."

Mr. Schofield grunted.

"I'll admit this much," he said. "I'll admit it wasn't anything we'll
ever get out of 'em."

And the remarks of Sam and Penrod, taking leave of each other, one on
each side of the gate, appeared to corroborate Mr. Schofield's opinion.

"Well, g'-night, Penrod," Sam said. "It was a pretty good Saturday,
wasn't it?"

"Fine!" said Penrod casually. "G'-night, Sam."




CHAPTER III. THE MILITARIST

PENROD SCHOFIELD, having been "kept-in" for the unjust period of twenty
minutes after school, emerged to a deserted street. That is, the street
was deserted so far as Penrod was concerned. Here and there people were
to be seen upon the sidewalks, but they were adults, and they and the
shade trees had about the same quality of significance in Penrod's
consciousness. Usually he saw grown people in the mass, which is to say,
they were virtually invisible to him, though exceptions must be taken in
favour of policemen, firemen, street-car conductors, motormen, and all
other men in any sort of uniform or regalia. But this afternoon none
of these met the roving eye, and Penrod set out upon his homeward way
wholly dependent upon his own resources.

To one of Penrod's inner texture, a mere unadorned walk from one
point to another was intolerable, and he had not gone a block without
achieving some slight remedy for the tameness of life. An electric-light
pole at the corner, invested with powers of observation, might have been
surprised to find itself suddenly enacting a role of dubious honour in
improvised melodrama. Penrod, approaching, gave the pole a look of sharp
suspicion, then one of conviction; slapped it lightly and contemptuously
with his open hand; passed on a few paces, but turned abruptly, and,
pointing his right forefinger, uttered the symbolic word, "Bing!"

The plot was somewhat indefinite; yet nothing is more certain than that
the electric-light pole had first attempted something against him,
then growing bitter when slapped, and stealing after him to take him
treacherously in the back, had got itself shot through and through by
one too old in such warfare to be caught off his guard.

Leaving the body to lie where it was, he placed the smoking pistol in
a holster at his saddlebow--he had decided that he was mounted--and
proceeded up the street. At intervals he indulged himself in other
encounters, reining in at first suspicion of ambush with a muttered,
"Whoa, Charlie!" or "Whoa, Mike!" or even "Whoa, Washington!" for
preoccupation with the enemy outweighed attention to the details of
theatrical consistency, though the steed's varying names were at least
harmoniously masculine, since a boy, in these, creative moments, never
rides a mare. And having brought Charlie or Mike or Washington to
a standstill, Penrod would draw the sure weapon from its holster
and--"Bing! Bing! Bing!"--let them have it.

It is not to be understood that this was a noisy performance, or even an
obvious one. It attracted no attention from any pedestrian, and it
was to be perceived only that a boy was proceeding up the street at a
somewhat irregular gait. Three or four years earlier, when Penrod was
seven or eight, he would have shouted "Bing!" at the top of his voice;
he would have galloped openly; all the world might have seen that he
bestrode a charger. But a change had come upon him with advancing years.
Although the grown people in sight were indeed to him as walking trees,
his dramas were accomplished principally by suggestion and symbol.
His "Whoas" and "Bings" were delivered in a husky whisper, and his
equestrianism was established by action mostly of the mind, the
accompanying artistry of the feet being unintelligible to the passerby.

And yet, though he concealed from observation the stirring little scenes
he thus enacted, a love of realism was increasing within him. Early
childhood is not fastidious about the accessories of its drama--a cane
is vividly a gun which may instantly, as vividly, become a horse; but at
Penrod's time of life the lath sword is no longer satisfactory. Indeed,
he now had a vague sense that weapons of wood were unworthy to the point
of being contemptible and ridiculous, and he employed them only when
he was alone and unseen. For months a yearning had grown more and more
poignant in his vitals, and this yearning was symbolized by one of his
most profound secrets. In the inner pocket of his jacket, he carried a
bit of wood whittled into the distant likeness of a pistol, but not even
Sam Williams had seen it. The wooden pistol never knew the light of day,
save when Penrod was in solitude; and yet it never left his side
except at night, when it was placed under his pillow. Still, it did not
satisfy; it was but the token of his yearning and his dream. With all
his might and main Penrod longed for one thing beyond all others. He
wanted a Real Pistol!

That was natural. Pictures of real pistols being used to magnificently
romantic effect were upon almost all the billboards in town, the year
round, and as for the "movie" shows, they could not have lived an hour
unpistoled. In the drug store, where Penrod bought his candy and soda
when he was in funds, he would linger to turn the pages of periodicals
whose illustrations were fascinatingly pistolic. Some of the magazines
upon the very library table at home were sprinkled with pictures of
people (usually in evening clothes) pointing pistols at other people.
Nay, the Library Board of the town had emitted a "Selected List of
Fifteen Books for Boys," and Penrod had read fourteen of them with
pleasure, but as the fifteenth contained no weapons in the earlier
chapters and held forth little prospect of any shooting at all, he
abandoned it halfway, and read the most sanguinary of the other fourteen
over again. So, the daily food of his imagination being gun, what wonder
that he thirsted for the Real!

He passed from the sidewalk into his own yard, with a subdued "Bing!"
inflicted upon the stolid person of a gatepost, and, entering the house
through the kitchen, ceased to bing for a time. However, driven back
from the fore part of the house by a dismal sound of callers, he
returned to the kitchen and sat down.

"Della," he said to the cook, "do you know what I'd do if you was a
crook and I had my ottomatic with me?"

Della was industrious and preoccupied. "If I was a cook!" she repeated
ignorantly, and with no cordiality. "Well, I AM a cook. I'm a-cookin'
right now. Either g'wan in the house where y'b'long, or git out in th'
yard!"

Penrod chose the latter, and betook himself slowly to the back fence,
where he was greeted in a boisterous manner by his wistful little old
dog, Duke, returning from some affair of his own in the alley.

"Get down!" said Penrod coldly, and bestowed a spiritless "Bing!" upon
him.

At this moment a shout was heard from the alley, "Yay, Penrod!" and the
sandy head of comrade Sam Williams appeared above the fence.

"Come on over," said Penrod.

As Sam obediently climbed the fence, the little old dog, Duke, moved
slowly away, but presently, glancing back over his shoulder and seeing
the two boys standing together, he broke into a trot and disappeared
round a corner of the house. He was a dog of long and enlightening
experience; and he made it clear that the conjunction of Penrod and Sam
portended events which, from his point of view, might be unfortunate.
Duke had a forgiving disposition, but he also possessed a melancholy
wisdom. In the company of either Penrod or Sam, alone, affection often
caused him to linger, albeit with a little pessimism, but when he saw
them together, he invariably withdrew in as unobtrusive a manner as
haste would allow.

"What you doin'?" Sam asked.

"Nothin'. What you?"

"I'll show you if you'll come over to our house," said Sam, who was
wearing an important and secretive expression.

"What for?" Penrod showed little interest.

"Well, I said I'd show you if you came on over, didn't I?"

"But you haven't got anything I haven't got," said Penrod indifferently.
"I know everything that's in your yard and in your stable, and there
isn't a thing--"

"I didn't say it was in the yard or in the stable, did I?"

"Well, there ain't anything in your house," returned Penrod frankly,
"that I'd walk two feet to look at--not a thing!"

"Oh, no!" Sam assumed mockery. "Oh, no, you wouldn't! You know what it
is, don't you? Yes, you do!" Penrod's curiosity stirred somewhat. "Well,
all right," he said, "I got nothin' to do. I just as soon go. What is
it?"

"You wait and see," said Sam, as they climbed the fence. "I bet YOUR ole
eyes'll open pretty far in about a minute or so!"

"I bet they don't. It takes a good deal to get me excited, unless it's
sumpthing mighty--"

"You'll see!" Sam promised.

He opened an alley, gate and stepped into his own yard in a manner
signalling caution--though the exploit, thus far, certainly required
none and Penrod began to be impressed and hopeful. They entered the
house, silently, encountering no one, and Sam led the way upstairs,
tiptoeing, implying unusual and increasing peril. Turning, in the upper
hall, they went into Sam's father's bedroom, and Sam closed the door
with a caution so genuine that already Penrod's eyes began to fulfil his
host's prediction. Adventures in another boy's house are trying to the
nerves; and another boy's father's bedroom, when invaded, has a violated
sanctity that is almost appalling. Penrod felt that something was about
to happen--something much more important than he had anticipated.

Sam tiptoed across the room to a chest of drawers, and, kneeling,
carefully pulled out the lowest drawer until the surface of its
contents--Mr. Williams' winter underwear--lay exposed. Then he fumbled
beneath the garments and drew forth a large object, displaying it
triumphantly to the satisfactorily dumfounded Penrod.

It was a blue-steel Colt's revolver, of the heaviest pattern made in the
Seventies. Mr. Williams had inherited it from Sam's grandfather (a small
man, a deacon, and dyspeptic) and it was larger and more horrible than
any revolver either of the boys had ever seen in any picture, moving or
stationary. Moreover, greenish bullets of great size were to be seen
in the chambers of the cylinder, suggesting massacre rather than mere
murder. This revolver was Real and it was Loaded!



CHAPTER IV. BINGISM

Both boys lived breathlessly through a magnificent moment.

"Leave me have it!" gasped Penrod. "Leave me have hold of it!"

"You wait a minute!" Sam protested, in a whisper. "I want to show you
how I do."

"No; you let me show you how _I_ do!" Penrod insisted; and they scuffled
for possession.

"Look out!" Sam whispered warningly. "It might go off."

"Then you better leave me have it!" And Penrod, victorious and flushed,
stepped back, the weapon in his grasp. "Here," he said, "this is the way
I do: You be a crook; and suppose you got a dagger, and I--"

"I don't want any dagger," Sam protested, advancing. "I want that
revolaver. It's my father's revolaver, ain't it?"

"Well, WAIT a minute, can't you? I got a right to show you the way I DO,
first, haven't I?" Penrod began an improvisation on the spot. "Say I'm
comin' along after dark like this--look, Sam! And say you try to make a
jump at me--"

"I won't!" Sam declined this role impatiently. "I guess it ain't YOUR
father's revolaver, is it?"

"Well, it may be your father's but it ain't yours," Penrod argued,
becoming logical. "It ain't either'r of us revolaver, so I got as much
right--"

"You haven't either. It's my fath--"

"WATCH, can't you--just a minute!" Penrod urged vehemently. "I'm not
goin' to keep it, am I? You can have it when I get through, can't you?
Here's how _I_ do: I'm comin' along after dark, just walkin' along this
way--like this--look, Sam!"

Penrod, suiting the action to the word, walked to the other end of the
room, swinging the revolver at his side with affected carelessness.

"I'm just walkin' along like this, and first I don't see you," continued
the actor. "Then I kind of get a notion sumpthing wrong's liable to
happen, so I--No!" He interrupted himself abruptly. "No; that isn't
it. You wouldn't notice that I had my good ole revolaver with me. You
wouldn't think I had one, because it'd be under my coat like this, and
you wouldn't see it." Penrod stuck the muzzle of the pistol into the
waistband of his knickerbockers at the left side and, buttoning his
jacket, sustained the weapon in concealment by pressure of his elbow.
"So you think I haven't got any; you think I'm just a man comin' along,
and so you--"

Sam advanced. "Well, you've had your turn," he said. "Now, it's mine.
I'm goin' to show you how I--"

"WATCH me, can't you?" Penrod wailed. "I haven't showed you how _I_ do,
have I? My goodness! Can't you watch me a minute?"

"I HAVE been! You said yourself it'd be my turn soon as you--"

"My goodness! Let me have a CHANCE, can't you?" Penrod retreated to the
wall, turning his right side toward Sam and keeping the revolver still
protected under his coat. "I got to have my turn first, haven't I?"

"Well, yours is over long ago."

"It isn't either! I--"

"Anyway," said Sam decidedly, clutching him by the right shoulder and
endeavouring to reach his left side--"anyway, I'm goin' to have it now."

"You said I could have my turn out!" Penrod, carried away by
indignation, raised his voice.

"I did not!" Sam, likewise lost to caution, asserted his denial loudly.

"You did, too."

"You said--"

"I never said anything!"

"You said--Quit that!"

"Boys!" Mrs. Williams, Sam's mother, opened the door of the room
and stood upon the threshold. The scuffling of Sam and Penrod ceased
instantly, and they stood hushed and stricken, while fear fell upon
them. "Boys, you weren't quarrelling, were you?"

"Ma'am?" said Sam.

"Were you quarrelling with Penrod?"

"No, ma'am," answered Sam in a small voice.

"It sounded like it. What was the matter?"

Both boys returned her curious glance with meekness. They were summoning
their faculties--which were needed. Indeed, these are the crises which
prepare a boy for the business difficulties of his later life. Penrod,
with the huge weapon beneath his jacket, insecurely supported by
an elbow and by a waistband which he instantly began to distrust,
experienced distressful sensations similar to those of the owner of too
heavily insured property carrying a gasoline can under his overcoat and
detained for conversation by a policeman. And if, in the coming years
it was to be Penrod's lot to find himself in that precise situation, no
doubt he would be the better prepared for it on account of this present
afternoon's experience under the scalding eye of Mrs. Williams. It
should be added that Mrs. Williams's eye was awful to the imagination
only. It was a gentle eye and but mildly curious, having no remote
suspicion of the dreadful truth, for Sam had backed upon the chest of
drawers and closed the damnatory open one with the calves of his legs.

Sam, not bearing the fatal evidence upon his person, was in a better
state than Penrod, though when boys fall into the stillness now assumed
by these two, it should be understood that they are suffering. Penrod,
in fact, was the prey to apprehension so keen that the actual pit of his
stomach was cold.

Being the actual custodian of the crime, he understood that his case
was several degrees more serious than that of Sam, who, in the event of
detection, would be convicted as only an accessory. It was a lesson, and
Penrod already repented his selfishness in not allowing Sam to show how
he did, first.

"You're sure you weren't quarrelling, Sam?" said Mrs. Williams.

"No, ma'am; we were just talking."

Still she seemed dimly uneasy, and her eye swung to Penrod.

"What were you and Sam talking about, Penrod!"

"Ma'am?"

"What were you talking about?"

Penrod gulped invisibly.

"Well," he murmured, "it wasn't much. Different things."

"What things?"

"Oh, just sumpthing. Different things."

"I'm glad you weren't quarrelling," said Mrs. Williams, reassured by
this reply, which, though somewhat baffling, was thoroughly familiar to
her ear. "Now, if you'll come downstairs, I'll give you each one cookie
and no more, so your appetites won't be spoiled for your dinners."

She stood, evidently expecting them to precede her. To linger might
renew vague suspicion, causing it to become more definite; and boys
preserve themselves from moment to moment, not often attempting
to secure the future. Consequently, the apprehensive Sam and the
unfortunate Penrod (with the monstrous implement bulking against his
ribs) walked out of the room and down the stairs, their countenances
indicating an interior condition of solemnity. And a curious shade of
behaviour might have here interested a criminologist. Penrod endeavoured
to keep as close to Sam as possible, like a lonely person seeking
company, while, on the other hand, Sam kept moving away from Penrod,
seeming to desire an appearance of aloofness.

"Go into the library, boys," said Mrs. Williams, as the three reached
the foot of the stairs. "I'll bring you your cookies. Papa's in there."

Under her eye the two entered the library, to find Mr. Williams reading
his evening paper. He looked up pleasantly, but it seemed to Penrod that
he had an ominous and penetrating expression.

"What have you been up to, you boys?" inquired this enemy.

"Nothing," said Sam. "Different things."

"What like?"

"Oh--just different things."


Mr. Williams nodded; then his glance rested casually upon Penrod.

"What's the matter with your arm, Penrod?"

Penrod became paler, and Sam withdrew from him almost conspicuously.

"Sir?"

"I said, What's the matter with your arm?"

"Which one?" Penrod quavered.

"Your left. You seem to be holding it at an unnatural position. Have you
hurt it?"

Penrod swallowed. "Yes, sir. A boy bit me--I mean a dog--a dog bit me."

Mr. Williams murmured sympathetically: "That's too bad! Where did he
bite you?"

"On the--right on the elbow."

"Good gracious! Perhaps you ought to have it cauterized."

"Sir?"

"Did you have a doctor look at it?"

"No, sir. My mother put some stuff from the drug store on it."

"Oh, I see. Probably it's all right, then."

"Yes, sir." Penrod drew breath more freely, and accepted the warm cookie
Mrs. Williams brought him. He ate it without relish.

"You can have only one apiece," she said. "It's too near dinner-time.
You needn't beg for any more, because you can't have 'em."

They were good about that; they were in no frame of digestion for
cookies.

"Was it your own dog that bit you?" Mr. Williams inquired.

"Sir? No, sir. It wasn't Duke."

"Penrod!" Mrs. Williams exclaimed. "When did it happen?"

"I don't remember just when," he answered feebly. "I guess it was day
before yesterday."

"Gracious! How did it--"

"He--he just came up and bit me."

"Why, that's terrible! It might be dangerous for other children," said
Mrs. Williams, with a solicitous glance at Sam. "Don't you know whom he
belongs to?"

"No'm. It was just a dog."

"You poor boy! Your mother must have been dreadfully frightened when you
came home and she saw--"

She was interrupted by the entrance of a middle-aged coloured woman.
"Miz Williams," she began, and then, as she caught sight of Penrod, she
addressed him directly, "You' ma telefoam if you here, send you home
right away, 'cause they waitin' dinner on you."

"Run along, then," said Mrs. Williams, patting the visitor lightly upon
his shoulder; and she accompanied him to the front door. "Tell your
mother I'm so sorry about your getting bitten, and you must take good
care of it, Penrod."

"Yes'm."

Penrod lingered helplessly outside the doorway, looking at Sam, who
stood partially obscured in the hall, behind Mrs. Williams. Penrod's
eyes, with veiled anguish, conveyed a pleading for help as well as a
horror of the position in which he found himself. Sam, however, pale and
determined, seemed to have assumed a stony attitude of detachment, as if
it were well understood between them that his own comparative innocence
was established, and that whatever catastrophe ensued, Penrod had
brought it on and must bear the brunt of it alone.

"Well, you'd better run along, since they're waiting for you at home,"
said Mrs. Williams, closing the door. "Good-night, Penrod."

... Ten minutes later Penrod took his place at his own dinner-table,
somewhat breathless but with an expression of perfect composure.

"Can't you EVER come home without being telephoned for?" demanded his
father.

"Yes, sir." And Penrod added reproachfully, placing the blame upon
members of Mr. Schofield's own class, "Sam's mother and father kept me,
or I'd been home long ago. They would keep on talkin', and I guess I had
to be POLITE, didn't I?"

His left arm was as free as his right; there was no dreadful bulk
beneath his jacket, and at Penrod's age the future is too far away to
be worried about the difference between temporary security and permanent
security is left for grown people. To Penrod, security was security, and
before his dinner was half eaten his spirit had become fairly serene.

Nevertheless, when he entered the empty carriage-house of the stable,
on his return from school the next afternoon, his expression was not
altogether without apprehension, and he stood in the doorway looking
well about him before he lifted a loosened plank in the flooring and
took from beneath it the grand old weapon of the Williams family. Not
did his eye lighten with any pleasurable excitement as he sat himself
down in a shadowy corner and began some sketchy experiments with
the mechanism. The allure of first sight was gone. In Mr. Williams'
bedchamber, with Sam clamouring for possession, it had seemed to Penrod
that nothing in the world was so desirable as to have that revolver
in his own hands--it was his dream come true. But, for reasons not
definitely known to him, the charm had departed; he turned the cylinder
gingerly, almost with distaste; and slowly there stole over him a
feeling that there was something repellent and threatening in the heavy
blue steel.

Thus does the long-dreamed Real misbehave--not only for Penrod!

More out of a sense of duty to bingism in general than for any other
reason, he pointed the revolver at the lawn-mower, and gloomily
murmured, "Bing!"

Simultaneously, a low and cautious voice sounded from the yard outside,
"Yay, Penrod!" and Sam Williams darkened the doorway, his eye falling
instantly upon the weapon in his friend's hand. Sam seemed relieved to
see it.

"You didn't get caught with it, did you?" he said hastily.

Penrod shook his head, rising.

"I guess not! I guess I got SOME brains around me," he added, inspired
by Sam's presence to assume a slight swagger. "They'd have to get up
pretty early to find any good ole revolaver, once I got MY hands on it!"

"I guess we can keep it, all right," Sam said confidentially. "Because
this morning papa was putting on his winter underclothes and he found it
wasn't there, and they looked all over and everywhere, and he was pretty
mad, and said he knew it was those cheap plumbers stole it that mamma
got instead of the regular plumbers he always used to have, and he said
there wasn't any chance ever gettin' it back, because you couldn't tell
which one took it, and they'd all swear it wasn't them. So it looks like
we could keep it for our revolaver, Penrod, don't it? I'll give you half
of it."

Penrod affected some enthusiasm. "Sam, we'll keep it out here in the
stable."

"Yes, and we'll go huntin' with it. We'll do lots of things with it!"
But Sam made no effort to take it, and neither boy seemed to feel
yesterday's necessity to show the other how he did. "Wait till next
Fourth o' July!" Sam continued. "Oh, oh! Look out!"

This incited a genuine spark from Penrod.

"Fourth o' July! I guess she'll be a little better than any
firecrackers! Just a little 'Bing!' Bing! Bing!' she'll be goin'. 'Bing!
Bing! Bing!'"

The suggestion of noise stirred his comrade. "I'll bet she'll go off
louder'n that time the gas-works blew up! I wouldn't be afraid to shoot
her off ANY time."

"I bet you would," said Penrod. "You aren't used to revolavers the way
I--"

"You aren't, either!" Sam exclaimed promptly, "I wouldn't be any more
afraid to shoot her off than you would."

"You would, too!"

"I would not!"

"Well, let's see you then; you talk so much!" And Penrod handed the
weapon scornfully to Sam, who at once became less self-assertive.

"I'd shoot her off in a minute," Sam said, "only it might break
sumpthing if it hit it."

"Hold her up in the air, then. It can't hurt the roof, can it?"

Sam, with a desperate expression, lifted the revolver at arm's length.
Both boys turned away their heads, and Penrod put his fingers in his
ears--but nothing happened. "What's the matter?" he demanded. "Why don't
you go on if you're goin' to?"

Sam lowered his arm. "I guess I didn't have her cocked," he said
apologetically, whereupon Penrod loudly jeered.

"Tryin' to shoot a revolaver and didn't know enough to cock her! If I
didn't know any more about revolavers than that, I'd--"

"There!" Sam exclaimed, managing to draw back the hammer until two
chilling clicks warranted his opinion that the pistol was now ready to
perform its office. "I guess she'll do all right to suit you THIS time!"

"Well, whyn't you go ahead, then; you know so much!" And as Sam raised
his arm, Penrod again turned away his head and placed his forefingers in
his ears.

A pause followed.

"Why'n't you go ahead?"

Penrod, after waiting in keen suspense, turned to behold his friend
standing with his right arm above his head, his left hand over his left
ear, and both eyes closed.

"I can't pull the trigger," said Sam indistinctly, his face convulsed as
in sympathy with the great muscular efforts of other parts of his body.
"She won't pull!"

"She won't?" Penrod remarked with scorn. "I'll bet _I_ could pull her."

Sam promptly opened his eyes and handed the weapon to Penrod.

"All right," he said, with surprising and unusual mildness. "You try
her, then."

Inwardly discomfited to a disagreeable extent, Penrod attempted to talk
his own misgivings out of countenance.

"Poor 'ittle baby!" he said, swinging the pistol at his side with a fair
pretense of careless ease. "Ain't even strong enough to pull a trigger!
Poor 'ittle baby! Well, if you can't even do that much, you better watch
me while _I_--"

"Well," said Sam reasonably, "why don't you go on and do it then?"

"Well, I AM goin' to, ain't I?"

"Well, then, why don't you?"

"Oh, I'll do it fast enough to suit YOU, I guess," Penrod retorted,
swinging the big revolver up a little higher than his shoulder and
pointing it in the direction of the double doors, which opened upon the
alley. "You better run, Sam," he jeered. "You'll be pretty scared when I
shoot her off, I guess."

"Well, why don't you SEE if I will? I bet you're afraid yourself."

"Oh, I am, am I?" said Penrod, in a reckless voice--and his finger
touched the trigger. It seemed to him that his finger no more than
touched it; perhaps he had been reassured by Sam's assertion that the
trigger was difficult. His intentions must remain in doubt, and probably
Penrod himself was not certain of them; but one thing comes to the
surface as entirely definite--that trigger was not so hard to pull as
Sam said it was.

BANG! WH-A-A-ACK! A shattering report split the air of the stable, and
there was an orifice of remarkable diameter in the alley door. With
these phenomena, three yells, expressing excitement of different kinds,
were almost simultaneous--two from within the stable and the third from
a point in the alley about eleven inches lower than the orifice just
constructed in the planking of the door. This third point, roughly
speaking, was the open mouth of a gayly dressed young coloured man whose
attention, as he strolled, had been thus violently distracted from some
mental computations he was making in numbers, including, particularly,
those symbols at ecstasy or woe, as the case might be, seven and eleven.
His eye at once perceived the orifice on a line enervatingly little
above the top of his head; and, although he had not supposed himself
so well known in this neighbourhood, he was aware that he did, here and
there, possess acquaintances of whom some such uncomplimentary action
might be expected as natural and characteristic. His immediate procedure
was to prostrate himself flat upon the ground, against the stable doors.

In so doing, his shoulders came brusquely in contact with one of them,
which happened to be unfastened, and it swung open, revealing to his
gaze two stark-white white boys, one of them holding an enormous pistol
and both staring at him in stupor of ultimate horror. For, to the glassy
eyes of Penrod and Sam, the stratagem of the young coloured man, thus
dropping to earth, disclosed, with awful certainty, a slaughtered body.

This dreadful thing raised itself upon its elbows and looked at them,
and there followed a motionless moment--a tableau of brief duration, for
both boys turned and would have fled, shrieking, but the body spoke:

"'At's a nice business!" it said reproachfully. "Nice business! Tryin'
blow a man's head off!"

Penrod was unable to speak, but Sam managed to summon the tremulous
semblance of a voice. "Where--where did it hit you?" he gasped.

"Nemmine anything 'bout where it HIT me," the young coloured man
returned, dusting his breast and knees as he rose. "I want to know what
kine o' white boys you think you is--man can't walk 'long street
'thout you blowin' his head off!" He entered the stable and, with an
indignation surely justified, took the pistol from the limp, cold hand
of Penrod. "Whose gun you playin' with? Where you git 'at gun?"

"It's ours," quavered Sam. "It belongs to us."

"Then you' pa ought to be 'rested," said the young coloured man.
"Lettin' boys play with gun!" He examined the revolver with an interest
in which there began to appear symptoms of a pleasurable appreciation.
"My goo'ness! Gun like'iss blow a team o' steers thew a brick house!
LOOK at 'at gun!" With his right hand he twirled it in a manner most
dexterous and surprising; then suddenly he became severe. "You white
boy, listen me!" he said. "Ef I went an did what I OUGHT to did, I'd
march straight out 'iss stable, git a policeman, an' tell him 'rest you
an' take you off to jail. 'At's what you need--blowin' man's head off!
Listen me: I'm goin' take 'iss gun an' th'ow her away where you can't do
no mo' harm with her. I'm goin' take her way off in the woods an' th'ow
her away where can't nobody fine her an' go blowin' man's head off with
her. 'At's what I'm goin' do!" And placing the revolver inside his coat
as inconspicuously as possible, he proceeded to the open door and into
the alley, where he turned for a final word. "I let you off 'iss one
time," he said, "but listen me--you listen, white boy: you bet' not tell
you' pa. _I_ ain' goin' tell him, an' YOU ain' goin' tell him. He want
know where gun gone, you tell him you los' her."

He disappeared rapidly.

Sam Williams, swallowing continuously, presently walked to the alley
door, and remarked in a weak voice, "I'm sick at my stummick." He
paused, then added more decidedly: "I'm goin' home. I guess I've stood
about enough around here for one day!" And bestowing a last glance upon
his friend, who was now sitting dumbly upon the floor in the exact spot
where he had stood to fire the dreadful shot, Sam moved slowly away.

The early shades of autumn evening were falling when Penrod emerged from
the stable; and a better light might have disclosed to a shrewd eye some
indications that here was a boy who had been extremely, if temporarily,
ill. He went to the cistern, and, after a cautious glance round the
reassuring horizon, lifted the iron cover. Then he took from the inner
pocket of his jacket an object which he dropped listlessly into the
water: it was a bit of wood, whittled to the likeness of a pistol. And
though his lips moved not, nor any sound issued from his vocal organs,
yet were words formed. They were so deep in the person of Penrod they
came almost from the slowly convalescing profundities of his stomach.
These words concerned firearms, and they were:

"Wish I'd never seen one! Never want to see one again!"

Of course Penrod had no way of knowing that, as regards bingism in
general, several of the most distinguished old gentlemen in Europe were
at that very moment in exactly the same state of mind.



CHAPTER V. THE IN-OR-IN

Georgie Bassett was a boy set apart. Not only that; Georgie knew that he
was a boy set apart. He would think about it for ten or twenty minutes
at a time, and he could not look at himself in a mirror and remain
wholly without emotion. What that emotion was, he would have been unable
to put into words; but it helped him to understand that there was a
certain noble something about him that other boys did not possess.

Georgie's mother had been the first to discover that Georgie was a
boy set apart. In fact, Georgie did not know it until one day when he
happened to overhear his mother telling two of his aunts about it.
True, he had always understood that he was the best boy in town and
he intended to be a minister when he grew up; but he had never before
comprehended the full extent of his sanctity, and, from that fraught
moment onward, he had an almost theatrical sense of his set-apartness.

Penrod Schofield and Sam Williams and the other boys of the
neighbourhood all were conscious that there was something different and
spiritual about Georgie, and, though this consciousness of theirs may
have been a little obscure, it was none the less actual. That is to say,
they knew that Georgie Bassett was a boy set apart; but they did
not know that they knew it. Georgie's air and manner at all times
demonstrated to them that the thing was so, and, moreover, their mothers
absorbed appreciation of Georgie's wonderfulness from the very fount
of it, for Mrs. Bassett's conversation was of little else. Thus, the
radiance of his character became the topic of envious parental comment
during moments of strained patience in many homes, so that altogether
the most remarkable fact to be stated of Georgie Bassett is that he
escaped the consequences as long as he did.

Strange as it may seem, no actual violence was done him, except upon the
incidental occasion of a tar-fight into which he was drawn by an obvious
eccentricity on the part of destiny. Naturally, he was not popular with
his comrades; in all games he was pushed aside, and disregarded, being
invariably the tail-ender in every pastime in which leaders "chose
sides"; his counsels were slighted as worse than weightless, and all his
opinions instantly hooted. Still, considering the circumstances fairly
and thoughtfully, it is difficult to deny that his boy companions showed
creditable moderation in their treatment of him. That is, they were
moderate up to a certain date, and even then they did not directly
attack him--there was nothing cold--blooded about it at all. The
thing was forced upon them, and, though they all felt pleased and
uplifted--while it was happening--they did not understand precisely why.
Nothing could more clearly prove their innocence of heart than this very
ignorance, and yet none of the grown people who later felt themselves
concerned in the matter was able to look at it in that light. Now, here
was a characteristic working of those reactions that produce what is
sometimes called "the injustice of life", because the grown people were
responsible for the whole affair and were really the guilty parties.
It was from grown people that Georgie Bassett learned he was a boy set
apart, and the effect upon him was what alienated his friends. Then
these alienated friends were brought (by odious comparisons on the
part of grown people) to a condition of mind wherein they suffered
dumb annoyance, like a low fever, whenever they heard Georgie's name
mentioned, while association with his actual person became every day
more and more irritating. And yet, having laid this fuse and having kept
it constantly glowing, the grown people expected nothing to happen to
Georgie.

The catastrophe befell as a consequence of Sam Williams deciding to have
a shack in his backyard. Sam had somehow obtained a vasty piano-box and
a quantity of lumber, and, summoning Penrod Schofield and the coloured
brethren, Herman and Verman, he expounded to them his building-plans
and offered them shares and benefits in the institution he proposed to
found. Acceptance was enthusiastic; straightway the assembly became
a union of carpenters all of one mind, and ten days saw the shack not
completed but comprehensible. Anybody could tell, by that time, that it
was intended for a shack.

There was a door on leather hinges; it drooped, perhaps, but it was a
door. There was a window--not a glass one, but, at least, it could be
"looked out of", as Sam said. There was a chimney made of stovepipe,
though that was merely decorative, because the cooking was done out of
doors in an underground "furnace" that the boys excavated. There were
pictures pasted on the interior walls, and, hanging from a nail, there
was a crayon portrait of Sam's grandfather, which he had brought down
from the attic quietly, though, as he said, it "wasn't any use on earth
up there." There were two lame chairs from Penrod's attic and along
one wall ran a low and feeble structure intended to serve as a bench or
divan. This would come in handy, Sam said, if any of the party "had
to lay down or anything", and at a pinch (such as a meeting of the
association) it would serve to seat all the members in a row.

For, coincidentally with the development of the shack, the builders
became something more than partners. Later, no one could remember who
first suggested the founding of a secret order, or society, as a measure
of exclusiveness and to keep the shack sacred to members only; but it
was an idea that presently began to be more absorbing and satisfactory
than even the shack itself. The outward manifestations of it might
have been observed in the increased solemnity and preoccupation of the
Caucasian members and in a few ceremonial observances exposed to the
public eye. As an instance of these latter, Mrs. Williams, happening to
glance from a rearward window, about four o'clock one afternoon, found
her attention arrested by what seemed to be a flag-raising before the
door of the shack. Sam and Herman and Verman stood in attitudes of rigid
attention, shoulder to shoulder, while Penrod Schofield, facing them,
was apparently delivering some sort of exhortation, which he read from a
scribbled sheet of foolscap. Concluding this, he lifted from the ground
a long and somewhat warped clothes-prop, from one end of which hung
a whitish flag, or pennon, bearing an inscription. Sam and Herman and
Verman lifted their right hands, while Penrod placed the other end of
the clothes-prop in a hole in the ground, with the pennon fluttering
high above the shack. He then raised his own right hand, and the four
boys repeated something in concert. It was inaudible to Mrs. Williams;
but she was able to make out the inscription upon the pennon. It
consisted of the peculiar phrase "In-Or-In" done in black paint upon a
muslin ground, and consequently seeming to be in need of a blotter.

It recurred to her mind, later that evening, when she happened to find
herself alone with Sam in the library, and, in merest idle curiosity,
she asked: "Sam, what does 'In-Or-In' mean?"

Sam, bending over an arithmetic, uncreased his brow till it became of a
blank and marble smoothness.

"Ma'am?"

"What are those words on your flag?"

Sam gave her a long, cold, mystic look, rose to his feet and left the
room with emphasis and dignity. For a moment she was puzzled. But Sam's
older brother was this year completing his education at a university,
and Mrs. Williams was not altogether ignorant of the obligations of
secrecy imposed upon some brotherhoods; so she was able to comprehend
Sam's silent withdrawal, and, instead of summoning him back for further
questions, she waited until he was out of hearing and then began to
laugh.

Sam's action was in obedience to one of the rules adopted, at his own
suggestion, as a law of the order. Penrod advocated it warmly. From
Margaret he had heard accounts of her friends in college and thus had
learned much that ought to be done. On the other hand, Herman subscribed
to it with reluctance, expressing a decided opinion that if he and
Verman were questioned upon the matter at home and adopted the line of
conduct required by the new rule, it would be well for them to depart
not only from the room in which the questioning took place but from the
house, and hurriedly at that. "An' STAY away!" he concluded.

Verman, being tongue-tied--not without advantage in this case, and
surely an ideal qualification for membership--was not so apprehensive.
He voted with Sam and Penrod, carrying the day.

New rules were adopted at every meeting (though it cannot be said
that all of them were practicable) for, in addition to the information
possessed by Sam and Penrod, Herman and Verman had many ideas of their
own, founded upon remarks overheard at home. Both their parents belonged
to secret orders, their father to the Innapenent 'Nevolent Lodge (so
stated by Herman) and their mother to the Order of White Doves.

From these and other sources, Penrod found no difficulty in compiling
material for what came to be known as the "rixual"; and it was the
rixual he was reading to the members when Mrs. Williams happened to
observe the ceremonial raising of the emblem of the order.

The rixual contained the oath, a key to the secret language, or code
(devised by Penrod for use in uncertain emergencies) and passwords for
admission to the shack, also instructions for recognizing a brother
member in the dark, and a rather alarming sketch of the things to be
done during the initiation of a candidate.

This last was employed for the benefit of Master Roderick Magsworth
Bitts, Junior, on the Saturday following the flag-raising. He presented
himself in Sam's yard, not for initiation, indeed--having no previous
knowledge of the Society of the In-Or-In--but for general purposes
of sport and pastime. At first sight of the shack he expressed
anticipations of pleasure, adding some suggestions for improving the
architectural effect. Being prevented, however, from entering, and even
from standing in the vicinity of the sacred building, he plaintively
demanded an explanation; whereupon he was commanded to withdraw to the
front yard for a time, and the members held meeting in the shack. Roddy
was elected, and consented to undergo the initiation.

He was not the only new member that day. A short time after Roddy
had been taken into the shack for the reading of the rixual and other
ceremonies, little Maurice Levy entered the Williams' gate and strolled
round to the backyard, looking for Sam. He was surprised and delighted
to behold the promising shack, and, like Roddy, entertained fair hopes
for the future.

The door of the shack was closed; a board covered the window, but a
murmur of voices came from within. Maurice stole close and listened.
Through a crack he could see the flicker of a candle-flame, and he heard
the voice of Penrod Schofield:

"Roddy Bitts, do you solemnly swear?"

"Well, all right," said the voice of Roddy, somewhat breathless.

"How many fingers you see before your eyes?"

"Can't see any," Roddy returned. "How could I, with this thing over my
eyes, and laying down on my stummick, anyway?"

"Then the time has come," Penrod announced in solemn tones. "The time
has come."

Whack!

Evidently a broad and flat implement was thereupon applied to Roddy.

"OW!" complained the candidate.

"No noise!" said Penrod sternly, and added: "Roddy Bitts must now say
the oath. Say exackly what I say, Roddy, and if you don't--well, you
better, because you'll see! Now, say 'I solemnly swear--'"

"I solemnly swear--" Roddy said.

"To keep the secrets--"

"To keep the secrets--" Roddy repeated.

"To keep the secrets in infadelaty and violate and sanctuary."

"What?" Roddy naturally inquired.

Whack!

"OW!" cried Roddy. "That's no fair!"

"You got to say just what _I_ say," Penrod was heard informing him.
"That's the rixual, and anyway, even if you do get it right, Verman's
got to hit you every now and then, because that's part of the rixual,
too. Now go on and say it. 'I solemnly swear to keep the secrets in
infadelaty and violate and sanctuary."'

"I solemnly swear--" Roddy began.

But Maurice Levy was tired of being no party to such fascinating
proceedings, and he began to hammer upon the door.

"Sam! Sam Williams!" he shouted. "Lemme in there! I know lots about
'nishiatin'. Lemme in!"

The door was flung open, revealing Roddy Bitts, blindfolded and bound,
lying face down upon the floor of the shack; but Maurice had only a
fugitive glimpse of this pathetic figure before he, too, was recumbent.
Four boys flung themselves indignantly upon him and bore him to earth.

"Hi!" he squealed. "What you doin'? Haven't you got any SENSE?"

And, from within the shack, Roddy added his own protest.

"Let me up, can't you?" he cried. "I got to see what's goin' on out
there, haven't I? I guess I'm not goin' to lay here all DAY! What you
think I'm made of?"

"You hush up!" Penrod commanded. "This is a nice biznuss!" he continued,
deeply aggrieved. "What kind of a 'nishiation do you expect this is,
anyhow?"

"Well, here's Maurice Levy gone and seen part of the secrets," said Sam,
in a voice of equal plaintiveness. "Yes; and I bet he was listenin' out
here, too!"

"Lemme up!" begged Maurice, half stifled. "I didn't do any harm to your
old secrets, did I? Anyways, I just as soon be 'nishiated myself. I
ain't afraid. So if you 'nishiate me, what difference will it make if I
did hear a little?"

Struck with this idea, which seemed reasonable; Penrod obtained silence
from every one except Roddy, and it was decided to allow Maurice to rise
and retire to the front yard. The brother members then withdrew
within the shack, elected Maurice to the fellowship, and completed the
initiation of Mr. Bitts. After that, Maurice was summoned and underwent
the ordeal with fortitude, though the newest brother--still tingling
with his own experiences--helped to make certain parts of the rixual
unprecedentedly severe.

Once endowed with full membership, Maurice and Roddy accepted the
obligations and privileges of the order with enthusiasm. Both interested
themselves immediately in improvements for the shack, and made
excursions to their homes to obtain materials. Roddy returned with a
pair of lensless mother-of-pearl opera-glasses, a contribution that led
to the creation of a new office, called the "warner". It was his duty
to climb upon the back fence once every fifteen minutes and search the
horizon for intruders or "anybody that hasn't got any biznuss around
here." This post proved so popular, at first, that it was found
necessary to provide for rotation in office, and to shorten the
interval from fifteen minutes to an indefinite but much briefer period,
determined principally by argument between the incumbent and his
successor.

And Maurice Levy contributed a device so pleasant, and so necessary
to the prevention of interruption during meetings, that Penrod and
Sam wondered why they had not thought of it themselves long before. It
consisted of about twenty-five feet of garden hose in fair condition.
One end of it was introduced into the shack through a knothole, and the
other was secured by wire round the faucet of hydrant in the stable.
Thus, if members of the order were assailed by thirst during an
important session, or in the course of an initiation, it would not be
necessary for them all to leave the shack. One could go, instead, and
when he had turned on the water at the hydrant, the members in the shack
could drink without leaving their places. It was discovered, also, that
the section of hose could be used as a speaking-tube; and though it did
prove necessary to explain by shouting outside the tube what one had
said into it, still there was a general feeling that it provided another
means of secrecy and an additional safeguard against intrusion. It is
true that during the half-hour immediately following the installation
of this convenience, there was a little violence among the brothers
concerning a question of policy. Sam, Roddy and Verman--Verman
especially--wished to use the tube "to talk through" and Maurice, Penrod
and Herman wished to use it "to drink through." As a consequence of the
success of the latter party, the shack became too damp for habitation
until another day, and several members, as they went home at dusk, might
easily have been mistaken for survivors of some marine catastrophe.

Still, not every shack is equipped with running water, and exuberance
befitted the occasion. Everybody agreed that the afternoon had been one
of the most successful and important in many weeks. The Order of the
In-Or-In was doing splendidly, and yet every brother felt, in his heart,
that there was one thing that could spoil it. Against that fatality,
all were united to protect themselves, the shack, the rixual, the
opera-glasses and the water-and-speaking tube. Sam spoke not only for
himself but for the entire order when he declared, in speeding the last
parting guest:

"Well, we got to stick to one thing or we might as well quit! GEORGIE
BASSETT better not come pokin' around!"

"No, SIR!" said Penrod.



CHAPTER VI. GEORGIE BECOMES A MEMBER

But Georgie did. It is difficult to imagine how cause and effect could
be more closely and patently related. Inevitably, Georgie did come
poking around. How was he to refrain when daily, up and down the
neighbourhood, the brothers strutted with mystic and important airs,
when they whispered together and uttered words of strange import in his
presence? Thus did they defeat their own object. They desired to keep
Georgie at a distance, yet they could not refrain from posing before
him. They wished to impress upon him the fact that he was an outsider,
and they but succeeded in rousing his desire to be an insider, a desire
that soon became a determination. For few were the days until he not
only knew of the shack but had actually paid it a visit. That was upon a
morning when the other boys were in school, Georgie having found himself
indisposed until about ten o'clock, when he was able to take nourishment
and subsequently to interest himself in this rather private errand.
He climbed the Williams' alley fence, and, having made a modest
investigation of the exterior of the shack, which was padlocked, retired
without having disturbed anything except his own peace of mind. His
curiosity, merely piqued before, now became ravenous and painful. It was
not allayed by the mystic manners of the members or by the unnecessary
emphasis they laid upon their coldness toward himself; and when a
committee informed him darkly that there were "secret orders" to prevent
his coming within "a hundred and sixteen feet"--such was Penrod's
arbitrary language--of the Williams' yard, "in any direction", Georgie
could bear it no longer, but entered his own house, and, in burning
words, laid the case before a woman higher up. Here the responsibility
for things is directly traceable to grown people. Within that hour, Mrs.
Bassett sat in Mrs. Williams's library to address her hostess upon the
subject of Georgie's grievance.

"Of course, it isn't Sam's fault," she said, concluding her
interpretation of the affair. "Georgie likes Sam, and didn't blame
him at all. No; we both felt that Sam would always be a polite, nice
boy--Georgie used those very words--but Penrod seems to have a VERY bad
influence. Georgie felt that Sam would WANT him to come and play in
the shack if Penrod didn't make Sam do everything HE wants. What hurt
Georgie most is that it's SAM'S shack, and he felt for another boy to
come and tell him that he mustn't even go NEAR it--well, of course, it
was very trying. And he's very much hurt with little Maurice Levy, too.
He said that he was sure that even Penrod would be glad to have him for
a member of their little club if it weren't for Maurice--and I think he
spoke of Roddy Bitts, too."

The fact that the two remaining members were coloured was omitted
from this discourse which leads to the deduction that Georgie had not
mentioned it.

"Georgie said all the other boys liked him very much," Mrs. Bassett
continued, "and that he felt it his duty to join the club, because most
of them were so anxious to have him, and he is sure he would have a good
influence over them. He really did speak of it in quite a touching way,
Mrs. Williams. Of course, we mothers mustn't brag of our sons too much,
but Georgie REALLY isn't like other boys. He is so sensitive, you can't
think how this little affair has hurt him, and I felt that it might even
make him ill. You see, I HAD to respect his reason for wanting to
join the club. And if I AM his mother"--she gave a deprecating little
laugh--"I must say that it seems noble to want to join not really for
his own sake but for the good that he felt his influence would have over
the other boys. Don't you think so, Mrs. Williams?"

Mrs. Williams said that she did, indeed. And the result of this
interview was another, which took place between Sam and his father that
evening, for Mrs. Williams, after talking to Sam herself, felt that the
matter needed a man to deal with it. The man did it man-fashion.

"You either invite Georgie Bassett to play in the shack all he wants
to," the man said, "or the shack comes down."

"But--"

"Take your choice. I'm not going to have neighbourhood quarrels over
such--"

"But, Papa--"

"That's enough! You said yourself you haven't anything against Georgie."

"I said--"

"You said you didn't like him, but you couldn't tell why. You couldn't
state a single instance of bad behaviour against him. You couldn't
mention anything he ever did which wasn't what a gentleman should have
done. It's no use, I tell you. Either you invite Georgie to play in the
shack as much as he likes next Saturday, or the shack comes down."

"But, PAPA--"

"I'm not going to talk any more about it. If you want the shack pulled
down and hauled away, you and your friends continue to tantalize this
inoffensive little boy the way you have been. If you want to keep it, be
polite and invite him in."

"But--"

"That's ALL, I said!"

Sam was crushed.

Next day he communicated the bitter substance of the edict to the other
members, and gloom became unanimous. So serious an aspect did the affair
present that it was felt necessary to call a special meeting of the
order after school. The entire membership was in attendance; the door
was closed, the window covered with a board, and the candle lighted.
Then all of the brothers--except one--began to express their sorrowful
apprehensions. The whole thing was spoiled, they agreed, if Georgie
Bassett had to be taken in. On the other hand, if they didn't take him
in, "there wouldn't be anything left." The one brother who failed to
express any opinion was little Verman. He was otherwise occupied.

Verman had been the official paddler during the initiations of Roddy
Bitts and Maurice Levy; his work had been conscientious, and it seemed
to be taken by consent that he was to continue in office. An old shingle
from the woodshed roof had been used for the exercise of his function in
the cases of Roddy and Maurice; but this afternoon he had brought
with him a new one that he had picked up somewhere. It was broader and
thicker than the old one and, during the melancholy prophecies of his
fellows, he whittled the lesser end of it to the likeness of a handle.
Thus engaged, he bore no appearance of despondency; on the contrary, his
eyes, shining brightly in the candlelight, indicated that eager thoughts
possessed him, while from time to time the sound of a chuckle issued
from his simple African throat. Gradually the other brothers began to
notice his preoccupation, and one by one they fell silent, regarding him
thoughtfully. Slowly the darkness of their countenances lifted a little;
something happier and brighter began to glimmer from each boyish face.
All eyes remained fascinated upon Verman.

"Well, anyway," said Penrod, in a tone that was almost cheerful, "this
is only Tuesday. We got pretty near all week to fix up the 'nishiation
for Saturday."

And Saturday brought sunshine to make the occasion more tolerable for
both the candidate and the society. Mrs. Williams, going to the window
to watch Sam when he left the house after lunch, marked with pleasure
that his look and manner were sprightly as he skipped down the walk to
the front gate. There he paused and yodelled for a time. An answering
yodel came presently; Penrod Schofield appeared, and by his side walked
Georgie Bassett. Georgie was always neat; but Mrs. Williams noticed that
he exhibited unusual gloss and polish to-day. As for his expression,
it was a shade too complacent under the circumstances, though, for that
matter, perfect tact avoids an air of triumph under any circumstances.
Mrs. Williams was pleased to observe that Sam and Penrod betrayed no
resentment whatever; they seemed to have accepted defeat in a good
spirit and to be inclined to make the best of Georgie. Indeed, they
appeared to be genuinely excited about him--it was evident that their
cordiality was eager and wholehearted.

The three boys conferred for a few moments; then Sam disappeared round
the house and returned, waving his hand and nodding. Upon that, Penrod
took Georgie's left arm, Sam took his right, and the three marched off
to the backyard in a companionable way that made Mrs. Williams feel it
had been an excellent thing to interfere a little in Georgie's interest.

Experiencing the benevolent warmth that comes of assisting in a good
action, she ascended to an apartment upstairs, and, for a couple of
hours, employed herself with needle and thread in sartorial repairs on
behalf of her husband and Sam. Then she was interrupted by the advent of
a coloured serving-maid.

"Miz Williams, I reckon the house goin' fall down!" this pessimist said,
arriving out of breath. "That s'iety o' Mist' Sam's suttenly tryin' to
pull the roof down on ow haids!"

"The roof?" Mrs. Williams inquired mildly. "They aren't in the attic,
are they?"

"No'm; they in the celluh, but they REACHIN' fer the roof! I nev'
did hear no sech a rumpus an' squawkin' an' squawlin' an' fallin' an'
whoopin' an' whackin' an' bangin'! They troop down by the outside celluh
do', n'en--bang!--they bus' loose, an' been goin' on ev' since, wuss'n
Bedlun! Ef they anything down celluh ain' broke by this time, it cain'
be only jes' the foundashum, an' I bet THAT ain' goin' stan' much
longer! I'd gone down an' stop 'em, but I'm 'fraid to. Hones', Miz
Williams, I'm 'fraid o' my life go down there, all that Bedlun goin' on.
I thought I come see what you say."

Mrs. Williams laughed.

"We have to stand a little noise in the house sometimes, Fanny, when
there are boys. They're just playing, and a lot of noise is usually a
pretty safe sign."

"Yes'm," Fanny said. "It's yo' house, Miz Williams, not mine. You want
'em tear it down, I'm willin'."

She departed, and Mrs. Williams continued to sew. The days were growing
short, and at five o'clock she was obliged to put the work aside, as her
eyes did not permit her to continue it by artificial light. Descending
to the lower floor, she found the house silent, and when she opened the
front door to see if the evening paper had come, she beheld Sam, Penrod
and Maurice Levy standing near the gate engaged in quiet conversation.
Penrod and Maurice departed while she was looking for the paper, and Sam
came thoughtfully up the walk.

"Well, Sam," she said, "it wasn't such a bad thing, after all, to show a
little politeness to Georgie Bassett, was it?"

Sam gave her a non-committal look--expression of every kind had been
wiped from his countenance. He presented a blank surface.

"No'm," he said meekly.

"Everything was just a little pleasanter because you'd been friendly,
wasn't it?"

"Yes'm."

"Has Georgie gone home?"

"Yes'm."

"I hear you made enough noise in the cellar--Did Georgie have a good
time?"

"Ma'am?"

"Did Georgie Bassett have a good time?"

"Well"--Sam now had the air of a person trying to remember details with
absolute accuracy--"well, he didn't say he did, and he didn't say he
didn't."

"Didn't he thank the boys?"

"No'm."

"Didn't he even thank you?"

"No'm."

"Why, that's queer," she said. "He's always so polite. He SEEMED to be
having a good time, didn't he, Sam?"

"Ma'am?"

"Didn't Georgie seem to be enjoying himself?"

This question, apparently so simple, was not answered with promptness.
Sam looked at his mother in a puzzled way, and then he found it
necessary to rub each of his shins in turn with the palm of his right
hand.

"I stumbled," he said apologetically. "I stumbled on the cellar steps."

"Did you hurt yourself?" she asked quickly.

"No'm; but I guess maybe I better rub some arnica--"

"I'll get it," she said. "Come up to your father's bathroom, Sam. Does
it hurt much?"

"No'm," he answered truthfully, "it hardly hurts at all."

And having followed her to the bathroom, he insisted, with unusual
gentleness, that he be left to apply the arnica to the alleged injuries
himself. He was so persuasive that she yielded, and descended to the
library, where she found her husband once more at home after his day's
work.

"Well?" he said. "Did Georgie show up, and were they decent to him?"

"Oh, yes; it's all right. Sam and Penrod were good as gold. I saw them
being actually cordial to him."

"That's well," Mr. Williams said, settling into a chair with his paper.
"I was a little apprehensive, but I suppose I was mistaken. I walked
home, and just now, as I passed Mrs. Bassett's, I saw Doctor Venny's
car in front, and that barber from the corner shop on Second Street was
going in the door. I couldn't think what a widow would need a barber
and a doctor for--especially at the same time. I couldn't think what
Georgie'd need such a combination for either, and then I got afraid that
maybe--"

Mrs. Williams laughed. "Oh, no; it hasn't anything to do with his having
been over here. I'm sure they were very nice to him."

"Well, I'm glad of that."

"Yes, indeed--" Mrs. Williams began, when Fanny appeared, summoning her
to the telephone.

It is pathetically true that Mrs. Williams went to the telephone humming
a little song. She was detained at the instrument not more than five
minutes; then she made a plunging return into the library, a blanched
and stricken woman. She made strange, sinister gestures at her husband.

He sprang up, miserably prophetic. "Mrs. Bassett?"

"Go to the telephone," Mrs. Williams said hoarsely "She wants to talk
to you, too. She CAN'T talk much--she's hysterical. She says they lured
Georgie into the cellar and had him beaten by negroes! That's not all--"

Mr. Williams was already on his way.

"You find Sam!" he commanded, over his shoulder.

Mrs. Williams stepped into the front hall. "Sam!" she called, addressing
the upper reaches of the stairway. "Sam!"

Not even echo answered.

"SAM!"

A faint clearing of somebody's throat was heard behind her, a sound so
modest and unobtrusive it was no more than just audible, and, turning,
the mother beheld her son sitting upon the floor in the shadow of the
stairs and gazing meditatively at the hatrack. His manner indicated that
he wished to produce the impression that he had been sitting there, in
this somewhat unusual place and occupation, for a considerable time, but
without overhearing anything that went on in the library so close by.

"Sam," she cried, "what have you DONE?"

"Well--I guess my legs are all right," he said gently. "I got the arnica
on, so probably they won't hurt any m--"

"Stand up!" she said.

"Ma'am?"

"March into the library!"

Sam marched--slow-time. In fact, no funeral march has been composed in
a time so slow as to suit this march of Sam's. One might have suspected
that he was in a state of apprehension.

Mr. Williams entered at one door as his son crossed the threshold of the
other, and this encounter was a piteous sight. After one glance at his
father's face, Sam turned desperately, as if to flee outright. But Mrs.
Williams stood in the doorway behind him.

"You come here!" And the father's voice was as terrible as his face.
"WHAT DID YOU DO TO GEORGIE BASSETT?"

"Nothin'," Sam gulped; "nothin' at all."

"What!"

"We just--we just 'nishiated him."

Mr. Williams turned abruptly, walked to the fireplace, and there turned
again, facing the wretched Sam. "That's all you did?"

"Yes, sir."

"Georgie Bassett's mother has just told me over the telephone," Mr.
Williams said, deliberately, "that you and Penrod Schofield and Roderick
Bitts and Maurice Levy LURED GEORGIE INTO THE CELLAR AND HAD HIM BEATEN
BY NEGROES!"

At this, Sam was able to hold up his head a little and to summon a
rather feeble indignation.

"It ain't so," he declared. "We didn't any such thing lower him into the
cellar. We weren't goin' NEAR the cellar with him. We never THOUGHT of
goin' down cellar. He went down there himself, first."

"So! I suppose he was running away from you, poor thing! Trying to
escape from you, wasn't he?"

"He wasn't," Sam said doggedly. "We weren't chasin' him--or anything at
all."

"Then why did he go in the cellar?"

"Well, he didn't exactly GO in the cellar," Sam said reluctantly.

"Well, how did he GET in the cellar, then?"

"He--he fell in," said Sam.

"HOW did he fall in?"

"Well, the door was open, and--well, he kept walkin' around there, and
we hollered at him to keep away, but just then he kind of--well, the
first _I_ noticed was I couldn't SEE him, and so we went and looked down
the steps, and he was sitting down there on the bottom step and kind of
shouting, and--"

"See here!" Mr. Williams interrupted. "You're going to make a clean
breast of this whole affair and take the consequences. You're going to
tell it and tell it ALL. Do you understand that?"

"Yes, sir."

"Then you tell me how Georgie Bassett fell down the cellar steps--and
tell me quick!"

"He--he was blindfolded."

"Aha! NOW we're getting at it. You begin at the beginning and tell me
just what you did to him from the time he got here. Understand?"

"Yes, sir."

"Go on, then!"

"Well, I'm goin' to," Sam protested. "We never hurt him at all. He
wasn't even hurt when he fell down cellar. There's a lot of mud down
there, because the cellar door leaks, and--"

"Sam!" Mr. Williams's tone was deadly. "Did you hear me tell you to
begin at the beginning?"

Sam made a great effort and was able to obey.

"Well, we had everything ready for the 'nishiation before lunch," he
said. "We wanted it all to be nice, because you said we had to have him,
papa, and after lunch Penrod went to guard him--that's a new part in the
rixual--and he brought him over, and we took him out to the shack and
blindfolded him, and--well, he got kind of mad because we wanted him
to lay down on his stummick and be tied up, and he said he wouldn't,
because the floor was a little bit wet in there and he could feel it
sort of squashy under his shoes, and he said his mother didn't want him
ever to get dirty and he just wouldn't do it; and we all kept telling
him he had to, or else how could there be any 'nishiation; and he kept
gettin' madder and said he wanted to have the 'nishiation outdoors where
it wasn't wet and he wasn't goin' to lay down on his stummick, anyway."
Sam paused for wind, then got under way again: "Well, some of the boys
were tryin' to get him to lay down on his stummick, and he kind of fell
up against the door and it came open and he ran out in the yard. He was
tryin' to get the blindfold off his eyes, but he couldn't because it
was a towel in a pretty hard knot; and he went tearin' all around the
backyard, and we didn't chase him, or anything. All we did was just
watch him--and that's when he fell in the cellar. Well, it didn't hurt
him any. It didn't hurt him at all; but he was muddier than what he
would of been if he'd just had sense enough to lay down in the shack.
Well, so we thought, long as he was down in the cellar anyway, we might
as well have the rest of the 'nishiation down there. So we brought the
things down and--and 'nishiated him--and that's all. That's every bit we
did to him."

"Yes," Mr. Williams said sardonically; "I see. What were the details of
the initiation?"

"Sir?"

"I want to know what else you did to him? What was the initiation?"

"It's--it's secret," Sam murmured piteously.

"Not any longer, I assure you! The society is a thing of the past and
you'll find your friend Penrod's parents agree with me in that. Mrs.
Bassett had already telephoned them when she called us up. You go on
with your story!"

Sam sighed deeply, and yet it may have been a consolation to know that
his present misery was not altogether without its counterpart. Through
the falling dusk his spirit may have crossed the intervening distance
to catch a glimpse of his friend suffering simultaneously and standing
within the same peril. And if Sam's spirit did thus behold Penrod in
jeopardy, it was a true vision.

"Go on!" Mr. Williams said.

"Well, there wasn't any fire in the furnace because it's too warm
yet, and we weren't goin' to do anything'd HURT him, so we put him in
there--"

"In the FURNACE?"

"It was cold," Sam protested. "There hadn't been any fire there since
last spring. Course we told him there was fire in it. We HAD to
do that," he continued earnestly, "because that was part of the
'nishiation. We only kept him in it a little while and kind of hammered
on the outside a little and then we took him out and got him to lay down
on his stummick, because he was all muddy anyway, where he fell down the
cellar; and how could it matter to anybody that had any sense at all?
Well, then we had the rixual, and--and--why, the teeny little paddlin'
he got wouldn't hurt a flea! It was that little coloured boy lives in
the alley did it--he isn't anyways near HALF Georgie's size but Georgie
got mad and said he didn't want any ole nigger to paddle him. That's
what he said, and it was his own foolishness, because Verman won't let
ANYBODY call him 'nigger', and if Georgie was goin' to call him that he
ought to had sense enough not to do it when he was layin' down that way
and Verman all ready to be the paddler. And he needn't of been so mad at
the rest of us, either, because it took us about twenty minutes to get
the paddle away from Verman after that, and we had to lock Verman up
in the laundry-room and not let him out till it was all over. Well, and
then things were kind of spoiled, anyway; so we didn't do but just a
little more--and that's all."

"Go on! What was the 'just a little more?'"

"Well--we got him to swaller a little teeny bit of asafidity that Penrod
used to have to wear in a bag around his neck. It wasn't enough to even
make a person sneeze--it wasn't much more'n a half a spoonful--it wasn't
hardly a QUARTER of a spoonf--"

"Ha!" said Mr. Williams. "That accounts for the doctor. What else?"

"Well--we--we had some paint left over from our flag, and we put just a
little teeny bit of it on his hair and--"

"Ha!" said Mr. Williams. "That accounts for the barber. What else?"

"That's all," Sam said, swallowing. "Then he got mad and went home."

Mr. Williams walked to the door, and sternly motioned to the culprit to
precede him through it. But just before the pair passed from her sight,
Mrs. Williams gave way to an uncontrollable impulse.

"Sam," she asked, "what does 'In-Or-In' stand for?"

The unfortunate boy had begun to sniffle.

"It--it means--Innapenent Order of Infadelaty," he moaned--and plodded
onward to his doom.

Not his alone: at that very moment Master Roderick Magsworth Bitts,
Junior, was suffering also, consequent upon telephoning on the part of
Mrs. Bassett, though Roderick's punishment was administered less on
the ground of Georgie's troubles and more on that of Roddy's having
affiliated with an order consisting so largely of Herman and Verman. As
for Maurice Levy, he was no whit less unhappy. He fared as ill.

Simultaneously, two ex-members of the In-Or-In were finding their lot
fortunate. Something had prompted them to linger in the alley in
the vicinity of the shack, and it was to this fated edifice that Mr.
Williams, with demoniac justice, brought Sam for the deed he had in
mind.

Herman and Verman listened--awe-stricken--to what went on within the
shack. Then, before it was over, they crept away and down the alley
toward their own home. This was directly across the alley from the
Schofields' stable, and they were horrified at the sounds that issued
from the interior of the stable store-room. It was the St. Bartholomew's
Eve of that neighbourhood.

"Man, man!" said Herman, shaking his head. "Glad I ain' no white boy!"

Verman seemed gloomily to assent.



CHAPTER VII. WHITEY

Penrod and Sam made a gloomy discovery one morning in mid-October. All
the week had seen amiable breezes and fair skies until Saturday, when,
about breakfast-time, the dome of heaven filled solidly with gray vapour
and began to drip. The boys' discovery was that there is no justice
about the weather.

They sat in the carriage-house of the Schofields' empty stable; the
doors upon the alley were open, and Sam and Penrod stared torpidly at
the thin but implacable drizzle that was the more irritating because
there was barely enough of it to interfere with a number of things they
had planned to do.

"Yes; this is NICE!" Sam said, in a tone of plaintive sarcasm. "This is
a PERTY way to do!" (He was alluding to the personal spitefulness of
the elements.) "I'd like to know what's the sense of it--ole sun pourin'
down every day in the week when nobody needs it, then cloud up and rain
all Saturday! My father said it's goin' to be a three days' rain."

"Well, nobody with any sense cares if it rains Sunday and Monday,"
Penrod said. "I wouldn't care if it rained every Sunday as long I lived;
but I just like to know what's the reason it had to go and rain to-day.
Got all the days o' the week to choose from and goes and picks on
Saturday. That's a fine biz'nuss!"

"Well, in vacation--" Sam began; but at a sound from a source invisible
to him he paused. "What's that?" he said, somewhat startled.

It was a curious sound, loud and hollow and unhuman, yet it seemed to be
a cough. Both boys rose, and Penrod asked uneasily: "Where'd that noise
come from?"

"It's in the alley," said Sam.

Perhaps if the day had been bright, both of them would have stepped
immediately to the alley doors to investigate; but their actual
procedure was to move a little distance in the opposite direction. The
strange cough sounded again.

"SAY!" Penrod quavered. "What IS that?"

Then both boys uttered smothered exclamations and jumped, for the long,
gaunt head that appeared in the doorway was entirely unexpected. It was
the cavernous and melancholy head of an incredibly thin, old, whitish
horse. This head waggled slowly from side to side; the nostrils
vibrated; the mouth opened, and the hollow cough sounded again.

Recovering themselves, Penrod and Sam underwent the customary human
reaction from alarm to indignation.

"What you want, you ole horse, you?" Penrod shouted. "Don't you come
coughin' around ME!"

And Sam, seizing a stick, hurled it at the intruder.

"Get out o' here!" he roared.

The aged horse nervously withdrew his head, turned tail, and made a
rickety flight up the alley, while Sam and Penrod, perfectly obedient
to inherited impulse, ran out into the drizzle and uproariously pursued.
They were but automatons of instinct, meaning no evil. Certainly they
did not know the singular and pathetic history of the old horse who
wandered into the alley and ventured to look through the open door.

This horse, about twice the age of either Penrod or Sam, had lived
to find himself in a unique position. He was nude, possessing neither
harness nor halter; all he had was a name, Whitey, and he would have
answered to it by a slight change of expression if any one had thus
properly addressed him. So forlorn was Whitey's case, he was actually an
independent horse; he had not even an owner. For two days and a half he
had been his own master.

Previous to that period he had been the property of one Abalene Morris,
a person of colour, who would have explained himself as engaged in
the hauling business. On the contrary, the hauling business was an
insignificant side line with Mr. Morris, for he had long ago given
himself, as utterly as fortune permitted, to the talent that early in
youth he had recognized as the greatest of all those surging in his
bosom. In his waking thoughts and in his dreams, in health and in
sickness, Abalene Morris was the dashing and emotional practitioner
of an art probably more than Roman in antiquity. Abalene was a
crap-shooter. The hauling business was a disguise.

A concentration of events had brought it about that, at one and the
same time, Abalene, after a dazzling run of the dice, found the hauling
business an actual danger to the preservation of his liberty. He won
seventeen dollars and sixty cents, and within the hour found himself
in trouble with an officer of the Humane Society on account of an
altercation with Whitey. Abalene had been offered four dollars for
Whitey some ten days earlier; wherefore he at once drove to the shop of
the junk-dealer who had made the offer and announced his acquiescence in
the sacrifice.

"No, suh!" the junk-dealer said, with emphasis, "I awready done got me
a good mule fer my deliv'ry hoss, 'n'at ole Whitey hoss ain' wuff no fo'
dollah nohow! I 'uz a fool when I talk 'bout th'owin' money roun' that
a-way. _I_ know what YOU up to, Abalene. Man come by here li'l bit
ago tole me all 'bout white man try to 'rest you, ovah on the avvynoo.
Yessuh; he say white man goin' to git you yit an' th'ow you in jail
'count o' Whitey. White man tryin' to fine out who you IS. He say,
nemmine, he'll know Whitey ag'in, even if he don' know you! He say he
ketch you by the hoss; so you come roun' tryin' fix me up with Whitey
so white man grab me, th'ow ME in 'at jail. G'on 'way f'um hyuh, you
Abalene! You cain' sell an' you cain' give Whitey to no cullud man 'n
'is town. You go an' drowned 'at ole hoss, 'cause you sutny goin' to
jail if you git ketched drivin' him."

The substance of this advice seemed good to Abalene, especially as the
seventeen dollars and sixty cents in his pocket lent sweet colours to
life out of jail at this time. At dusk he led Whitey to a broad common
at the edge of town, and spoke to him finally.

"G'on 'bout you biz'nis," said Abalene; "you ain' MY hoss. Don' look
roun'at me, 'cause _I_ ain't got no 'quaintance wif you. I'm a man o'
money, an' I got my own frien's; I'm a-lookin' fer bigger cities, hoss.
You got you biz'nis an' I got mine. Mista' Hoss, good-night!"

Whitey found a little frosted grass upon the common and remained there
all night. In the morning he sought the shed where Abalene had kept him;
but that was across the large and busy town, and Whitey was hopelessly
lost. He had but one eye, a feeble one, and his legs were not to be
depended upon; but he managed to cover a great deal of ground, to
have many painful little adventures, and to get monstrously hungry and
thirsty before he happened to look in upon Penrod and Sam.

When the two boys chased him up the alley they had no intention to cause
pain; they had no intention at all. They were no more cruel than Duke,
Penrod's little old dog, who followed his own instincts, and, making his
appearance hastily through a hole in the back fence, joined the pursuit
with sound and fury. A boy will nearly always run after anything that
is running, and his first impulse is to throw a stone at it. This is a
survival of primeval man, who must take every chance to get his dinner.
So, when Penrod and Sam drove the hapless Whitey up the alley, they were
really responding to an impulse thousands and thousands of years old--an
impulse founded upon the primordial observation that whatever runs is
likely to prove edible. Penrod and Sam were not "bad"; they were never
that. They were something that was not their fault; they were historic.

At the next corner Whitey turned to the right into the cross-street;
thence, turning to the right again and still warmly pursued,
he zigzagged down a main thoroughfare until he reached another
cross-street, which ran alongside the Schofields' yard and brought him
to the foot of the alley he had left behind in his flight. He entered
the alley, and there his dim eye fell upon the open door he had
previously investigated. No memory of it remained; but the place had a
look associated in his mind with hay, and, as Sam and Penrod turned
the corner of the alley in panting yet still vociferous pursuit, Whitey
stumbled up the inclined platform before the open doors, staggered
thunderously across the carriage-house and through another open door
into a stall, an apartment vacant since the occupancy of Mr. Schofield's
last horse, now several years deceased.



CHAPTER VIII. SALVAGE

The two boys shrieked with excitement as they beheld the coincidence of
this strange return. They burst into the stable, making almost as much
noise as Duke, who had become frantic at the invasion. Sam laid hands
upon a rake.

"You get out o' there, you ole horse, you!" he bellowed. "I ain't afraid
to drive him out. I--"

"WAIT a minute!" Penrod shouted. "Wait till I--"

Sam was manfully preparing to enter the stall.

"You hold the doors open," he commanded, "so's they won't blow shut and
keep him in here. I'm goin' to hit him--"

"Quee-YUT!" Penrod shouted, grasping the handle of the rake so that Sam
could not use it. "Wait a MINUTE, can't you?" He turned with ferocious
voice and gestures upon Duke. "DUKE!" And Duke, in spite of his
excitement, was so impressed that he prostrated himself in silence, and
then unobtrusively withdrew from the stable. Penrod ran to the alley
doors and closed them.

"My gracious!" Sam protested. "What you goin' to do?"

"I'm goin' to keep this horse," said Penrod, whose face showed the
strain of a great idea.

"What FOR?"

"For the reward," said Penrod simply.

Sam sat down in the wheelbarrow and stared at his friend almost with
awe.

"My gracious," he said, "I never thought o' that! How--how much do you
think we'll get, Penrod?"

Sam's thus admitting himself to a full partnership in the enterprise
met no objection from Penrod, who was absorbed in the contemplation of
Whitey.

"Well," he said judicially, "we might get more and we might get less."

Sam rose and joined his friend in the doorway opening upon the two
stalls. Whitey had preempted the nearer, and was hungrily nuzzling the
old frayed hollows in the manger.

"Maybe a hunderd dollars--or sumpthing?" Sam asked in a low voice.

Penrod maintained his composure and repeated the newfound expression
that had sounded well to him a moment before. He recognized it as a
symbol of the non--committal attitude that makes people looked up to.
"Well"--he made it slow, and frowned--"we might get more and we might
get less."

"More'n a hunderd DOLLARS?" Sam gasped.

"Well," said Penrod, "we might get more and we might get less." This
time, however, he felt the need of adding something. He put a question
in an indulgent tone, as though he were inquiring, not to add to his own
information but to discover the extent of Sam's. "How much do you think
horses are worth, anyway?"

"I don't know," Sam said frankly, and, unconsciously, he added, "They
might be more and they might be less."

"Well, when our ole horse died," Penrod said, "Papa said he wouldn't
taken five hunderd dollars for him. That's how much HORSES are worth!"

"My gracious!" Sam exclaimed. Then he had a practical afterthought. "But
maybe he was a better horse than this'n. What colour was he?"

"He was bay. Looky here, Sam"--and now Penrod's manner changed from
the superior to the eager--"you look what kind of horses they have in a
circus, and you bet a circus has the BEST horses, don't it? Well, what
kind of horses do they have in a circus? They have some black and white
ones; but the best they have are white all over. Well, what kind of a
horse is this we got here? He's perty near white right now, and I bet if
we washed him off and got him fixed up nice he WOULD be white. Well, a
bay horse is worth five hunderd dollars, because that's what Papa said,
and this horse--"

Sam interrupted rather timidly.

"He--he's awful bony, Penrod. You don't guess they'd make any--"

Penrod laughed contemptuously.

"Bony! All he needs is a little food and he'll fill right up and look
good as ever. You don't know much about horses, Sam, I expect. Why, OUR
ole horse--"

"Do you expect he's hungry now?" asked Sam, staring at Whitey.

"Let's try him," said Penrod. "Horses like hay and oats the best; but
they'll eat most anything."

"I guess they will. He's tryin' to eat that manger up right now, and I
bet it ain't good for him."

"Come on," said Penrod, closing the door that gave entrance to the
stalls. "We got to get this horse some drinkin'-water and some good
food."

They tried Whitey's appetite first with an autumnal branch that they
wrenched from a hardy maple in the yard. They had seen horses nibble
leaves, and they expected Whitey to nibble the leaves of this
branch; but his ravenous condition did not allow him time for cool
discriminations. Sam poked the branch at him from the passageway, and
Whitey, after one backward movement of alarm, seized it venomously.

"Here! You stop that!" Sam shouted. "You stop that, you ole horse, you!"

"What's the matter?" called Penrod from the hydrant, where he was
filling a bucket. "What's he doin' now?"

"Doin'! He's eatin' the wood part, too! He's chewin' up sticks as big as
baseball bats! He's crazy!"

Penrod rushed to see this sight, and stood aghast.

"Take it away from him, Sam!" he commanded sharply.

"Go on, take it away from him yourself!" was the prompt retort of his
comrade.

"You had no biz'nuss to give it to him," said Penrod. "Anybody with any
sense ought to know it'd make him sick. What'd you want to go and give
it to him for?"

"Well, you didn't say not to."

"Well, what if I didn't? I never said I did, did I? You go on in that
stall and take it away from him."

"YES, I will!" Sam returned bitterly. Then, as Whitey had dragged the
remains of the branch from the manger to the floor of the stall, Sam
scrambled to the top of the manger and looked over. "There ain't much
left to TAKE away! He's swallered it all except some splinters. Better
give him the water to try and wash it down with." And, as Penrod
complied, "My gracious, look at that horse DRINK!"

They gave Whitey four buckets of water, and then debated the question of
nourishment. Obviously, this horse could not be trusted with branches,
and, after getting their knees black and their backs sodden, they gave
up trying to pull enough grass to sustain him. Then Penrod remembered
that horses like apples, both "cooking-apples" and "eating-apples", and
Sam mentioned the fact that every autumn his father received a barrel of
"cooking-apples" from a cousin who owned a farm. That barrel was in the
Williams' cellar now, and the cellar was providentially supplied with
"outside doors," so that it could be visited without going through the
house. Sam and Penrod set forth for the cellar.

They returned to the stable bulging, and, after a discussion of Whitey's
digestion (Sam claiming that eating the core and seeds, as Whitey
did, would grow trees in his inside) they went back to the cellar for
supplies again--and again. They made six trips, carrying each time a
capacity cargo of apples, and still Whitey ate in a famished manner.
They were afraid to take more apples from the barrel, which began to
show conspicuously the result of their raids, wherefore Penrod made an
unostentatious visit to the cellar of his own house. From the inside he
opened a window and passed vegetables out to Sam, who placed them in a
bucket and carried them hurriedly to the stable, while Penrod returned
in a casual manner through the house. Of his sang-froid under a great
strain it is sufficient to relate that, in the kitchen, he said suddenly
to Della, the cook, "Oh, look behind you!" and by the time Della
discovered that there was nothing unusual behind her, Penrod was gone,
and a loaf of bread from the kitchen table was gone with him.

Whitey now ate nine turnips, two heads of lettuce, one cabbage, eleven
raw potatoes and the loaf of bread. He ate the loaf of bread last and
he was a long time about it; so the boys came to a not unreasonable
conclusion.

"Well, sir, I guess we got him filled up at last!" said Penrod. "I bet
he wouldn't eat a saucer of ice-cream now, if we'd give it to him!"

"He looks better to me," said Sam, staring critically at Whitey. "I
think he's kind of begun to fill out some. I expect he must like us,
Penrod; we been doin' a good deal for this horse."

"Well, we got to keep it up," Penrod insisted rather pompously. "Long as
_I_ got charge o' this horse, he's goin' to get good treatment."

"What we better do now, Penrod?"

Penrod took on the outward signs of deep thought.

"Well, there's plenty to DO, all right. I got to think."

Sam made several suggestions, which Penrod--maintaining his air of
preoccupation--dismissed with mere gestures.

"Oh, _I_ know!" Sam cried finally. "We ought to wash him so's he'll
look whiter'n what he does now. We can turn the hose on him across the
manger."

"No; not yet," Penrod said. "It's too soon after his meal. You ought to
know that yourself. What we got to do is to make up a bed for him--if he
wants to lay down or anything."

"Make up a what for him?" Sam echoed, dumfounded. "What you talkin'
about? How can--"

"Sawdust," Penrod said. "That's the way the horse we used to have used
to have it. We'll make this horse's bed in the other stall, and then he
can go in there and lay down whenever he wants to."

"How we goin' to do it?"

"Look, Sam; there's the hole into the sawdust-box! All you got to do is
walk in there with the shovel, stick the shovel in the hole till it gets
full of sawdust, and then sprinkle it around on the empty stall."

"All _I_ got to do!" Sam cried. "What are you goin' to do?"

"I'm goin' to be right here," Penrod answered reassuringly. "He won't
kick or anything, and it isn't goin' to take you half a second to slip
around behind him to the other stall."

"What makes you think he won't kick?"

"Well, I KNOW he won't, and, besides, you could hit him with the shovel
if he tried to. Anyhow, I'll be right here, won't I?"

"I don't care where you are," Sam said earnestly. "What difference would
that make if he ki--"

"Why, you were goin' right in the stall," Penrod reminded him. "When he
first came in, you were goin' to take the rake and--"

"I don't care if I was," Sam declared. "I was excited then."

"Well, you can get excited now, can't you?" his friend urged. "You can
just as easy get--"

He was interrupted by a shout from Sam, who was keeping his eye upon
Whitey throughout the discussion.

"Look! Looky there!" And undoubtedly renewing his excitement, Sam
pointed at the long, gaunt head beyond the manger. It was disappearing
from view. "Look!" Sam shouted. "He's layin' down!"

"Well, then," said Penrod, "I guess he's goin' to take a nap. If he
wants to lay down without waitin' for us to get the sawdust fixed for
him, that's his lookout, not ours."

On the contrary, Sam perceived a favourable opportunity for action.

"I just as soon go and make his bed up while he's layin' down," he
volunteered. "You climb up on the manger and watch him, Penrod, and I'll
sneak in the other stall and fix it all up nice for him, so's he can go
in there any time when he wakes up, and lay down again, or anything;
and if he starts to get up, you holler and I'll jump out over the other
manger."

Accordingly, Penrod established himself in a position to observe the
recumbent figure. Whitey's breathing was rather laboured but regular,
and, as Sam remarked, he looked "better", even in his slumber. It is not
to be doubted that although Whitey was suffering from a light attack of
colic his feelings were in the main those of contentment. After trouble,
he was solaced; after exposure, he was sheltered; after hunger and
thirst, he was fed and watered. He slept.

The noon whistles blew before Sam's task was finished; but by the time
he departed for lunch there was made a bed of such quality that Whitey
must needs have been a born fault-finder if he complained of it. The
friends parted, each urging the other to be prompt in returning; but
Penrod got into threatening difficulties as soon as he entered the
house.



CHAPTER IX. REWARD OF MERIT

"Penrod," said his mother, "what did you do with that loaf of bread
Della says you took from the table?"

"Ma'am? WHAT loaf o' bread?"

"I believe I can't let you go outdoors this afternoon," Mrs. Schofield
said severely. "If you were hungry, you know perfectly well all you had
to do was to--"

"But I wasn't hungry; I--"

"You can explain later," Mrs. Schofield said. "You'll have all
afternoon."

Penrod's heart grew cold.

"I CAN'T stay in," he protested. "I've asked Sam Williams to come over."

"I'll telephone Mrs. Williams."

"Mamma!" Penrod's voice became agonized. "I HAD to give that bread to
a--to a poor ole man. He was starving and so were his children and his
wife. They were all just STARVING--and they couldn't wait while I took
time to come and ask you, Mamma. I got to GO outdoors this afternoon. I
GOT to! Sam's--"

She relented.

In the carriage-house, half an hour later, Penrod gave an account of the
episode.

"Where'd we been, I'd just like to know," he concluded, "if I hadn't got
out here this afternoon?"

"Well, I guess I could managed him all right," Sam said. "I was in the
passageway, a minute ago, takin' a look at him. He's standin' up again.
I expect he wants more to eat."

"Well, we got to fix about that," said Penrod. "But what I mean--if I'd
had to stay in the house, where would we been about the most important
thing in the whole biz'nuss?"

"What you talkin' about?"

"Well, why can't you wait till I tell you?" Penrod's tone had become
peevish. For that matter, so had Sam's; they were developing one of the
little differences, or quarrels, that composed the very texture of their
friendship.

"Well, why don't you tell me, then?"

"Well, how can I?" Penrod demanded. "You keep talkin' every minute."

"I'm not talkin' NOW, am I?" Sam protested. "You can tell me NOW, can't
you? I'm not talk--"

"You are, too!" Penrod shouted. "You talk all the time! You--"

He was interrupted by Whitey's peculiar cough. Both boys jumped and
forgot their argument.

"He means he wants some more to eat, I bet," said Sam.

"Well, if he does, he's got to wait," Penrod declared. "We got to get
the most important thing of all fixed up first."

"What's that, Penrod?"

"The reward," said Penrod mildly. "That's what I was tryin' to tell you
about, Sam, if you'd ever give me half a chance."

"Well, I DID give you a chance. I kept TELLIN' you to tell me, but--"

"You never! You kept sayin'--"

They renewed this discussion, protracting it indefinitely; but as
each persisted in clinging to his own interpretation of the facts, the
question still remains unsettled. It was abandoned, or rather, it merged
into another during the later stages of the debate, this other being
concerned with which of the debaters had the least "sense." Each made
the plain statement that if he were more deficient than his opponent in
that regard, self-destruction would be his only refuge. Each declared
that he would "rather die than be talked to death"; and then, as the
two approached a point bluntly recriminative, Whitey coughed again,
whereupon they were miraculously silent, and went into the passageway in
a perfectly amiable manner.

"I got to have a good look at him, for once," Penrod said, as he stared
frowningly at Whitey. "We got to fix up about that reward."

"I want to take a good ole look at him myself," Sam said.

After supplying Whitey with another bucket of water, they returned to
the carriage-house and seated themselves thoughtfully. In truth, they
were something a shade more than thoughtful; the adventure to which they
had committed themselves was beginning to be a little overpowering. If
Whitey had been a dog, a goat, a fowl, or even a stray calf, they would
have felt equal to him; but now that the earlier glow of their wild
daring had disappeared, vague apprehensions stirred. Their "good look"
at Whitey had not reassured them--he seemed large, Gothic and unusual.

Whisperings within them began to urge that for boys to undertake an
enterprise connected with so huge an animal as an actual horse was
perilous. Beneath the surface of their musings, dim but ominous
prophecies moved; both boys began to have the feeling that, somehow,
this affair was going to get beyond them and that they would be in heavy
trouble before it was over--they knew not why. They knew why no more
than they knew why they felt it imperative to keep the fact of Whitey's
presence in the stable a secret from their respective families; but they
did begin to realize that keeping a secret of that size was going to be
attended with some difficulty. In brief, their sensations were becoming
comparable to those of the man who stole a house.

Nevertheless, after a short period given to unspoken misgivings, they
returned to the subject of the reward. The money-value of bay horses, as
compared to white, was again discussed, and each announced his certainty
that nothing less than "a good ole hunderd dollars" would be offered for
the return of Whitey.

But immediately after so speaking they fell into another silence, due to
sinking feelings. They had spoken loudly and confidently, and yet they
knew, somehow, that such things were not to be. According to their
knowledge, it was perfectly reasonable to suppose that they would
receive this fortune; but they frightened themselves in speaking of it.
They knew that they COULD not have a hundred dollars for their own. An
oppression, as from something awful and criminal, descended upon them at
intervals.

Presently, however, they were warmed to a little cheerfulness again by
Penrod's suggestion that they should put a notice in the paper. Neither
of them had the slightest idea how to get it there; but such details as
that were beyond the horizon; they occupied themselves with the question
of what their advertisement ought to "say". Finding that they differed
irreconcilably, Penrod went to his cache in the sawdust-box and brought
two pencils and a supply of paper. He gave one of the pencils and
several sheets to Sam; then both boys bent themselves in silence to the
labour of practical composition. Penrod produced the briefer
paragraph. (See Fig. I.) Sam's was more ample. (See Fig. II.)
------------------[Transcribed from handwritten illustration for Project
Gutenberg:] FIG. I. Reward. White horse in Schofields ally finders got
him in Schofields stable and will let him taken away by by (crossed out:
pay) paying for good food he has aten while (crossed out: wat w) while
(crossed out: wat) waiting and Reward of (crossed out: $100 $20 $15 $5)
$10.

FIG II. FOND Horse on Saturday morning owner can get him by (crossed
through word, unreadable) replying at stable bhind Mr. Schofield.
You will have to proof he is your horse he is whit with hind of brown
(crossed out: spec) speks and worout (crossed out: tail) tale, he is
geting good care and food, reword (crossed out: $100 $20) sevntyfive
cents to each one or we will keep him lokked up.----------------

Neither Sam nor Penrod showed any interest in what the other
had written; but both felt that something praiseworthy had been
accomplished. Penrod exhaled a sigh, as of relief, and, in a manner he
had observed his father use sometimes, he said:

"Thank goodness, THAT'S off my mind, anyway!"

"What we goin' do next, Penrod?" Sam asked deferentially, the borrowed
manner having some effect upon him.

"I don't know what YOU'RE goin' to do," Penrod returned, picking up the
old cigarbox that had contained the paper and pencils. "I'M goin' to put
mine in here, so's it'll come in handy when I haf to get at it."

"Well, I guess I'll keep mine there, too," Sam said. Thereupon he
deposited his scribbled slip beside Penrod's in the cigarbox, and the
box was solemnly returned to the secret place whence it had been taken.

"There, THAT'S 'tended to!" Sam said, and, unconsciously imitating his
friend's imitation, he gave forth audibly a breath of satisfaction and
relief.

Both boys felt that the financial side of their great affair had been
conscientiously looked to, that the question of the reward was settled,
and that everything was proceeding in a businesslike manner. Therefore,
they were able to turn their attention to another matter.

This was the question of Whitey's next meal. After their exploits of
the morning, and the consequent imperilment of Penrod, they decided
that nothing more was to be done in apples, vegetables or bread; it was
evident that Whitey must be fed from the bosom of nature.

"We couldn't pull enough o' that frostbit ole grass in the yard to feed
him," Penrod said gloomily. "We could work a week and not get enough to
make him swaller more'n about twice. All we got this morning, he blew
most of it away. He'd try to scoop it in toward his teeth with his lip,
and then he'd haf to kind of blow out his breath, and after that all the
grass that'd be left was just some wet pieces stickin' to the outsides
of his face. Well, and you know how he acted about that maple branch. We
can't trust him with branches."

Sam jumped up.

"_I_ know!" he cried. "There's lots of leaves left on the branches. We
can give them to him."

"I just said--"

"I don't mean the branches," Sam explained. "We'll leave the branches on
the trees, but just pull the leaves off the branches and put 'em in the
bucket and feed 'em to him out of the bucket."

Penrod thought this plan worth trying, and for three-quarters of an hour
the two boys were busy with the lower branches of various trees in the
yard. Thus they managed to supply Whitey with a fair quantity of wet
leaves, which he ate in a perfunctory way, displaying little of his
earlier enthusiasm. And the work of his purveyors might have been more
tedious if it had been less damp, for a boy is seldom bored by anything
that involves his staying-out in the rain without protection. The
drizzle had thickened; the leaves were heavy with water, and at every
jerk the branches sent fat drops over the two collectors. They attained
a noteworthy state of sogginess.

Finally, they were brought to the attention of the authorities indoors,
and Della appeared upon the back porch.

"Musther Penrod," she called, "y'r mamma says ye'll c'm in the house
this minute an' change y'r shoes an' stockin's an' everythun' else ye
got on! D'ye hear me?"

Penrod, taken by surprise and unpleasantly alarmed, darted away from the
tree he was depleting and ran for the stable.

"You tell her I'm dry as toast!" he shouted over his shoulder.

Della withdrew, wearing the air of a person gratuitously insulted; and
a moment later she issued from the kitchen, carrying an umbrella. She
opened it and walked resolutely to the stable.

"She says I'm to bring ye in the house," said Della, "an' I'm goin' to
bring ye!"

Sam had joined Penrod in the carriage-house, and, with the beginnings
of an unnamed terror, the two beheld this grim advance. But they did not
stay for its culmination. Without a word to each other they hurriedly
tiptoed up the stairs to the gloomy loft, and there they paused,
listening.

They heard Della's steps upon the carriage-house floor.

"Ah, there's plenty places t'hide in," they heard her say; "but I'll
show ye! She tole me to bring ye, and I'm--"

She was interrupted by a peculiar sound--loud, chilling, dismal, and
unmistakably not of human origin. The boys knew it for Whitey's cough;
but Della had not their experience. A smothered shriek reached their
ears; there was a scurrying noise, and then, with horror, they heard
Della's footsteps in the passageway that ran by Whitey's manger.
Immediately there came a louder shriek, and even in the anguish of
knowing their secret discovered, they were shocked to hear distinctly
the words, "O Lard in hivvin!" in the well-known voice of Della. She
shrieked again, and they heard the rush of her footfalls across the
carriage-house floor. Wild words came from the outer air, and the
kitchen door slammed violently. It was all over. She had gone to "tell".

Penrod and Sam plunged down the stairs and out of the stable. They
climbed the back fence and fled up the alley. They turned into Sam's
yard, and, without consultation, headed for the cellar doors, nor paused
till they found themselves in the farthest, darkest and gloomiest recess
of the cellar. There, perspiring, stricken with fear, they sank down
upon the earthen floor, with their moist backs against the stone wall.

Thus with boys. The vague apprehensions that had been creeping upon
Penrod and Sam all afternoon had become monstrous; the unknown was
before them. How great their crime would turn out to be (now that it was
in the hands of grown people) they did not know; but, since it concerned
a horse, it would undoubtedly be considered of terrible dimensions.

Their plans for a reward, and all the things that had seemed both
innocent and practical in the morning, now staggered their minds as
manifestations of criminal folly. A new and terrible light seemed to
play upon the day's exploits; they had chased a horse belonging to
strangers, and it would be said that they deliberately drove him into
the stable and there concealed him. They had, in truth, virtually stolen
him, and they had stolen food for him. The waning light through
the small window above them warned Penrod that his inroads upon the
vegetables in his own cellar must soon be discovered. Della, that
Nemesis, would seek them in order to prepare them for dinner, and she
would find them not. But she would recall his excursion to the cellar,
for she had seen him when he came up; and also the truth would be known
concerning the loaf of bread. Altogether, Penrod felt that his case
was worse than Sam's--until Sam offered a suggestion that roused such
horrible possibilities concerning the principal item of their offense
that all thought of the smaller indictments disappeared.

"Listen, Penrod," Sam quavered: "What--what if that--what if that ole
horse maybe b'longed to a--policeman!" Sam's imagination was not of the
comforting kind. "What'd they--do to us, Penrod, if it turned out he was
some policeman's horse?"

Penrod was able only to shake his head. He did not reply in words; but
both boys thenceforth considered it almost inevitable that Whitey had
belonged to a policeman, and, in their sense of so ultimate a disaster,
they ceased for a time to brood upon what their parents would probably
do to them. The penalty for stealing a policeman's horse would be only
a step short of capital, they were sure. They would not be hanged; but
vague, looming sketches of something called the penitentiary began to
flicker before them.

It grew darker in the cellar, so that finally they could not see each
other.

"I guess they're huntin' for us by now," Sam said huskily. "I don't--I
don't like it much down here, Penrod."

Penrod's hoarse whisper came from the profound gloom: "Well, who ever
said you did?"

"Well--" Sam paused; then he said plaintively, "I wish we'd never SEEN
that dern ole horse."

"It was every bit his fault," said Penrod. "We didn't do anything. If he
hadn't come stickin' his ole head in our stable, it'd never happened
at all. Ole fool!" He rose. "I'm goin' to get out of here; I guess I've
stood about enough for one day."

"Where--where you goin', Penrod? You aren't goin' HOME, are you?"

"No; I'm not! What you take me for? You think I'm crazy?"

"Well, where CAN we go?"

How far Penrod's desperation actually would have led him is doubtful;
but he made this statement: "I don't know where YOU'RE goin', but I'M
goin' to walk straight out in the country till I come to a farmhouse and
say my name's George and live there!"

"I'll do it, too," Sam whispered eagerly. "I'll say my name's Henry."

"Well, we better get started," said the executive Penrod. "We got to get
away from here, anyway."

But when they came to ascend the steps leading to the "outside doors",
they found that those doors had been closed and locked for the night.

"It's no use," Sam lamented, "and we can't bust 'em, cause I tried to,
once before. Fanny always locks 'em about five o'clock--I forgot. We got
to go up the stairway and try to sneak out through the house."

They tiptoed back, and up the inner stairs. They paused at the top, then
breathlessly stepped out into a hall that was entirely dark. Sam touched
Penrod's sleeve in warning and bent to listen at a door.

Immediately that door opened, revealing the bright library, where sat
Penrod's mother and Sam's father.

It was Sam's mother who had opened the door. "Come into the library,
boys," she said. "Mrs. Schofield is just telling us about it."

And as the two comrades moved dumbly into the lighted room, Penrod's
mother rose, and, taking him by the shoulder, urged him close to the
fire.

"You stand there and try to dry off a little, while I finish telling Mr.
and Mrs. Williams about you and Sam," she said. "You'd better make Sam
keep near the fire, too, Mrs. Williams, because they both got wringing
wet. Think of their running off just when most people would have wanted
to stay! Well, I'll go on with the story, then. Della told me all about
it, and what the cook next door said SHE'D seen, how they'd been trying
to pull grass and leaves for the poor old thing all day--and all about
the apples they carried from YOUR cellar, and getting wet and working
in the rain as hard as they could--and they'd given him a loaf of bread!
Shame on you, Penrod!" She paused to laugh; but there was a little
moisture about her eyes, even before she laughed. "And they'd fed him
on potatoes and lettuce and cabbage and turnips out of OUR cellar! And
I wish you'd see the sawdust bed they made for him! Well, when I'd
telephoned, and the Humane Society man got there, he said it was the
most touching thing he ever knew. It seems he KNEW this horse, and had
been looking for him. He said ninety-nine boys out of a hundred would
have chased the poor old thing away, and he was going to see to it that
this case didn't go unnoticed, because the local branch of the society
gives little silver medals for special acts like this. And the last
thing he said was that he was sure Penrod and Sam each would be awarded
one at the meeting of the society next Thursday night."

... On the following Saturday a yodel sounded from the sunny sidewalk
in front of the Schofields' house, and Penrod, issuing forth, beheld the
familiar figure of Samuel Williams waiting.

Upon Sam's breast there glittered a round bit of silver suspended by a
white ribbon from a bar of the same metal. Upon the breast of Penrod was
a decoration precisely similar.

"'Lo, Penrod," said Sam. "What are you goin' to do?"

"Nothin'"

"I got mine on," said Sam.

"I have, too," said Penrod. "I wouldn't take a hunderd dollars for
mine."

"I wouldn't take two hunderd for mine," said Sam.

Each glanced pleasantly at the other's medal. They faced each other
without shame. Neither had the slightest sense of hypocrisy in himself
or in his comrade. On the contrary!

Penrod's eyes went from Sam's medal back to his own; thence they
wandered, with perhaps a little disappointment, to the lifeless street
and to the empty yards and spectatorless windows of the neighbourhood.
Then he looked southward toward the busy heart of the town, where
multitudes were.

"Let's go down and see what time it is by the court-house-clock," said
Penrod.



CHAPTER X. CONSCIENCE

Mrs. Schofield had been away for three days, visiting her sister
in Dayton, Illinois, and on the train, coming back, she fell into a
reverie. Little dramas of memory were reenacted in her pensive mind, and
through all of them moved the figure of Penrod as a principal figure, or
star. These little dramas did not present Penrod as he really was,
much less did they glow with the uncertain but glamorous light in which
Penrod saw himself. No; Mrs. Schofield had indulged herself in absence
from her family merely for her own pleasure, and, now that she was
homeward bound, her conscience was asserting itself; the fact that she
had enjoyed her visit began to take on the aspect of a crime.

She had heard from her family only once during the three days--the
message "All well don't worry enjoy yourself" telegraphed by Mr.
Schofield, and she had followed his suggestions to a reasonable extent.
Of course she had worried--but only at times; wherefore she now suffered
more and more poignant pangs of shame because she had not worried
constantly. Naturally, the figure of Penrod, in her railway reverie, was
that of an invalid.

She recalled all the illnesses of his babyhood and all those of his
boyhood. She reconstructed scene after scene, with the hero always
prostrate and the family physician opening the black case of phials. She
emphatically renewed her recollection of accidental misfortunes to the
body of Penrod Schofield, omitting neither the considerable nor the
inconsiderable, forgetting no strain, sprain, cut, bruise or dislocation
of which she had knowledge. And running this film in a sequence
unrelieved by brighter interludes, she produced a biographical picture
of such consistent and unremittent gloom that Penrod's past appeared to
justify disturbing thoughts about his present and future.

She became less and less at ease, reproaching herself for having gone
away, wondering how she had brought herself to do such a crazy thing,
for it seemed to her that the members of her family were almost helpless
without her guidance; they were apt to do anything--anything at all--or
to catch anything. The more she thought about her having left these
irresponsible harebrains unprotected and undirected for three days, the
less she was able to account for her action. It seemed to her that
she must have been a little flighty; but, shaking her head grimly, she
decided that flightiness was not a good excuse. And she made up her mind
that if, upon her arrival, she found poor little neglected Penrod (and
Margaret and Mr. Schofield) spared to her, safe and sound, she would
make up to them--especially to Penrod--for all her lack of care in the
past, and for this present wild folly of spending three whole days and
nights with her sister, far away in Dayton, Illinois. Consequently,
when Mrs. Schofield descended from that train, she wore the hurried but
determined expression that was always the effect upon her of a guilty
conscience.

"You're SURE Penrod is well now?" she repeated, after Mr. Schofield had
seated himself at her side in a vehicle known to its driver as a "deepoe
hack".

"'Well NOW?'" he said. "He's been well all the time. I've told you twice
that he's all right."

"Men can't always see." She shook her head impatiently. "I haven't been
a bit sure he was well lately. I don't think he's been really well for
two or three months. How has he seemed to-day?"

"In fair health," Mr. Schofield replied thoughtfully. "Della called me
up at the office to tell me that one of the telephone-men had come into
the house to say that if that durn boy didn't quit climbing their poles
they'd have him arrested. They said he--"

"That's it!" Mrs. Schofield interrupted quickly. "He's nervous. It's
some nervous trouble makes him act like that. He's not like himself at
all."

"Sometimes," Mr. Schofield said, "I wish he weren't."

"When he's himself," Mrs. Schofield went on anxiously, "he's very quiet
and good; he doesn't go climbing telegraph-poles and reckless things
like that. And I noticed before I went away that he was growing twitchy,
and seemed to be getting the habit of making unpleasant little noises in
his throat."

"Don't fret about that," her husband said. "He was trying to learn Sam
Williams's imitation of a bullfrog's croak. I used to do that myself
when I was a boy. Gl-glump, gallump! No; I can't do it now. But nearly
all boys feel obliged to learn it."

"You're entirely mistaken, Henry," she returned a little sharply. "That
isn't the way he goes in his throat. Penrod is getting to be a VERY
nervous boy, and he makes noises because he can't help it. He works
part of his face, too, sometimes, so much that I've been afraid it would
interfere with his looks."

"Interfere with his what?" For the moment, Mr. Schofield seemed to be
dazed.

"When he's himself," she returned crisply, "he's quite a handsome boy."

"He is?"

"Handsomer than the average, anyhow," Mrs. Schofield said firmly. "No
wonder you don't see it--when we've let his system get all run down like
this!"

"Good heavens!" the mystified Mr. Schofield murmured. "Penrod's system
hasn't been running down; it's just the same as it always was. He's
absolutely all right."

"Indeed he is not!" she said severely. "We've got to take better care of
him than we have been."

"Why, how could--"

"I know what I'm talking about," she interrupted. "Penrod is anything
but a strong boy, and it's all our fault. We haven't been watchful
enough of his health; that's what's the matter with him and makes him so
nervous."

Thus she continued, and, as she talked on, Mr. Schofield began, by
imperceptible processes, to adopt her views. As for Mrs. Schofield
herself, these views became substantial by becoming vocal. This is to
say, with all deference, that as soon as she heard herself stating
them she was convinced that they accurately represented facts. And the
determined look in her eyes deepened when the "deepoe hack" turned the
familiar corner and she saw Penrod running to the gate, followed by
Duke.

Never had Penrod been so glad to greet his mother. Never was he more
boisterous in the expression of happiness of that kind. And the tokens
of his appetite at dinner, a little later, were extraordinary. Mr.
Schofield began to feel reassured in spite of himself; but Mrs.
Schofield shook her head.

"Don't you see? It's abnormal!" she said, in a low, decisive voice.


That night Penrod awoke from a sweet, conscienceless slumber--or,
rather, he was awakened. A wrappered form lurked over him in the gloom.

"Uff--ow--" he muttered, and turned his face from the dim light that
shone through the doorway. He sighed and sought the depths of sleep
again.

"Penrod," his mother said softly, and, while he resisted feebly, she
turned him over to face her.

"Gawn lea' me 'lone," he muttered.

Then, as a little sphere touched his lips, he jerked his head away,
startled.

"Whassat?"

Mrs. Schofield replied in tones honeysweet and coaxing: "It's just a
nice little pill, Penrod."

"Doe waw 'ny!" he protested, keeping his eyes shut, clinging to the
sleep from which he was being riven.

"Be a good boy, Penrod," she whispered. "Here's a glass of nice cool
water to swallow it down with. Come, dear; it's going to do you lots of
good."

And again the little pill was placed suggestively against his lips; but
his head jerked backward, and his hand struck out in blind, instinctive
self-defense.

"I'll BUST that ole pill," he muttered, still with closed eyes. "Lemme
get my han's on it an' I will!"

"Penrod!"

"PLEASE go on away, mamma!"

"I will, just as soon as you take this little pill."

"I DID!"

"No, dear."

"I did," Penrod insisted plaintively. "You made me take it just before I
went to bed."

"Oh, yes; THAT one. But, dearie," Mrs. Schofield explained, "I got to
thinking about it after I went to bed, and I decided you'd better have
another."

"I don't WANT another."

"Yes, dearie."

"Please go 'way and let me sleep."

"Not till you've taken the little pill, dear."

"Oh, GOLLY!" Groaning, he propped himself upon an elbow and allowed the
pill to pass between his lips. (He would have allowed anything whatever
to pass between them, if that passing permitted his return to slumber.)
Then, detaining the pill in his mouth, he swallowed half a glass of
water, and again was recumbent.

"G'-night, Mamma."

"Good-night, dearie. Sleep well."

"Yes'm."

After her departure Penrod drowsily enjoyed the sugar coating of the
pill; but this was indeed a brief pleasure. A bitterness that was like
a pang suddenly made itself known to his sense of taste, and he realized
that he had dallied too confidingly with the product of a manufacturing
chemist who should have been indicted for criminal economy. The
medicinal portion of the little pill struck the wall with a faint tap,
then dropped noiselessly to the floor, and, after a time, Penrod slept.

Some hours later he began to dream; he dreamed that his feet and legs
were becoming uncomfortable as a result of Sam Williams's activities
with a red-hot poker.

"You QUIT that!" he said aloud, and awoke indignantly. Again a dark,
wrappered figure hovered over the bed.

"It's only a hot-water bag, dear," Mrs. Schofield said, still labouring
under the covers with an extended arm. "You mustn't hunch yourself up
that way, Penrod. Put your feet down on it."

And, as he continued to hunch himself, she moved the bag in the
direction of his withdrawal.

"Ow, murder!" he exclaimed convulsively. "What you tryin' to do? Scald
me to death?"

"Penrod--"

"My goodness, Mamma," he wailed; "can't you let me sleep a MINUTE?"

"It's very bad for you to let your feet get cold, dear."

"They WEREN'T cold. I don't want any ole hot-wat--"

"Penrod," she said firmly, "you must put your feet against the bag. It
isn't too hot."

"Oh, isn't it?" he retorted. "I don't s'pose you'd care if I burned
my feet right off! Mamma, won't you please, pul-LEEZE let me get some
sleep?"

"Not till you--"

She was interrupted by a groan that seemed to come from an abyss.

"All right, I'll do it! Let 'em burn, then!" Thus spake the desperate
Penrod; and Mrs. Schofield was able to ascertain that one heel had been
placed in light contact with the bag.

"No; both feet, Penrod."

With a tragic shiver he obeyed.

"THAT'S right, dear! Now, keep them that way. It's good for you.
Good-night."

"G'-night!"

The door closed softly behind her, and the body of Penrod, from the hips
upward, rose invisibly in the complete darkness of the bedchamber.
A moment later the hot-water bag reached the floor in as noiseless a
manner as that previously adopted by the remains of the little pill,
and Penrod once more bespread his soul with poppies. This time he slept
until the breakfast-bell rang.

He was late to school, and at once found himself in difficulties.
Government demanded an explanation of the tardiness; but Penrod made no
reply of any kind. Taciturnity is seldom more strikingly out of place
than under such circumstances, and the penalties imposed took account
not only of Penrod's tardiness but of his supposititious defiance of
authority in declining to speak. The truth was that Penrod did not know
why he was tardy, and, with mind still lethargic, found it impossible
to think of an excuse his continuing silence being due merely to the
persistence of his efforts to invent one. Thus were his meek searchings
misinterpreted, and the unloved hours of improvement in science and the
arts made odious.

"They'll SEE!" he whispered sorely to himself, as he bent low over his
desk, a little later. Some day he would "show 'em". The picture in his
mind was of a vast, vague assembly of people headed by Miss Spence
and the superior pupils who were never tardy, and these multitudes,
representing persecution and government in general, were all cringing
before a Penrod Schofield who rode a grim black horse up and down their
miserable ranks, and gave curt orders.

"Make 'em step back there!" he commanded his myrmidons savagely. "Fix
it so's your horses'll step on their feet if they don't do what I say!"
Then, from his shining saddle, he watched the throngs slinking away. "I
guess they know who I am NOW!"



CHAPTER XI. THE TONIC

These broodings helped a little; but it was a severe morning, and on
his way home at noon he did not recover heart enough to practice the
bullfrog's croak, the craft that Sam Williams had lately mastered to
inspiring perfection. This sonorous accomplishment Penrod had determined
to make his own. At once guttural and resonant, impudent yet plaintive,
with a barbaric twang like the plucked string of a Congo war-fiddle, the
sound had fascinated him. It is made in the throat by processes utterly
impossible to describe in human words, and no alphabet as yet produced
by civilized man affords the symbols to vocalize it to the ear of
imagination. "Gunk" is the poor makeshift that must be employed to
indicate it.

Penrod uttered one half-hearted "Gunk" as he turned in at his own gate.
However, this stimulated him, and he paused to practice. "Gunk!" he
croaked. "Gunk-gunk-gunk-gunk!"

Mrs. Schofield leaned out of an open window upstairs.

"Don't do that, Penrod," she said anxiously. "Please don't do that."

"Why not?" Penrod asked, and, feeling encouraged by his progress in the
new art, he continued: "Gunk--gunk-gunk! Gunk-gunk--"

"Please try not to do it," she urged pleadingly. "You CAN stop it if you
try. Won't you, dear?"

But Penrod felt that he was almost upon the point of attaining a mastery
equal to Sam Williams's. He had just managed to do something in his
throat that he had never done before, and he felt that unless he kept
on doing it at this time, his new-born facility might evade him later.
"Gunk!" he croaked. "Gunk--gunk-gunk!" And he continued to croak,
persevering monotonously, his expression indicating the depth of his
preoccupation.

His mother looked down solicitously, murmured in a melancholy undertone,
shook her head; then disappeared from the window, and, after a moment or
two, opened the front door.

"Come in, dear," she said; "I've got something for you."

Penrod's look of preoccupation vanished; he brightened and ceased to
croak. His mother had already given him a small leather pocketbook with
a nickel in it, as a souvenir of her journey. Evidently she had brought
another gift as well, delaying its presentation until now. "I've got
something for you!" These were auspicious words.

"What is it, Mamma?" he asked, and, as she smiled tenderly upon him,
his gayety increased. "Yay!" he shouted. "Mamma, is it that reg'lar
carpenter's tool chest I told you about?"

"No," she said. "But I'll show you, Penrod. Come on, dear."

He followed her with alacrity to the dining-room, and the bright
anticipation in his eyes grew more brilliant--until she opened the
door of the china-closet, simultaneously with that action announcing
cheerily:

"It's something that's going to do you lots of good, Penrod."

He was instantly chilled, for experience had taught him that when
predictions of this character were made, nothing pleasant need be
expected. Two seconds later his last hope departed as she turned from
the closet and he beheld in her hands a quart bottle containing what
appeared to be a section of grassy swamp immersed in a cloudy brown
liquor. He stepped back, grave suspicion in his glance.

"What IS that?" he asked, in a hard voice.

Mrs. Schofield smiled upon him. "It's nothing," she said. "That is, it's
nothing you'll mind at all. It's just so you won't be so nervous."

"I'm not nervous."

"You don't think so, of course, dear," she returned, and, as she spoke,
she poured some of the brown liquor into a tablespoon. "People often
can't tell when they're nervous themselves; but your Papa and I have
been getting a little anxious about you, dear, and so I got this
medicine for you."

"WHERE'D you get it?" he demanded.

Mrs. Schofield set the bottle down and moved toward him, insinuatingly
extending the full tablespoon.

"Here, dear," she said; "just take this little spoonful, like a goo--"

"I want to know where it came from," he insisted darkly, again stepping
backward.

"Where?" she echoed absently, watching to see that nothing was spilled
from the spoon as she continued to move toward him. "Why, I was talking
to old Mrs. Wottaw at market this morning, and she said her son Clark
used to have nervous trouble, and she told me about this medicine and
how to have it made at the drug store. She told me it cured Clark,
and--"

"I don't want to be cured," Penrod said, adding inconsistently, "I
haven't got anything to be cured of."

"Now, dear," Mrs. Schofield began, "you don't want your papa and me to
keep on worrying about--"

"I don't care whether you worry or not," the heartless boy interrupted.
"I don't want to take any horrable ole medicine. What's that grass and
weeds in the bottle for?"

Mrs. Schofield looked grieved. "There isn't any grass and there aren't
any weeds; those are healthful herbs."

"I bet they'll make me sick."

She sighed. "Penrod, we're trying to make you well."

"But I AM well, I tell you!"

"No, dear; your papa's been very much troubled about you. Come, Penrod;
swallow this down and don't make such a fuss about it. It's just for
your own good."

And she advanced upon him again, the spoon extended toward his lips. It
almost touched them, for he had retreated until his back was against
the wall-paper. He could go no farther; but he evinced his unshaken
repugnance by averting his face.

"What's it taste like?" he demanded.

"It's not unpleasant at all," she answered, poking the spoon at his
mouth. "Mrs. Wottaw said Clark used to be very fond of it. It doesn't
taste like ordinary medicine at all,' she said."

"How often I got to take it?" Penrod mumbled, as the persistent spoon
sought to enter his mouth. "Just this once?"

"No, dear; three times a day."

"I won't do it!"

"Penrod!" She spoke sharply. "You swallow this down and stop making such
a fuss. I can't be all day. Hurry."

She inserted the spoon between his lips, so that its rim touched his
clenched teeth; he was still reluctant. Moreover, is reluctance was
natural and characteristic, for a boy's sense of taste is as simple and
as peculiar as a dog's, though, of course, altogether different from a
dog's. A boy, passing through the experimental age, may eat and drink
astonishing things; but they must be of his own choosing. His palate is
tender, and, in one sense, might be called fastidious; nothing is more
sensitive or more easily shocked. A boy tastes things much more than
grown people taste them: what is merely unpleasant to a man is
sheer broth of hell to a boy. Therefore, not knowing what might be
encountered, Penrod continued to be reluctant.

"Penrod," his mother exclaimed, losing patience, "I'll call your papa to
make you take it, if you don't swallow it right down! Open your mouth,
Penrod! It isn't going to taste bad at all. Open your mouth--THERE!"

The reluctant jaw relaxed at last, and Mrs. Schofield dexterously
elevated the handle of the spoon so that the brown liquor was deposited
within her son.

"There!" she repeated triumphantly. "It wasn't so bad after all, was
it?"

Penrod did not reply. His expression had become odd, and the oddity of
his manner was equal to that of his expression. Uttering no sound, he
seemed to distend, as if he had suddenly become a pneumatic boy under
dangerous pressure. Meanwhile, his reddening eyes, fixed awfully upon
his mother, grew unbearable.

"Now, it wasn't such a bad taste," Mrs. Schofield said rather nervously.
"Don't go acting THAT way, Penrod!"

But Penrod could not help himself. In truth, even a grown person
hardened to all manner of flavours, and able to eat caviar or liquid
Camembert, would have found the cloudy brown liquor virulently
repulsive. It contained in solution, with other things, the vital
element of surprise, for it was comparatively odourless, and, unlike the
chivalrous rattlesnake, gave no warning of what it was about to do. In
the case of Penrod, the surprise was complete and its effect visibly
shocking.

The distention by which he began to express his emotion appeared to
be increasing; his slender throat swelled as his cheeks puffed. His
shoulders rose toward his ears; he lifted his right leg in an unnatural
way and held it rigidly in the air.

"Stop that, Penrod!" Mrs. Schofield commanded. "You stop it!"

He found his voice.

"Uff! OOOFF!" he said thickly, and collapsed--a mere, ordinary,
every-day convulsion taking the place of his pneumatic symptoms. He
began to writhe, at the same time opening and closing his mouth rapidly
and repeatedly, waving his arms, stamping on the floor.

"Ow! Ow-ow-OW!" he vociferated.

Reassured by these normal demonstrations, of a type with which she was
familiar, Mrs. Schofield resumed her fond smile.

"YOU'RE all right, little boysie!" she said heartily. Then, picking up
the bottle, she replenished the tablespoon, and told Penrod something
she had considered it undiplomatic to mention before.

"Here's the other one," she said sweetly.

"Uuf!" he sputtered. "Other--uh--what?"

"Two tablespoons before each meal," she informed him.

Instantly Penrod made the first of a series of passionate efforts to
leave the room. His determination was so intense and the manifestations
of it were so ruthless, that Mrs. Schofield, exhausted, found herself
obliged to call for the official head of the house--in fact, she found
herself obliged to shriek for him; and Mr. Schofield, hastily entering
the room, beheld his wife apparently in the act of sawing his son back
and forth across the sill of an open window.

Penrod made a frantic effort to reach the good green earth, even after
his mother's clutch upon his ankle had been reenforced by his father's.
Nor was the lad's revolt subdued when he was deposited upon the floor
and the window closed. Indeed, it may be said that he actually never
gave up, though it is a fact that the second potion was successfully
placed inside him. But by the time this feat was finally accomplished,
Mr. Schofield had proved that, in spite of middle age, he was entitled
to substantial claims and honours both as athlete and orator--his
oratory being founded less upon the school of Webster and more upon that
of Jeremiah.

So the thing was done, and the double dose put within the person of
Penrod Schofield. It proved not ineffective there, and presently, as its
new owner sat morosely at table, he began to feel slightly dizzy and
his eyes refused him perfect service. This was natural, because two
tablespoons of the cloudy brown liquor contained about the amount of
alcohol to be found in an ordinary cocktail. Now a boy does not enjoy
the effects of intoxication; enjoyment of that kind is obtained only
by studious application. Therefore, Penrod spoke of his symptoms
complainingly, and even showed himself so vindictive as to attribute
them to the new medicine.

His mother made no reply. Instead, she nodded her head as if some inner
conviction had proven well founded.

"BILIOUS, TOO," she whispered to her husband.

That evening, during the half-hour preceding dinner, the dining-room was
the scene of another struggle, only a little less desperate than that
which had been the prelude to lunch, and again an appeal to the head of
the house was found necessary. Muscular activity and a liberal imitation
of the jeremiads once more subjugated the rebel--and the same rebellion
and its suppression in a like manner took place the following morning
before breakfast. But this was Saturday, and, without warning or
apparent reason, a remarkable change came about at noon. However, Mr.
and Mrs. Schofield were used to inexplicable changes in Penrod, and they
missed its significance.

When Mrs. Schofield, with dread in her heart, called Penrod into the
house "to take his medicine" before lunch, he came briskly, and took it
like a lamb!

"Why, Penrod, that's splendid!" she cried "You see it isn't bad, at
all."

"No'm," he said meekly. "Not when you get used to it."

"And aren't you ashamed, making all that fuss?" she went on happily.

"Yes'm, I guess so."

"And don't you feel better? Don't you see how much good it's doing you
already?"

"Yes'm, I guess so."


Upon a holiday morning, several weeks later, Penrod and Sam Williams
revived a pastime that they called "drug store", setting up display
counters, selling chemical, cosmetic and other compounds to imaginary
customers, filling prescriptions and variously conducting themselves in
a pharmaceutical manner. They were in the midst of affairs when Penrod
interrupted his partner and himself with a cry of recollection.

"_I_ know!" he shouted. "I got some mighty good ole stuff we want. You
wait!" And, dashing to the house, he disappeared.

Returning immediately, Penrod placed upon the principal counter of the
"drug store" a large bottle. It was a quart bottle, in fact; and it
contained what appeared to be a section of grassy swamp immersed in a
cloudy brown liquor.

"There!" Penrod exclaimed. "How's that for some good ole medicine?"

"It's good ole stuff," Sam said approvingly. "Where'd you get it? Whose
is it, Penrod?"

"It WAS mine," said Penrod. "Up to about serreval days ago, it was. They
quit givin' it to me. I had to take two bottles and a half of it."

"What did you haf to take it for?"

"I got nervous, or sumpthing," said Penrod.

"You all well again now?"

"I guess so. Uncle Passloe and cousin Ronald came to visit, and I expect
she got too busy to think about it, or sumpthing. Anyway, she quit
makin' me take it, and said I was lots better. She's forgot all about it
by this time."

Sam was looking at the bottle with great interest.

"What's all that stuff in there, Penrod?" he asked. "What's all that
stuff in there looks like grass?"

"It IS grass," said Penrod.

"How'd it get there?"

"I stuck it in there," the candid boy replied. "First they had some
horrable ole stuff in there like to killed me. But after they got three
doses down me, I took the bottle out in the yard and cleaned her all
out and pulled a lot o' good ole grass and stuffed her pretty full and
poured in a lot o' good ole hydrant water on top of it. Then, when they
got the next bottle, I did the same way, and--"

"It don't look like water," Sam objected.

Penrod laughed a superior laugh.

"Oh, that's nothin'," he said, with the slight swagger of young
and conscious genius. "Of course, I had to slip in and shake her up
sometimes, so's they wouldn't notice."

"But what did you put in it to make it look like that?"

Penrod, upon the point of replying, happened to glance toward the house.
His gaze, lifting, rested for a moment upon a window. The head of Mrs.
Schofield was framed in that window. She nodded gayly to her son. She
could see him plainly, and she thought that he seemed perfectly healthy,
and as happy as a boy could be. She was right.

"What DID you put in it?" Sam insisted.

And probably it was just as well that, though Mrs. Schofield could see
her son, the distance was too great for her to hear him.

"Oh, nothin'," Penrod replied. "Nothin' but a little good ole mud."



CHAPTER XII. GIPSY

On a fair Saturday afternoon in November Penrod's little old dog Duke
returned to the ways of his youth and had trouble with a strange cat on
the back porch. This indiscretion, so uncharacteristic, was due to the
agitation of a surprised moment, for Duke's experience had inclined
him to a peaceful pessimism, and he had no ambition for hazardous
undertakings of any sort. He was given to musing but not to avoidable
action, and he seemed habitually to hope for something that he was
pretty sure would not happen. Even in his sleep, this gave him an air of
wistfulness.

Thus, being asleep in a nook behind the metal refuse-can, when the
strange cat ventured to ascend the steps of the porch, his appearance
was so unwarlike that the cat felt encouraged to extend its field of
reconnaissance for the cook had been careless, and the backbone of a
three-pound whitefish lay at the foot of the refuse-can.

This cat was, for a cat, needlessly tall, powerful, independent and
masculine. Once, long ago, he had been a roly-poly pepper-and-salt
kitten; he had a home in those days, and a name, "Gipsy," which he
abundantly justified. He was precocious in dissipation. Long before his
adolescence, his lack of domesticity was ominous, and he had formed bad
companionships. Meanwhile, he grew so rangy, and developed such length
and power of leg and such traits of character, that the father of the
little girl who owned him was almost convincing when he declared that
the young cat was half broncho and half Malay pirate--though, in the
light of Gipsy's later career, this seems bitterly unfair to even the
lowest orders of bronchos and Malay pirates.

No; Gipsy was not the pet for a little girl. The rosy hearthstone and
sheltered rug were too circumspect for him. Surrounded by the comforts
of middle-class respectability, and profoundly oppressed, even in his
youth, by the Puritan ideals of the household, he sometimes experienced
a sense of suffocation. He wanted free air and he wanted free life; he
wanted the lights, the lights and the music. He abandoned the bourgeoise
irrevocably. He went forth in a May twilight, carrying the evening
beefsteak with him, and joined the underworld.

His extraordinary size, his daring and his utter lack of sympathy soon
made him the leader--and, at the same time, the terror--of all the
loose-lived cats in a wide neighbourhood. He contracted no friendships
and had no confidants. He seldom slept in the same place twice in
succession, and though he was wanted by the police, he was not found.
In appearance he did not lack distinction of an ominous sort; the slow,
rhythmic, perfectly controlled mechanism of his tail, as he impressively
walked abroad, was incomparably sinister. This stately and dangerous
walk of his, his long, vibrant whiskers, his scars, his yellow eye, so
ice-cold, so fire-hot, haughty as the eye of Satan, gave him the deadly
air of a mousquetaire duellist. His soul was in that walk and in that
eye; it could be read--the soul of a bravo of fortune, living on
his wits and his velour, asking no favours and granting no quarter.
Intolerant, proud, sullen, yet watchful and constantly planning--purely
a militarist, believing in slaughter as in a religion, and confident
that art, science, poetry and the good of the world were happily
advanced thereby--Gipsy had become, though technically not a wildcat,
undoubtedly the most untamed cat at large in the civilized world. Such,
in brief, was the terrifying creature that now elongated its neck, and,
over the top step of the porch, bent a calculating scrutiny upon the
wistful and slumberous Duke.

The scrutiny was searching but not prolonged. Gipsy muttered
contemptuously to himself, "Oh, sheol; I'm not afraid o' THAT!" And
he approached the fishbone, his padded feet making no noise upon the
boards. It was a desirable fishbone, large, with a considerable portion
of the fish's tail still attached to it.

It was about a foot from Duke's nose, and the little dog's dreams began
to be troubled by his olfactory nerve. This faithful sentinel, on guard
even while Duke slept, signalled that alarums and excursions by parties
unknown were taking place, and suggested that attention might well be
paid. Duke opened one drowsy eye. What that eye beheld was monstrous.

Here was a strange experience--the horrific vision in the midst of
things so accustomed. Sunshine fell sweetly upon porch and backyard;
yonder was the familiar stable, and from its interior came the busy hum
of a carpenter shop, established that morning by Duke's young master,
in association with Samuel Williams and Herman. Here, close by, were
the quiet refuse-can and the wonted brooms and mops leaning against the
latticed wall at the end of the porch, and there, by the foot of the
steps, was the stone slab of the cistern, with the iron cover displaced
and lying beside the round opening, where the carpenters had left it,
not half an hour ago, after lowering a stick of wood into the water, "to
season it". All about Duke were these usual and reassuring environs of
his daily life, and yet it was his fate to behold, right in the midst of
them, and in ghastly juxtaposition to his face, a thing of nightmare and
lunacy.

Gipsy had seized the fishbone by the middle. Out from one side of his
head, and mingling with his whiskers, projected the long, spiked spine
of the big fish; down from the other side of that ferocious head dangled
the fish's tail, and from above the remarkable effect thus produced shot
the intolerable glare of two yellow eyes. To the gaze of Duke, still
blurred by slumber, this monstrosity was all of one piece the bone
seemed a living part of it. What he saw was like those interesting
insect-faces that the magnifying glass reveals to great M. Fabre. It
was impossible for Duke to maintain the philosophic calm of M. Fabre,
however; there was no magnifying glass between him and this spined and
spiky face. Indeed, Duke was not in a position to think the matter over
quietly. If he had been able to do that, he would have said to himself:
"We have here an animal of most peculiar and unattractive appearance,
though, upon examination, it seems to be only a cat stealing a fishbone.
Nevertheless, as the thief is large beyond all my recollection of cats
and has an unpleasant stare, I will leave this spot at once."

On the contrary, Duke was so electrified by his horrid awakening that he
completely lost his presence of mind. In the very instant of his first
eye's opening, the other eye and his mouth behaved similarly, the latter
loosing upon the quiet air one shriek of mental agony before the little
dog scrambled to his feet and gave further employment to his voice in
a frenzy of profanity. At the same time the subterranean diapason of a
demoniac bass viol was heard; it rose to a wail, and rose and rose again
till it screamed like a small siren. It was Gipsy's war-cry, and, at the
sound of it, Duke became a frothing maniac. He made a convulsive frontal
attack upon the hobgoblin--and the massacre began.

Never releasing the fishbone for an instant, Gipsy laid back his ears in
a chilling way, beginning to shrink into himself like a concertina, but
rising amidships so high that he appeared to be giving an imitation of
that peaceful beast, the dromedary. Such was not his purpose, however,
for, having attained his greatest possible altitude, he partially sat
down and elevated his right arm after the manner of a semaphore. This
semaphore arm remained rigid for a second, threatening; then it vibrated
with inconceivable rapidity, feinting. But it was the treacherous left
that did the work. Seemingly this left gave Duke three lightning little
pats upon the right ear; but the change in his voice indicated that
these were no love-taps. He yelled "help!" and "bloody murder!"

Never had such a shattering uproar, all vocal, broken out upon a
peaceful afternoon. Gipsy possessed a vocabulary for cat-swearing
certainly second to none out of Italy, and probably equal to the best
there, while Duke remembered and uttered things he had not thought of
for years.

The hum of the carpenter shop ceased, and Sam Williams appeared in the
stable doorway. He stared insanely.

"My gorry!" he shouted. "Duke's havin' a fight with the biggest cat you
ever saw in your life! C'mon!"

His feet were already in motion toward the battlefield, with Penrod and
Herman hurrying in his wake. Onward they sped, and Duke was encouraged
by the sight and sound of these reenforcements to increase his
own outrageous clamours and to press home his attack. But he was
ill-advised. This time it was the right arm of the semaphore that
dipped--and Duke's honest nose was but too conscious of what happened in
consequence.

A lump of dirt struck the refuse-can with violence, and Gipsy beheld
the advance of overwhelming forces. They rushed upon him from two
directions, cutting off the steps of the porch. Undaunted, the
formidable cat raked Duke's nose again, somewhat more lingeringly, and
prepared to depart with his fishbone. He had little fear for himself,
because he was inclined to think that, unhampered, he could whip
anything on earth; still, things seemed to be growing rather warm and he
saw nothing to prevent his leaving.

And though he could laugh in the face of so unequal an antagonist as
Duke, Gipsy felt that he was never at his best or able to do himself
full justice unless he could perform that feline operation inaccurately
known as "spitting". To his notion, this was an absolute essential
to combat; but, as all cats of the slightest pretensions to technique
perfectly understand, it can neither be well done nor produce the best
effects unless the mouth be opened to its utmost capacity so as to
expose the beginnings of the alimentary canal, down which--at least that
is the intention of the threat--the opposing party will soon be passing.
And Gipsy could not open his mouth without relinquishing his fishbone.

Therefore, on small accounts he decided to leave the field to his
enemies and to carry the fishbone elsewhere. He took two giant leaps.
The first landed him upon the edge of the porch. There, without an
instant's pause, he gathered his fur-sheathed muscles, concentrated
himself into one big steel spring, and launched himself superbly into
space. He made a stirring picture, however brief, as he left the solid
porch behind him and sailed upward on an ascending curve into the sunlit
air. His head was proudly up; he was the incarnation of menacing power
and of self-confidence. It is possible that the whitefish's spinal
column and flopping tail had interfered with his vision, and in
launching himself he may have mistaken the dark, round opening of
the cistern for its dark, round cover. In that case, it was a leap
calculated and executed with precision, for as the boys clamoured their
pleased astonishment, Gipsy descended accurately into the orifice and
passed majestically from public view, with the fishbone still in his
mouth and his haughty head still high.

There was a grand splash!



CHAPTER XIII. CONCERNING TROUSERS

Duke, hastening to place himself upon the stone slab, raged at his enemy
in safety; and presently the indomitable Gipsy could be heard from the
darkness below, turning on the bass of his siren, threatening the
water that enveloped him, returning Duke's profanity with interest, and
cursing the general universe.

"You hush!" Penrod stormed, rushing at Duke. "You go 'way from here! You
DUKE!"

And Duke, after prostrating himself, decided that it would be a relief
to obey and to consider his responsibilities in this matter at an end.
He withdrew beyond a corner of the house, thinking deeply.

"Why'n't you let him bark at the ole cat?" Sam Williams inquired,
sympathizing with the oppressed. "I guess you'd want to bark if a cat
had been treatin' you the way this one did Duke."

"Well, we got to get this cat out o' here, haven't we?" Penrod demanded
crossly.

"What fer?" Herman asked. "Mighty mean cat! If it was me, I let 'at ole
cat drownd."

"My goodness," Penrod cried. "What you want to let it drown for?
Anyways, we got to use this water in our house, haven't we? You don't
s'pose people like to use water that's got a cat drowned in it, do
you? It gets pumped up into the tank in the attic and goes all over the
house, and I bet you wouldn't want to see your father and mother usin'
water a cat was drowned in. I guess I don't want my father and moth--"

"Well, how CAN we get it out?" Sam asked, cutting short this virtuous
oration. "It's swimmin' around down there," he continued, peering into
the cistern, "and kind of roaring, and it must of dropped its fishbone,
'cause it's spittin' just awful. I guess maybe it's mad 'cause it fell
in there."

"I don't know how it's goin' to be got out," said Penrod; "but I know
it's GOT to be got out, and that's all there is to it! I'm not goin' to
have my father and mother--"

"Well, once," said Sam, "once when a kitten fell down OUR cistern, Papa
took a pair of his trousers, and he held 'em by the end of one leg, and
let 'em hang down through the hole till the end of the other leg was in
the water, and the kitten went and clawed hold of it, and he pulled it
right up, easy as anything. Well, that's the way to do now, 'cause if
a kitten could keep hold of a pair of trousers, I guess this ole cat
could. It's the biggest cat _I_ ever saw! All you got to do is to go
and ast your mother for a pair of your father's trousers, and we'll have
this ole cat out o' there in no time."

Penrod glanced toward the house perplexedly.

"She ain't home, and I'd be afraid to--"

"Well, take your own, then," Sam suggested briskly.

"You take 'em off in the stable, and wait in there, and I and Herman'll
get the cat out."

Penrod had no enthusiasm for this plan; but he affected to consider it.

"Well, I don't know 'bout that," he said, and then, after gazing
attentively into the cistern and making some eye measurements of his
knickerbockers, he shook his head. "They'd be too short. They wouldn't
be NEAR long enough!"

"Then neither would mine," said Sam promptly.

"Herman's would," said Penrod.

"No, suh!" Herman had recently been promoted to long trousers, and he
expressed a strong disinclination to fall in with Penrod's idea. "My
Mammy sit up late nights sewin' on 'ese britches fer me, makin' 'em
outen of a pair o' pappy's, an' they mighty good britches. Ain' goin'
have no wet cat climbin' up 'em! No, suh!"

Both boys began to walk toward him argumentatively, while he moved
slowly backward, shaking his head and denying them.

"I don't keer how much you talk!" he said. "Mammy gave my OLE britches
to Verman, an' 'ese here ones on'y britches I got now, an' I'm go' to
keep 'em on me--not take 'em off an' let ole wet cat splosh all over
'em. My Mammy, she sewed 'em fer ME, I reckon--d'in' sew 'em fer no
cat!"

"Oh, PLEASE, come on, Herman!" Penrod begged pathetically. "You don't
want to see the poor cat drown, do you?"

"Mighty mean cat!" Herman said. "Bet' let 'at ole pussy-cat 'lone whur
it is."

"Why, it'll only take a minute," Sam urged. "You just wait inside the
stable and you'll have 'em back on again before you could say 'Jack
Robinson.'"

"I ain' got no use to say no Jack Robason," said Herman. "An' I ain' go'
to han' over my britches fer NO cat!"

"Listen here, Herman," Penrod began pleadingly. "You can watch us every
minute through the crack in the stable door, can't you? We ain't goin'
to HURT 'em any, are we? You can see everything we do, can't you? Look
at here, Herman: you know that little saw you said you wished it was
yours, in the carpenter shop? Well, honest, if you'll just let us take
your trousers till we get this poor ole cat out the cistern, I'll give
you that little saw."

Herman was shaken; he yearned for the little saw.

"You gimme her to keep?" he asked cautiously. "You gimme her befo' I
han' over my britches?"

"You'll see!" Penrod ran into the stable, came back with the little saw,
and placed it in Herman's hand. Herman could resist no longer, and two
minutes later he stood in the necessary negligee within the shelter of
the stable door, and watched, through the crack, the lowering of the
surrendered garment into the cistern. His gaze was anxious, and surely
nothing could have been more natural, since the removal had exposed
Herman's brown legs, and, although the weather was far from inclement,
November is never quite the month for people to be out of doors entirely
without leg-covering. Therefore, he marked with impatience that Sam and
Penrod, after lowering the trousers partway to the water, had withdrawn
them and fallen into an argument.

"Name o' goo'ness!" Herman shouted. "I ain' got no time fer you all do
so much talkin'. If you go' git 'at cat out, why'n't you GIT him?"

"Wait just a minute," Penrod called, and he came running to the stable,
seized upon a large wooden box, which the carpenters had fitted with
a lid and leather hinges, and returned with it cumbersomely to the
cistern. "There!" he said. "That'll do to put it in. It won't get out o'
that, I bet you."

"Well, I'd like to know what you want to keep it for," Sam said
peevishly, and, with the suggestion of a sneer, he added, "I s'pose you
think somebody'll pay about a hunderd dollars reward or something, on
account of a cat!"

"I don't, either!" Penrod protested hotly. "I know what I'm doin', I
tell you."

"Well, what on earth--"

"I'll tell you some day, won't I?" Penrod cried. "I got my reasons for
wantin' to keep this cat, and I'm goin' to keep it. YOU don't haf to
ke--"

"Well, all right," Sam said shortly. "Anyways, it'll be dead if you
don't hurry."

"It won't, either," Penrod returned, kneeling and peering down upon
the dark water. "Listen to him! He's growlin' and spittin' away like
anything! It takes a mighty fine-blooded cat to be as fierce as that. I
bet you most cats would 'a' given up and drowned long ago. The water's
awful cold, and I expect he was perty supprised when he lit in it."

"Herman's makin' a fuss again," Sam said. "We better get the ole cat out
o' there if we're goin' to."

"Well, this is the way we'll do," Penrod said authoritatively: "I'll let
you hold the trousers, Sam. You lay down and keep hold of one leg, and
let the other one hang down till its end is in the water. Then you kind
of swish it around till it's somewheres where the cat can get hold of
it, and soon as he does, you pull it up, and be mighty careful so's it
don't fall off. Then I'll grab it and stick it in the box and slam the
lid down."

Rather pleased to be assigned to the trousers, Sam accordingly extended
himself at full length upon the slab and proceeded to carry out Penrod's
instructions. Meanwhile, Penrod, peering from above, inquired anxiously
for information concerning this work of rescue.

"Can you see it, Sam? Why don't it grab hold? What's it doin' now, Sam?"

"It's spittin' at Herman's trousers," said Sam. "My gracious, but it's a
fierce cat! If it's mad all the time like this, you better not ever try
to pet it much. Now it's kind o' sniffin' at the trousers. It acks to me
as if it was goin' to ketch hold. Yes, it's stuck one claw in 'em--OW!"

Sam uttered a blood-curdling shriek and jerked convulsively. The next
instant, streaming and inconceivably gaunt, the ravening Gipsy appeared
with a final bound upon Sam's shoulder. It was not in Gipsy's character
to be drawn up peaceably; he had ascended the trousers and Sam's arm
without assistance and in his own way. Simultaneously--for this was a
notable case of everything happening at once--there was a muffled, soggy
splash, and the unfortunate Herman, smit with prophecy in his seclusion,
uttered a dismal yell. Penrod laid hands upon Gipsy, and, after a
struggle suggestive of sailors landing a man-eating shark, succeeded in
getting him into the box, and sat upon the lid thereof.

Sam had leaped to his feet, empty handed and vociferous.

"Ow ow, OUCH!" he shouted, as he rubbed his suffering arm and shoulder.
Then, exasperated by Herman's lamentations, he called angrily: "Oh, what
_I_ care for your ole britches? I guess if you'd 'a' had a cat climb up
YOU, you'd 'a' dropped 'em a hunderd times over!"

However, upon excruciating entreaty, he consented to explore the
surface of the water with a clothes-prop, but reported that the luckless
trousers had disappeared in the depths, Herman having forgotten to
remove some "fishin' sinkers" from his pockets before making the fated
loan.

Penrod was soothing a lacerated wrist in his mouth.

"That's a mighty fine-blooded cat," he remarked. "I expect it'd got
away from pretty near anybody, 'specially if they didn't know much about
cats. Listen at him, in the box, Sam. I bet you never heard a cat growl
as loud as that in your life. I shouldn't wonder it was part panther or
sumpthing."

Sam began to feel more interest and less resentment.

"I tell you what we can do, Penrod," he said: "Let's take it in the
stable and make the box into a cage. We can take off the hinges and
slide back the lid a little at a time, and nail some o' those laths over
the front for bars."

"That's just exackly what I was goin' to say!" Penrod exclaimed. "I
already thought o' that, Sam. Yessir, we'll make it just like a reg'lar
circus-cage, and our good ole cat can look out from between the bars
and growl. It'll come in pretty handy if we ever decide to have another
show. Anyways, we'll have her in there, good and tight, where we can
watch she don't get away. I got a mighty good reason to keep this cat,
Sam. You'll see."

"Well, why don't you--" Sam was interrupted by n vehement appeal from
the stable. "Oh, we're comin'!" he shouted. "We got to bring our cat in
its cage, haven't we?"

"Listen, Herman," Penrod called absent-mindedly. "Bring us some bricks,
or something awful heavy to put on the lid of our cage, so we can carry
it without our good ole cat pushin' the lid open."

Herman explained with vehemence that it would not be right for him to
leave the stable upon any errand until just restorations had been made.
He spoke inimically of the cat that had been the occasion of his loss,
and he earnestly requested that operations with the clothes-prop be
resumed in the cistern. Sam and Penrod declined, on the ground that
this was absolutely proven to be of no avail, and Sam went to look for
bricks.

These two boys were not unfeeling. They sympathized with Herman; but
they regarded the trousers as a loss about which there was no use in
making so much outcry. To them, it was part of an episode that ought to
be closed. They had done their best, and Sam had not intended to drop
the trousers; that was something no one could have helped, and therefore
no one was to be blamed. What they were now interested in was the
construction of a circus-cage for their good ole cat.

"It's goin' to be a cage just exactly like circus-cages, Herman," Penrod
said, as he and Sam set the box down on the stable floor. "You can help
us nail the bars and--"

"I ain' studyin' 'bout no bars!" Herman interrupted fiercely. "What good
you reckon nailin' bars go' do me if Mammy holler fer me? You white boys
sutn'y show me bad day! I try treat people nice, 'n'en they go th'ow my
britches down cistern!

"I did not!" Sam protested. "That ole cat just kicked 'em out o' my hand
with its hind feet while its front ones were stickin' in my arm. I bet
YOU'D of--"

"Blame it on cat!" Herman sneered. "'At's nice! Jes' looky here minute:
Who'd I len' 'em britches to? D' I len' 'em britches to thishere cat?
No, suh; you know I didn'! You know well's any man I len' 'em britches
to you--an' you tuck an' th'owed 'em down cistern!"

"Oh, PLEASE hush up about your old britches!" Penrod said plaintively.
"I got to think how we're goin' to fix our cage up right, and you make
so much noise I can't get my mind on it. Anyways, didn't I give you that
little saw?"

"Li'l saw!" Herman cried, unmollified. "Yes; an' thishere li'l saw go'
do me lot o' good when I got to go home!"

"Why, it's only across the alley to your house, Herman!" said Sam. "That
ain't anything at all to step over there, and you've got your little
saw."

"Aw right! You jes' take off you' closes an' step 'cross the alley,"
said Herman bitterly. "I give you li'l saw to carry!"

Penrod had begun to work upon the cage.

"Now listen here, Herman," he said: "if you'll quit talkin' so much, and
kind of get settled down or sumpthing, and help us fix a good cage for
our panther, well, when mamma comes home about five o'clock, I'll go and
tell her there's a poor boy got his britches burned up in a fire,
and how he's waitin' out in the stable for some, and I'll tell her I
promised him. Well, she'll give me a pair I wore for summer; honest she
will, and you can put 'em on as quick as anything."

"There, Herman," said Sam; "now you're all right again!"

"WHO all right?" Herman complained. "I like feel sump'm' roun' my laigs
befo' no five o'clock!"

"Well, you're sure to get 'em by then," Penrod promised. "It ain't
winter yet, Herman. Come on and help saw these laths for the bars,
Herman, and Sam and I'll nail 'em on. It ain't long till five o'clock,
Herman, and then you'll just feel fine!"

Herman was not convinced; but he found himself at a disadvantage in the
argument. The question at issue seemed a vital one to him--and yet his
two opponents evidently considered it of minor importance. Obviously,
they felt that the promise for five o'clock had settled the whole matter
conclusively; but to Herman this did not appear to be the fact. However,
he helplessly suffered himself to be cajoled back into carpentry, though
he was extremely ill at ease and talked a great deal of his misfortune.
He shivered and grumbled, and, by his passionate urgings, compelled
Penrod to go into the house so many times to see what time it was by the
kitchen clock that both his companions almost lost patience with him.

"There!" said Penrod, returning from performing this errand for the
fourth time. "It's twenty minutes after three, and I'm not goin' in
to look at that ole clock again if I haf to die for it! I never heard
anybody make such a fuss in my life, and I'm gettin' tired of it. Must
think we want to be all night fixin' this cage for our panther! If you
ask me to go and see what time it is again, Herman, I'm a-goin' to take
back about askin' mamma at five o'clock, and THEN where'll you be?"

"Well, it seem like mighty long aft'noon to me," Herman sighed. "I jes'
like to know what time it is gettin' to be now!"

"Look out!" Penrod warned him. "You heard what I was just tellin' you
about how I'd take back--"

"Nemmine," Herman said hurriedly. "I wasn' astin' you. I jes' sayin'
sump'm' kind o' to myse'f like."



CHAPTER XIV. CAMERA WORK IN THE JUNGLE

The completed cage, with Gipsy behind the bars, framed a spectacle
sufficiently thrilling and panther-like. Gipsy raved, "spat", struck
virulently at taunting fingers, turned on his wailing siren for minutes
at a time, and he gave his imitation of a dromedary almost continuously.
These phenomena could be intensified in picturesqueness, the boys
discovered, by rocking the cage a little, tapping it with a hammer,
or raking the bars with a stick. Altogether, Gipsy was having a lively
afternoon.

There came a vigorous rapping on the alley door of the stable, and
Verman was admitted.

"Yay, Verman!" cried Sam Williams. "Come and look at our good ole
panther!"

Another curiosity, however, claimed Verman's attention. His eyes opened
wide, and he pointed at Herman's legs.

"Wha' ma' oo? Mammy hay oo hip ap hoe-woob."

"Mammy tell ME git 'at stove-wood?" Herman interpreted resentfully.
"How'm I go' git 'at stove-wood when my britches down bottom 'at
cistern, I like you answer ME please? You shet 'at do' behime you!"

Verman complied, and again pointing to his brother's legs, requested to
be enlightened.

"Sin' I tole you once they down bottom 'at cistern," Herman shouted,
much exasperated. "You wan' know how come so, you ast Sam Williams. He
say thishere cat tuck an' th'owed 'em down there!"

Sam, who was busy rocking the cage, remained cheerfully absorbed in that
occupation.

"Come look at our good ole panther, Verman," he called. "I'll get this
circus-cage rockin' right good, an' then--"

"Wait a minute," said Penrod; "I got sumpthing I got to think about.
Quit rockin' it! I guess I got a right to think about sumpthing without
havin' to go deaf, haven't I?"

Having obtained the quiet so plaintively requested, he knit his brow and
gazed intently upon Verman, then upon Herman, then upon Gipsy. Evidently
his idea was fermenting. He broke the silence with a shout.

"_I_ know, Sam! I know what we'll do NOW! I just thought of it, and it's
goin' to be sumpthing I bet there aren't any other boys in this town
could do, because where would they get any good ole panther like we got,
and Herman and Verman? And they'd haf to have a dog, too--and we got
our good ole Dukie, I guess. I bet we have the greatest ole time this
afternoon we ever had in our lives!"

His enthusiasm roused the warm interest of Sam--and Verman, though
Herman, remaining cold and suspicious, asked for details.

"An' I like to hear if it's sump'm'," he concluded, "what's go' git me
my britches back outen 'at cistern!"

"Well, it ain't exackly that," said Penrod. "It's different from that.
What I'm thinkin' about, well, for us to have it the way it ought to be,
so's you and Verman would look like natives--well, Verman ought to take
off his britches, too."

"Mo!" said Verman, shaking his head violently. "Mo!"

"Well, wait a minute, can't you?" Sam Williams said. "Give Penrod a
chance to say what he wants to, first, can't you? Go on, Penrod."

"Well, you know, Sam," said Penrod, turning to this sympathetic auditor;
"you remember that movin'-pitcher show we went to, 'Fortygraphing Wild
Animals in the Jungle'. Well, Herman wouldn't have to do a thing more to
look like those natives we saw that the man called the 'beaters'. They
were dressed just about like the way he is now, and if Verman--"

"MO!" said Verman.

"Oh, WAIT a minute, Verman!" Sam entreated. "Go on, Penrod."

"Well, we can make a mighty good jungle up in the loft," Penrod
continued eagerly. "We can take that ole dead tree that's out in the
alley and some branches, and I bet we could have the best jungle you
ever saw. And then we'd fix up a kind of place in there for our panther,
only, of course, we'd haf to keep him in the cage so's he wouldn't run
away; but we'd pretend he was loose. And then you remember how they
did with that calf? Well, we'd have Duke for the tied-up calf for the
panther to come out and jump on, so they could fortygraph him. Herman
can be the chief beater, and we'll let Verman be the other beaters, and
I'll--"

"Yay!" shouted Sam Williams. "I'll be the fortygraph man!"

"No," said Penrod; "you be the one with the gun that guards the
fortygraph man, because I'm the fortygraph man already. You can fix up a
mighty good gun with this carpenter shop, Sam. We'll make spears for
our good ole beaters, too, and I'm goin' to make me a camera out o' that
little starch-box and a bakin'-powder can that's goin' to be a mighty
good ole camera. We can do lots more things--"

"Yay!" Sam cried. "Let's get started!" He paused. "Wait a minute,
Penrod. Verman says he won't--"

"Well, he's got to!" said Penrod.

"I momp!" Verman insisted, almost distinctly.

They began to argue with him; but, for a time, Verman remained firm.
They upheld the value of dramatic consistency, declaring that a beater
dressed as completely as he was "wouldn't look like anything at all". He
would "spoil the whole biznuss", they said, and they praised Herman
for the faithful accuracy of his costume. They also insisted that the
garment in question was much too large for Verman, anyway, having been
so recently worn by Herman and turned over to Verman with insufficient
alteration, and they expressed surprise that "anybody with any sense"
should make such a point of clinging to a misfit.

Herman sided against his brother in this controversy, perhaps because a
certain loneliness, of which he was censcious, might be assuaged by the
company of another trouserless person--or it may be that his motive was
more sombre. Possibly he remembered that Verman's trousers were his own
former property and might fit him in case the promise for five o'clock
turned out badly. At all events, Verman finally yielded under great
pressure, and consented to appear in the proper costume of the multitude
of beaters it now became his duty to personify.

Shouting, the boys dispersed to begin the preparation of their jungle
scene. Sam and Penrod went for branches and the dead tree, while Herman
and Verman carried the panther in his cage to the loft, where the
first thing that Verman did was to hang his trousers on a nail in a
conspicuous and accessible spot near the doorway. And with the arrival
of Penrod and Sam, panting and dragging no inconsiderable thicket after
them, the coloured brethren began to take a livelier interest in things.
Indeed, when Penrod, a little later, placed in their hands two spears,
pointed with tin, their good spirits were entirely restored, and they
even began to take a pride in being properly uncostumed beaters.

Sam's gun and Penrod's camera were entirely satisfactory, especially the
latter. The camera was so attractive, in fact, that the hunter and the
chief beater and all the other beaters immediately resigned and insisted
upon being photographers. Each had to be given a "turn" before the
jungle project could be resumed.

"Now, for goodnesses' sakes," said Penrod, taking the camera from
Verman, "I hope you're done, so's we can get started doin something like
we ought to! We got to have Duke for a tied-up calf. We'll have to bring
him and tie him out here in front the jungle, and then the panther'll
come out and jump on him. Wait, and I'll go bring him."

Departing upon this errand, Penrod found Duke enjoying the declining
rays of the sun in the front yard.

"Hyuh, Duke!" called his master, in an indulgent tone. "Come on, good
ole Dukie! Come along!"

Duke rose conscientiously and followed him.

"I got him, men!" Penrod called from the stairway. "I got our good
ole calf all ready to be tied up. Here he is!" And he appeared in the
doorway with the unsuspecting little dog beside him.

Gipsy, who had been silent for some moments, instantly raised his
banshee battlecry, and Duke yelped in horror. Penrod made a wild effort
to hold him; but Duke was not to be detained. Unnatural strength and
activity came to him in his delirium, and, for the second or two that
the struggle lasted, his movements were too rapid for the eyes of the
spectators to follow--merely a whirl and blur in the air could be seen.
Then followed a sound of violent scrambling and Penrod sprawled alone at
the top of the stairs.

"Well, why'n't you come and help me?" he demanded indignantly. "I
couldn't get him back now if I was to try a million years!"

"What we goin' to do about it?" Sam asked.

Penrod rose and dusted his knees. "We got to get along without any
tied-up calf--that's certain! But I got to take those fortygraphs SOME
way or other!"

"Me an' Verman aw ready begin 'at beatin'," Herman suggested. "You tole
us we the beaters."

"Well, wait a minute," said Penrod, whose feeling for realism in drama
was always alert. "I want to get a mighty good pitcher o' that ole
panther this time." As he spoke, he threw open the wide door intended
for the delivery of hay into the loft from the alley below. "Now, bring
the cage over here by this door so's I can get a better light; it's
gettin' kind of dark over where the jungle is. We'll pretend there isn't
any cage there, and soon as I get him fortygraphed, I'll holler, 'Shoot,
men!' Then you must shoot, Sam--and Herman, you and Verman must hammer
on the cage with your spears, and holler: 'Hoo! Hoo!' and pretend you're
spearin' him."

"Well, we aw ready!" said Herman. "Hoo! Hoo!"

"Wait a minute," Penrod interposed, frowningly surveying the cage. "I
got to squat too much to get my camera fixed right." He assumed various
solemn poses, to be interpreted as those of a photographer studying his
subject. "No," he said finally; "it won't take good that way."

"My gootness!" Herman exclaimed. "When we goin' begin 'at beatin'?"

"Here!" Apparently Penrod had solved a weighty problem. "Bring that
busted ole kitchen chair, and set the panther up on it. There! THAT'S
the ticket! This way, it'll make a mighty good pitcher!" He turned to
Sam importantly. "Well, Jim, is the chief and all his beaters here?"

"Yes, Bill; all here," Sam responded, with an air of loyalty.

"Well, then, I guess we're ready," said Penrod, in his deepest voice.
"Beat, men."

Herman and Verman were anxious to beat. They set up the loudest uproar
of which they were capable. "Hoo! Hoo! Hoo!" they bellowed, flailing
the branches with their spears and stamping heavily upon the floor.
Sam, carried away by the elan of the performance, was unable to resist
joining them. "Hoo! Hoo! Hoo!" he shouted. "Hoo! Hoo! Hoo!" And as the
dust rose from the floor to their stamping, the three of them produced
such a din and hoo-hooing as could be made by nothing on earth except
boys.

"Back, men!" Penrod called, raising his voice to the utmost. "Back for
your lives. The PA-A-ANTHER! Now I'm takin' his pitcher. Click, click!
Shoot, men; shoot!"

"Bing! Bing!" shouted Sam, levelling his gun at the cage, while Herman
and Verman hammered upon it, and Gipsy cursed boys, the world and the
day he was born. "Bing! Bing! Bing!"

"You missed him!" screamed Penrod. "Give me that gun!" And snatching it
from Sam's unwilling hand, he levelled it at the cage.

"BING!" he roared.

Simultaneously there was the sound of another report; but this was an
actual one and may best be symbolized by the statement that it was a
whack. The recipient was Herman, and, outrageously surprised and pained,
he turned to find himself face to face with a heavily built coloured
woman who had recently ascended the stairs and approached the
preoccupied hunters from the rear. In her hand was a lath, and, even as
Herman turned, it was again wielded, this time upon Verman.

"MAMMY!"

"Yes; you bettuh holler, 'Mammy!"' she panted. "My goo'ness, if yo'
pappy don' lam you to-night! Ain' you got no mo' sense 'an to let white
boys 'suede you play you Affikin heathums? Whah you britches?"

"Yonnuh Verman's," quavered Herman.

"Whah y'own?"

Choking, Herman answered bravely:

"'At ole cat tuck an' th'owed 'em down cistern!"

Exasperated almost beyond endurance, she lifted the lath again. But
unfortunately, in order to obtain a better field of action, she moved
backward a little, coming in contact with the bars of the cage, a
circumstance that she overlooked. More unfortunately still, the longing
of the captive to express his feelings was such that he would have
welcomed the opportunity to attack an elephant. He had been striking
and scratching at inanimate things and at boys out of reach for the past
hour; but here at last was his opportunity. He made the most of it.

"I learn you tell me cat th'owed--OOOOH!"

The coloured woman leaped into the air like an athlete, and, turning
with a swiftness astounding in one of her weight, beheld the semaphoric
arm of Gipsy again extended between the bars and hopefully reaching for
her. Beside herself, she lifted her right foot briskly from the ground,
and allowed the sole of her shoe to come in contact with Gipsy's cage.

The cage moved from the tottering chair beneath it. It passed through
the yawning hay-door and fell resoundingly to the alley below, where--as
Penrod and Sam, with cries of dismay, rushed to the door and looked
down--it burst asunder and disgorged a large, bruised and chastened
cat. Gipsy paused and bent one strange look upon the broken box. Then he
shook his head and departed up the alley, the two boys watching him till
he was out of sight.

Before they turned, a harrowing procession issued from the
carriage-house doors beneath them. Herman came first, hurriedly
completing a temporary security in Verman's trousers. Verman followed,
after a little reluctance that departed coincidentally with some
inspiriting words from the rear. He crossed the alley hastily, and his
Mammy stalked behind, using constant eloquence and a frequent lath. They
went into the small house across the way and closed the door.

Then Sam turned to Penrod.

"Penrod," he said thoughtfully, "was it on account of fortygraphing in
the jungle you wanted to keep that cat?"

"No; that was a mighty fine-blooded cat. We'd of made some money."

Sam jeered.

"You mean when we'd sell tickets to look at it in its cage?"

Penrod shook his head, and if Gipsy could have overheard and understood
his reply, that atrabilious spirit, almost broken by the events of the
day, might have considered this last blow the most overwhelming of all.

"No," said Penrod; "when she had kittens."



CHAPTER XV. A MODEL LETTER TO A FRIEND

On Monday morning Penrod's faith in the coming of another Saturday
was flaccid and lustreless. Those Japanese lovers who were promised a
reunion after ten thousand years in separate hells were brighter with
hope than he was. On Monday Penrod was virtually an agnostic.

Nowhere upon his shining morning face could have been read any eager
anticipation of useful knowledge. Of course he had been told that school
was for his own good; in fact, he had been told and told and told, but
the words conveying this information, meaningless at first, assumed,
with each repetition, more and more the character of dull and
unsolicited insult.

He was wholly unable to imagine circumstances, present or future, under
which any of the instruction and training he was now receiving could
be of the slightest possible use or benefit to himself; and when he was
informed that such circumstances would frequently arise in his later
life, he but felt the slur upon his coming manhood and its power to
prevent any such unpleasantness.

If it were possible to place a romantic young Broadway actor and athlete
under hushing supervision for six hours a day, compelling him to
bend his unremittent attention upon the city directory of Sheboygan,
Wisconsin, he could scarce be expected to respond genially to frequent
statements that the compulsion was all for his own good. On the
contrary, it might be reasonable to conceive his response as taking the
form of action, which is precisely the form that Penrod's smouldering
impulse yearned to take.

To Penrod school was merely a state of confinement, envenomed by
mathematics. For interminable periods he was forced to listen to
information concerning matters about which he had no curiosity whatever;
and he had to read over and over the dullest passages in books that
bored him into stupors, while always there overhung the preposterous
task of improvising plausible evasions to conceal the fact that he
did not know what he had no wish to know. Likewise, he must always be
prepared to avoid incriminating replies to questions that he felt nobody
had a real and natural right to ask him. And when his gorge rose and his
inwards revolted, the hours became a series of ignoble misadventures and
petty disgraces strikingly lacking in privacy.

It was usually upon Wednesday that his sufferings culminated; the
nervous strength accumulated during the holiday hours at the end of the
week would carry him through Monday and Tuesday; but by Wednesday it
seemed ultimately proven that the next Saturday actually never was
coming, "this time", and the strained spirit gave way. Wednesday was the
day averaging highest in Penrod's list of absences; but the time came
when he felt that the advantages attendant upon his Wednesday "sick
headache" did not compensate for its inconveniences.

For one thing, this illness had become so symmetrically recurrent that
even the cook felt that he was pushing it too far, and the liveliness of
her expression, when he was able to leave his couch and take the air in
the backyard at about ten o'clock, became more disagreeable to him
with each convalescence. There visibly increased, too, about the whole
household, an atmosphere of uncongeniality and suspicion so pronounced
that every successive illness was necessarily more severe, and at last
the patient felt obliged to remain bedded until almost eleven, from
time to time giving forth pathetic little sounds eloquent of anguish
triumphing over Stoic endurance, yet lacking a certain conviction of
utterance.

Finally, his father enacted, and his mother applied, a new and
distinctly special bit of legislation, explaining it with simple candour
to the prospective beneficiary.

"Whenever you really ARE sick," they said, "you can go out and play as
soon as you're well--that is, if it happens on Saturday. But when you're
sick on a school-day, you'll stay in bed till the next morning. This is
going to do you good, Penrod."

Physically, their opinion appeared to be affirmed, for Wednesday after
Wednesday passed without any recurrence of the attack; but the spiritual
strain may have been damaging. And it should be added that if Penrod's
higher nature did suffer from the strain, he was not unique. For,
confirming the effect of Wednesday upon boys in general, it is probable
that, if full statistics concerning cats were available, they would
show that cats dread Wednesdays, and that their fear is shared by
other animals, and would be shared, to an extent by windows, if windows
possessed nervous systems. Nor must this probable apprehension on
the part of cats and the like be thought mere superstition. Cats have
superstitions, it is true; but certain actions inspired by the sight of
a boy with a missile in his hand are better evidence of the workings of
logic upon a practical nature than of faith in the supernatural.

Moreover, the attention of family physicians and specialists should be
drawn to these significant though obscure phenomena; for the suffering
of cats is a barometer of the nerve-pressure of boys, and it may
be accepted as sufficiently established that Wednesday--after
school-hours--is the worst time for cats.

After the promulgation of that parental edict, "You'll stay in bed till
the next morning", four weeks went by unflawed by a single absence from
the field of duty; but, when the fifth Wednesday came, Penrod held sore
debate within himself before he finally rose. In fact, after rising,
and while actually engaged with his toilet, he tentatively emitted
the series of little moans that was his wonted preliminary to a quiet
holiday at home; and the sound was heard (as intended) by Mr. Schofield,
who was passing Penrod's door on his way to breakfast.

"ALL right!" the father said, making use of peculiar and unnecessary
emphasis. "Stay in bed till to-morrow morning. Castor-oil, this time,
too."

Penrod had not hoped much for his experiment; nevertheless his
rebellious blood was sensibly inflamed by the failure, and he
accompanied his dressing with a low murmuring--apparently a bitter
dialogue between himself and some unknown but powerful patron.

Thus he muttered:

"Well, they better NOT!" "Well, what can I DO about it?" "Well, I'D show
'em!" "Well, I WILL show 'em!" "Well, you OUGHT to show 'em; that's the
way _I_ do! I just shake 'em around, and say, 'Here! I guess you don't
know who you're talkin' to like that! You better look out!'" "Well,
that's the way _I_'m goin' to do!" "Well, go on and DO it, then!" "Well,
I AM goin'--"

The door of the next room was slightly ajar; now it swung wide, and
Margaret appeared.

"Penrod, what on earth are you talking about?"

"Nothin'. None o' your--"

"Well, hurry to breakfast, then; it's getting late."

Lightly she went, humming a tune, leaving the door of her room open, and
the eyes of Penrod, as he donned his jacket, chanced to fall upon her
desk, where she had thoughtlessly left a letter--a private missive just
begun, and intended solely for the eyes of Mr. Robert Williams, a senior
at a far university.

In such a fashion is coincidence the architect of misfortune. Penrod's
class in English composition had been instructed, the previous day, to
concoct at home and bring to class on Wednesday morning, "a model letter
to a friend on some subject of general interest." Penalty for omission
to perform this simple task was definite; whosoever brought no letter
would inevitably be "kept in" after school, that afternoon, until
the letter was written, and it was precisely a premonition of this
misfortune that had prompted Penrod to attempt his experimental moaning
upon his father, for, alas! he had equipped himself with no model
letter, nor any letter whatever.

In stress of this kind, a boy's creed is that anything is worth a try;
but his eye for details is poor. He sees the future too sweepingly and
too much as he would have it seldom providing against inconsistencies of
evidence that may damage him. For instance, there is a well-known
case of two brothers who exhibited to their parents, with pathetic
confidence, several imported dried herring on a string, as a proof that
the afternoon had been spent, not at a forbidden circus, but with hook
and line upon the banks of a neighbouring brook.

So with Penrod. He had vital need of a letter, and there before his
eyes, upon Margaret's desk, was apparently the precise thing he needed!

From below rose the voice of his mother urging him to the
breakfast-table, warning him that he stood in danger of tardiness at
school; he was pressed for time, and acted upon an inspiration that
failed to prompt him even to read the letter.

Hurriedly he wrote "Dear freind" at the top of the page Margaret had
partially filled. Then he signed himself "Yours respectfuly, Penrod
Schofield" at the bottom, and enclosed the missive within a battered
volume entitled, "Principles of English Composition." With that and
other books compacted by a strap, he descended to a breakfast somewhat
oppressive but undarkened by any misgivings concerning a "letter to a
friend on some subject of general interest." He felt that a difficulty
had been encountered and satisfactorily disposed of; the matter could
now be dismissed from his mind. He had plenty of other difficulties to
take its place.

No; he had no misgivings, nor was he assailed by anything unpleasant
in that line, even when the hour struck for the class in English
composition. If he had been two or three years older, experience might
have warned him to take at least the precaution of copying his offering,
so that it would appear in his own handwriting when he "handed it in";
but Penrod had not even glanced at it.

"I think," Miss Spence said, "I will ask several of you to read your
letters aloud before you hand them in. Clara Raypole, you may read
yours."

Penrod was bored but otherwise comfortable; he had no apprehension
that he might be included in the "several," especially as Miss Spence's
beginning with Clara Raypole, a star performer, indicated that her
selection of readers would be made from the conscientious and proficient
division at the head of the class. He listened stoically to the
beginning of the first letter, though he was conscious of a dull
resentment, inspired mainly by the perfect complacency of Miss Raypole's
voice.

"'Dear Cousin Sadie,'" she began smoothly, "'I thought I would write
you to-day on some subject of general interest, and so I thought I
would tell you about the subject of our court-house. It is a very fine
building situated in the centre of the city, and a visit to the building
after school hours well repays for the visit. Upon entrance we find upon
our left the office of the county clerk and upon our right a number of
windows affording a view of the street. And so we proceed, finding on
both sides much of general interest. The building was begun in 1886
A.D. and it was through in 1887 A.D. It is four stories high and made
of stone, pressed brick, wood, and tiles, with a tower, or cupola, one
hundred and twenty-seven feet seven inches from the ground. Among other
subjects of general interest told by the janitor, we learn that the
architect of the building was a man named Flanner, and the foundations
extend fifteen feet five inches under the ground.'"

Penrod was unable to fix his attention upon these statistics; he began
moodily to twist a button of his jacket and to concentrate a new-born
and obscure but lasting hatred upon the court-house. Miss Raypole's glib
voice continued to press upon his ears; but, by keeping his eyes fixed
upon the twisting button he had accomplished a kind of self-hypnosis, or
mental anaesthesia, and was but dimly aware of what went on about him.

The court-house was finally exhausted by its visitor, who resumed her
seat and submitted with beamish grace to praise. Then Miss Spence said,
in a favourable manner:

"Georgie Bassett, you may read your letter next."

The neat Georgie rose, nothing loath, and began: "'Dear Teacher--'"

There was a slight titter, which Miss Spence suppressed. Georgie was not
at all discomfited.

"'My mother says,'" he continued, reading his manuscript, "'we should
treat our teacher as a friend, and so _I_ will write YOU a letter.'"

This penetrated Penrod's trance, and he lifted his eyes to fix them upon
the back of Georgie Bassett's head in a long and inscrutable stare. It
was inscrutable, and yet if Georgie had been sensitive to thought waves,
it is probable that he would have uttered a loud shriek; but he remained
placidly unaware, continuing:

"'I thought I would write you about a subject of general interest, and
so I will write you about the flowers. There are many kinds of flowers,
spring flowers, and summer flowers, and autumn flowers, but no winter
flowers. Wild flowers grow in the woods, and it is nice to hunt them in
springtime, and we must remember to give some to the poor and hospitals,
also. Flowers can be made to grow in flower-beds and placed in vases in
houses. There are many names for flowers, but _I_ call them "nature's
ornaments.--'"

Penrod's gaze had relaxed, drooped to his button again, and his lethargy
was renewed. The outer world grew vaguer; voices seemed to drone at a
distance; sluggish time passed heavily--but some of it did pass.

"Penrod!"

Miss Spence's searching eye had taken note of the bent head and the
twisting button. She found it necessary to speak again.

"Penrod Schofield!"

He came languidly to life.

"Ma'am?"

"You may read your letter."

"Yes'm."

And he began to paw clumsily among his books, whereupon Miss Spence's
glance fired with suspicion.

"Have you prepared one?" she demanded.

"Yes'm," said Penrod dreamily.

"But you're going to find you forgot to bring it, aren't you?"

"I got it," said Penrod, discovering the paper in his "Principles of
English Composition."

"Well, we'll listen to what you've found time to prepare," she said,
adding coldly, "for once!"

The frankest pessimism concerning Penrod permeated the whole room; even
the eyes of those whose letters had not met with favour turned upon him
with obvious assurance that here was every prospect of a performance
that would, by comparison, lend a measure of credit to the worst
preceding it. But Penrod was unaffected by the general gaze; he rose,
still blinking from his lethargy, and in no true sense wholly alive.

He had one idea: to read as rapidly as possible, so as to be done with
the task, and he began in a high-pitched monotone, reading with a blind
mind and no sense of the significance of the words.

"'Dear friend,"' he declaimed. "'You call me beautiful, but I am not
really beautiful, and there are times when I doubt if I am even pretty,
though perhaps my hair is beautiful, and if it is true that my eyes are
like blue stars in heaven--'"

Simultaneously he lost his breath and there burst upon him a perception
of the results to which he was being committed by this calamitous
reading. And also simultaneous the outbreak of the class into
cachinnations of delight, severely repressed by the perplexed but
indignant Miss Spence.

"Go on!" she commanded grimly, when she had restored order.

"Ma'am?" he gulped, looking wretchedly upon the rosy faces all about
him.

"Go on with the description of yourself," she said. "We'd like to hear
some more about your eyes being like blue stars in heaven."

Here many of Penrod's little comrades were forced to clasp their faces
tightly in both hands; and his dismayed gaze, in refuge, sought the
treacherous paper in his hand.

What it beheld there was horrible.

"Proceed!" Miss Spence said.

"'I--often think,'" he faltered, "'and a-a tree-more th-thrills my bein'
when I REcall your last words to me--that last--that last--that--'"

"GO ON!"

"'That last evening in the moonlight when you--you--you--'"

"Penrod," Miss Spence said dangerously, "you go on, and stop that
stammering."

"'You--you said you would wait for--for years to--to--to--to--"

"PENROD!"

"'To win me!'" the miserable Penrod managed to gasp. "'I should not
have pre--premitted--permitted you to speak so until we have our--our
parents' con-consent; but oh, how sweet it--'" He exhaled a sigh
of agony, and then concluded briskly, "'Yours respectfully, Penrod
Schofield.'"

But Miss Spence had at last divined something, for she knew the
Schofield family.

"Bring me that letter!" she said.

And the scarlet boy passed forward between rows of mystified but
immoderately uplifted children.

Miss Spence herself grew rather pink as she examined the missive, and
the intensity with which she afterward extended her examination to
cover the complete field of Penrod Schofield caused him to find a remote
centre of interest whereon to rest his embarrassed gaze. She let him
stand before her throughout a silence, equalled, perhaps, by the tenser
pauses during trials for murder, and then, containing herself, she
sweepingly gestured him to the pillory--a chair upon the platform,
facing the school.

Here he suffered for the unusual term of an hour, with many jocular and
cunning eyes constantly upon him; and, when he was released at noon,
horrid shouts and shrieks pursued him every step of his homeward way.
For his laughter-loving little schoolmates spared him not--neither boy
nor girl.

"Yay, Penrod!" they shouted. "How's your beautiful hair?" And, "Hi,
Penrod! When you goin' to get your parents' consent?" And, "Say, blue
stars in heaven, how's your beautiful eyes?" And, "Say, Penrod, how's
your tree-mores?" "Does your tree-mores thrill your bein', Penrod?" And
many other facetious inquiries, hard to bear in public.

And when he reached the temporary shelter of his home, he experienced
no relief upon finding that Margaret was out for lunch. He was as deeply
embittered toward her as toward any other, and, considering her largely
responsible for his misfortune, he would have welcomed an opportunity to
show her what he thought of her.



CHAPTER XVI. WEDNESDAY MADNESS

How long he was "kept in" after school that afternoon is not a matter of
record; but it was long. Before he finally appeared upon the street, he
had composed an ample letter on a subject of general interest, namely
"School Life", under the supervision of Miss Spencer. He had also
received some scorching admonitions in respect to honourable behaviour
regarding other people's letters; and Margaret's had been returned to
him with severe instructions to bear it straight to the original owner
accompanied by full confession and apology. As a measure of insurance
that these things be done, Miss Spence stated definitely her intention
to hold a conversation by telephone with Margaret that evening.
Altogether, the day had been unusually awful, even for Wednesday, and
Penrod left the school-house with the heart of an anarchist throbbing
in his hot bosom. It were more accurate, indeed, to liken him to the
anarchist's characteristic weapon; for as Penrod came out to the street
he was, in all inward respects, a bomb, loaded and ticking.

He walked moodily, with a visible aspect of soreness. A murmurous
sound was thick about his head, wherefore it is to be surmised that he
communed with his familiar, and one vehement, oft-repeated phrase beat
like a tocsin of revolt upon the air: "Daw-gone 'em!"

He meant everybody--the universe.

Particularly included, evidently, was a sparrow, offensively cheerful
upon a lamp-post. This self-centred little bird allowed a pebble to pass
overhead and remained unconcerned, but, a moment later, feeling a jar
beneath his feet, and hearing the tinkle of falling glass, he decided
to leave. Similarly, and at the same instant, Penrod made the same
decision, and the sparrow in flight took note of a boy likewise in
flight.

The boy disappeared into the nearest alley and emerged therefrom,
breathless, in the peaceful vicinity of his own home. He entered the
house, clumped upstairs and down, discovered Margaret reading a book in
the library, and flung the accursed letter toward her with loathing.

"You can take the old thing," he said bitterly. "_I_ don't want it!"

And before she was able to reply, he was out of the room. The next
moment he was out of the house.

"Daw-GONE 'em!" he said.

And then, across the street, his soured eye fell upon his true comrade
and best friend leaning against a picket fence and holding desultory
converse with Mabel Rorebeck, an attractive member of the Friday
Afternoon Dancing Class, that hated organization of which Sam and Penrod
were both members. Mabel was a shy little girl; but Penrod had a vague
understanding that Sam considered her two brown pig-tails beautiful.

Howbeit, Sam had never told his love; he was, in fact, sensitive about
it. This meeting with the lady was by chance, and, although it afforded
exquisite moments, his heart was beating in an unaccustomed manner, and
he was suffering from embarrassment, being at a loss, also, for subjects
of conversation. It is, indeed, no easy matter to chat easily with a
person, however lovely and beloved, who keeps her face turned the other
way, maintains one foot in rapid and continuous motion through an arc
seemingly perilous to her equilibrium, and confines her responses, both
affirmative and negative, to "Uh-huh."

Altogether, Sam was sufficiently nervous without any help from Penrod,
and it was with pure horror that he heard his own name and Mabel's
shrieked upon the ambient air with viperish insinuation.

"Sam-my and May-bul! OH, oh!"

Sam started violently. Mabel ceased to swing her foot, and both,
encarnadined, looked up and down and everywhere for the invisible but
well-known owner of that voice. It came again, in taunting mockery:

       "Sammy's mad, and I am glad,
     And I know what will please him:
       A bottle o' wine to make him shine,
     And Mabel Rorebeck to squeeze him!"

"Fresh ole thing!" said Miss Rorebeck, becoming articulate. And
unreasonably including Sam in her indignation, she tossed her head at
him with an unmistakable effect of scorn. She began to walk away.

"Well, Mabel," Sam said plaintively, following, "it ain't MY fault. _I_
didn't do anything. It's Penrod."

"I don't care," she began pettishly, when the viperish voice was again
lifted:

"Oh, oh, oh! Who's your beau? Guess _I_ know: Mabel and Sammy, oh, oh,
oh! _I_ caught you!"

Then Mabel did one of those things that eternally perplex the slower
sex. She deliberately made a face, not at the tree behind which Penrod
was lurking, but at the innocent and heart-wrung Sam. "You needn't come
limpin' after me, Sam Williams!" she said, though Sam was approaching
upon two perfectly sound legs. And then she ran away at the top of her
speed.

"Run, rigger, run!" Penrod began inexcusably. But Sam cut the
persecutions short at this point. Stung to fury, he charged upon the
sheltering tree in the Schofields' yard.

Ordinarily, at such a juncture, Penrod would have fled, keeping his own
temper and increasing the heat of his pursuer's by back-flung jeers. But
this was Wednesday, and he was in no mood to run from Sam. He stepped
away from the tree, awaiting the onset.

"Well, what you goin' to do so much?" he said.

Sam did not pause to proffer the desired information. "'Tcha got'ny
SENSE!" was the total extent of his vocal preliminaries before flinging
himself headlong upon the taunter; and the two boys went to the ground
together. Embracing, they rolled, they pommelled, they hammered, they
kicked. Alas, this was a fight.

They rose, flailing a while, then renewed their embrace, and, grunting,
bestowed themselves anew upon our ever too receptive Mother Earth. Once
more upon their feet, they beset each other sorely, dealing many
great blows, ofttimes upon the air, but with sufficient frequency upon
resentful flesh. Tears were jolted to the rims of eyes, but technically
they did not weep. "Got'ny sense," was repeated chokingly many, many
times; also, "Dern ole fool!" and, "I'll SHOW you!"

The peacemaker who appeared upon the animated scene was Penrod's
great-uncle Slocum. This elderly relative had come to call upon Mrs.
Schofield, and he was well upon his way to the front door when the
mutterings of war among some shrubberies near the fence caused him to
deflect his course in benevolent agitation.

"Boys! Boys! Shame, boys!" he said; but, as the originality of these
expressions did not prove striking enough to attract any great
attention from the combatants, he felt obliged to assume a share in
the proceedings. It was a share entailing greater activity than he had
anticipated, and, before he managed to separate the former friends,
he intercepted bodily an amount of violence to which he was wholly
unaccustomed. Additionally, his attire was disarranged; his hat was no
longer upon his head, and his temper was in a bad way. In fact, as his
hat flew off, he made use of words that under less extreme circumstances
would have caused both boys to feel a much profounder interest than they
did in great-uncle Slocum.

"I'll GET you!" Sam babbled. "Don't you ever dare to speak to me again,
Penrod Schofield, long as you live, or I'll whip you worse'n I have this
time!"

Penrod squawked. For the moment he was incapable of coherent speech,
and then, failing in a convulsive attempt to reach his enemy, his fury
culminated upon an innocent object that had never done him the slightest
harm. Great-uncle Slocum's hat lay upon the ground close by, and Penrod
was in the state of irritation that seeks an outlet too blindly--as
people say, he "HAD to do SOMETHING!" He kicked great-uncle Slocum's hat
with such sweep and precision that it rose swiftly, and, breasting the
autumn breeze, passed over the fence and out into the street.

Great-uncle Slocum uttered a scream of anguish, and, immediately ceasing
to peacemake, ran forth to a more important rescue; but the conflict was
not renewed. Sanity had returned to Sam Williams; he was awed by this
colossal deed of Penrod's and filled with horror at the thaught that he
might be held as accessory to it. Fleetly he fled, pursued as far as
the gate by the whole body of Penrod, and thereafter by Penrod's voice
alone.

"You BETTER run! You wait till I catch you! You'll see what you get next
time! Don't you ever speak to me again as long as you--"

Here he paused abruptly, for great-uncle Slocum had recovered his hat
and was returning toward the gate. After one glance at great-uncle
Slocum, Penrod did not linger to attempt any explanation--there are
times when even a boy can see that apologies would seem out of place.
Penrod ran round the house to the backyard.

Here he was enthusiastically greeted by Duke. "You get away from
me!" Penrod said hoarsely, and with terrible gestures he repulsed the
faithful animal, who retired philosophically to the stable, while his
master let himself out of the back gate. Penrod had decided to absent
himself from home for the time being.

The sky was gray, and there were hints of coming dusk in the air; it
was an hour suited to his turbulent soul, and he walked with a sombre
swagger. "Ran like a c'ardy-calf!" he sniffed, half aloud, alluding to
the haste of Sam Williams in departure. "All he is, ole c'ardy-calf!"

Then, as he proceeded up the alley, a hated cry smote his ears: "Hi,
Penrod! How's your tree-mores?" And two jovial schoolboy faces appeared
above a high board fence. "How's your beautiful hair, Penrod?" they
vociferated. "When you goin' to git your parents' consent? What makes
you think you're only pretty, ole blue stars?"

Penrod looked about feverishly for a missile, and could find none to
his hand, but the surface of the alley sufficed; he made mud balls and
fiercely bombarded the vociferous fence. Naturally, hostile mud balls
presently issued from behind this barricade; and thus a campaign
developed that offered a picture not unlike a cartoonist's sketch of
a political campaign, wherein this same material is used for the
decoration of opponents. But Penrod had been unwise; he was outnumbered,
and the hostile forces held the advantageous side of the fence.

Mud balls can be hard as well as soggy; some of those that reached
Penrod were of no inconsiderable weight and substance, and they made him
grunt despite himself. Finally, one, at close range, struck him in
the pit of the stomach, whereupon he clasped himself about the middle
silently, and executed some steps in seeming imitation of a quaint
Indian dance.

His plight being observed through a knothole, his enemies climbed upon
the fence and regarded him seriously.

"Aw, YOU'RE all right, ain't you, old tree-mores?" inquired one.

"I'll SHOW you!" bellowed Penrod, recovering his breath; and he hurled
a fat ball--thoughtfully retained in hand throughout his agony--to such
effect that his interrogator disappeared backward from the fence without
having taken any initiative of his own in the matter. His comrade
impulsively joined him upon the ground, and the battle continued.

Through the gathering dusk it went on. It waged but the hotter as
darkness made aim more difficult--and still Penrod would not be driven
from the field. Panting, grunting, hoarse from returning insults,
fighting on and on, an indistinguishable figure in the gloom, he held
the back alley against all comers.

For such a combat darkness has one great advantage; but it has an
equally important disadvantage--the combatant cannot see to aim; on
the other hand, he cannot see to dodge. And all the while Penrod
was receiving two for one. He became heavy with mud. Plastered,
impressionistic and sculpturesque, there was about him a quality of the
tragic, of the magnificent. He resembled a sombre masterpiece by Rodin.
No one could have been quite sure what he was meant for.

Dinner bells tinkled in houses. Then they were rung from kitchen doors.
Calling voices came urging from the distance, calling boys' names into
the darkness. They called and a note of irritation seemed to mar their
beauty.

Then bells were rung again--and the voices renewed appeals more urgent,
much more irritated. They called and called and called.

THUD! went the mud balls.

Thud! Thud! Blunk!

"OOF!" said Penrod.

... Sam Williams, having dined with his family at their usual hour,
seven, slipped unostentatiously out of the kitchen door, as soon as he
could, after the conclusion of the meal, and quietly betook himself to
the Schofields' corner.

Here he stationed himself where he could see all avenues of approach
to the house, and waited. Twenty minutes went by, and then Sam became
suddenly alert and attentive, for the arc-light revealed a small,
grotesque figure slowly approaching along the sidewalk. It was brown in
colour, shaggy and indefinite in form; it limped excessively, and paused
to rub itself, and to meditate.

Peculiar as the thing was, Sam had no doubt as to its identity. He
advanced.

"'Lo, Penrod," he said cautiously, and with a shade of formality.

Penrod leaned against the fence, and, lifting one leg, tested the
knee-joint by swinging his foot back and forth, a process evidently
provocative of a little pain. Then he rubbed the left side of his
encrusted face, and, opening his mouth to its whole capacity as
an aperture, moved his lower jaw slightly from side to side, thus
triumphantly settling a question in his own mind as to whether or no a
suspected dislocation had taken place.

Having satisfied himself on these points, he examined both shins
delicately by the sense of touch, and carefully tested the capacities of
his neck-muscles to move his head in a wonted manner. Then he responded
somewhat gruffly: "'Lo!" "Where you been?" Sam said eagerly, his
formality vanishing.

"Havin' a mud-fight."

"I guess you did!" Sam exclaimed, in a low voice. "What you goin' to
tell your--"

"Oh, nothin'."

"Your sister telephoned to our house to see if I knew where you were,"
said Sam. "She told me if I saw you before you got home to tell you
sumpthing; but not to say anything about it. She said Miss Spence had
telephoned to her, but she said for me to tell you it was all right
about that letter, and she wasn't goin' to tell your mother and father
on you, so you needn't say anything about it to 'em."

"All right," said Penrod indifferently.

"She says you're goin' to be in enough trouble without that," Sam went
on. "You're goin' to catch fits about your Uncle Slocum's hat, Penrod."

"Well, I guess I know it."

"And about not comin' home to dinner, too. Your mother telephoned twice
to Mamma while we were eatin' to see if you'd come in our house. And
when they SEE you--MY, but you're goin' to get the DICKENS, Penrod!"

Penrod seemed unimpressed, though he was well aware that Sam's prophecy
was no unreasonable one.

"Well, I guess I know it," he repeated casually. And he moved slowly
toward his own gate.

His friend looked after him curiously--then, as the limping figure
fumbled clumsily with bruised fingers at the latch of the gate, there
sounded a little solicitude in Sam's voice.

"Say, Penrod, how--how do you feel?"

"What?"

"Do you feel pretty bad?"

"No," said Penrod, and, in spite of what awaited him beyond the lighted
portals just ahead, he spoke the truth. His nerves were rested, and his
soul was at peace. His Wednesday madness was over.

"No," said Penrod; "I feel bully!"



CHAPTER XVII. PENROD'S BUSY DAY

Although the pressure had thus been relieved and Penrod found peace with
himself, nevertheless there were times during the rest of that week
when he felt a strong distaste for Margaret. His schoolmates frequently
reminded him of such phrases in her letter as they seemed least able to
forget, and for hours after each of these experiences he was unable to
comport himself with human courtesy when constrained (as at dinner) to
remain for any length of time in the same room with her. But by Sunday
these moods had seemed to pass; he attended church in her close
company, and had no thought of the troubles brought upon him by her
correspondence with a person who throughout remained unknown to him.

Penrod slumped far down in the pew with his knees against the back of
that in front, and he also languished to one side, so that the people
sitting behind were afforded a view of him consisting of a little hair
and one bored ear. The sermon--a noble one, searching and eloquent--was
but a persistent sound in that ear, though, now and then, Penrod's
attention would be caught by some detached portion of a sentence, when
his mind would dwell dully upon the phrases for a little while and lapse
into a torpor. At intervals his mother, without turning her head, would
whisper, "Sit up, Penrod," causing him to sigh profoundly and move his
shoulders about an inch, this mere gesture of compliance exhausting all
the energy that remained to him.

The black backs and gray heads of the elderly men in the congregation
oppressed him; they made him lethargic with a sense of long lives of
repellent dullness. But he should have been grateful to the lady with
the artificial cherries upon her hat. His gaze lingered there, wandered
away, and hopelessly returned again and again, to be a little refreshed
by the glossy scarlet of the cluster of tiny globes. He was not so
fortunate as to be drowsy; that would have brought him some relief--and
yet, after a while, his eyes became slightly glazed; he saw dimly, and
what he saw was distorted.

The church had been built in the early 'Seventies, and it contained
some naive stained glass of that period. The arch at the top of a window
facing Penrod was filled with a gigantic Eye. Of oyster-white and raw
blues and reds, inflamed by the pouring sun, it had held an awful place
in the infantile life of Penrod Schofield, for in his tenderer years he
accepted it without question as the literal Eye of Deity. He had been
informed that the church was the divine dwelling--and there was the Eye!

Nowadays, being no longer a little child, he had somehow come to know
better without being told, and, though the great flaming Eye was no
longer the terrifying thing it had been to him during his childhood, it
nevertheless retained something of its ominous character. It made him
feel spied upon, and its awful glare still pursued him, sometimes, as
he was falling asleep at night. When he faced the window his feeling was
one of dull resentment.

His own glazed eyes, becoming slightly crossed with an ennui that was
peculiarly intense this morning, rendered the Eye more monstrous than it
was. It expanded to horrible size, growing mountainous; it turned into
a volcano in the tropics, and yet it stared at him, indubitably an Eye
implacably hostile to all rights of privacy forever. Penrod blinked and
clinched his eyelids to be rid of this dual image, and he managed to
shake off the volcano. Then, lowering the angle of his glance, he saw
something most remarkable--and curiously out of place.

An inverted white soup-plate was lying miraculously balanced upon the
back of a pew a little distance in front of him, and upon the upturned
bottom of the soup-plate was a brown cocoanut. Mildly surprised,
Penrod yawned, and, in the effort to straighten his eyes, came to life
temporarily. The cocoanut was revealed as Georgie Bassett's head,
and the soup-plate as Georgie's white collar. Georgie was sitting up
straight, as he always did in church, and Penrod found this vertical
rectitude unpleasant. He knew that he had more to fear from the Eye
than Georgie had, and he was under the impression (a correct one) that
Georgie felt on intimate terms with it and was actually fond of it.

Penrod himself would have maintained that he was fond of it, if he had
been asked. He would have said so because he feared to say otherwise;
and the truth is that he never consciously looked at the Eye
disrespectfully. He would have been alarmed if he thought the Eye had
any way of finding out how he really felt about it. When not off his
guard, he always looked at it placatively.

By and by, he sagged so far to the left that he had symptoms of a
"stitch in the side", and, rousing himself, sat partially straight for
several moments. Then he rubbed his shoulders slowly from side to side
against the back of the seat, until his mother whispered, "Don't do
that, Penrod."

Upon this, he allowed himself to slump inwardly till the curve in the
back of his neck rested against the curved top of the back of the seat.
It was a congenial fit, and Penrod again began to move slowly from side
to side, finding the friction soothing. Even so slight a pleasure was
denied him by a husky, "Stop that!" from his father.

Penrod sighed, and slid farther down. He scratched his head, his left
knee, his right biceps and his left ankle, after which he scratched
his right knee, his right ankle and his left biceps. Then he said, "Oh,
hum!" unconsciously, but so loudly that there was a reproving stir in
the neighbourhood of the Schofield pew, and his father looked at him
angrily.

Finally, his nose began to trouble him. It itched, and after scratching
it, he rubbed it harshly. Another "Stop that!" from his father proved of
no avail, being greeted by a desperate-sounding whisper, "I GOT to!"

And, continuing to rub his nose with his right hand, Penrod began to
search his pockets with his left. The quest proving fruitless, he
rubbed his nose with his left hand and searched with his right. Then
he abandoned his nose and searched feverishly with both hands, going
through all of his pockets several times.

"What DO you want?" whispered his mother.

But Margaret had divined his need, and she passed him her own
handkerchief. This was both thoughtful and thoughtless--the latter
because Margaret was in the habit of thinking that she became faint in
crowds, especially at the theatre or in church, and she had just soaked
her handkerchief with spirits of ammonia from a small phial she carried
in her muff.

Penrod hastily applied the handkerchief to his nose and even more
hastily exploded. He sneezed stupendously; he choked, sneezed
again, wept, passed into a light convulsion of coughing and sneezing
together--a mergence of sound that attracted much attention--and, after
a few recurrent spasms, convalesced into a condition marked by silent
tears and only sporadic instances of sneezing.

By this time his family were unanimously scarlet--his father and mother
with mortification, and Margaret with the effort to control the almost
irresistible mirth that the struggles and vociferations of Penrod had
inspired within her. And yet her heart misgave her, for his bloodshot
and tearful eyes were fixed upon her from the first and remained upon
her, even when half-blinded with his agony; and their expression--as
terrible as that of the windowed Eye confronting her--was not for an
instant to be misunderstood. Absolutely, he believed that she had handed
him the ammonia-soaked handkerchief deliberately and with malice, and
well she knew that no power on earth could now or at any time henceforth
persuade him otherwise.

"Of course I didn't mean it, Penrod," she said, at the first opportunity
upon their homeward way. "I didn't notice--that is, I didn't think--"
Unfortunately for the effect of sincerity she hoped to produce, her
voice became tremulous and her shoulders moved suspiciously.

"Just you wait! You'll see!" he prophesied, in a voice now choking, not
with ammonia, but with emotion. "Poison a person, and then laugh in his
face!"

He spake no more until they had reached their own house, though she made
some further futile efforts at explanation and apology.

And after brooding abysmally throughout the meal that followed, he
disappeared from the sight of his family, having answered with one
frightful look his mother's timid suggestion that it was almost time
for Sunday-school. He retired to his eyry--the sawdust box in the empty
stable--and there gave rein to his embittered imaginings, incidentally
forming many plans for Margaret.

Most of these were much too elaborate; but one was so alluring that he
dwelt upon it, working out the details with gloomy pleasure, even after
he had perceived its defects. It involved some postponement--in fact,
until Margaret should have become the mother of a boy about Penrod's
present age. This boy would be precisely like Georgie Bassett--Penrod
conceived that as inevitable--and, like Georgie, he would be his
mother's idol. Penrod meant to take him to church and force him to blow
his nose with an ammonia-soaked handkerchief in the presence of the Eye
and all the congregation.

Then Penrod intended to say to this boy, after church, "Well, that's
exackly what your mother did to me, and if you don't like it, you better
look out!"

And the real Penrod in the sawdust box clenched his fists. "Come ahead,
then!" he muttered. "You talk too much!" Whereupon, the Penrod of his
dream gave Margaret's puny son a contemptuous thrashing under the eyes
of his mother, who besought in vain for mercy. This plan was finally
dropped, not because of any lingering nepotism within Penrod, but
because his injury called for action less belated.

One after another, he thought of impossible things; one after another,
he thought of things merely inane and futile, for he was trying to
do something beyond his power. Penrod was never brilliant, or even
successful, save by inspiration.

At four o'clock he came into the house, still nebulous, and as he passed
the open door of the library he heard a man's voice, not his father's.

"To me," said this voice, "the finest lines in all literature are those
in Tennyson's 'Maud'--

"'Had it lain for a century dead, My dust would hear her and beat, And
blossom in purple and red, There somewhere around near her feet.'

"I think I have quoted correctly," continued the voice nervously, "but,
at any rate, what I wished to--ah--say was that I often think of those
ah--words; but I never think of them without thinking of--of--of YOU.
I--ah--"

The nervous voice paused, and Penrod took an oblique survey of the room,
himself unobserved. Margaret was seated in an easy chair and her face
was turned away from Penrod, so that her expression of the moment
remained unknown to him. Facing her, and leaning toward her with
perceptible emotion, was Mr. Claude Blakely--a young man with whom
Penrod had no acquaintance, though he had seen him, was aware of his
identity, and had heard speech between Mrs. Schofield and Margaret which
indicated that Mr. Blakely had formed the habit of calling frequently at
the house. This was a brilliantly handsome young man; indeed, his face
was so beautiful that even Penrod was able to perceive something about
it which might be explicably pleasing--at least to women. And Penrod
remembered that, on the last evening before Mr. Robert Williams's
departure for college, Margaret had been peevish because Penrod had
genially spent the greater portion of the evening with Robert and
herself upon the porch. Margaret made it clear, later, that she strongly
preferred to conduct her conversations with friends unassisted--and as
Penrod listened to the faltering words of Mr. Claude Blakely, he felt
instinctively that, in a certain contingency, Margaret's indignation
would be even more severe to-day than on the former occasion.

Mr. Blakely coughed faintly and was able to continue.

"I mean to say that when I say that what Tennyson says--ah--seems to--to
apply to--to a feeling about you--"

At this point, finding too little breath in himself to proceed, in spite
of the fact that he had spoken in an almost inaudible tone, Mr. Blakely
stopped again.

Something about this little scene was making a deep impression upon
Penrod. What that impression was, he could not possibly have stated;
but he had a sense of the imminence of a tender crisis, and he perceived
that the piquancy of affairs in the library had reached a point which
would brand an intentional interruption as the act of a cold-blooded
ruffian. Suddenly it was as though a strong light shone upon him: he
decided that it was Mr. Blakely who had told Margaret that her eyes
were like blue stars in heaven--THIS was the person who had caused the
hateful letter to be written! That decided Penrod; his inspiration, so
long waited for, had come.

"I--I feel that perhaps I am not plain," said Mr. Blakely, and
immediately became red, whereas he had been pale. He was at least modest
enough about his looks to fear that Margaret might think he had referred
to them. "I mean, not plain in another sense--that is, I mean not that
_I_ am not plain in saying what I mean to you--I mean, what you mean to
ME! I feel--"

This was the moment selected by Penrod. He walked carelessly into the
library, inquiring in a loud, bluff voice:

"Has anybody seen my dog around here anywheres?"

Mr. Blakely had inclined himself so far toward Margaret, and he was
sitting so near the edge of the chair, that only a really wonderful bit
of instinctive gymnastics landed him upon his feet instead of upon his
back. As for Margaret, she said, "Good gracious!" and regarded Penrod
blankly.

"Well," said Penrod breezily, "I guess it's no use lookin' for him--he
isn't anywheres around. I guess I'll sit down." Herewith, he sank into
an easy chair, and remarked, as in comfortable explanation, "I'm kind of
tired standin' up, anyway."

Even in this crisis, Margaret was a credit to her mother's training.

"Penrod, have you met Mr. Blakely?"

"What?"

Margaret primly performed the rite.

"Mr. Blakely, this is my little brother Penrod."

Mr. Blakely was understood to murmur, "How d'ye do?"

"I'm well," said Penrod.

Margaret bent a perplexed gaze upon him, and he saw that she had not
divined his intentions, though the expression of Mr. Blakely was already
beginning to be a little compensation for the ammonia outrage. Then,
as the protracted silence which followed the introduction began to be a
severe strain upon all parties, Penrod felt called upon to relieve it.

"I didn't have anything much to do this afternoon, anyway," he said. And
at that there leaped a spark in Margaret's eye; her expression became
severe.

"You should have gone to Sunday-school," she told him crisply.

"Well, I didn't!" said Penrod, with a bitterness so significant of
sufferings connected with religion, ammonia, and herself, that Margaret,
after giving him a thoughtful look, concluded not to urge the point.

Mr. Blakely smiled pleasantly. "I was looking out of the window a minute
ago," he said, "and I saw a dog run across the street and turn the
corner."

"What kind of a lookin' dog was it?" Penrod inquired, with languor.

"Well," said Mr. Blakely, "it was a--it was a nice-looking dog."

"What colour was he?"

"He was--ah--white. That is, I think--"

"It wasn't Duke," said Penrod. "Duke's kind of brownish-gray-like."

Mr. Blakely brightened.

"Yes, that was it," he said. "This dog I saw first had another dog with
him--a brownish-gray dog."

"Little or big?" Penrod asked, without interest.

"Why, Duke's a little dog!" Margaret intervened. "Of COURSE, if it was
little, it must have been Duke."

"It WAS little," said Mr. Blakely too enthusiastically. "It was a little
bit of a dog. I noticed it because it was so little."

"Couldn't 'a' been Duke, then," said Penrod. "Duke's a kind of a
middle-sized dog." He yawned, and added: "I don't want him now. I want
to stay in the house this afternoon, anyway. And it's better for Duke to
be out in the fresh air."

Mr. Blakely coughed again and sat down, finding little to say. It was
evident, also, that Margaret shared his perplexity; and another silence
became so embarrassing that Penrod broke it.

"I was out in the sawdust-box," he said, "but it got kind of chilly."
Neither of his auditors felt called upon to offer any comment, and
presently he added, "I thought I better come in here where it's warmer."

"It's too warm,"' said Margaret, at once. "Mr. Blakely, would you mind
opening a window?"

"By all means!" the young man responded earnestly, as he rose. "Maybe
I'd better open two?"

"Yes," said Margaret; "that would be much better."

But Penrod watched Mr. Blakely open two windows to their widest, and
betrayed no anxiety. His remarks upon the relative temperatures of
the sawdust-box and the library had been made merely for the sake of
creating sound in a silent place. When the windows had been open for
several minutes, Penrod's placidity, though gloomy, denoted anything but
discomfort from the draft, which was powerful, the day being windy.

It was Mr. Blakely's turn to break a silence, and he did it so
unexpectedly that Margaret started. He sneezed.

"Perhaps--" Margaret began, but paused apprehensively.
"Perhaps-per-per--" Her apprehensions became more and more poignant; her
eyes seemed fixed upon some incredible disaster; she appeared to inflate
while the catastrophe she foresaw became more and more imminent. All at
once she collapsed, but the power decorum had over her was attested by
the mildness of her sneeze after so threatening a prelude.

"Perhaps I'd better put one of the windows down," Mr. Blakely suggested.

"Both, I believe," said Margaret. "The room has cooled off, now, I
think."

Mr. Blakely closed the windows, and, returning to a chair near Margaret,
did his share in the production of another long period of quiet. Penrod
allowed this one to pass without any vocal disturbance on his part. It
may be, however, that his gaze was disturbing to Mr. Blakely, upon whose
person it was glassily fixed with a self-forgetfulness that was almost
morbid.

"Didn't you enjoy the last meeting of the Cotillion Club?" Margaret said
finally.

And upon Mr. Blakely's answering absently in the affirmative, she
suddenly began to be talkative. He seemed to catch a meaning in her
fluency, and followed her lead, a conversation ensuing which at first
had all the outward signs of eagerness. They talked with warm interest
of people and events unknown to Penrod; they laughed enthusiastically
about things beyond his ken; they appeared to have arranged a perfect
way to enjoy themselves, no matter whether he was with them or elsewhere
but presently their briskness began to slacken; the appearance of
interest became perfunctory. Within ten minutes the few last scattering
semblances of gayety had passed, and they lapsed into the longest and
most profound of all their silences indoors that day. Its effect upon
Penrod was to make him yawn and settle himself in his chair.

Then Mr. Blakely, coming to the surface out of deep inward communings,
snapped his finger against the palm of his hand impulsively.

"By George!" he exclaimed, under his breath.

"What is it?" Margaret asked. "Did you remember something?"

"No, it's nothing," he said. "Nothing at all. But, by the way, it seems
a pity for you to be missing the fine weather. I wonder if I could
persuade you to take a little walk?"

Margaret, somewhat to the surprise of both the gentlemen present, looked
uncertain.

"I don't know," she said.

Mr. Blakely saw that she missed his point.

"One can talk better in the open, don't you think?" he urged, with a
significant glance toward Penrod.

Margaret also glanced keenly at Penrod. "Well, perhaps." And then, "I'll
get my hat," she said.

Penrod was on his feet before she left the room. He stretched himself.

"I'll get mine, too," he said.

But he carefully went to find it in a direction different from that
taken by his sister, and he joined her and her escort not till they were
at the front door, whither Mr. Blakely--with a last flickering of hope
had urged a flight in haste.

"I been thinkin' of takin' a walk, all afternoon," said Penrod
pompously. "Don't matter to me which way we go."

The exquisite oval of Mr. Claude Blakely's face merged into outlines
more rugged than usual; the conformation of his jaw became perceptible,
and it could be seen that he had conceived an idea which was
crystallizing into a determination.

"I believe it happens that this is our first walk together," he said to
Margaret, as they reached the pavement, "but, from the kind of tennis
you play, I judge that you could go a pretty good gait. Do you like
walking fast?"

She nodded. "For exercise."

"Shall we try it then?"

"You set the pace," said Margaret. "I think I can keep up."

He took her at her word, and the amazing briskness of their start seemed
a little sinister to Penrod, though he was convinced that he could
do anything that Margaret could do, and also that neither she nor her
comely friend could sustain such a speed for long. On the contrary, they
actually increased it with each fleeting block they covered.

"Here!" he panted, when they had thus put something more than a
half-mile behind them. "There isn't anybody has to have a doctor, I
guess! What's the use our walkin' so fast?"

In truth, Penrod was not walking, for his shorter legs permitted no
actual walking at such a speed; his gait was a half-trot.

"Oh, WE'RE out for a WALK!" Mr. Blakely returned, a note of gayety
beginning to sound in his voice. "Marg--ah--Miss Schofield, keep your
head up and breathe through your nose. That's it! You'll find I was
right in suggesting this. It's going to turn out gloriously! Now, let's
make it a little faster."

Margaret murmured inarticulately, for she would not waste her breath in
a more coherent reply. Her cheeks were flushed; her eyes were brimming
with the wind, but when she looked at Penrod, they were brimming with
something more. Gurgling sounds came from her.

Penrod's expression had become grim. He offered no second protest,
mainly because he, likewise, would not waste his breath, and if he
would, he could not. Of breath in the ordinary sense breath, breathed
automatically--he had none. He had only gasps to feed his straining
lungs, and his half-trot, which had long since become a trot, was
changed for a lope when Mr. Blakely reached his own best burst of speed.

And now people stared at the flying three. The gait of Margaret and
Mr. Blakely could be called a walk only by courtesy, while Penrod's was
becoming a kind of blind scamper. At times he zigzagged; other times,
he fell behind, wabbling. Anon, with elbows flopping and his face
sculptured like an antique mask, he would actually forge ahead, and then
carom from one to the other of his companions as he fell back again.

Thus the trio sped through the coming of autumn dusk, outflying the
fallen leaves that tumbled upon the wind. And still Penrod held to the
task that he had set himself. The street lamps flickered into life, but
on and on Claude Blakely led the lady, and on and on reeled the
grim Penrod. Never once was he so far from them that they could have
exchanged a word unchaperoned by his throbbing ear.

"OH!" Margaret cried, and, halting suddenly, she draped herself about a
lamp-post like a strip of bunting. "Guh-uh-guh-GOODNESS!" she sobbed.

Penrod immediately drooped to the curb-stone, which he reached, by pure
fortune, in a sitting position. Mr. Blakely leaned against a fence, and
said nothing, though his breathing was eloquent. "We--we must go--go
home," Margaret gasped. "We must, if--if we can drag ourselves!"

Then Penrod showed them what mettle they he'd tried to crack. A paroxysm
of coughing shook him; he spoke through it sobbingly:

"'Drag!' 'S jus' lul-like a girl! Ha-why I walk--OOF!--faster'n that
every day--on my--way to school." He managed to subjugate a tendency to
nausea. "What you--want to go--home for?" he said. "Le's go on!"

In the darkness Mr. Claude Blakely's expression could not be seen,
nor was his voice heard. For these and other reasons, his opinions and
sentiments may not be stated.

... Mrs. Schofield was looking rather anxiously forth from her front
door when the two adult figures and the faithful smaller one came up the
walk.

"I was getting uneasy," she said. "Papa and I came in and found the
house empty. It's after seven. Oh, Mr. Blakely, is that you?"

"Good-evening," he said. "I fear I must be keeping an engagement.
Good-night. Good-night, Miss Schofield."

"Good-night."

"Well, good-night," Penrod called, staring after him. But Mr. Blakely
was already too far away to hear him, and a moment later Penrod followed
his mother and sister into the house.

"I let Della go to church," Mrs. Schofield said to Margaret. "You and I
might help Katie get supper."

"Not for a few minutes," Margaret returned gravely, looking at Penrod.
"Come upstairs, mamma; I want to tell you something."

Penrod cackled hoarse triumph and defiance.

"Go on! Tell! What _'I_ care? You try to poison a person in church
again, and then laugh in his face, you'll see what you get!"

But after his mother had retired with Margaret to the latter's room, he
began to feel disturbed in spite of his firm belief that his cause
was wholly that of justice victorious. Margaret had insidious ways of
stating a case; and her point of view, no matter how absurd or unjust,
was almost always adopted by Mr. and Mrs. Schofield in cases of
controversy.

Penrod became uneasy. Perceiving himself to be in danger, he decided
that certain measures were warranted. Unquestionably, it would be well
to know beforehand in what terms Margaret would couch the charges
which he supposed he must face in open court--that is to say, at the
supper-table. He stole softly up the stairs, and, flattening himself
against the wall, approached Margaret's door, which was about an inch
ajar.

He heard his mother making sounds which appalled him--he took them for
sobs. And then Margaret's voice rang out in a peal of insane laughter.
Trembling, he crept nearer the door. Within the room Margaret was
clinging to her mother, and both were trying to control their hilarity.

"He did it all to get even!" Margaret exclaimed, wiping her eyes. "He
came in at just the right time. That GOOSE was beginning to talk his
silly, soft talk--the way he does with every girl in town--and he was
almost proposing, and I didn't know how to stop him. And then Penrod
came in and did it for me. I could have hugged Penrod, mamma, I actually
could! And I saw he meant to stay to get even for that ammonia--and, oh,
I worked so hard to make him think I wanted him to GO! Mamma, mamma, if
you could have SEEN that walk! That GOOSE kept thinking he could wear
Penrod out or drop him behind, but I knew he couldn't so long as Penrod
believed he was worrying us and getting even. And that GOOSE thought I
WANTED to get rid of Penrod, too; and the conceited thing said it would
turn out 'gloriously,' meaning we'd be alone together pretty soon--I'd
like to shake him! You see, I pretended so well, in order to make Penrod
stick to us, that GOOSE believed I meant it! And if he hadn't tried to
walk Penrod off his legs, he wouldn't have wilted his own collar and
worn himself out, and I think he'd have hung on until you'd have had to
invite him to stay to supper, and he'd have stayed on all evening, and
I wouldn't have had a chance to write to Robert Williams. Mamma, there
have been lots of times when I haven't been thankful for Penrod, but
to-day I could have got down on my knees to you and papa for giving me
such a brother!"

In the darkness of the hall, as a small but crushed and broken form
stole away from the crack in the door, a gigantic Eye seemed to
form--seemed to glare down upon Penrod--warning him that the way of
vengeance is the way of bafflement, and that genius may not prevail
against the trickeries of women.

"This has been a NICE day!" Penrod muttered hoarsely.



CHAPTER XVIII. ON ACCOUNT OF THE WEATHER

There is no boredom (not even an invalid's) comparable to that of a boy
who has nothing to do. When a man says he has nothing to do, he speaks
idly; there is always more than he can do. Grown women never say they
have nothing to do, and when girls or little girls say they have nothing
to do, they are merely airing an affectation. But when a boy has nothing
to do, he has actually nothing at all to do; his state is pathetic, and
when he complains of it his voice is haunting.

Mrs. Schofield was troubled by this uncomfortable quality in the voice
of her son, who came to her thrice, in his search for entertainment or
even employment, one Saturday afternoon during the February thaw. Few
facts are better established than that the February thaw is the poorest
time of year for everybody. But for a boy it is worse than poorest; it
is bankrupt. The remnant streaks of old soot-speckled snow left against
the north walls of houses have no power to inspire; rather, they are
dreary reminders of sports long since carried to satiety. One cares
little even to eat such snow, and the eating of icicles, also, has come
to be a flaccid and stale diversion. There is no ice to bear a skate,
there is only a vast sufficiency of cold mud, practically useless.
Sunshine flickers shiftily, coming and going without any honest purpose;
snow-squalls blow for five minutes, the flakes disappearing as they
touch the earth; half an hour later rain sputters, turns to snow and
then turns back to rain--and the sun disingenuously beams out again,
only to be shut off like a rogue's lantern. And all the wretched while,
if a boy sets foot out of doors, he must be harassed about his overcoat
and rubbers; he is warned against tracking up the plastic lawn and
sharply advised to stay inside the house. Saturday might as well be
Sunday.

Thus the season. Penrod had sought all possible means to pass the time.
A full half-hour of vehement yodelling in the Williams' yard had failed
to bring forth comrade Sam; and at last a coloured woman had opened a
window to inform Penrod that her intellect was being unseated by his
vocalizations, which surpassed in unpleasantness, she claimed, every
sound in her previous experience and, for the sake of definiteness, she
stated her age to be fifty-three years and four months. She added that
all members of the Williams family had gone out of town to attend the
funeral of a relative, but she wished that they might have remained
to attend Penrod's, which she confidently predicted as imminent if the
neighbourhood followed its natural impulse.

Penrod listened for a time, but departed before the conclusion of the
oration. He sought other comrades, with no success; he even went to the
length of yodelling in the yard of that best of boys, Georgie Bassett.
Here was failure again, for Georgie signalled to him, through a closed
window, that a closeting with dramatic literature was preferable to the
society of a playmate; and the book that Georgie exhibited was openly
labelled, "300 Choice Declamations." Georgie also managed to convey
another reason for his refusal of Penrod's companionship, the visitor
being conversant with lip-reading through his studies at the "movies."

"TOO MUDDY!"

Penrod went home.

"Well," Mrs. Schofield said, having almost exhausted a mother's powers
of suggestion, "well, why don't you give Duke a bath?" She was that far
depleted when Penrod came to her the third time.

Mothers' suggestions are wonderful for little children but sometimes
lack lustre when a boy approaches twelve an age to which the ideas of a
Swede farm-hand would usually prove more congenial. However, the dim and
melancholy eye of Penrod showed a pale gleam, and he departed. He gave
Duke a bath.

The entertainment proved damp and discouraging for both parties. Duke
began to tremble even before he was lifted into the water, and after his
first immersion he was revealed to be a dog weighing about one-fourth
of what an observer of Duke, when Duke was dry, must have guessed his
weight to be. His wetness and the disclosure of his extreme fleshly
insignificance appeared to mortify him profoundly. He wept. But,
presently, under Penrod's thorough ministrations--for the young master
was inclined to make this bath last as long as possible--Duke plucked
up a heart and began a series of passionate attempts to close the
interview. As this was his first bath since September, the effects were
lavish and impressionistic, both upon Penrod and upon the bathroom.
However, the imperious boy's loud remonstrances contributed to bring
about the result desired by Duke.

Mrs. Schofield came running, and eloquently put an end to Duke's winter
bath. When she had suggested this cleansing as a pleasant means of
passing the time, she assumed that it would take place in a washtub in
the cellar; and Penrod's location of the performance in her own bathroom
was far from her intention.

Penrod found her language oppressive, and, having been denied the right
to rub Duke dry with a bath-towel--or even with the cover of a table in
the next room--the dismal boy, accompanied by his dismal dog, set forth,
by way of the kitchen door, into the dismal weather. With no purpose
in mind, they mechanically went out to the alley, where Penrod leaned
morosely against the fence, and Duke stood shivering close by, his
figure still emaciated and his tail absolutely withdrawn from view.

There was a cold, wet wind, however; and before long Duke found his
condition unendurable. He was past middle age and cared little for
exercise; but he saw that something must be done. Therefore, he made
a vigorous attempt to dry himself in a dog's way. Throwing himself,
shoulders first, upon the alley mud, he slid upon it, back downward;
he rolled and rolled and rolled. He began to feel lively and rolled
the more; in every way he convinced Penrod that dogs have no regard
for appearances. Also, having discovered an ex-fish near the Herman and
Verman cottage, Duke confirmed an impression of Penrod's that dogs have
a peculiar fancy in the matter of odours that they like to wear.

Growing livelier and livelier, Duke now wished to play with his
master. Penrod was anything but fastidious; nevertheless, under the
circumstances, he withdrew to the kitchen, leaving Duke to play by
himself, outside.

Della, the cook, was comfortably making rolls and entertaining a caller
with a cup of tea. Penrod lingered a few moments, but found even his
attention to the conversation ill received, while his attempts to
take part in it met outright rebuff. His feelings were hurt; he passed
broodingly to the front part of the house, and flung himself wearily
into an armchair in the library. With glazed eyes he stared at shelves
of books that meant to him just what the wallpaper meant, and he
sighed from the abyss. His legs tossed and his arms flopped; he got up,
scratched himself exhaustively, and shuffled to a window. Ten desolate
minutes he stood there, gazing out sluggishly upon a soggy world. During
this time two wet delivery-wagons and four elderly women under umbrellas
were all that crossed his field of vision. Somewhere in the world, he
thought, there was probably a boy who lived across the street from
a jail or a fire-engine house, and had windows worth looking out of.
Penrod rubbed his nose up and down the pane slowly, continuously, and
without the slightest pleasure; and he again scratched himself wherever
it was possible to do so, though he did not even itch. There was nothing
in his life.

Such boredom as he was suffering can become agony, and an imaginative
creature may do wild things to escape it; many a grown person has taken
to drink on account of less pressure than was upon Penrod during that
intolerable Saturday.

A faint sound in his ear informed him that Della, in the kitchen, had
uttered a loud exclamation, and he decided to go back there. However,
since his former visit had resulted in a rebuff that still rankled, he
paused outside the kitchen door, which was slightly ajar, and listened.
He did this idly, and with no hope of hearing anything interesting or
helpful.

"Snakes!" Della exclaimed. "Didja say the poor man was seein' snakes,
Mrs. Cullen?"

"No, Della," Mrs. Cullen returned dolorously; "jist one. Flora says he
niver see more th'n one--jist one big, long, ugly-faced horrible black
one; the same one comin' back an' makin' a fizzin' n'ise at um iv'ry
time he had the fit on um. 'Twas alw'ys the same snake; an' he'd holler
at Flora. 'Here it comes ag'in, oh, me soul!' he'd holler. 'The big,
black, ugly-faced thing; it's as long as the front fence!' he'd holler,
'an' it's makin' a fizzin' n'ise at me, an' breathin' in me face!' he'd
holler. 'Fer th' love o' hivin', Flora,' he'd holler, 'it's got a little
black man wit' a gassly white forehead a-pokin' of it along wit' a
broom-handle, an' a-sickin' it on me, the same as a boy sicks a dog on
a poor cat. Fer the love o' hivin', Flora,' he'd holler, 'cantcha fright
it away from me before I go out o' me head?'"

"Poor Tom!" said Della with deep compassion. "An' the poor man out of
his head all the time, an' not knowin' it! 'Twas awful fer Flora to sit
there an' hear such things in the night like that!"

"You may believe yerself whin ye say it!" Mrs. Cullen agreed. "Right the
very night the poor soul died, he was hollerin' how the big black snake
and the little black man wit' the gassly white forehead a-pokin' it wit'
a broomstick had come fer um. 'Fright 'em away, Flora!' he was croakin',
in a v'ice that hoarse an' husky 'twas hard to make out what he says.
'Fright 'em away, Flora!' he says. ''Tis the big, black, ugly-faced
snake, as black as a black stockin' an' thicker round than me leg at
the thigh before I was wasted away!' he says, poor man. 'It's makin' the
fizzin' n'ise awful to-night,' he says. 'An' the little black man wit'
the gassly white forehead is a-laughin',' he says. 'He's a-laughin'
an' a-pokin' the big, black, fizzin', ugly-faced snake wit' his
broomstick--"

Della was unable to endure the description.

"Don't tell me no more, Mrs. Cullen!" she protested. "Poor Tom! I
thought Flora was wrong last week whin she hid the whisky. 'Twas takin'
it away from him that killed him--an' him already so sick!"

"Well," said Mrs. Cullen, "he hardly had the strengt' to drink much,
she tells me, after he see the big snake an' the little black divil the
first time. Poor woman, she says he talked so plain she sees 'em both
herself, iv'ry time she looks at the poor body where it's laid out. She
says--"

"Don't tell me!" cried the impressionable Della. "Don't tell me, Mrs.
Cullen! I can most see 'em meself, right here in me own kitchen! Poor
Tom! To think whin I bought me new hat, only last week, the first time
I'd be wearin' it'd be to his funeral. To-morrow afternoon, it is?"

"At two o'clock," said Mrs. Cullen. "Ye'll be comin' to th' house
to-night, o' course, Della?"

"I will," said Della. "After what I've been hearin' from ye, I'm 'most
afraid to come, but I'll do it. Poor Tom! I remember the day him an'
Flora was married--"

But the eavesdropper heard no more; he was on his way up the back
stairs. Life and light--and purpose had come to his face once more.

Margaret was out for the afternoon. Unostentatiously, he went to her
room, and for the next few minutes occupied himself busily therein. He
was so quiet that his mother, sewing in her own room, would not have
heard him except for the obstinacy of one of the drawers in Margaret's
bureau. Mrs. Schofield went to the door of her daughter's room.

"What are you doing, Penrod?"

"Nothin'."

"You're not disturbing any of Margaret's things, are you?"

"No, ma'am," said the meek lad.

"What did you jerk that drawer open for?"

"Ma'am?"

"You heard me, Penrod."

"Yes, ma'am. I was just lookin' for sumpthing."

"For what?" Mrs. Schofield asked. "You know that nothing of yours would
be in Margaret's room, Penrod, don't you?"

"Ma'am?"

"What was it you wanted?" she asked, rather impatiently.

"I was just lookin' for some pins."

"Very well," she said, and handed him two from the shoulder of her
blouse.

"I ought to have more," he said. "I want about forty."

"What for?"

"I just want to MAKE sumpthing, Mamma," he said plaintively. "My
goodness! Can't I even want to have a few pins without everybody makin'
such a fuss about it you'd think I was doin' a srime!"

"Doing a what, Penrod?"

"A SRIME!" he repeated, with emphasis; and a moment's reflection
enlightened his mother.

"Oh, a crime!" she exclaimed. "You MUST quit reading the murder trials
in the newspapers, Penrod. And when you read words you don't know how to
pronounce you ought to ask either your papa or me."

"Well, I am askin' you about sumpthing now," Penrod said. "Can't I
even have a few PINS without stoppin' to talk about everything in the
newspapers, Mamma?"

"Yes," she said, laughing at his seriousness; and she took him to her
room, and bestowed upon him five or six rows torn from a paper of pins.
"That ought to be plenty," she said, "for whatever you want to make."

And she smiled after his retreating figure, not noting that he looked
softly bulky around the body, and held his elbows unnaturally tight to
his sides. She was assured of the innocence of anything to be made with
pins, and forbore to press investigation. For Penrod to be playing with
pins seemed almost girlish. Unhappy woman, it pleased her to have her
son seem girlish!

Penrod went out to the stable, tossed his pins into the wheelbarrow,
then took from his pocket and unfolded six pairs of long black
stockings, indubitably the property of his sister. (Evidently Mrs.
Schofield had been a little late in making her appearance at the door of
Margaret's room.)

Penrod worked systematically; he hung the twelve stockings over the
sides of the wheelbarrow, and placed the wheelbarrow beside a large
packing-box that was half full of excelsior. One after another, he
stuffed the stockings with excelsior, till they looked like twelve long
black sausages. Then he pinned the top of one stocking securely over the
stuffed foot of another, pinning the top of a third to the foot of the
second, the top of a fourth to the foot of the third--and continued
operations in this fashion until the twelve stockings were the semblance
of one long and sinuous black body, sufficiently suggestive to any
normal eye.

He tied a string to one end of this unpleasant-looking thing, led it
around the stable, and, by vigorous manipulations, succeeded in making
it wriggle realistically; but he was not satisfied, and, dropping
the string listlessly, sat down in the wheelbarrow to ponder. Penrod
sometimes proved that there were within him the makings of an artist;
he had become fascinated by an idea, and could not be content until
that idea was beautifully realized. He had meant to create a big, long,
ugly-faced horrible black snake with which to interest Della and her
friend, Mrs. Cullen; but he felt that results, so far, were too crude
for exploitation. Merely to lead the pinned stockings by a string was
little to fulfill his ambitious vision.

Finally, he rose from the wheelbarrow.

"If I only had a cat!" he said dreamily.



CHAPTER XIX. CREATIVE ART

He went forth, seeking.

The Schofield household was catless this winter but there was a nice
white cat at the Williams'. Penrod strolled thoughtfully over to the
Williams's yard.

He was entirely successful, not even having been seen by the sensitive
coloured woman, aged fifty-three years and four months.

But still Penrod was thoughtful. The artist within him was unsatisfied
with his materials: and upon his return to the stable he placed the
cat beneath an overturned box, and once more sat down in the inspiring
wheelbarrow, pondering. His expression, concentrated and yet a little
anxious, was like that of a painter at work upon a portrait that may or
may not turn out to be a masterpiece. The cat did not disturb him by her
purring, though she was, indeed, already purring. She was one of those
cozy, youngish cats--plump, even a little full-bodied, perhaps, and
rather conscious of the figure--that are entirely conventional and
domestic by nature, and will set up a ladylike housekeeping anywhere
without making a fuss about it. If there be a fault in these cats,
overcomplacency might be the name for it; they err a shade too sure
of themselves, and their assumption that the world means to treat them
respectfully has just a little taint of the grande dame. Consequently,
they are liable to great outbreaks of nervous energy from within,
engendered by the extreme surprises that life sometimes holds in store
for them. They lack the pessimistic imagination.

Mrs. Williams's cat was content upon a strange floor and in the
confining enclosure of a strange box. She purred for a time, then
trustfully fell asleep. 'Twas well she slumbered; she would need all her
powers presently.

She slumbered, and dreamed not that she would wake to mingle with events
that were to alter her serene disposition radically and cause her to
become hasty-tempered and abnormally suspicious for the rest of her
life.

Meanwhile, Penrod appeared to reach a doubtful solution of his problem.
His expression was still somewhat clouded as he brought from the
storeroom of the stable a small fragment of a broken mirror, two paint
brushes and two old cans, one containing black paint and the other
white. He regarded himself earnestly in the mirror; then, with some
reluctance, he dipped a brush into one of the cans, and slowly painted
his nose a midnight black. He was on the point of spreading this
decoration to cover the lower part of his face, when he paused, brush
halfway between can and chin.

What arrested him was a sound from the alley--a sound of drumming upon
tin. The eyes of Penrod became significant of rushing thoughts; his
expression cleared and brightened. He ran to the alley doors and flung
them open.

"Oh, Verman!" he shouted.

Marching up and down before the cottage across the alley, Verman plainly
considered himself to be an army. Hanging from his shoulders by a string
was an old tin wash-basin, whereon he beat cheerily with two dry bones,
once the chief support of a chicken. Thus he assuaged his ennui.

"Verman, come on in here," Penrod called. "I got sumpthing for you to do
you'll like awful well."

Verman halted, ceased to drum, and stared. His gaze was not fixed
particularly upon Penrod's nose, however, and neither now nor later did
he make any remark or gesture referring to this casual eccentricity. He
expected things like that upon Penrod or Sam Williams. And as for Penrod
himself, he had already forgotten that his nose was painted.

"Come on, Verman!"

Verman continued to stare, not moving. He had received such invitations
before, and they had not always resulted to his advantage. Within that
stable things had happened to him the like of which he was anxious to
avoid in the future.

"Oh, come ahead, Verman!" Penrod urged, and, divining logic in the
reluctance confronting him, he added, "This ain't goin' to be anything
like last time, Verman. I got sumpthing just SPLENDUD for you to do!"

Verman's expression hardened; he shook his head decisively.

"Mo," he said.

"Oh, COME on, Verman?" Penrod pleaded. "It isn't anything goin' to HURT
you, is it? I tell you it's sumpthing you'd give a good deal to GET to
do, if you knew what it is."

"Mo!" said Verman firmly. "I mome maw woo!"

Penrod offered arguments.

"Look, Verman!" he said. "Listen here a minute, can't you? How d'you
know you don't want to until you know what it is? A person CAN'T know
they don't want to do a thing even before the other person tells 'em
what they're goin' to get 'em to do, can they? For all you know, this
thing I'm goin' to get you to do might be sumpthing you wouldn't miss
doin' for anything there is! For all you know, Verman, it might be
sumpthing like this: well, f'rinstance, s'pose I was standin' here,
and you were over there, sort of like the way you are now, and I says,
'Hello, Verman!' and then I'd go on and tell you there was sumpthing
I was goin' to get you to do; and you'd say you wouldn't do it, even
before you heard what it was, why where'd be any sense to THAT? For all
you know, I might of been goin' to get you to eat a five-cent bag o'
peanuts."

Verman had listened obdurately until he heard the last few words; but
as they fell upon his ear, he relaxed, and advanced to the stable doors,
smiling and extending his open right hand.

"Aw wi," he said. "Gi'm here."

"Well," Penrod returned, a trifle embarrassed, "I didn't say it WAS
peanuts, did I? Honest, Verman, it's sumpthing you'll like better'n a
few old peanuts that most of 'em'd prob'ly have worms in 'em, anyway.
All I want you to do is--"

But Verman was not favourably impressed; his face hardened again.

"Mo!" he said, and prepared to depart.

"Look here, Verman," Penrod urged. "It isn't goin' to hurt you just to
come in here and see what I got for you, is it? You can do that much,
can't you?"

Surely such an appeal must have appeared reasonable, even to Verman,
especially since its effect was aided by the promising words, "See what
I got for you." Certainly Verman yielded to it, though perhaps a little
suspiciously. He advanced a few cautious steps into the stable.

"Look!" Penrod cried, and he ran to the stuffed and linked stockings,
seized the leading-string, and vigorously illustrated his further
remarks. "How's that for a big, long, ugly-faced horr'ble black ole
snake, Verman? Look at her follow me all round anywhere I feel like
goin'! Look at her wiggle, will you, though? Look how I make her do
anything I tell her to. Lay down, you ole snake, you--See her lay down
when I tell her to, Verman? Wiggle, you ole snake, you! See her wiggle,
Verman?"

"Hi!" Undoubtedly Verman felt some pleasure.

"Now, listen, Verman!" Penrod continued, hastening to make the most of
the opportunity. "Listen! I fixed up this good ole snake just for you.
I'm goin' to give her to you."

"HI!"

On account of a previous experience not unconnected with cats, and
likely to prejudice Verman, Penrod decided to postpone mentioning Mrs.
Williams's pet until he should have secured Verman's cooperation in the
enterprise irretrievably.

"All you got to do," he went on, "is to chase this good ole snake
around, and sort o' laugh and keep pokin' it with the handle o' that
rake yonder. I'm goin' to saw it off just so's you can poke your good
ole snake with it, Verman."

"Aw wi," said Verman, and, extending his open hand again, he uttered a
hopeful request. "Peamup?"

His host perceived that Verman had misunderstood him. "Peanuts!" he
exclaimed. "My goodness! I didn't say I HAD any peanuts, did I? I only
said s'pose f'rinstance I DID have some. My goodness! You don't expeck
me to go round here all day workin' like a dog to make a good ole snake
for you and then give you a bag o' peanuts to hire you to play with it,
do you, Verman? My goodness!"

Verman's hand fell, with a little disappointment.

"Aw wi," he said, consenting to accept the snake without the bonus.

"That's the boy! NOW we're all right, Verman; and pretty soon I'm goin'
to saw that rake-handle off for you, too; so's you can kind o' guide
your good ole snake around with it; but first--well, first there's just
one more thing's got to be done. I'll show you--it won't take but a
minute." Then, while Verman watched him wonderingly, he went to the can
of white paint and dipped a brush therein. "It won't get on your clo'es
much, or anything, Verman," he explained. "I only just got to--"

But as he approached, dripping brush in hand, the wondering look was all
gone from Verman; determination took its place.

"Mo!" he said, turned his back, and started for outdoors.

"Look here, Verman," Penrod cried. "I haven't done anything to you yet,
have I? It isn't goin' to hurt you, is it? You act like a little teeny
bit o' paint was goin' to kill you. What's the matter of you? I only
just got to paint the top part of your face; I'm not goin' to TOUCH the
other part of it--nor your hands or anything. All _I_ want--"

"MO!" said Verman from the doorway.

"Oh, my goodness!" moaned Penrod; and in desperation he drew forth from
his pocket his entire fortune. "All right, Verman," he said resignedly.
"If you won't do it any other way, here's a nickel, and you can go and
buy you some peanuts when we get through. But if I give you this money,
you got to promise to wait till we ARE through, and you got to promise
to do anything I tell you to. You goin' to promise?"

The eyes of Verman glistened; he returned, gave bond, and, grasping the
coin, burst into the rich laughter of a gourmand.

Penrod immediately painted him dead white above the eyes, all round his
head and including his hair. It took all the paint in the can.

Then the artist mentioned the presence of Mrs. Williams's cat, explained
in full his ideas concerning the docile animal, and the long black
snake, and Della and her friend, Mrs. Cullen, while Verman listened with
anxiety, but remained true to his oath.

They removed the stocking at the end of the long black snake, and cut
four holes in the foot and ankle of it. They removed the excelsior,
placed Mrs. Williams's cat in the stocking, shook her down into the
lower section of it; drew her feet through the four holes there, leaving
her head in the toe of the stocking; then packed the excelsior down on
top of her, and once more attached the stocking to the rest of the long,
black snake.

How shameful is the ease of the historian! He sits in his dressing-gown
to write: "The enemy attacked in force--" The tranquil pen, moving in a
cloud of tobacco smoke, leaves upon the page its little hieroglyphics,
serenely summing up the monstrous deeds and sufferings of men of action.
How cold, how niggardly, to state merely that Penrod and the painted
Verman succeeded in giving the long, black snake a motive power, or
tractor, apparently its own but consisting of Mrs. Williams's cat!

She was drowsy when they lifted her from the box; she was still drowsy
when they introduced part of her into the orifice of the stocking; but
she woke to full, vigorous young life when she perceived that their
purpose was for her to descend into the black depths of that stocking
head first.

Verman held the mouth of the stocking stretched, and Penrod manipulated
the cat; but she left her hearty mark on both of them before, in a
moment of unfortunate inspiration, she humped her back while she was
upside down, and Penrod took advantage of the concavity to increase it
even more than she desired. The next instant she was assisted downward
into the gloomy interior, with excelsior already beginning to block the
means of egress.

Gymnastic moments followed; there were times when both boys hurled
themselves full-length upon the floor, seizing the animated stocking
with far-extended hands; and even when the snake was a complete thing,
with legs growing from its unquestionably ugly face, either Penrod
or Verman must keep a grasp upon it, for it would not be soothed, and
refused, over and over, to calm itself, even when addressed as, "Poor
pussy!" and "Nice 'ittle kitty!"

Finally, they thought they had their good ole snake "about quieted
down", as Penrod said, because the animated head had remained in one
place for an unusual length of time, though the legs produced a rather
sinister effect of crouching, and a noise like a distant planing-mill
came from the interior--and then Duke appeared in the doorway. He was
still feeling lively.



CHAPTER XX. THE DEPARTING GUEST

By the time Penrod returned from chasing Duke to the next corner, Verman
had the long, black snake down from the rafter where its active head had
taken refuge, with the rest of it dangling; and both boys agreed that
Mrs. Williams's cat must certainly be able to "see SOME, anyway",
through the meshes of the stocking.

"Well," said Penrod, "it's gettin' pretty near dark, what with all this
bother and mess we been havin' around here, and I expeck as soon as I
get this good ole broom-handle fixed out of the rake for you, Verman,
it'll be about time to begin what we had to go and take all this trouble
FOR."


.... Mr. Schofield had brought an old friend home to dinner with him:
"Dear old Joe Gilling," he called this friend when introducing him to
Mrs. Schofield. Mr. Gilling, as Mrs. Schofield was already informed by
telephone, had just happened to turn up in town that day, and had called
on his classmate at the latter's office. The two had not seen each other
in eighteen years.

Mr. Gilling was a tall man, clad highly in the mode, and brought to a
polished and powdered finish by barber and manicurist; but his colour
was peculiar, being almost unhumanly florid, and, as Mrs. Schofield
afterward claimed to have noticed, his eyes "wore a nervous,
apprehensive look", his hands were tremulous, and his manner was "queer
and jerky"--at least, that is how she defined it.

She was not surprised to hear him state that he was travelling for his
health and not upon business. He had not been really well for several
years, he said.

At that, Mr. Schofield laughed and slapped him heartily on the back.

"Oh, mercy!" Mr. Gilling cried, leaping in his chair. "What IS the
matter?"

"Nothing!" Mr. Schofield laughed. "I just slapped you the way we used to
slap each other on the campus. What I was going to say was that you have
no business being a bachelor. With all your money, and nothing to do but
travel and sit around hotels and clubs, no wonder you've grown bilious."

"Oh, no; I'm not bilious," Mr. Gilling said uncomfortably. "I'm not
bilious at all."

"You ought to get married," Mr. Schofield returned. "You ought--" He
paused, for Mr. Gilling had jumped again. "What's the trouble, Joe?"

"Nothing. I thought perhaps--perhaps you were going to slap me on the
back again."

"Not this time," Mr. Schofield said, renewing his laughter. "Well, is
dinner about ready?" he asked, turning to his wife. "Where are Margaret
and Penrod?"

"Margaret's just come in," Mrs. Schofield answered. "She'll be down in a
minute, and Penrod's around somewhere."

"Penrod?" Mr. Gilling repeated curiously, in his nervous, serious way.
"What is Penrod?"

And at this, Mrs. Schofield joined in her husband's laughter. Mr.
Schofield explained.

"Penrod's our young son," he said. "He's not much for looks, maybe; but
he's been pretty good lately, and sometimes we're almost inclined to be
proud of him. You'll see him in a minute, old Joe!"

Old Joe saw him even sooner. Instantly, as Mr. Schofield finished his
little prediction, the most shocking uproar ever heard in that house
burst forth in the kitchen. Distinctly Irish shrieks unlimited came from
that quarter--together with the clashing of hurled metal and tin, the
appealing sound of breaking china, and the hysterical barking of a dog.

The library door flew open, and Mrs. Cullen appeared as a mingled streak
crossing the room from one door to the other. She was followed by a
boy with a coal-black nose and between his feet, as he entered, there
appeared a big long, black, horrible snake, with frantic legs springing
from what appeared to be its head; and it further fulfilled Mrs.
Cullen's description by making a fizzin' noise. Accompanying the snake,
and still faithfully endeavouring to guide it with the detached handle
of a rake, was a small black demon with a gassly white forehead and
gasslier white hair. Duke evidently still feeling his bath, was doing
all in his power to aid the demon in making the snake step lively. A few
kitchen implements followed this fugitive procession through the library
doorway.

The long, black snake became involved with a leg of the heavy table in
the centre of the room. The head developed spasms of agility; there were
clangings and rippings, then the foremost section of the long, black
snake detached itself, bounded into the air, and, after turning a number
of somersaults, became, severally, a torn stocking, excelsior, and a
lunatic cat. The ears of this cat were laid back flat upon its head and
its speed was excessive upon a fairly circular track it laid out for
itself in the library. Flying round this orbit, it perceived the open
doorway; passed through it, thence to the kitchen, and outward and
onward--Della having left the kitchen door open in her haste as she
retired to the backyard.

The black demon with the gassly white forehead and hair, finding himself
in the presence of grown people who were white all over, turned in his
tracks and followed Mrs. Williams's cat to the great outdoors. Duke
preceded Verman. Mrs. Cullen vanished. Of the apparition, only wreckage
and a rightfully apprehensive Penrod were left.


"But where," Mrs. Schofield began, a few minutes later, looking suddenly
mystified--"where--where--"

"Where what?" Mr. Schofield asked testily. "What are you talking about?"
His nerves were jarred, and he was rather hoarse after what he had been
saying to Penrod. (That regretful necromancer was now upstairs doing
unhelpful things to his nose over a washstand.) "What do you mean by,
'Where, where, where?'" Mr. Schofield demanded. "I don't see any sense
to it."

"But where is your old classmate?" she cried. "Where's Mr. Gilling?"

She was the first to notice this striking absence.

"By George!" Mr. Schofield exclaimed. "Where IS old Joe?"

Margaret intervened. "You mean that tall, pale man who was calling?" she
asked.

"Pale, no!" said her father. "He's as flushed as--"

"He was pale when _I_ saw him," Margaret said. "He had his hat and
coat, and he was trying to get out of the front door when I came running
downstairs. He couldn't work the catch for a minute; but before I got to
the foot of the steps he managed to turn it and open the door. He went
out before I could think what to say to him, he was in such a hurry. I
guess everything was so confused you didn't notice--but he's certainly
gone."

Mrs. Schofield turned to her husband.

"But I thought he was going to stay to dinner!" she cried.

Mr. Schofield shook his head, admitting himself floored. Later, having
mentally gone over everything that might shed light on the curious
behaviour of old Joe, he said, without preface:

"He wasn't at all dissipated when we were in college."

Mrs. Schofield nodded severely. "Maybe this was just the best thing
could have happened to him, after all," she said.

"It may be," her husband returned. "I don't say it isn't. BUT that isn't
going to make any difference in what I'm going to do to Penrod!"



CHAPTER XXI. YEARNINGS

The next day a new ambition entered into Penrod Schofield; it was
heralded by a flourish of trumpets and set up a great noise within his
being.

On his way home from Sunday-school he had paused at a corner to listen
to a brass band, which was returning from a funeral, playing a medley of
airs from "The Merry Widow," and as the musicians came down the street,
walking so gracefully, the sun picked out the gold braid upon their
uniforms and splashed fire from their polished instruments. Penrod
marked the shapes of the great bass horns, the suave sculpture of their
brazen coils, and the grand, sensational flare of their mouths. And he
saw plainly that these noble things, to be mastered, needed no more than
some breath blown into them during the fingering of a few simple keys.
Then obediently they gave forth those vast but dulcet sounds which
stirred his spirit as no other sounds could stir it quite.

The leader of the band, walking ahead, was a pleasing figure, nothing
more. Penrod supposed him to be a mere decoration, and had never
sympathized with Sam Williams' deep feeling about drum-majors. The
cornets, the trombones, the smaller horns were rather interesting, of
course; and the drums had charm, especially the bass drum, which must
be partially supported by a youth in front; but, immeasurably above all
these, what fascinated Penrod was the little man with the monster horn.
There Penrod's widening eyes remained transfixed--upon the horn,
so dazzling, with its broad spaces of brassy highlights, and so
overwhelming, with its mouth as wide as a tub; that there was something
almost threatening about it.

The little, elderly band-musician walked manfully as he blew his great
horn; and in that pompous engine of sound, the boy beheld a spectacle
of huge forces under human control. To Penrod, the horn meant power, and
the musician meant mastery over power, though, of course, Penrod did not
know that this was how he really felt about the matter.

Grandiloquent sketches were passing and interchanging before his mind's
eye--Penrod, in noble raiment, marching down the staring street,
his shoulders swaying professionally, the roar of the horn he bore
submerging all other sounds; Penrod on horseback, blowing the enormous
horn and leading wild hordes to battle, while Marjorie Jones looked on
from the sidewalk; Penrod astounding his mother and father and sister
by suddenly serenading them in the library. "Why, Penrod, where DID you
learn to play like this?"

These were vague and shimmering glories of vision rather than definite
plans for his life work, yet he did with all his will determine to own
and play upon some roaring instrument of brass. And, after all, this
was no new desire of his; it was only an old one inflamed to take a new
form. Nor was music the root of it, for the identical desire is often
uproarious among them that hate music. What stirred in Penrod was new
neither in him nor in the world, but old--old as old Adam, old as the
childishness of man. All children have it, of course: they are all
anxious to Make a Noise in the World.

While the band approached, Penrod marked the time with his feet; then he
fell into step and accompanied the musicians down the street, keeping as
near as possible to the little man with the big horn. There were four or
five other boys, strangers, also marching with the band, but these were
light spirits, their flushed faces and prancing legs proving that they
were merely in a state of emotional reaction to music. Penrod, on the
contrary, was grave. He kept his eyes upon the big horn, and, now and
then, he gave an imitation of it. His fingers moved upon invisible keys,
his cheeks puffed out, and, from far down in his throat, he produced
strange sounds: "Taw, p'taw-p'taw! Taw, p'taw-p'taw! PAW!"

The other boys turned back when the musicians ceased to play, but Penrod
marched on, still keeping close to what so inspired him. He stayed with
the band till the last member of it disappeared up a staircase in an
office-building, down at the business end of the street; and even after
that he lingered a while, looking at the staircase.

Finally, however, he set his face toward home, whither he marched in a
procession, the visible part of which consisted of himself alone. All
the way the rhythmic movements of his head kept time with his marching
feet and, also, with a slight rise and fall of his fingers at about the
median line of his abdomen. And pedestrians who encountered him in this
preoccupation were not surprised to hear, as he passed, a few explosive
little vocalizations: "Taw, p'taw-p'taw! TAW! Taw-aw-HAW!"

These were the outward symptoms of no fleeting impulse, but of steadfast
desire; therefore they were persistent. The likeness of the great bass
horn remained upon the retina of his mind's eye, losing nothing of its
brazen enormity with the passing of hours, nor abating, in his mind's
ear, one whit of its fascinating blatancy. Penrod might have forgotten
almost anything else more readily; for such a horn has this double
compulsion: people cannot possibly keep themselves from looking at its
possessor--and they certainly have GOT to listen to him!

Penrod was preoccupied at dinner and during the evening, now and then
causing his father some irritation by croaking, "Taw, p'taw-p'taw!"
while the latter was talking. And when bedtime came for the son of the
house, he mounted the stairs in a rhythmic manner, and p'tawed himself
through the upper hall as far as his own chamber.

Even after he had gone to bed, there came a revival of these
manifestations. His mother had put out his light for him and had
returned to the library downstairs; three-quarters of an hour had
elapsed since then, and Margaret was in her room, next to his, when a
continuous low croaking (which she was just able to hear) suddenly broke
out into loud, triumphal blattings:

"TAW, p'taw-p'taw-aw-HAW! P'taw-WAW-aw! Aw-PAW!"

"Penrod," Margaret called, "stop that! I'm trying to write letters. If
you don't quit and go to sleep, I'll call papa up, and you'll SEE!"

The noise ceased, or, rather, it tapered down to a desultory faint
croaking which finally died out; but there can be little doubt that
Penrod's last waking thoughts were of instrumental music. And in
the morning, when he woke to face the gloomy day's scholastic tasks,
something unusual and eager fawned in his face with the return of
memory. "Taw-p'taw!" he began. "PAW!"

All day, in school and out, his mind was busy with computations--not
such as are prescribed by mathematical pedants, but estimates of how
much old rags and old iron would sell for enough money to buy a horn.
Happily, the next day, at lunch, he was able to dismiss this problem
from his mind: he learned that his Uncle Joe would be passing through
town, on his way from Nevada, the following afternoon, and all the
Schofield family were to go to the station to see him. Penrod would be
excused from school.

At this news his cheeks became pink, and for a moment he was breathless.
Uncle Joe and Penrod did not meet often, but when they did, Uncle Joe
invariably gave Penrod money. Moreover, he always managed to do it
privately so that later there was no bothersome supervision. Last time
he had given Penrod a silver dollar.

At thirty-five minutes after two, Wednesday afternoon, Uncle Joe's
train came into the station, and Uncle Joe got out and shouted among his
relatives. At eighteen minutes before three he was waving to them from
the platform of the last car, having just slipped a two-dollar bill into
Penrod's breast-pocket. And, at seven minutes after three, Penrod opened
the door of the largest "music store" in town.

A tall, exquisite, fair man, evidently a musical earl, stood before
him, leaning whimsically upon a piano of the highest polish. The sight
abashed Penrod not a bit--his remarkable financial condition even made
him rather peremptory.

"See here," he said brusquely: "I want to look at that big horn in the
window."

"Very well," said the earl; "look at it." And leaned more luxuriously
upon the polished piano.

"I meant--" Penrod began, but paused, something daunted, while an
unnamed fear brought greater mildness into his voice, as he continued,
"I meant--I--How much IS that big horn?"

"How much?" the earl repeated.

"I mean," said Penrod, "how much is it worth?"

"I don't know," the earl returned. "Its price is eighty-five dollars."

"Eighty-fi--" Penrod began mechanically, but was forced to pause and
swallow a little air that obstructed his throat, as the difference
between eighty-five and two became more and more startling. He
had entered the store, rich; in the last ten seconds he had become
poverty-stricken. Eighty-five dollars was the same as eighty-five
millions.

"Shall I put it aside for you," asked the salesman-earl, "while you look
around the other stores to see if there's anything you like better?"

"I guess--I guess not," said Penrod, whose face had grown red. He
swallowed again, scraped the floor with the side of his right shoe,
scratched the back of his neck, and then, trying to make his manner
casual and easy, "Well I can't stand around here all day," he said. "I
got to be gettin' on up the street."

"Business, I suppose?"

Penrod, turning to the door, suspected jocularity, but he found himself
without recourse; he was nonplussed.

"Sure you won't let me have that horn tied up in nice wrapping-paper in
case you decide to take it?"

Penrod was almost positive that the spirit of this question was
satirical; but he was unable to reply, except by a feeble shake of the
head--though ten minutes later, as he plodded forlornly his homeward
way, he looked over his shoulder and sent backward a few words of morose
repartee:

"Oh, I am, am I?" he muttered, evidently concluding a conversation
which he had continued mentally with the salesman. "Well, you're double
anything you call me, so that makes you a smart Aleck twice! Ole double
smart Aleck!"

After that, he walked with the least bit more briskness, but not much.
No wonder he felt discouraged: there are times when eighty-five dollars
can be a blow to anybody! Penrod was so stunned that he actually
forgot what was in his pocket. He passed two drug stores, and they had
absolutely no meaning to him. He walked all the way without spending a
cent.

At home he spent a moment in the kitchen pantry while the cook was
in the cellar; then he went out to the stable and began some really
pathetic experiments. His materials were the small tin funnel which he
had obtained in the pantry, and a short section of old garden hose. He
inserted the funnel into one end of the garden hose, and made it fast by
wrappings of cord. Then he arranged the hose in a double, circular coil,
tied it so that it would remain coiled, and blew into the other end.

He blew and blew and blew; he set his lips tight together, as he had
observed the little musician with the big horn set his, and blew
and sputtered, and sputtered and blew, but nothing of the slightest
importance happened in the orifice of the funnel. Still he blew. He
began to be dizzy; his eyes watered; his expression became as horrible
as a strangled person's. He but blew the more. He stamped his feet and
blew. He staggered to the wheelbarrow, sat, and blew--and yet the funnel
uttered nothing; it seemed merely to breathe hard.

It would not sound like a horn, and, when Penrod finally gave up, he had
to admit piteously that it did not look like a horn. No boy over nine
could have pretended that it was a horn.

He tossed the thing upon the floor, and leaned back in the wheelbarrow,
inert.

"Yay, Penrod!"

Sam Williams appeared in the doorway, and, behind Sam, Master Roderick
Magsworth Bitts, Junior.

"Yay, there!"

Penrod made no response.

The two came in, and Sam picked up the poor contrivance Penrod had
tossed upon the floor.

"What's this ole dingus?" Sam asked.

"Nothin'."

"Well, what's it for?"

"Nothin'," said Penrod. "It's a kind of a horn."

"What kind?"

"For music," said Penrod simply.

Master Bitts laughed loud and long; he was derisive. "Music!" he yipped.
"I thought you meant a cow's horn! He says it's a music-horn, Sam? What
you think o' that?"

Sam blew into the thing industriously.

"It won't work," he announced.

"Course it won't!" Roddy Bitts shouted. "You can't make it go without
you got a REAL horn. I'm goin' to get me a real horn some day before
long, and then you'll see me goin' up and down here playin' it like
sixty! I'll--"

"'Some day before long!'" Sam mocked. "Yes, we will! Why'n't you get it
to-day, if you're goin' to?"

"I would," said Roddy. "I'd go get the money from my father right now,
only he wouldn't give it to me."

Sam whooped, and Penrod, in spite of his great depression, uttered a few
jibing sounds.

"I'd get MY father to buy me a fire-engine and team o' HORSES," Sam
bellowed, "only he wouldn't!"

"Listen, can't you?" cried Roddy. "I mean he would most any time,
but not this month. I can't have any money for a month beginning last
Saturday, because I got paint on one of our dogs, and he came in the
house with it on him, and got some on pretty near everything. If it
hadn't 'a' been for that--"

"Oh, yes!" said Sam. "If it hadn't 'a' been for that! It's always
SUMPTHING!"

"It is not!"

"Well, then, why'n't you go GET a real horn?"

Roddy's face had flushed with irritation.

"Well, didn't I just TELL you--" he began, but paused, while the renewal
of some interesting recollection became visible in his expression. "Why,
I COULD, if I wanted to," he said more calmly. "It wouldn't be a new
one, maybe. I guess it would be kind of an old one, but--"

"Oh, a toy horn!" said Sam. "I expect one you had when you were three
years old, and your mother stuck it up in the attic to keep till you're
dead, or sumpthing!"

"It's not either any toy horn," Roddy insisted. "It's a reg'lar horn for
a band, and I could have it as easy as anything."

The tone of this declaration was so sincere that it roused the lethargic
Penrod.

"Roddy, is that true?" he sat up to inquire piercingly.

"Of course it is!" Master Bitts returned. "What you take me for? I could
go get that horn this minute if I wanted to."

"A real one--honest?"

"Well, didn't I say it was a real one?"

"Like in the BAND?"

"I said so, didn't I?"

"I guess you mean one of those little ones," said Penrod.

"No, sir!" Roddy insisted stoutly; "it's a big one! It winds around in a
big circle that would go all the way around a pretty fat man."

"What store is it in?"

"It's not in any store," said Roddy. "It's at my Uncle Ethelbert's. He's
got this horn and three or four pianos and a couple o' harps and--"

"Does he keep a music store?"

"No. These harps and pianos and all such are old ones--awful old."

"Oh," said Sam, "he runs a second-hand store!"

"He does not!" Master Bitts returned angrily. "He doesn't do anything.
He's just got 'em. He's got forty-one guitars."

"Yay!" Sam whooped, and jumped up and down. "Listen to Roddy Bitts
makin' up lies!"

"You look out, Sam Williams!" said Roddy threateningly. "You look out
how you call me names!"

"What name'd I call you?"

"You just the same as said I told lies. That's just as good as callin'
me a liar, isn't it?"

"No," said Sam; "but I got a right to, if I want to. Haven't I, Penrod?"

"How?" Roddy demanded hotly. "How you got a right to?"

"Because you can't prove what you said."

"Well," said Roddy, "you'd be just as much of one if you can't prove
what I said WASN'T true."

"No, sir! You either got to prove it or be a liar. Isn't that so,
Penrod.

"Yes, sir," Penrod ruled, with a little importance, "that's the way it
is, Roddy."

"Well, then," said Roddy, "come on over to my Uncle Ethelbert's, and
I'll show you!"

"No," said Sam. "I wouldn't walk over there just to find out sumpthing
I already know isn't so. Outside of a music store there isn't anybody in
the world got forty-one guitars! I've heard lots o' people TALK, but I
never heard such a big l--"

"You shut up!" shouted Roddy. "You ole--"

Penrod interposed.

"Why'n't you show us the horn, Roddy?" he asked. "You said you could get
it. You show us the horn and we'll believe you. If you show us the horn,
Sam'll haf to take what he said back; won't you, Sam?"

"Yes," said Sam, and added. "He hasn't got any. He went and told a--"

Roddy's eyes were bright with rage; he breathed noisily.

"I haven't?" he cried. "You just wait here, and I'll show you!"

And he ran furiously from the stable.



CHAPTER XXII. THE HORN OF FAME

"Bet he won't come back!" said Sam.

"Well, he might."

"Well, if he does and he hasn't got any horn, I got a right to call him
anything I want to, and he's got to stand it. And if he doesn't come
back," Sam continued, as by the code, "then I got a right to call him
whatever I like next time I ketch him out."

"I expect he'll have SOME kind of ole horn, maybe," said Penrod.

"No," the skeptical Sam insisted, "he won't."

But Roddy did. Twenty minutes elapsed, and both the waiting boys had
decided that they were legally entitled to call him whatever they
thought fitting, when he burst in, puffing; and in his hands he bore a
horn. It was a "real" one, and of a kind that neither Penrod nor Sam had
ever seen before, though they failed to realize this, because its shape
was instantly familiar to them. No horn could have been simpler: it
consisted merely of one circular coil of brass with a mouthpiece at
one end for the musician, and a wide-flaring mouth of its own, for the
noise, at the other. But it was obviously a second-hand horn; dents
slightly marred it, here and there, and its surface was dull, rather
greenish. There were no keys; and a badly faded green cord and tassel
hung from the coil.

Even so shabby a horn as this electrified Penrod. It was not a
stupendous horn, but it was a horn, and when a boy has been sighing for
the moon, a piece of green cheese will satisfy him, for he can play that
it is the moon.

"Gimme that HORN!" Penrod shouted, as he dashed for it.

"YAY!" Sam cried, and sought to wrest it from him. Roddy joined the
scuffle, trying to retain the horn; but Penrod managed to secure it.
With one free hand he fended the others off while he blew into the
mouthpiece.

"Let me have it," Sam urged. "You can't do anything with it. Lemme take
it, Penrod."

"No!" said Roddy. "Let ME! My goodness! Ain't I got any right to blow my
own horn?"

They pressed upon Penrod, who frantically fended and frantically blew.
At last he remembered to compress his lips, and force the air through
the compression.

A magnificent snort from the horn was his reward. He removed his lips
from the mouthpiece, and capered in pride.

"Hah!" he cried. "Hear that? I guess _I_ can't play this good ole horn!
Oh, no!"

During his capers, Sam captured the horn. But Sam had not made the best
of his opportunities as an observer of bands; he thrust the mouthpiece
deep into his mouth, and blew until his expression became one of agony.

"No, no!" Penrod exclaimed. "You haven't got the secret of blowin' a
horn, Sam. What's the use your keepin' hold of it, when you don't know
any more about it 'n that? It ain't makin' a sound! You lemme have that
good ole horn back, Sam. Haven't you got sense enough to see I know how
to PLAY?"

Laying hands upon it, he jerked it away from Sam, who was a little
piqued over the failure of his own efforts, especially as Penrod now
produced a sonarous blat--quite a long one. Sam became cross.

"My goodness!" Roddy Bitts said peevishly. "Ain't I ever goin' to get
a turn at my own horn? Here you've had two turns, Penrod, and even Sam
Williams--"

Sam's petulance at once directed itself toward Roddy partly because of
the latter's tactless use of the word "even," and the two engaged in
controversy, while Penrod was left free to continue the experiments
which so enraptured him.

"Your own horn!" Sam sneered. "I bet it isn't yours! Anyway, you can't
prove it's yours, and that gives me a right to call you any--"

"You better not! It is, too, mine. It's just the same as mine!"

"No, sir," said Sam; "I bet you got to take it back where you got it,
and that's not anything like the same as yours; so I got a perfect right
to call you whatev--"

"I do NOT haf to take it back where I got it, either!" Roddy cried, more
and more irritated by his opponent's persistence in stating his rights
in this matter.

"I BET they told you to bring it back," said Sam tauntingly.

"They didn't, either! There wasn't anybody there."

"Yay! Then you got to get it back before they know it's gone."

"I don't either any such a thing! I heard my Uncle Ethelbert say Sunday
he didn't want it. He said he wished somebody'd take that horn off his
hands so's he could buy sumpthing else. That's just exactly what he
said. I heard him tell my mother. He said, 'I guess I prackly got to
give it away if I'm ever goin' to get rid of it.' Well, when my own
uncle says he wants to give a horn away, and he wishes he could get rid
of it, I guess it's just the same as mine, soon as I go and take it,
isn't it? I'm goin' to keep it."

Sam was shaken, but he had set out to demonstrate those rights of his
and did not mean to yield them.

"Yes; you'll have a NICE time," he said, "next time your uncle goes to
play on that horn and can't find it. No, sir; I got a perfect ri--"

"My uncle don't PLAY on it!" Roddy shrieked. "It's an ole wore-out horn
nobody wants, and it's mine, I tell you! I can blow on it, or bust it,
or kick it out in the alley and leave it there, if I want to!"

"No, you can't!"

"I can, too!"

"No, you can't. You can't PROVE you can, and unless you prove it, I got
a perf--"

Roddy stamped his foot. "I can, too!" he shrieked. "You ole durn
jackass, I can, too! I can, can, can, can--"

Penrod suddenly stopped his intermittent production of blats, and
intervened. "_I_ know how you can prove it, Roddy," he said briskly.
"There's one way anybody can always prove sumpthing belongs to them,
so that nobody'd have a right to call them what they wanted to. You can
prove it's yours, EASY!"

"How?"

"Well," said Penrod, "if you give it away."

"What you mean?" asked Roddy, frowning.

"Well, look here," Penrod began brightly. "You can't give anything away
that doesn't belong to you, can you?"

"No."

"So, then," the resourceful boy continued, "f'r instance, if you give
this ole horn to me, that'd prove it was yours, and Sam'd haf to say it
was, and he wouldn't have any right to--"

"I won't do it!" said Roddy sourly. "I don't want to give you that horn.
What I want to give you anything at all for?"

Penrod sighed, as if the task of reaching Roddy's mind with reason were
too heavy for him. "Well, if you don't want to prove it, and rather
let us have the right to call you anything we want to--well, all right,
then," he said.

"You look out what you call me!" Roddy cried, only the more incensed, in
spite of the pains Penrod was taking with him. "I don't haf to prove it.
It's MINE!"

"What kind o' proof is that?" Sam Williams demanded severely. "You GOT
to prove it and you can't do it!"

Roddy began a reply, but his agitation was so great that what he said
had not attained coherency when Penrod again intervened. He had just
remembered something important.

"Oh, _I_ know, Roddy!" he exclaimed. "If you sell it, that'd prove it
was yours almost as good as givin' it away. What'll you take for it?"

"I don't want to sell it," said Roddy sulkily.

"Yay! Yay! YAY!" shouted the taunting Sam Williams, whose every word and
sound had now become almost unbearable to Master Bitts. Sam was usually
so good-natured that the only explanation of his conduct must lie in the
fact that Roddy constitutionally got on his nerves. "He KNOWS he can't
prove it! He's a goner, and now we can begin callin' him anything we can
think of! I choose to call him one first, Penrod. Roddy, you're a--"

"Wait!" shouted Penrod, for he really believed Roddy's claims to be
both moral and legal. When an uncle who does not even play upon an old
second-hand horn wishes to get rid of that horn, and even complains of
having it on his hands, it seems reasonable to consider that the horn
becomes the property of a nephew who has gone to the trouble of carrying
the undesired thing out of the house.

Penrod determined to deal fairly. The difference between this horn
and the one in the "music-store" window seemed to him just about the
difference between two and eighty-five. He drew forth the green bill
from his pocket.

"Roddy," he said, "I'll give you two dollars for that horn."

Sam Williams's mouth fell open; he was silenced indeed. But for a
moment, the confused and badgered Roddy was incredulous; he had not
dreamed that Penrod possessed such a sum.

"Lemme take a look at that money!" he said.

If at first there had been in Roddy's mind a little doubt about his
present rights of ownership, he had talked himself out of it. Also,
his financial supplies for the month were cut off, on account of the
careless dog. Finally, he thought that the horn was worth about fifty
cents.

"I'll do it, Penrod!" he said with decision.

Thereupon Penrod shouted aloud, prancing up and down the carriage-house
with the horn. Roddy was happy, too, land mingled his voice with
Penrod's.

"Hi! Hi! Hi!" shouted Roddy Bitts. "I'm goin' to buy me an air-gun down
at Fox's hardware store!"

And he departed, galloping.

... He returned the following afternoon. School was over, and Penrod
and Sam were again in the stable; Penrod "was practising" upon the horn,
with Sam for an unenthusiastic spectator and auditor. Master Bitts' brow
was heavy; he looked uneasy.

"Penrod," he began, "I got to--"

Penrod removed the horn briefly from his lips.

"Don't come bangin' around here and interrup' me all the time," he said
severely. "I got to practice."

And he again pressed the mouthpiece to his lips. He was not of those
whom importance makes gracious.

"Look here, Penrod," said Roddy, "I got to have that horn back."

Penrod lowered the horn quickly enough at this.

"What you talkin' about?" he demanded. "What you want to come bangin'
around here for and--"

"I came around here for that horn," Master Bitts returned, and his
manner was both dogged and apprehensive, the apprehension being more
prevalent when he looked at Sam. "I got to have that horn," he said.

Sam, who had been sitting in the wheelbarrow, jumped up and began to
dance triumphantly.

"Yay! It WASN'T his, after all! Roddy Bitts told a big l--"

"I never, either!" Roddy almost wailed.

"Well, what you want the horn back for?" the terrible Sam demanded.

"Well, 'cause I want it. I got a right to want it if I want to, haven't
I?"

Penrod's face had flushed with indignation.

"You look here, Sam," he began hotly. "Didn't you hear Roddy say this
was his horn?"

"He said it!" Sam declared. "He said it a million times!"

"Well, and didn't he sell this horn to me?"

"Yes, SIR!"

"Didn't I pay him money cash down for it?"

"Two dollars!"

"Well, and ain't it my horn now, Sam?"

"You bet you!"

"YES, sir!" Penrod went on with vigour. "It's my horn now whether it
belonged to you or not, Roddy, because you SOLD it to me and I paid my
good ole money for it. I guess a thing belongs to th`, person that paid
their own money for it, doesn't it? _I_ don't haf to give up my own
propaty, even if you did come on over here and told us a big l--"

"_I_ NEVER!" shouted Roddy. "It was my horn, too, and I didn't tell any
such a thing!" He paused; then, reverting to his former manner, said
stubbornly, "I got to have that horn back. I GOT to!"

"Why'n't you tell us what FOR, then?" Sam insisted.

Roddy's glance at this persecutor was one of anguish.

"I know my own biz'nuss!" he muttered.

And while Sam jeered, Roddy turned to Penrod desperately.

"You gimme that horn back! I got to have it."

But Penrod followed Sam's lead.

"Well, why can't you tell us what FOR?" he asked.

Perhaps if Sam had not been there, Roddy could have unbosomed himself.
He had no doubt of his own virtue in this affair, and he was conscious
that he had acted in good faith throughout--though, perhaps, a little
impulsively. But he was in a predicament, and he knew that if he became
more explicit, Sam could establish with undeniable logic those rights
about which he had been so odious the day before. Such triumph for
Sam was not within Roddy's power to contemplate; he felt that he would
rather die, or sumpthing.

"I got to have that horn!" he reiterated woodenly.

Penrod had no intention to humour this preposterous boy, and it was
only out of curiosity that he asked, "Well, if you want the horn back,
where's the two dollars?"

"I spent it. I bought an air-gun for a dollar and sixty-five cents, and
three sodies and some candy with the rest. I'll owe you the two dollars,
Penrod. I'm willing to do that much."

"Well, why don't you give him the air-gun," asked the satirical Sam,
"and owe him the rest?"

"I can't. Papa took the air-gun away from me because he didn't like
sumpthing I did with it. I got to owe you the whole two dollars,
Penrod."

"Look here, Roddy," said Penrod. "Don't you s'pose I'd rather keep this
horn and blow on it than have you owe me two dollars?"

There was something about this simple question which convinced Roddy
that his cause was lost. His hopes had been but faint from the beginning
of the interview.

"Well--" said Roddy. For a time he scuffed the floor with his shoe.
"Daw-gone it!" he said, at last; and he departed morosely.

Penrod had already begun to "practice" again, and Mr. Williams,
after vain appeals to be permitted to practice in turn, sank into
the wheelbarrow in a state of boredom, not remarkable under the
circumstances. Then Penrod contrived--it may have been accidental--to
produce at one blast two tones which varied in pitch.

His pride and excitement were extreme though not contagious. "Listen,
Sam!" he shouted. "How's THAT for high?"

The bored Sam made no response other than to rise languidly to his feet,
stretch, and start for home.

Left alone, Penrod's practice became less ardent; he needed the stimulus
of an auditor. With the horn upon his lap he began to rub the greenish
brass surface with a rag. He meant to make this good ole two-dollar horn
of his LOOK like sumpthing!

Presently, moved by a better idea, he left the horn in the stable and
went into the house, soon afterward appearing before his mother in the
library.

"Mamma," he said, complainingly, "Della won't--"

But Mrs. Schofield checked him.

"Sh, Penrod; your father's reading the paper."

Penrod glanced at Mr. Schofield, who sat near the window, reading by the
last light of the early sunset.

"Well, I know it," said Penrod, lowering his voice. "But I wish you'd
tell Della to let me have the silver polish. She says she won't, and I
want to--"

"Be quiet, Penrod, you can't have the silver polish."

"But, mamma--"

"Not another word. Can't you see you're interrupting your father. Go on,
papa."

Mr. Schofield read aloud several despatches from abroad, and after each
one of them Penrod began in a low but pleading tone:

"Mamma, I want--"

"SH, Penrod!"

Mr. Schofield continued to read, and Penrod remained in the room, for he
was determined to have the silver polish.

"Here's something curious," said Mr. Schofield, as his eye fell upon a
paragraph among the "locals."

"What?"

"Valuable relic missing," Mr. Schofield read. "It was reported at police
headquarters to-day that a 'valuable object had been stolen from the
collection of antique musical instruments owned by E. Magsworth Bitts,
724 Central Avenue. The police insist that it must have been an inside
job, but Mr. Magsworth Bitts inclines to think it was the work of a
negro, as only one article was removed and nothing else found to be
disturbed. The object stolen was an ancient hunting-horn dating from
the eighteenth century and claimed to have belonged to Louis XV, King of
France. It was valued at about twelve hundred and fifty dollars."

Mrs. Schofield opened her mouth wide. "Why, that IS curious!" she
exclaimed.

She jumped up. "Penrod!"

But Penrod was no longer in the room.

"What's the matter?" Mr. Schofield inquired.

"Penrod!" said Mrs. Schofield breathlessly. "HE bought an old horn--like
one in old hunting-pictures--yesterday! He bought it with some money
Uncle Joe gave him! He bought it from Roddy Bitts!"

"Where'd he go?"

Together they rushed to the back porch.

Penrod had removed the lid of the cistern; he was kneeling beside it,
and the fact that the diameter of the opening into the cistern was
one inch less than the diameter of the coil of Louis the Fifteenth's
hunting-horn was all that had just saved Louis the Fifteenth's
hunting-horn from joining the drowned trousers of Herman.

Such was Penrod's instinct, and thus loyally he had followed it.

... He was dragged into the library, expecting anything whatever. The
dreadful phrases of the newspaper item rang through his head like the
gongs of delirium: "Police headquarters!" "Work of a negro!" "King of
France!" "Valued at about twelve hundred and fifty dollars!"

Eighty-five dollars had dismayed him; twelve hundred and fifty was
unthinkable. Nightmares were coming to life before his eyes.

But a light broke slowly; it came first to Mr. and Mrs. Schofield, and
it was they who illuminated Penrod. Slowly, slowly, as they spoke more
and more pleasantly to him, it began to dawn upon him that this trouble
was all Roddy's.

And when Mr. Schofield went to take the horn to the house of Mr.
Ethelbert Magsworth Bitts, Penrod sat quietly with his mother. Mr.
Schofield was gone an hour and a half. Upon his solemn return he
reported that Roddy's father had been summoned by telephone to bring his
son to the house of Uncle Ethelbert. Mr. Bitts had forthwith appeared
with Roddy, and, when Mr. Schofield came away, Roddy was still (after
half an hour's previous efforts) explaining his honourable intentions.
Mr. Schofield indicated that Roddy's condition was agitated, and that he
was having a great deal of difficulty in making his position clear.

Penrod's imagination paused outside the threshold of that room in Mr.
Ethelbert Magsworth Bitts' house, and awe fell upon him when he thought
of it. Roddy seemed to have disappeared within a shrouding mist where
Penrod's mind refused to follow him.

"Well, he got back his ole horn!" said Sam after school the next
afternoon. "I KNEW we had a perfect right to call him whatever we wanted
to! I bet you hated to give up that good ole horn, Penrod."

But Penrod was serene. He was even a little superior.

"Pshaw!" he said. "I'm goin' to learn to play on sumpthing better'n any
ole horn. It's lots better, because you can carry it around with you
anywhere, and you couldn't a horn."

"What is it?" Sam asked, not too much pleased by Penrod's air of
superiority and high content. "You mean a jew's-harp?"

"I guess not! I mean a flute with all silver on it and everything. My
father's goin' to buy me one."

"I bet he isn't!"

"He is, too," said Penrod; "soon as I'm twenty-one years old."



CHAPTER XXIII. THE PARTY

        ____________________________
       |                            |
       |     Miss Amy Rennsdale     |
       |                            |
       |          At Home           |
       | Saturday, the twenty-third |
       |     from three to six      |
       |                            |
       | R.s.v.p.           Dancing |
        ----------------------------

This little card, delicately engraved, betokened the hospitality
incidental to the ninth birthday anniversary of Baby Rennsdale, youngest
member of the Friday Afternoon Dancing Class, and, by the same token, it
represented the total social activity (during that season) of a certain
limited bachelor set consisting of Messrs. Penrod Schofield and Samuel
Williams. The truth must be faced: Penrod and Sam were seldom invited to
small parties; they were considered too imaginative. But in the case of
so large an affair as Miss Rennsdale's, the feeling that their parents
would be sensitive outweighed fears of what Penrod and Sam might do at
the party. Reputation is indeed a bubble, but sometimes it is blown of
sticky stuff.

The comrades set out for the fete in company, final maternal outpourings
upon deportment and the duty of dancing with the hostess evaporating in
their freshly cleaned ears. Both boys, however, were in a state of
mind, body, and decoration appropriate to the gala scene they were
approaching. Their collars were wide and white; inside the pockets of
their overcoats were glistening dancing-pumps, wrapped in tissue-paper;
inside their jacket pockets were pleasant-smelling new white gloves,
and inside their heads solemn timidity commingled with glittering
anticipations. Before them, like a Christmas tree glimpsed through
lace curtains, they beheld joy shimmering--music, ice-cream, macaroons,
tinsel caps, and the starched ladies of their hearts Penrod and Sam
walked demurely yet almost boundingly; their faces were shining but
grave--they were on their way to the Party!

"Look at there!" said Penrod. "There's Carlie Chitten!"

"Where?" Sam asked.

"'Cross the street. Haven't you got any eyes?"

"Well, whyn't you say he was 'cross the street in the first place?"
Sam returned plaintively. "Besides, he's so little you can't hardly
see him." This was, of course, a violent exaggeration, though Master
Chitten, not yet eleven years old, was an inch or two short for his age.
"He's all dressed up," Sam added. "I guess he must be invited."

"I bet he does sumpthing," said Penrod.

"I bet he does, too," Sam agreed.

This was the extent of their comment upon the small person across the
street; but, in spite of its non-committal character, the manner of both
commentators seemed to indicate that they had just exchanged views upon
an interesting and even curious subject. They walked along in silence
for several minutes, staring speculatively at Master Chitten.

His appearance was pleasant and not remarkable. He was a handsome, dark
little boy, with quick eyes and a precociously reserved expression; his
air was "well-bred"; he was exquisitely neat, and he had a look of manly
competence that grown people found attractive and reassuring. In short,
he was a boy of whom a timid adult stranger would have inquired the way
with confidence. And yet Sam and Penrod had mysterious thoughts about
him--obviously there was something subterranean here.

They continued to look at him for the greater part of block, when,
their progress bringing them in sight of Miss Amy Rennsdale's place of
residence their attention was directed to a group of men bearing festal
burdens--encased violins, a shrouded harp and other beckoning shapes.
There were signs, too, that most of "those invited" intended to miss no
moment of this party; guests already indoors watched from the windows
the approach of the musicians. Washed boys in black and white, and girls
in tender colours converged from various directions, making gayly for
the thrilling gateway--and the most beautiful little girl in all the
world, Marjorie Jones, of the amber curls, jumped from a carriage step
to the curbstone as Penrod and Sam came up. She waved to them.

Sam responded heartily; but Penrod, feeling real emotion and seeking
to conceal it, muttered, "'Lo, Marjorie!" gruffly, offering no further
demonstration. Marjorie paused a moment, expectant, and then, as he did
not seize the opportunity to ask her for the first dance, she tried
not to look disappointed and ran into the house ahead of the two boys.
Penrod was scarlet; he wished to dance the first dance with Marjorie,
and the second and the third and all the other dances, and he strongly
desired to sit with her "at refreshments"; but he had been unable to ask
for a single one of these privileges. It would have been impossible for
him to state why he was thus dumb, although the reason was simple and
wholly complimentary to Marjorie: she had looked so overpoweringly
pretty that she had produced in the bosom of her admirer a severe case
of stage fright. That was "all the matter with him"; but it was the
beginning of his troubles, and he did not recover until he and Sam
reached the "gentlemen's dressing-room", whither they were directed by a
polite coloured man.

Here they found a cloud of acquaintances getting into pumps and gloves,
and, in a few extreme cases, readjusting hair before a mirror. Some even
went so far--after removing their shoes and putting on their pumps--as
to wash traces of blacking from their hands in the adjacent bathroom
before assuming their gloves. Penrod, being in a strange mood, was one
of these, sharing the basin with little Maurice Levy.

"Carrie Chitten's here," said Maurice, as they soaped their hands.

"I guess I know it," Penrod returned. "I bet he does sumpthing, too."

Maurice shook his head ominously. "Well, I'm gettin' tired of it. I know
he was the one stuck that cold fried egg in P'fesser Bartet's overcoat
pocket at dancin'-school, and ole p'fesser went and blamed it on me.
Then, Carlie, he cum up to me, th' other day, and he says, 'Smell my
buttonhole bokay.' He had some vi'lets stickin' in his buttonhole, and
I went to smell 'em and water squirted on me out of 'em. I guess I've
stood about enough, and if he does another thing I don't like, he better
look out!"

Penrod showed some interest, inquiring for details, whereupon Maurice
explained that if Master Chitten displeased him further, Master Chitten
would receive a blow upon one of his features. Maurice was simple and
homely about it, seeking rhetorical vigour rather than elegance; in
fact, what he definitely promised Master Chitten was "a bang on the
snoot."

"Well," said Penrod, "he never bothered ME any. I expect he knows too
much for that!"

A cry of pain was heard from the dressing-room at this juncture, and,
glancing through the doorway, Maurice and Penrod beheld Sam Williams in
the act of sucking his right thumb with vehemence, the while his brow
was contorted and his eyes watered. He came into the bathroom and held
his thumb under a faucet.

"That darn little Carlie Chitten!" he complained. "He ast me to hold a
little tin box he showed me. He told me to hold it between my thumb and
fingers and he'd show me sumpthing. Then he pushed the lid, and a big
needle came out of a hole and stuck me half through my thumb. That's a
NICE way to act, isn't it?"

Carlie Chitten's dark head showed itself cautiously beyond the casing of
the door.

"How's your thumb, Sam?" he asked.

"You wait!" Sam shouted, turning furiously; but the small
prestidigitator was gone. With a smothered laugh, Carlie dashed through
the groups of boys in the dressing-room and made his way downstairs,
his manner reverting to its usual polite gravity before he entered the
drawing-room, where his hostess waited. Music sounding at about this
time, he was followed by the other boys, who came trooping down, leaving
the dressing-room empty.

Penrod, among the tail-enders of the procession, made his dancing-school
bow to Miss Rennsdale and her grown-up supporters (two maiden aunts and
a governess) then he looked about for Marjorie, discovering her but too
easily. Her amber curls were swaying gently in time to the music; she
looked never more beautiful, and her partner was Master Chitten!

A pang of great penetrative power and equal unexpectedness found the
most vulnerable spot beneath the simple black of Penrod Schofield's
jacket. Straightway he turned his back upon the crash-covered floors
where the dancers were, and moved gloomily toward the hall. But one of
the maiden aunts Rennsdale waylaid him.

"It's Penrod Schofield, isn't it?" she asked. "Or Sammy Williams? I'm
not sure which. Is it Penrod?"

"Ma'am?" he said. "Yes'm."

"Well, Penrod, I can find a partner for you. There are several dear
little girls over here, if you'll come with me."

"Well--" He paused, shifted from one foot to the other, and looked
enigmatic. "I better not," he said. He meant no offence; his trouble was
only that he had not yet learned how to do as he pleased at a party and,
at the same time, to seem polite about it. "I guess I don't want to," he
added.

"Very well!" And Miss Rennsdale instantly left him to his own devices.

He went to lurk in the wide doorway between the hall and the
drawing-room--under such conditions the universal refuge of his sex at
all ages. There he found several boys of notorious shyness, and stood
with them in a mutually protective group. Now and then one of them would
lean upon another until repelled by action and a husky "What's matter
'th you? Get off o' me!" They all twisted their slender necks uneasily
against the inner bands of their collars, at intervals, and sometimes
exchanged facetious blows under cover. In the distance Penrod caught
glimpses of amber curls flashing to and fro, and he knew himself to be
among the derelicts.

He remained in this questionable sanctuary during the next dance; but,
edging along the wall to lean more comfortably in a corner, as the music
of the third sounded, he overheard part of a conversation that somewhat
concerned him. The participants were the governess of his hostess, Miss
Lowe, and that one of the aunts Rennsdale who had offered to provide
him with a partner. These two ladies were standing just in front of him,
unconscious of his nearness.

"I never," Miss Rennsdale said, "never saw a more fascinating little boy
than that Carlie Chitten. There'll be some heartaches when he grows up;
I can't keep my eyes off him."

"Yes; he's a charming boy," Miss Lowe said. "His manners are
remarkable."

"He's a little man of the world," the enthusiastic Miss Rennsdale went
on, "very different from such boys as Penrod Schofield!"

"Oh, PENROD!" Miss Lowe exclaimed. "Good gracious!"

"I don't see why he came. He declines to dance--rudely, too!"

"I don't think the little girls will mind that so much!" Miss Lowe said.
"If you'd come to the dancing class some Friday with Amy and me, you'd
understand why."

They moved away. Penrod heard his name again mentioned between them as
they went, and, though he did not catch the accompanying remark, he was
inclined to think it unfavourable. He remained where he was, brooding
morbidly.

He understood that the government was against him, nor was his judgment
at fault in this conclusion. He was affected, also, by the conduct of
Marjorie, who was now dancing gayly with Maurice Levy, a former rival
of Penrod's. The fact that Penrod had not gone near her did not make her
culpability seem the less; in his gloomy heart he resolved not to ask
her for one single dance. He would not go near her. He would not go near
ANY OF 'EM!

His eyes began to burn, and he swallowed heavily; but he was never one
to succumb piteously to such emotion, and it did not even enter his head
that he was at liberty to return to his own home. Neither he nor any
of his friends had ever left a party until it was officially concluded.
What his sufferings demanded of him now for their alleviation was not
departure but action!

Underneath the surface, nearly all children's parties contain a group
of outlaws who wait only for a leader to hoist the black flag. The group
consists mainly of boys too shy to be at ease with the girls, but
who wish to distinguish themselves in some way; and there are others,
ordinarily well behaved, whom the mere actuality of a party makes
drunken. The effect of music, too, upon children is incalculable,
especially when they do not hear it often--and both a snare-drum and a
bass drum were in the expensive orchestra at the Rennsdale party.

Nevertheless, the outlawry at any party may remain incipient unless a
chieftain appears; but in Penrod's corner were now gathering into one
anarchical mood all the necessary qualifications for leadership. Out
of that bitter corner there stepped, not a Penrod Schofield subdued
and hoping to win the lost favour of the Authorities, but a hot-hearted
rebel determined on an uprising.

Smiling a reckless and challenging smile, he returned to the cluster
of boys in the wide doorway and began to push one and another of them
about. They responded hopefully with counter-pushes, and presently there
was a tumultuous surging and eddying in that quarter, accompanied by
noises that began to compete with the music. Then Penrod allowed himself
to be shoved out among the circling dancers, so that he collided with
Marjorie and Maurice Levy, almost oversetting them.

He made a mock bow and a mock apology, being inspired to invent a jargon
phrase.

"Excuse me," he said, at the same time making vocal his own conception
of a taunting laugh. "Excuse me, but I must 'a' got your bumpus!"

Marjorie looked grieved and turned away with Maurice; but the boys in
the doorway squealed with maniac laughter.

"Gotcher bumpus! Gotcher bumpus!" they shrilled. And they began to push
others of their number against the dancing couples, shouting, "'Scuse
me! Gotcher bumpus!"

It became a contagion and then a game. As the dances went on, strings
of boys, led by Penrod, pursued one another across the rooms, howling,
"Gotcher bumpus!" at the top of their lungs. They dodged and ducked,
and seized upon dancers as shields; they caromed from one couple into
another, and even into the musicians of the orchestra. Boys who were
dancing abandoned their partners and joined the marauders, shrieking,
"Gotcher bumpus!" Potted plants went down; a slender gilt chair refused
to support the hurled body of Master Roderick Magsworth Bitts, and the
sound of splintering wood mingled with other sounds. Dancing became
impossible; Miss Amy Rennsdale wept in the midst of the riot, and
everybody knew that Penrod Schofield had "started it".

Under instructions, the leader of the orchestra, clapping his hands for
attention, stepped to the centre of the drawing-room, and shouted,

"A moment silence, if you bleace!"

Slowly the hubbub ceased; the virtuous and the wicked paused alike in
their courses to listen. Miss Amy Rennsdale was borne away to have her
tearful face washed, and Marjorie Jones and Carlie Chitten and Georgie
Bassett came forward consciously, escorted by Miss Lowe. The musician
waited until the return of the small hostess; then he announced in a
loud voice:

"A fency dence called 'Les Papillons', denced by Miss Amy Rennstul, Miss
Chones, Mister Chorch Passett, ant Mister Jitten. Some young chentlemen
haf mate so much noise ant confoosion Miss Lowe wish me to ask bleace no
more such a nonsense. Fency dence, 'Les Papillons'."

Thereupon, after formal salutations, Mr. Chitten took Marjorie's hand,
Georgie Bassett took Miss Rennsdale's, and they proceeded to dance "Les
Papillons" in a manner that made up in conscientiousness whatever it
may have lacked in abandon. The outlaw leader looked on, smiling a
smile intended to represent careless contempt, but in reality he was
unpleasantly surprised. A fancy dance by Georgie Bassett and Baby
Rennsdale was customary at every party attended by members of the
Friday Afternoon Dancing Class; but Marjorie and Carlie Chitten were new
performers, and Penrod had not heard that they had learned to dance "Les
Papillons" together. He was the further embittered.

Carlie made a false step, recovering himself with some difficulty,
whereupon a loud, jeering squawk of laughter was heard from the
insurgent cluster, which had been awed to temporary quiet but still
maintained its base in the drawing-room doorway. There was a general
"SH!" followed by a shocked whispering, as well as a general turning of
eyes toward Penrod. But it was not Penrod who had laughed, though no
one would have credited him with an alibi. The laughter came from two
throats that breathed as one with such perfect simultaneousness that
only one was credited with the disturbance. These two throats belonged
respectively to Samuel Williams and Maurice Levy, who were standing in a
strikingly Rosencrantz-and-Guildenstern attitude.

"He got me with his ole tin-box needle, too," Maurice muttered to Sam.
"He was goin' to do it to Marjorie, and I told her to look out, and he
says, 'Here, YOU take it!' all of a sudden, and he stuck it in my hand
so quick I never thought. And then, BIM! his ole needle shot out and
perty near went through my thumb-bone or sumpthing. He'll be sorry
before this day's over!"

"Well," said Sam darkly, "he's goin' to be sorry he stuck ME, anyway!"
Neither Sam nor Maurice had even the vaguest plan for causing the
desired regret in the breast of Master Chitten; but both derived a
little consolation from these prophecies. And they, too, had aligned
themselves with the insurgents. Their motives were personal--Carlie
Chitten had wronged both of them, and Carlie was conspicuously in high
favour with the Authorities. Naturally Sam and Maurice were against the
Authorities.

"Les Papillons" came to a conclusion. Carlie and Georgie bowed; Marjorie
Jones and Baby Rennsdale curtesied, and there was loud applause. In
fact, the demonstration became so uproarious that some measure of it was
open to suspicion, especially as hisses of reptilian venomousness were
commingled with it, and also a hoarse but vociferous repetition of
the dastard words, "Carrie dances ROTTEN!" Again it was the work of
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern; but the plot was attributed to another.

"SHAME, Penrod Schofield!" said both the aunts Rennsdale publicly, and
Penrod, wholly innocent, became scarlet with indignant mortification.
Carlie Chitten himself, however, marked the true offenders. A slight
flush tinted his cheeks, and then, in his quiet, self-contained way, he
slipped through the crowd of girls and boys, unnoticed, into the
hall, and ran noiselessly up the stairs and into the "gentlemen's
dressing-room", now inhabited only by hats, caps, overcoats, and the
temporarily discarded shoes of the dancers. Most of the shoes stood in
rows against the wall, and Carlie examined these rows attentively, after
a time discovering a pair of shoes with patent leather tips. He knew
them; they belonged to Maurice Levy, and, picking them up, he went to
a corner of the room where four shoes had been left together under
a chair. Upon the chair were overcoats and caps that he was able to
identify as the property of Penrod Schofield and Samuel Williams; but,
as he was not sure which pair of shoes belonged to Penrod and which
to Sam, he added both pairs to Maurice's and carried them into the
bathroom. Here he set the plug in the tub, turned the faucets, and,
after looking about him and discovering large supplies of all sorts in a
wall cabinet, he tossed six cakes of green soap into the tub. He let
the soap remain in the water to soften a little, and, returning to the
dressing room, whiled away the time in mixing and mismating pairs of
shoes along the walls, and also in tying the strings of the mismated
shoes together in hard knots.

Throughout all this, his expression was grave and intent; his bright
eyes grew brighter, but he did not smile. Carlie Chitten was a singular
boy, though not unique: he was an "only child", lived at a hotel, and
found life there favourable to the development of certain peculiarities
in his nature. He played a lone hand, and with what precocious diplomacy
he played that curious hand was attested by the fact that Carlie was
brilliantly esteemed by parents and guardians in general.

It must be said for Carlie that, in one way, his nature was liberal.
For instance, having come upstairs to prepare a vengeance upon Sam and
Maurice in return for their slurs upon his dancing, he did not confine
his efforts to the belongings of those two alone. He provided every boy
in the house with something to think about later, when shoes should be
resumed; and he was far from stopping at that. Casting about him for
some material that he desired, he opened a door of the dressing-room
and found himself confronting the apartment of Miss Lowe. Upon a desk he
beheld the bottle of mucilage he wanted, and, having taken possession of
it, he allowed his eye the privilege of a rapid glance into a dressing
table drawer, accidentally left open.

He returned to the dressing-room, five seconds later, carrying not only
the mucilage but a "switch" worn by Miss Lowe when her hair was dressed
in a fashion different from that which she had favoured for the party.
This "switch" he placed in the pocket of a juvenile overcoat unknown to
him, and then he took the mucilage into the bathroom. There he rescued
from the water the six cakes of soap, placed one in each of the six
shoes, pounding it down securely into the toe of the shoe with the
handle of a back brush. After that, Carlie poured mucilage into all six
shoes impartially until the bottle was empty, then took them back to
their former positions in the dressing-room. Finally, with careful
forethought, he placed his own shoes in the pockets of his overcoat, and
left the overcoat and his cap upon a chair near the outer door of the
room. Then he went quietly downstairs, having been absent from
the festivities a little less than twelve minutes. He had been
energetic--only a boy could have accomplished so much in so short a
time. In fact, Carlie had been so busy that his forgetting to turn off
the faucets in the bathroom is not at all surprising.

No one had noticed his absence. That infectious pastime, "Gotcher
bumpus", had broken out again, and the general dancing, which had been
resumed upon the conclusion of "Les Papillons", was once more becoming
demoralized. Despairingly the aunts Rennsdale and Miss Lowe brought
forth from the rear of the house a couple of waiters and commanded them
to arrest the ringleaders, whereupon hilarious terror spread among
the outlaw band. Shouting tauntingly at their pursuers, they fled--and
bellowing, trampling flight swept through every quarter of the house.

Refreshments quelled this outbreak for a time. The orchestra played
a march; Carlie Chitten and Georgie Bassett, with Amy Rennsdale and
Marjorie, formed the head of a procession, while all the boys who had
retained their sense of decorum immediately sought partners and fell in
behind. The outlaws, succumbing to ice cream hunger, followed suit,
one after the other, until all of the girls were provided with escorts.
Then, to the moral strains of "The Stars and Stripes Forever", the
children paraded out to the dining-room. Two and two they marched,
except at the extreme tail end of the line, where, since there were
three more boys than girls at the party, the three left-over boys were
placed. These three were also the last three outlaws to succumb and
return to civilization from outlying portions of the house after the
pursuit by waiters. They were Messieurs Maurice Levy, Samuel Williams,
and Penrod Schofield.

They took their chairs in the capacious dining-room quietly enough,
though their expressions were eloquent of bravado, and they jostled one
another and their neighbours intentionally, even in the act of sitting.
However, it was not long before delectable foods engaged their whole
attention and Miss Amy Rennsdale's party relapsed into etiquette for
the following twenty minutes. The refection concluded with the mild
explosion of paper "crackers" that erupted bright-coloured, fantastic
headgear, and, during the snapping of the "crackers", Penrod heard the
voice of Marjorie calling from somewhere behind him, "Carrie and Amy,
will you change chairs with Georgie Bassett and me--just for fun?" The
chairs had been placed in rows, back to back, and Penrod would not
even turn his head to see if Master Chitten and Miss Rennsdale accepted
Marjorie's proposal, though they were directly behind him and Sam; but
he grew red and breathed hard. A moment later, the liberty-cap that he
had set upon his head was softly removed, and a little crown of silver
paper put in its place.

"PENROD?"

The whisper was close to his ear, and a gentle breath cooled the back of
his neck.



CHAPTER XXIV. THE HEART OF MARJORIE JONES

"Well, what you want?" Penrod asked, brusquely.

Marjorie's wonderful eyes were dark and mysterious, like still water at
twilight.

"What makes you behave so AWFUL?" she whispered.

"I don't either! I guess I got a right to do the way I want to, haven't
I?"

"Well, anyway," said Marjorie, "you ought to quit bumping into people so
it hurts."

"Poh! It wouldn't hurt a fly!"

"Yes, it did. It hurt when you bumped Maurice and me that time."

"It didn't either. WHERE'D it hurt you? Let's see if it--"

"Well, I can't show you, but it did. Penrod, are you going to keep on?"

Penrod's heart had melted within him; but his reply was pompous and
cold. "I will if I feel like it, and I won't if I feel like it. You wait
and see."

But Marjorie jumped up and ran around to him abandoning her escort.
All the children were leaving their chairs and moving toward the
dancing-rooms; the orchestra was playing dance-music again.

"Come on, Penrod!" Marjorie cried. "Let's go dance this together. Come
on!"

With seeming reluctance, he suffered her to lead him away. "Well, I'll
go with you; but I won't dance," he said "I wouldn't dance with the
President of the United States"

"Why, Penrod?"

"Well--because well, I won't DO it!"

"All right. I don't care. I guess I've danced plenty, anyhow. Let's go
in here." She led him into a room too small for dancing, used ordinarily
by Miss Amy Rennsdale's father as his study, and now vacant. For a while
there was silence; but finally Marjorie pointed to the window and said
shyly:

"Look, Penrod, it's getting dark. The party'll be over pretty soon, and
you've never danced one single time!"

"Well, I guess I know that, don't I?"

He was unable to cast aside his outward truculence though it was but a
relic. However, his voice was gentler, and Marjorie seemed satisfied.
From the other rooms came the swinging music, shouts of "Gotcher
bumpus!" sounds of stumbling, of scrambling, of running, of muffled
concus signs and squeals of dismay. Penrod's followers were renewing the
wild work, even in the absence of their chief.

"Penrod Schofield, you bad boy," said Marjorie, "you started every bit
of that! You ought to be ashamed of yourself."

"_I_ didn't do anything," he said--and he believed it. "Pick on me for
everything!"

"Well, they wouldn't if you didn't do so much," said Marjorie.

"They would, too."

"They wouldn't, either. Who would?"

"That Miss Lowe," he specified bitterly. "Yes, and Baby Rennsdale's
aunts. If the house'd burn down, I bet they'd say Penrod Schofield did
it! Anybody does anything at ALL, they say, 'Penrod Schofield, shame on
you!' When you and Carlie were dan--"

"Penrod, I just hate that little Carlie Chitten. P'fesser Bartet made me
learn that dance with him; but I just hate him."

Penrod was now almost completely mollified; nevertheless, he continued
to set forth his grievance. "Well, they all turned around to me and they
said, 'Why, Penrod Schofield, shame on you!' And I hadn't done a single
thing! I was just standin' there. They got to blame ME, though!"

Marjorie laughed airily. "Well, if you aren't the foolishest--"

"They would, too," he asserted, with renewed bitterness. "If the house
was to fall down, you'd see! They'd all say--"

Marjorie interrupted him. She put her hand on the top of her head,
looking a little startled.

"What's that?" she said.

"What's what?"

"Like rain!" Marjorie cried. "Like it was raining in here! A drop fell
on my--"

"Why, it couldn't--" he began. But at this instant a drop fell upon his
head, too, and, looking up, they beheld a great oozing splotch upon the
ceiling. Drops were gathering upon it and falling; the tinted plaster
was cracking, and a little stream began to patter down and splash upon
the floor. Then there came a resounding thump upstairs, just above them,
and fragments of wet plaster fell.

"The roof must be leaking," said Marjorie, beginning to be alarmed.

"Couldn't be the roof," said Penrod. "Besides there ain't any rain
outdoors."

As he spoke, a second slender stream of water began to patter upon the
floor of the hall outside the door.

"Good gracious!" Marjorie cried, while the ceiling above them shook as
with earthquake--or as with boys in numbers jumping, and a great uproar
burst forth overhead.

"I believe the house IS falling down, Penrod!" she quavered.

"Well, they'll blame ME for it!" he said. "Anyways, we better get out o'
here. I guess sumpthing must be the matter."

His guess was accurate, so far as it went. The dance-music had swung
into "Home Sweet Home" some time before, the children were preparing
to leave, and Master Chitten had been the first boy to ascend to the
gentlemen's dressing-room for his cap, overcoat and shoes, his
motive being to avoid by departure any difficulty in case his earlier
activities should cause him to be suspected by the other boys. But in
the doorway he halted, aghast.

The lights had not been turned on; but even the dim windows showed
that the polished floor gave back reflections no floor-polish had ever
equalled. It was a gently steaming lake, from an eighth to a quarter of
an inch deep. And Carlie realized that he had forgotten to turn off the
faucets in the bathroom.

For a moment, his savoir faire deserted him, and he was filled with
ordinary, human-boy panic. Then, at a sound of voices behind him, he
lost his head and rushed into the bathroom. It was dark, but certain
sensations and the splashing of his pumps warned him that the water was
deeper in there. The next instant the lights were switched on in both
bathroom and dressing-room, and Carlie beheld Sam Williams in the
doorway of the former.

"Oh, look, Maurice!" Sam shouted, in frantic excitement. "Somebody's
let the tub run over, and it's about ten feet deep! Carlie Chitten's
sloshin' around in here. Let's hold the door on him and keep him in!"

Carlie rushed to prevent the execution of this project; but he slipped
and went swishing full length along the floor, creating a little surf
before him as he slid, to the demoniac happiness of Sam and Maurice.
They closed the door, however, and, as other boys rushed, shouting and
splashing, into the flooded dressing-room, Carlie began to hammer upon
the panels. Then the owners of shoes, striving to rescue them from the
increasing waters, made discoveries.


The most dangerous time to give a large children's party is when
there has not been one for a long period. The Rennsdale party had that
misfortune, and its climax was the complete and convulsive madness of
the gentlemen's dressing-room during those final moments supposed to be
given to quiet preparations, on the part of guests, for departure.

In the upper hall and upon the stairway, panic-stricken little girls
listened, wild-eyed, to the uproar that went on, while waiters and maid
servants rushed with pails and towels into what was essentially the
worst ward in Bedlam. Boys who had behaved properly all afternoon now
gave way and joined the confraternity of lunatics. The floors of the
house shook to tramplings, rushes, wrestlings, falls and collisions. The
walls resounded to chorused bellowings and roars. There were pipings
of pain and pipings of joy; there was whistling to pierce the drums of
ears; there were hootings and howlings and bleatings and screechings,
while over all bleated the heathen battle-cry incessantly: "GOTCHER
BUMPUS! GOTCHER BUMPUS!" For the boys had been inspired by the unusual
water to transform Penrod's game of "Gotcher bumpus" into an aquatic
sport, and to induce one another, by means of superior force, dexterity,
or stratagems, either to sit or to lie at full length in the flood,
after the example of Carlie Chitten.

One of the aunts Rennsdale had taken what charge she could of the
deafened and distracted maids and waiters who were working to stem the
tide, while the other of the aunts Rennsdale stood with her niece
and Miss Lowe at the foot of the stairs, trying to say good-night
reassuringly to those of the terrified little girls who were able to
tear themselves away. This latter aunt Rennsdale marked a dripping
figure that came unobtrusively, and yet in a self-contained and
gentlemanly manner, down the stairs.

"Carlie Chitten!" she cried. "You poor dear child, you're soaking! To
think those outrageous little fiends wouldn't even spare YOU!" As she
spoke, another departing male guest came from behind Carlie and placed
in her hand a snakelike article--a thing that Miss Lowe seized and
concealed with one sweeping gesture.

"It's some false hair somebody must of put in my overcoat pocket," said
Roderick Magsworth Bitts. "Well, 'g-night. Thank you for a very nice
time."

"Good-night, Miss Rennsdale," said Master Chitten demurely. "Thank you
for a--"

But Miss Rennsdale detained him. "Carrie," she said earnestly, "you're
a dear boy, and I know you'll tell me something. It was all Penrod
Schofield, wasn't it?"

"You mean he left the--"

"I mean," she said, in a low tone, not altogether devoid of ferocity. "I
mean it was Penrod who left the faucets running, and Penrod who tied the
boys' shoes together, and filled some of them with soap and mucilage,
and put Miss Lowe's hair in Roddy Bitts's overcoat. No; look me in the
eye, Carlie! They were all shouting that silly thing he started. Didn't
he do it?"

Carlie cast down thoughtful eyes. "I wouldn't like to tell, Miss
Rennsdale," he said. "I guess I better be going or I'll catch cold.
Thank you for a very nice time."

"There!" said Miss Rennsdale vehemently, as Carlie went on his way.
"What did I tell you? Carlie Chitten's too manly to say it, but I just
KNOW it was that terrible Penrod Schofield."

Behind her, a low voice, unheard by all except the person to whom it
spoke, repeated a part of this speech: "What did I tell you?"

This voice belonged to one Penrod Schofield.

Penrod and Marjorie had descended by another stairway, and he now
considered it wiser to pass to the rear of the little party at the foot
of the stairs. As he was still in his pumps, his choked shoes occupying
his overcoat pockets, he experienced no difficulty in reaching the front
door, and getting out of it unobserved, although the noise upstairs was
greatly abated. Marjorie, however, made her curtseys and farewells in a
creditable manner.

"There!" Penrod said again, when she rejoined him in the darkness
outside. "What did I tell you? Didn't I say I'd get the blame of it,
no matter if the house went and fell down? I s'pose they think I put
mucilage and soap in my own shoes."

Marjorie delayed at the gate until some eagerly talking little girls had
passed out. The name "Penrod Schofield" was thick and scandalous among
them.

"Well," said Marjorie, "_I_ wouldn't care, Penrod. 'Course, about soap
and mucilage in YOUR shoes, anybody'd know some other boy must of put
'em there to get even for what you put in his."

Penrod gasped.

"But I DIDN'T!" he cried. "I didn't do ANYTHING! That ole Miss Rennsdale
can say what she wants to, I didn't do--"

"Well, anyway, Penrod," said Marjorie, softly, "they can't ever PROVE it
was you."

He felt himself suffocating in a coil against which no struggle availed.

"But I never DID it!" he wailed, helplessly. "I never did anything at
all!"

She leaned toward him a little, and the lights from her waiting carriage
illumined her dimly, but enough for him to see that her look was fond
and proud, yet almost awed.

"Anyway, Penrod," she whispered, "_I_ don't believe there's any other
boy in the whole world could of done HALF as much!"

And with that, she left him, and ran out to the carriage.

But Penrod remained by the gate to wait for Sam, and the burden of his
sorrows was beginning to lift. In fact, he felt a great deal better, in
spite of his having just discovered why Marjorie loved him.