Tabitha\'s Vacation
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Ruth Alberta Brown >> Tabitha\'s Vacation
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"Well, you needn't for I'm not hungry. Tell Tabitha I don't want
anything to eat. I am going to bed. My head aches."
"All right," retorted Susie, too cheerfully, he thought with bitterness
in his heart, as he followed her nimble feet toward the house. He had
hoped she would at least express some sympathy for his aching head; but
what did she care? What did anyone care about him? Morosely he
shambled along behind his agile cousin; but instead of entering the
kitchen, which was of necessity also the dining-room, he chose the
front door, and quietly sought the room where he and his brother slept.
Toady's pale face on the pillow made him pause on the threshold, while
a twinge of remorse tugged at his heart, but the victim, hearing the
creak of the opening door, opened his round eyes, and smiling
beatifically, asked in a weak voice, "Seen Tabitha?"
Billiard grunted an unintelligible reply.
"Tell you what, she's a crackerjack!" continued the invalid. Then, as
Billiard's only answer was a vicious jerk which divested him of collar
and waist at a single effort, Toady cried in surprise, "Why, Bill, have
you had your supper?"
"Don't want any!" growled the other, tugging savagely at his boots.
"What's the matter? Sick?"
"Headache!"
"_You_ didn't eat any castor-beans, did you?"
Billiard paused in the act of crawling into bed to glare angrily at his
brother, thinking he was being made fun of; but Toady's cherubic face
seemed to allay his suspicions, and he briefly, but savagely replied,
"Naw!"
"You better tell Tabitha--" began Toady in genuine solicitude; but
Billiard again misconstrued his brother's meaning, and interrupted,
"Aw, shut up! Let a feller alone for once, can't you?" And as
Billiard wriggled into bed, puzzled Toady lapsed into silence.
Tabitha, too, was puzzled by the older boy's actions. She had hoped
that the poisoning of his brother would awake his better nature if
nothing else would, so she was keenly disappointed, as well as
surprised, at the change which now took place in him.
"It seems so strange," she confided to Gloriana. "He acted so terribly
cut up the day he brought Toady home sick, that I thought it would cure
him of his mean mischief, at least. But now he seems bent on trying to
find the limit of human endurance--doubling his mischief and being more
aggravatingly hateful than ever."
"Perhaps he is getting even for Toady's reform," suggested the
red-haired girl, looking worried.
"Toady--bless the boy!" exclaimed Tabitha fervently. "I should go wild
if he had taken the streak Billiard has."
"And yet I can see how provoking it must be to Bill----"
"Why, Gloriana!"
"I mean that Toady's declaration of independence would naturally rouse
Bill's 'mad,' as Rosslyn says, when Toady had blindly followed his
leadership for so long. And besides, the way Toady flaunts his virtues
in his brother's face----"
"That _is_ rather amusing, isn't it?"
"Provoking? I should, say! Billiard has been used to saying the word
and Toady has obeyed. It's rather a--a--jar, to be defied, or ignored
all of a sudden. Bill is bright----"
"Too bright," sighed Tabitha, somewhat sarcastically, Gloriana thought.
"He _is_ bright!" championed the younger girl warmly. "This morning I
happened to overhear him teasing the girls at play under the kitchen
window, and he declared that it was a mistake for Inez and Irene to be
twins; that it should have been Susie and Inez, and then their names
would have been Suez and Inez."
Tabitha smiled in spite of herself, then said heatedly, "But he is so
mean about it! To-day while you were at the bakery and he thought I
had gone for the mail, I heard a commotion in the yard, and what do you
suppose I found him doing?"
Gloriana shook her head.
"He had the girls and Rosslyn lined up by the woodpile and was making
them carry in _his_ wood. Even little Janie was loaded down with two
immense sticks, so heavy she could hardly toddle with them."
"What did you do?"
"Made them drop their loads right where they were, and he had to carry
it all in by himself."
"Without even Toady's help?"
"All by himself!" repeated Tabitha emphatically.
"I am afraid--we are not apt--to----"
"To what?" asked Tabitha, as her companion stammered in confusion and
paused abruptly.
"To gain anything--_much_ of anything by trying to force Billiard into
being good."
"How _are_ we to make him mind, then? He won't coax. You can't
flatter him into behaving himself, and threats don't do a mite of good.
_I_ think a smart dose of the hickory stick would be the most effective
medicine for such cases as his."
Glory looked dubious.
"You don't agree with me?" suggested Tabitha.
"He is such a big boy to be thrashed," she evaded.
"He is such a big boy to act that way!"
"Yes, that's true, but----"
How she would have finished her sentence Tabitha never found out, for
at that moment a piercing scream broke the stillness of the desert
afternoon, followed by a medley of excited accusations, denials,
threats, and Billiard's taunting laugh. Tabitha flew to the rescue of
her brood and found Irene stretched full length in the gravel, with
Mercedes and Toady deluging her with water, while the rest of the
sisters danced frantically about the trio.
"He--he shot her!" cried Rosslyn indignantly, at sight of the slender
figure in the doorway.
"I gave her fair warning," said defiant Billiard.
"Hand me your gun!" demanded Tabitha in exasperation, after a hasty
examination of the victim had convinced her that Irene was more
frightened than hurt.
"Gun! Ha, ha, ain't that rich?" mocked Billiard.
"'Twas a slingshot," volunteered Toady.
"And he shooted a rock," added Janie.
Tabitha held out her hand with an imperious gesture. "Pass it over
quietly, or I shall make you."
Billiard calmly pocketed the article in dispute, and seeing that Irene
was recovering under the heroic treatment of her amateur nurses, he
seated himself in tantalizing silence upon the saw-horse, as if to
enjoy the scene he had created. But his enjoyment was short lived.
Tabitha, now thoroughly aroused, and forgetful of her dignity, swooped
down upon the tormentor, wrested his slingshot from his grasp, and
before anyone could divine her intentions, seized a barrel stave from
the woodpile and gave the surprised boy a sound drubbing.
In the midst of the thrashing, there came vividly to her mind her
childish horror of that day of reckoning with her father, when he had
struck her with one of his slippers, and she recalled the fact that it
was not the physical hurt, but the humiliation of the blow which had
wounded her most deeply. Flinging down the stick, she released the
struggling lad as suddenly as she had seized him; and in tones that
sounded husky in spite of herself, briefly ordered, "Go to your room!"
Angry, stunned, shamed, Billiard bounced through the kitchen, slammed
the door of his room, turned the key in the lock and--stood still in
the middle of the floor. Whipped by a girl not four years his senior!
Whipped by a _girl_! It was an unforgivable outrage. He would get
even for that. But what was he to do? Would _could_ he do? She had
beaten him at every turn, she had set Toady against him, she had made
him the laughing stock of his cousins. He--he--he would do something
desperate. He would----
As if in answer to his thoughts, he heard a strange voice close beside
the open window say, "Yes, he has run away. The inspector completed
his job this morning, found Atwater's accounts five hundred dollars
short, and he skipped."
"Who?" demanded Mercedes. "The post-master?"
"Yep! Lit out. Can't have been gone more'n an hour, but no one seems
to have seen him anywhere around town, and they are scouring the
country for him."
Billiard drew a deep breath. That was an idea. Why hadn't he thought
of it before! He, too, would run away. Stealthily he crept to the
little closet, selected a clean shirt, a pair of stockings, a necktie,
and his pajamas, tied them up in a bath-towel, not having such a thing
in his wardrobe as a bandana handkerchief, although he felt that this
was an essential; and after a cautious survey of the premises to make
sure that the children were nowhere near, he crawled out of the window,
carefully shut the screen again, and darted swiftly down the steep,
pathless incline on the west side of the house to the flat below. It
was a hazardous undertaking, and at any other time he would have shrunk
from attempting it, but in his unreasonable anger and desire for
revenge, all else was forgotten; and he arrived at the sandy bottom
breathless, badly scratched by the mesquite, and smarting from the
prick of cactus thorns, but triumphant.
Pausing only long enough to shake his fist defiantly at the house on
the cliff above, he made off across the desert as fast as his legs
would carry him. His first idea had been to follow the railroad, but
on second thought he concluded that he might easily be overtaken and
brought back if he took that course. So after a brief survey of the
pathless landscape, he decided to skirt the mountains in whose hollow
lay the town of Silver Bow, and to strike off to the west, in the
direction of a neighboring mining camp called Crystal City.
"If I _should_ miss that place," he reasoned to himself, "I am sure to
get somewhere. Perhaps to Los Angeles that Mercy goes so crazy about.
Say, that's just the thing! It takes only about twelve hours to get
there by train; I ought to be able to walk it in two days, and I'll
join the navy. I always did want to be a sailor!"
So he trudged sturdily on through the heavy sand of the flats, building
air castles and nursing his wrath, but paying little heed to the course
he was taking, until with a shiver of alarm he discovered that the
afternoon sun had set and the range of white-capped mountains which
sheltered Crystal City was seemingly no nearer than when he had set
out. He began to feel faint with hunger and thirst, and was appalled
to think he had forgotten in his flight to pack any lunch in his small
store of belongings, and was now what seemed miles from civilization,
in the midst of the pathless desert with neither food nor drink, and
night coming on.
Night! He shuddered. How could he have forgotten the night part of
it? Where was he to stay? He was afraid of the desert darkness.
Somehow, it always seemed blacker and stiller there than anywhere else
on earth. But perhaps the moon would come up. That would be lots of
company, and the weather was so warm that he would really enjoy
sleeping out in the open air. Eagerly he scanned the evening sky, and
perceiving that the east appeared to be growing lighter, his spirits
began to rise. After all, he was not sorry he had run away. Wouldn't
there be consternation in the Eagles' Nest when his absence was
discovered? How Tabitha would regret her unwarranted harshness! And
Toady--Toady would cry and snivel because he had deserted his dear, big
brother in his hour of need. And searching parties would be sent all
over the country to find him. How he gloated over the pictures his
vivid imagination had drawn!
But all the while he stumbled on, it was growing darker, the landscape
had become an indistinct blur, and night sounds filled the air. The
lonely howl of a wolf in the distance sent a chill of fear down
Billiard's spine; the scream of a night-hawk overhead made him jump
almost out of his shoes, and he was just beginning to consider where he
should lie down to sleep when a sudden scurry in the underbrush froze
him in his tracks. The next minute, however, he laughed at his fright,
for it was merely a mother burro and her baby colt which his steps had
routed from their hiding-place and sent flying across the flats for
safety. A twig snapping sharply under his feet startled him; what
sounded like a warning hiss close by brought his heart into his mouth;
and trembling from head to foot he paused by a clump of Spanish
bayonets, uncertain what to do next.
Oh, if only he had not run away! If only he were sitting with the rest
of the lively troop of children around the supper table! Or perhaps it
was too late for supper now. More likely they would be preparing for
bed. What frolics they had enjoyed in the evenings when Tabitha made
taffy and recited stirring ballads to fill in the moments while the
toothsome sweet was cooking. What exciting tales his cousins told of
the brave, black-haired maid whom he was trying so hard to hate. He
did hate her! That is, sometimes he did. But he could not help
admiring her pluck, even though he stood in awe of the fierce temper
that blazed up so quickly, and as quickly died away again. She was
certainly a wonder for a girl. There was no 'fraid cat about her. He
wished she liked him better. But how could she, when he was so
tantalizing, mean and sly? Perhaps if he went back home, that is, to
Aunt----
"Hands up! We've got you at last!" growled a stern voice almost in his
ear, it seemed; and poor Billiard's hands shot high into the air, he
shut his eyes, held his breath and waited for the end. But to his
utter amazement, a second voice huskily replied, after an instant,
"Yes, you've got me, boys. I knew it was no use to run away,
but--I--couldn't bear--to stay--and know that everyone looked at me as
a thief. I never took the money."
The moon, which had seemed so slow in rising, had finally mounted to
the crest of the surrounding hills, and poured a stream of mellow light
upon the waste below. Billiard, his hands still thrust stiffly above
his head, now distinguished a few feet in front of him the dark shapes
of a dozen or more men, armed with revolvers, clustering around one
whom he recognized as Atwater, the runaway post-master of Silver Bow.
"That's all right, Atwater," growled the first speaker, who was
evidently leader of the posse. "Tell your tale in court, but be a man
and face the music. Fall in, boys!"
For a long time, Billiard watched them as they marched their hapless
prisoner back to town, and the leader's words kept ringing in his ears,
"Be a man and face the music!" Suddenly a new thought flashed through
his brain. Why had he not followed them? It wasn't too late yet. He
could still see their forms indistinctly moving across the desert, and
by following their lead, would sooner or later reach Silver Bow
himself. Stepping out from the clump of Spanish bayonets which had
formed his retreat, he set out on a dog-trot in the direction the men
had taken, and after a long, rough, weary journey, actually found
himself trailing up the familiar path to the Eagles' Nest.
He paused as he reached the children's play house and took a furtive
survey of the place. One lone light burned in the low cottage.
Probably Tabitha had missed him and was waiting for his return.
Supposing she should lick him again for running away?
"Billiard!"
'Twas only a whisper from a rock nearby? but the boy almost screamed
aloud in his fright at the unexpectedness of it.
"Sh!" the voice continued. "It's only I,--Glory. I had to go to the
drug-store for some alum,--Janie has the croup,--and I saw you coming
up the trail. Tabitha hasn't missed you yet. She has been so anxious
over the baby. So sneak back to your room and I'll bring you something
to eat as soon as I can. Run now! Tabitha will be expecting me."
"But Glory, doesn't _anyone_ know I--" began bewildered Billiard, much
taken back at his reception.
"Ran away?" finished Gloriana. "No one but Toady and myself. He won't
tell. I made him promise. Of course we'd have had to, if you hadn't
come back, but I knew--I thought you would--" How could she tell him
that she knew he was too much of a coward to persist in running away?
"Scramble into your room as quietly as possible," she continued, "so as
not to disturb the others, and I will bring you some supper in a minute
or so."
"You're--you're awfully good to a feller," mumbled the abashed boy,
wondering how he ever could have disliked the red-haired Glory.
"I--I'll not forget it." And as the girl hurried up the path to the
kitchen door, he skirted the house till he reached the window of his
room, through which he wriggled cautiously and disappeared in the
friendly darkness within, thankful that he was home again.
CHAPTER IX
BILLIARD SURRENDERS
Toady kept his promise not to mention Billiard's runaway expedition to
anyone else save Gloriana; but being human, he could not keep from
twitting his brother occasionally, and the days which followed that
memorable night were full of misery for the unhappy boy. His cousins
avoided him, Tabitha ignored him, Toady tormented him, and even
Gloriana seemed indifferent to his plight. In his fright at
discovering himself lost on the desert at night, he had resolved to
follow Toady's example and turn over a new leaf. He could not quite
make up his mind to confess his sins to eagle-eyed Tabitha, but was
really sincere in his desire to do better; and was as surprised as he
was disappointed to find that no one paid any attention to the sudden
change in his deportment.
"Might as well have kept on being bad," he growled with an injured air
one afternoon when a fortnight had passed without any noticeable change
in the atmosphere. "Wish I hadn't come back that night. Guess they'd
have sung a different tune then! Maybe a coyote would have got me, or
I'd have stepped into a rattlesnake's nest and been stung to death.
Bet they'd have felt sorry when they found me--," he hesitated. His
picture was too vivid, and he shuddered as he thought what a fate would
have been his had a rattlesnake bitten him as he tramped across the
pathless waste in his flight. "Pretty near dead," he finished finally,
unable to endure the thought that they _might_ have found him dead.
"If I had kept on, I'd be in Los Angeles now,--maybe in the navy
already. I've a good notion to try again. I could almost go by train,
now that my 'lowance has come. Mercy says it takes twelve dollars, and
I've got ten. 'T any rate, I could ride as far as that would take me,
and--by George, I b'lieve I could beat my way without spending a cent!
That's the way tramps travel from city to city."
He winced at the idea of being classed with tramps, and fell to
debating whether he would buy a ticket and ride like a gentleman as far
as his ten dollars would carry him, or whether he would attempt the
hobo's hazardous method of transportation. Before he had arrived at
any satisfactory conclusion, he heard the tramp of feet close by, and
the lively chatter of voices, and around the bend of the path came
Toady with his six cousins. They did not see him at first, half hidden
as he was by the heap of ragged rocks on which he lay stretched full
length, but even when they did become aware of his presence, they
merely glanced indifferently at the lazy figure and passed by without
speaking.
Angered at thus being ignored and left out in the cold, Billiard
resolved to display no interest in them, either, although he was
consumed with curiosity as to where they were bound; but a chance
remark of Susie's about being lowered in a bucket overcame his resolve,
and he called after them, "Where you going, kids?"
"Don't you wish you knew?" Inez flung back with a saucy toss of her
head.
"Up Pike's Peak," said Toady, without so touch as looking back.
"You mean down Ali Baba's cave," suggested Mercedes laughingly.
"Shall we tell him?" asked Irene, relenting as she glanced back at the
lonely figure on the rocks.
"He'll just be bad if we let him come," warned Susie.
"He hasn't been bad for a long time," gentle Irene reminded them.
"Aw, what do you s'pose I care where you are going?" sung out Billiard,
more hurt by their manner than he cared to acknowledge. "Keep on to
Jericho, if you want to."
"We ain't going to Jericho," said Irene, lagging uncertainly behind the
others. "Only just across town to that hill over there where is a--a
'bandoned mine. Toady's never seen what one looks like, so we're
taking him along to get a peek at it. Have you ever seen a mine?"
Billiard shook his head.
"Tabitha says if we're real good, she'll see if the superintendent
won't take us all through the Silver Legion mine before the summer is
over; but to-day we're just going to show Toady how the miners go up
and down the shaft. He won't b'lieve they use a bucket. Don't you
want to come too?"
"Nope, guess not," Billiard answered promptly, though the wistful look
in his eyes belied his words.
"It's int'resting," urged Irene, who somehow seemed to understand that
Billiard did not really mean what he said.
"Is it a real bucket?" he could not refrain from asking.
"Yes."
"Like a water bucket?"
"Yes, only bigger."
"I sh'd think the miners would fall out."
"Oh, it's big enough so they can't tumble if they mind the rules; but
you've got to keep your head down inside, or you'll be killed by the
big beans--" she meant beams--"which are built in to hold the dirt from
caving in and filling up the mine. Come and see for yourself."
"Well, p'r'aps I will." With a great show of indifference, the boy
uncoiled his legs, slid to the ground beside Irene, and hurried with
her after the others, now a considerable distance in advance; but the
little group had reached their goal and were gingerly peering into the
black depths of the abandoned shaft when Billiard and Irene joined them.
"Ugh!" shuddered Mercedes, drawing back with a shiver from the yawning
mouth of the hole. "It smells like lizards. I'll bet the bottom of
the shaft is full of them."
"It didn't use to be," remarked Susie, dropping a pebble over the brink
and listening to the hollow echoes it awoke as it bounded from timber
to timber.
"Were you ever down there?" asked Toady in surprise.
"No, but papa was one of the men here when the mine was working."
"What did it quit working for?" ventured Billiard, testing the
weather-stained rope still coiled about the winch above the shaft.
"The vein of rich silver stopped all of a sudden and they couldn't make
the other ore pay, so they shut down, and the men went to work in other
mines, or else moved away."
"How deep is a shaft?" asked Toady, as Susie sent another pebble
spinning after the first and counted rapidly until it struck the bottom.
"Some are _hundreds_ of feet deep," replied Mercedes impressively, glad
of a chance to air her meagre knowledge of mining affairs. "But
this----"
"Is only a hole," finished Inez contemptuously.
"What do you mean by that?" demanded Billiard, mystified. "Ain't this
a sure-enough shaft?"
"Oh, yes," Mercedes hastened to inform him; "only 'tisn't the main one.
That's all boarded up, and no one can go down it any more. This was
dug later. Someone thought there was more silver here, and they made
this shaft. It's not very deep----"
"Let's go down it!" proposed Billiard, boyishly eager for such an
adventure.
"Oh, horrors!" shrieked Mercedes. "With all those lizards down there?"
"Shucks! Lizards won't hurt a fellow."
"Maybe there are snakes, too," said Rosslyn, hastily backing away from
the place.
"We'd have heard them," Billiard answered promptly. "Susie has fired
enough rocks at 'em to stir 'em up if there was any there."
"But Tabitha mightn't like it," suggested Irene in troubled tones.
"Did she ever say you _couldn't_ go?"
"N-o."
"Or did your mother?"
"N-o."
"Then what's to hinder?"
"S'posing the rope should bu'st," mused Irene aloud.
"_That_ rope? Why, it's half as big as my arm! Yes, bigger."
"But it has been here a long, long time. Ever since I can remember.
Doesn't rope rot?"
"I'll bet that's as strong as iron," boasted Billiard. "There's
nothing rotten about it. I'll stump any of you to go down with me."
"Will you go first and see if there are any snakes?" demanded Susie,
whose love of adventure was constantly leading her into mischief.
"If you'll promise honor bright to come next."
"I will," Susie rashly promised, her eyes dancing with excitement and
eagerness. "Will you go, too, Toady?"
"Sure, but who's going to let us down? I'll bet it takes some work to
keep the rope unwinding just right."
"I'll lower you all," proposed Mercedes magnanimously, for the idea of
descending into that black, musty hole did not appeal to her in the
least, but she could not bear to appear less brave than fly-away Susie.
"You! Pooh! You are just a girl! The bucket would get away from you
the first thing, and then where'd the rest of us be? No, I've got a
better plan than that. You and Toady and Irene let Susie and Inez and
me down first; and after we have had a look at the thing, we'll come up
and let you down. How does that suit you?"
"It's a go," Toady readily responded.
"All right," quavered Mercedes.
But Irene held her peace. Nothing could tempt her to crouch in that
great, swaying bucket and be dropped into the blackness of that yawning
pit, but she did not mean to voice her opinions until the proper
moment. So she took her place beside Mercedes and Toady and puffed and
panted as the rope slowly unwound, and Billiard, scrooched low in the
bucket, disappeared from view. It was hard work and slow, to pay out
the rope evenly, but Billiard did not seem at all inclined to be
critical, and accepted his rough, jolting descent without a murmur.
Had the truth been known, the boy was too nearly paralyzed with fright
to notice anything of his surroundings, and more than once he was on
the point of signalling for his companions to hoist him to the surface
again, but fear of ridicule kept him tongue-tied until it was too late.
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