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Chapter Seven. One Memorable Night

The Story of a Bad Boy





Two months had elapsed since my arrival at Rivermouth, when the
approach of an important celebration produced the greatest excitement
among the juvenile population of the town.

There was very little hard study done in the Temple Grammar
School the week preceding the Fourth of July. For my part, my heart
and brain were so full of fire-crackers, Roman candles, rockets,
pin-wheels, squibs, and gunpowder in various seductive forms, that I
wonder I didn't explode under Mr. Grimshaw's very nose. I couldn't do
a sum to save me; I couldn't tell, for love or money, whether
Tallahassee was the capital of Tennessee or of Florida; the present
and the pluperfect tenses were inextricably mixed in my memory, and I
didn't know a verb from an adjective when I met one. This was not
alone my condition, but that of every boy in the school.

Mr. Grimshaw considerately made allowances for our temporary
distraction, and sought to fix our interest on the lessons by
connecting them directly or indirectly with the coming Event. The
class in arithmetic, for instance, was requested to state how many
boxes of fire-crackers, each box measuring sixteen inches square,
could be stored in a room of such and such dimensions. He gave us the
Declaration of Independence for a parsing exercise, and in geography
confined his questions almost exclusively to localities rendered
famous in the Revolutionary War.

"What did the people of Boston do with the tea on board the
English vessels?" asked our wily instructor.

"Threw it into the river!" shrieked the smaller boys, with an
impetuosity that made Mr. Grimshaw smile in spite of himself. One
luckless urchin said, "Chucked it," for which happy expression he was
kept in at recess.

Notwithstanding these clever stratagems, there was not much
solid work done by anybody. The trail of the serpent (an inexpensive
but dangerous fire-toy) was over us all. We went round deformed by
quantities of Chinese crackers artlessly concealed in our
trousers-pockets; and if a boy whipped out his handkerchief without
proper precaution, he was sure to let off two or three torpedoes.

Even Mr. Grimshaw was made a sort of accessory to the universal
demoralization. In calling the school to order, he always rapped on
the table with a heavy ruler. Under the green baize table-cloth, on
the exact spot where he usually struck, certain boy, whose name I
withhold, placed a fat torpedo. The result was a loud explosion,
which caused Mr. Grimshaw to look queer. Charley Marden was at the
water-pail, at the time, and directed general attention to himself by
strangling for several seconds and then squirting a slender thread of
water over the blackboard.

Mr. Grimshaw fixed his eyes reproachfully on Charley, but said
nothing. The real culprit (it wasn't Charley Marden, but the boy
whose name I withhold) instantly regretted his badness, and after
school confessed the whole thing to Mr. Grimshaw, who heaped coals of
fire upon the nameless boy's head giving him five cents for the
Fourth of July. If Mr. Grimshaw had caned this unknown youth, the
punishment would not have been half so severe.

On the last day of June the Captain received a letter from my
father, enclosing five dollars "for my son Tom," which enabled that
young gentleman to make regal preparations for the celebration of our
national independence. A portion of this money, two dollars, I
hastened to invest in fireworks; the balance I put by for
contingencies. In placing the fund in my possession, the Captain
imposed one condition that dampened my ardor considerably-I was to
buy no gunpowder. I might have all the snapping-crackers and
torpedoes I wanted; but gunpowder was out of the question.

I thought this rather hard, for all my young friends were
provided with pistols of various sizes. Pepper Whitcomb had a
horse-pistol nearly as large as himself, and Jack Harris, though he,
to be sure, was a big boy, was going to have a real oldfashioned
flintlock musket. However, I didn't mean to let this drawback destroy
my happiness. I had one charge of powder stowed away in the little
brass pistol which I brought from New Orleans, and was bound to make
a noise in the world once, if I never did again.

It was a custom observed from time immemorial for the towns-boys
to have a bonfire on the Square on the midnight before the Fourth. I
didn't ask the Captain's leave to attend this ceremony, for I had a
general idea that he wouldn't give it. If the Captain, I reasoned,
doesn't forbid me, I break no orders by going. Now this was a
specious line of argument, and the mishaps that befell me in
consequence of adopting it were richly deserved.

On the evening of the 3d I retired to bed very early, in order
to disarm suspicion. I didn't sleep a wink, waiting for eleven
o'clock to come round; and I thought it never would come round, as I
lay counting from time to time the slow strokes of the ponderous bell
in the steeple of the Old North Church. At length the laggard hour
arrived. While the clock was striking I jumped out of bed and began
dressing.

My grandfather and Miss Abigail were heavy sleepers, and I might
have stolen downstairs and out at the front door undetected; but such
a commonplace proceeding did not suit my adventurous disposition. I
fastened one end of a rope (it was a few yards cut from Kitty
Collins's clothes-line) to the bedpost nearest the window, and
cautiously climbed out on the wide pediment over the hall door. I had
neglected to knot the rope; the result was, that, the moment I swung
clear of the pediment, I descended like a flash of lightning, and
warmed both my hands smartly. The rope, moreover, was four or five
feet too short; so I got a fall that would have proved serious had I
not tumbled into the middle of one of the big rose-bushes growing on
either side of the steps.

I scrambled out of that without delay, and was congratulating
myself on my good luck, when I saw by the light of the setting moon
the form of a man leaning over the garden gate. It was one of the
town watch, who had probably been observing my operations with
curiosity. Seeing no chance of escape, I put a bold face on the
matter and walked directly up to him.

'What on airth air you a doin'?" asked the man, grasping the
collar of my jacket.

"I live here, sir, if you please," I replied, "and am going to
the bonfire. I didn't want to wake up the old folks, that's all."

The man cocked his eye at me in the most amiable manner, and
released his hold.

"Boys is boys," he muttered. He didn't attempt to stop me as I
slipped through the gate.

Once beyond his clutches, I took to my heels and soon reached
the Square, where I found forty or fifty fellows assembled, engaged
in building a pyramid of tar-barrels. The palms of my hands still
tingled so that I couldn't join in the sport. I stood in the doorway
of the Nautilus Bank, watching the workers, among whom I recognized
lots of my schoolmates. They looked like a legion of imps, coming and
going in the twilight, busy in raising some infernal edifice. What a
Babel of voices it was, everybody directing everybody else, and
everybody doing everything wrong!

When all was prepared, someone applied a match to the sombre
pile. A fiery tongue thrust itself out here and there, then suddenly
the whole fabric burst into flames, blazing and crackling
beautifully. This was a signal for the boys to join hands and dance
around the burning barrels, which they did shouting like mad
creatures. When the fire had burnt down a little, fresh staves were
brought and heaped on the pyre. In the excitement of the moment I
forgot my tingling palms, and found myself in the thick of the
carousal.

Before we were half ready, our combustible material was
expended, and a disheartening kind of darkness settled down upon us.
The boys collected together here and there in knots, consulting as to
what should be done. It yet lacked four or five hours of daybreak,
and none of us were in the humor to return to bed. I approached one
of the groups standing near the town pump, and discovered in the
uncertain light of the dying brands the figures of Jack Harris, Phil
Adams, Harry Blake, and Pepper Whitcomb, their faces streaked with
perspiration and tar, and, their whole appearance suggestive of New
Zealand chiefs.

"Hullo! Here's Tom Bailey!" shouted Pepper Whitcomb. "He'll join
in!"

Of course he would. The sting had gone out of my hands, and I
was ripe for anything-none the less ripe for not knowing what was on
the tapis. After whispering together for a moment the boys motioned
me to follow them.

We glided out from the crowd and silently wended our way through
a neighboring alley, at the head of which stood a tumble-down old
barn, owned by one Ezra Wingate. In former days this was the stable
of the mail-coach that ran between Rivermouth and Boston. When the
railroad superseded that primitive mode of travel, the lumbering
vehicle was rolled in the barn, and there it stayed. The
stage-driver, after prophesying the immediate downfall of the nation,
died of grief and apoplexy, and the old coach followed in his wake as
fast as could by quietly dropping to pieces. The barn had the
reputation of being haunted, and I think we all kept very close
together when we found ourselves standing in the black shadow cast by
the tall gable. Here, in a low voice, Jack Harris laid bare his plan,
which was to burn the ancient stage-coach.

"The old trundle-cart isn't worth twenty-five cents," said Jack
Harris, "and Ezra Wingate ought to thank us for getting the rubbish
out of the way. But if any fellow here doesn't want to have a hand in
it, let him cut and run, and keep a quiet tongue in his head ever
after."

With this he pulled out the staples that held the lock, and the
big barn door swung slowly open. The interior of the stable was
pitch-dark, of course. As we made a movement to enter, a sudden
scrambling, and the sound of heavy bodies leaping in all directions,
caused us to start back in terror.

"Rats!" cried Phil Adams.

"Bats!" exclaimed Harry Blake.

'Cats!" suggested Jack Harris. "Who's afraid?"

Well, the truth is, we were all afraid; and if the pole of the
stage had not been lying close to the threshold, I don't believe
anything on earth would have induced us to cross it. We seized hold
of the pole-straps and succeeded with great trouble in dragging the
coach out. The two fore wheels had rusted to the axle-tree, and
refused to revolve. It was the merest skeleton of a coach. The
cushions had long since been removed, and the leather hangings, where
they had not crumbled away, dangled in shreds from the worm-eaten
frame. A load of ghosts and a span of phantom horses to drag them
would have made the ghastly thing complete.

Luckily for our undertaking, the stable stood at the top of a
very steep hill. With three boys to push behind, and two in front to
steer, we started the old coach on its last trip with. little or no
difficulty. Our speed increased every moment, and, the fore wheels
becoming unlocked as we arrived at the foot of the declivity, we
charged upon the crowd like a regiment of cavalry, scattering the
people right and left. Before reaching the bonfire, to which someone
had added several bushels of shavings, Jack Harris and Phil Adams,
who were steering, dropped on the ground, and allowed the vehicle to
pass over them, which it did without injuring them; but the boys who
were clinging for dear life to the trunk-rack behind fell over the
prostrate steersman, and there we all lay in a heap, two or three of
us quite picturesque with the nose-bleed.

The coach, with an intuitive perception of what was expected of
it, plunged into the centre of the kindling shavings, and stopped.
The flames sprung up and clung to the rotten woodwork, which burned
like tinder. At this moment a figure was seen leaping wildly from the
inside of the blazing coach. The figure made three bounds towards us,
and tripped over Harry Blake. It was Pepper Whitcomb, with his hair
somewhat singed, and his eyebrows completely scorched off !

Pepper had slyly ensconced himself on the back seat before we
started, intending to have a neat little ride down hill, and a laugh
at us afterwards. But the laugh, as it happened, was on our side, or
would have been, if half a dozen watchmen had not suddenly pounced
down upon us, as we lay scrambling on the ground, weak with mirth
over Pepper's misfortune. We were collared and marched off before we
well knew what had happened.

The abrupt transition from the noise and light of the Square to
the silent, gloomy brick room in the rear of the Meat Market seemed
like the work of enchantment. We stared at each other, aghast.

"Well," remarked Jack Harris, with a sickly smile, "this is a
go!"

"No go, I should say," whimpered Harry Blake, glancing at the
bare brick walls and the heavy ironplated door.

"Never say die," muttered Phil Adams, dolefully.

The bridewell was a small low-studded chamber built up against
the rear end of the Meat Market, and approached from the Square by a
narrow passage-way. A portion of the rooms partitioned off into eight
cells, numbered, each capable of holding two persons. The cells were
full at the time, as we presently discovered by seeing several
hideous faces leering out at us through the gratings of the doors.

A smoky oil-lamp in a lantern suspended from the ceiling threw a
flickering light over the apartment, which contained no furniture
excepting a couple of stout wooden benches. It was a dismal place by
night, and only little less dismal by day, tall houses surrounding
"the lock-up" prevented the faintest ray of sunshine from penetrating
the ventilator over the door-long narrow window opening inward and
propped up by a piece of lath.

As we seated ourselves in a row on one of the benches, I imagine
that our aspect was anything but cheerful. Adams and Harris looked
very anxious, and Harry Blake, whose nose had just stopped bleeding,
was mournfully carving his name, by sheer force of habit, on the
prison bench. I don't think I ever saw a more "wrecked" expression on
any human countenance than Pepper Whitcomb's presented. His look of
natural astonishment at finding himself incarcerated in a jail was
considerably heightened by his lack of eyebrows.

As for me, it was only by thinking how the late Baron Trenck
would have conducted himself under similar circumstances that I was
able to restrain my tears.

None of us were inclined to conversation. A deep silence, broken
now and then by a startling snore from the cells, reigned throughout
the chamber. By and by Pepper Whitcomb glanced nervously towards Phil
Adams and said, "Phil, do you think they will-hang us?"

"Hang your grandmother!" returned Adams, impatiently. "What I'm
afraid of is that they'll keep us locked up until the Fourth is
over."

"You ain't smart ef they do!" cried a voice from one of the
cells. It was a deep bass voice that sent a chill through me.

"Who are you?" said Jack Harris, addressing the cells in
general; for the echoing qualities of the room made it difficult to
locate the voice.

"That don't matter," replied the speaker, putting his face close
up to the gratings of No. 3, "but ef I was a youngster like you, free
an' easy outside there, this spot wouldn't hold me long."

"That's so I" chimed several of the prison-birds, wagging their
heads behind the iron lattices.

"Hush!" whispered Jack Harris, rising from his seat and walking
on tip-toe to the door of cell No. 3. "What would you do?"

"Do? Why, I'd pile them 'ere benches up agin that 'ere door, an'
crawl out of that 'erc winder in no time. That's my adwice."

"And werry good adwice it is, Jim," said the occupant of No. 5,
approvingly.

Jack Harris seemed to be of the same opinion, for he hastily
placed the benches one on the top of another under the ventilator,
and, climbing up on the highest bench, peeped out into the
passage-way.

"If any gent happens to have a ninepence about him," said the
man in cell No. 3, "there's a sufferin' family here as could make use
of it. Smallest favors gratefully received, an' no questions
axed."

This appeal touched a new silver quarter of a dollar in my
trousers-pocket; I fished out the coin from a mass of fireworks, and
gave it to the prisoner. He appeared to be so good-natured a fellow
that I ventured to ask what he had done to get into jail.

"Intirely innocent. I was clapped in here by a rascally nevew as
wishes to enjoy my wealth afore I'm dead.'

"Your name, Sir?' I inquired, with a view of reporting the
outrage to my grandfather and having the injured person re instated
in society.

"Git out, you insolent young reptyle!" shouted the man, in a
passion.

I retreated precipitately, amid a roar of laughter from the
other cells.

'Can't you keep still?" exclaimed Harris, withdrawing his head
from the window.

A portly watchman usually sat on a stool outside the door day
and night; but on this particular occasion, his services being
required elsewhere, the bridewell had been left to guard itself.

"All clear," whispered Jack Harris, as he vanished through the
aperture and dropped softly on the ground outside. We all followed
him expeditiously-Pepper Whitcomb and myself getting stuck in the
window for a moment in our frantic efforts not to be last.

"Now, boys, everybody for himself !"







                                                                                    

 

 

Go back to the Aldrich page for related resources.
Move on to the next section in this etext, Chapter Eight. The Adventures of a Fourth.

The Story of a Bad Boy

Chapter One. In Which I Introduce Myself
Chapter Two. In Which I Entertain Peculiar Views
Chapter Three. On Board the Typhoon
Chapter Four. Rivermouth
Chapter Five. The Nutter House and the Nutter Family
Chapter Six. Lights and Shadows
Chapter Seven. One Memorable Night
Chapter Eight. The Adventures of a Fourth
Chapter Nine. I Become an R. M. C.
Chapter Ten. I Fight Conway
Chapter Eleven. All About Gypsy
Chapter Twelve. Winter at Rivermouth
Chapter Thirteen. The Snow Fort on Slatter's Hill
Chapter Fourteen. The Cruise of the Dolphin
Chapter Fifteen. An Old Acquaintance Turns Up
Chapter Sixteen. In Which Sailor Ben Spins a Yarn
Chapter Seventeen. How We Astonished the Rivermouthians
Chapter Eighteen. A Frog He Would A-Wooing Go
Chapter Nineteen. I Become A Blighted Being
Chapter Twenty. In Which I Prove Myself To Be the Grandson of My Grandfather
Chapter Twenty-One. In Which I Leave Rivermouth
Chapter Twenty-Two. Exeunt Omnes

 


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