Only don’t be hard on Sanch; he’s been real good to me, and we’re fond of one another;
ain’t us, old chap?” answered the boy, with his arm around the dog’s neck, and an anxious look which he had not worn for himself.
“I’m going to take you right home, and wash and feed and put you in a good bed; and tomorrow — well, we’ll see what’ll happen
then,” said Mrs. Moss, not quite sure about it herself.
“You’re very kind, ma’am. I’ll be glad to work for you. Ain’t you got a horse I can see to?” asked the boy, eagerly.
“Nothing but hens and a cat.”
Bab and Betty burst out laughing when their mother said that, and Ben gave a faint giggle, as if he would like to join in
if he only had the strength to do it. But his legs shook under him, and he felt a queer dizziness; so he could only hold on
to Sancho, and blink at the light like a young owl.
“Come right along, child. Run on, girls, and put the rest of the broth to warming, and fill the kettle. I’ll see to the
boy,” commanded Mrs. Moss, waving off the children, and going up to feel the pulse of her new charge, for it suddenly occurred
to her that he might be sick and not safe to take home.
The hand he gave her was very thin, but clean and cool, and the black eyes were clear though hollow, for the poor lad was
half starved.
“I’m awful shabby, but I ain’t dirty. I had a washin’ in the rain last night, and I’ve jest about lived on water lately,”
he explained, wondering why she looked at him so hard.
“Put out your tongue.”
He did so, but took it in again to say quickly—
“I ain’t sick — I’m only hungry; for I haven’t had a mite but what Sanch brought, for three days; and I always go halves,
don’t I, Sanch?”
The poodle gave a shrill bark, and vibrated excitedly between the door and his master as if he understood all that was going
on, and recommended a speedy march toward the promised food and shelter. Mrs. Moss took the hint, and bade the boy follow
her and bring his “things” with him.
“I ain’t got any. Some big fellers took away my bundle, else I wouldn’t look so bad. There’s only this. I’m sorry Sanch took
it, and I’d like to give it back if I knew whose it was,” said Ben, bringing the new dinner pail out from the depths of the
coach where he had gone to housekeeping.
“That’s soon done; it’s mine, and you’re welcome to the bits your queer dog ran off with. Come along, I must lock up,” and
Mrs. Moss clanked her keys suggestively.
Ben limped out, leaning on a broken hoe-handle, for he was stiff after two days in such damp lodgings, as well as worn out
with a fortnight’s wandering through sun and rain. Sancho was in great spirits, evidently feeling that their woes were over
and his foraging expeditions at an end, for
he frisked about his master with yelps of pleasure, or made playful darts at the ankles of his benefactress, which caused
her to cry, “Whish!” and “Scat!” and shake her skirts at him as if he were a cat or hen.
A hot fire was roaring in the stove under the broth skillet and teakettle, and Betty was poking in more wood, with a great
smirch of black on her chubby cheek, while Bab was cutting away at the loaf as if bent on slicing her own fingers off. Before
Ben knew what he was about, he found himself in the old rocking chair devouring bread and butter as only a hungry boy can,
with Sancho close by gnawing a mutton bone like a ravenous wolf in sheep’s clothing.
While the newcomers were thus happily employed, Mrs. Moss beckoned the little girls out of the room, and gave them both an
errand.
“Bab, you run over to Mrs. Barton’s, and ask her for any old duds Billy don’t want; and Betty, you go to the Cutters, and
tell Miss Clarindy I’d like a couple of the shirts we made at last sewing circle. Any shoes, or a hat, or socks, would come
handy, for the poor dear hasn’t a whole thread on him.”
Away went the children full of anxiety to clothe their beggar; and so well did they plead his cause with the good neighbors,
that Ben hardly knew himself when he emerged from the back bedroom half an hour later, clothed in Billy Barton’s faded flannel
suit, with an unbleached cotton shirt out of the Dorcas basket, and a pair of Milly Cutter’s old shoes on his feet.
Sancho also had been put in better trim, for, after his master had refreshed himself with a warm bath, he gave his dog a good
scrub while Mrs. Moss set a stitch here and there in the new old clothes; and Sancho reappeared, looking more like the china
poodle than ever, being as white as
snow, his curls well brushed up, and his tasselly tail waving proudly over his back.
Feeling eminently respectable and comfortable, the wanderers humbly presented themselves, and were greeted with smiles of
approval from the little girls and a hospitable welcome from the mother, who set them near the stove to dry, as both were
decidedly damp after their ablutions.
“I declare I shouldn’t have known you!” exclaimed the good woman, surveying the boy with great satisfaction; for, though still
very thin and tired, the lad had a tidy look that pleased her, and a lively way of moving about in his clothes, like an eel
in a skin rather too big for him. The merry black eyes seemed to see everything, the voice had an honest sound, and the sunburnt
face looked several years younger since the unnatural despondency had gone out of it.
“It’s very nice, and me and Sanch are lots obliged, ma’am,” murmured Ben, getting red and bashful under the three pairs of
friendly eyes fixed upon him.
Bab and Betty were doing up the tea things with unusual despatch, so that they might entertain their guest, and just as Ben
spoke Bab dropped a cup. To her great surprise no smash followed, for, bending quickly, the boy caught it as it fell, and
presented it to her on the back of his hand with a little bow.
“Gracious! how could you do it?” asked Bab, looking as if she thought there was magic about it.
“That’s nothing; look here,” and, taking two plates, Ben sent them spinning up into the air, catching and throwing so rapidly
that Bab and Betty stood with their mouths open, as if to swallow the plates should they fall, while Mrs. Moss, with her dishcloth
suspended, watched the antics of her crockery with a housewife’s anxiety.
“That does beat all!” was the only exclamation she had time to make; for, as if desirous of showing his gratitude in
the only way he could, Ben took several clothespins from a basket nearby, sent several saucers twirling up, caught them on
the pins, balanced the pins on chin, nose, forehead, and went walking about with a new and peculiar sort of toadstool ornamenting
his countenance.
The children were immensely tickled, and Mrs. Moss was so amused she would have lent her best soup tureen if he had expressed
a wish for it. But Ben was too tired to show all his accomplishments at once, and he soon stopped, looking as if he almost
regretted having betrayed that he possessed any.
“I guess you’ve been in the juggling business,” said Mrs. Moss, with a wise nod, for she saw the same look on his face as
when he said his name was Ben Brown — the look of one who was not telling the whole truth.
“Yes, ’m. I used to help Señor Pedro, the Wizard of the World, and I learned some of his tricks,” stammered Ben, trying to
seem innocent.
“Now, look here, boy, you’d better tell me the whole story, and tell it true, or I shall have to send you up to Judge Morris.
I wouldn’t like to do that, for he is a harsh sort of a man; so, if you haven’t done anything bad, you needn’t be afraid to
speak out, and I’ll do what I can for you,” said Mrs. Moss, rather sternly, as she went and sat down in her rocking chair,
as if about to open the court.
“I haven’t done anything bad, and I ain’t afraid, only I don’t want to go back; and if I tell, maybe you’ll let ’em know where I be,” said Ben, much distressed between
his longing to confide in his new friend and his fear of his old enemies.
“If they abused you, of course I wouldn’t.
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