登陆注册
15515000000045

第45章 CHAPTER XVI. WEDNESDAY MADNESS(1)

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 al1 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!"

同类推荐
  • 道德玄经原旨发挥

    道德玄经原旨发挥

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 阴持入经注

    阴持入经注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 先秦汉魏晋南北朝诗

    先秦汉魏晋南北朝诗

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 慎行论

    慎行论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 庄氏史案

    庄氏史案

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 南菀君心

    南菀君心

    一场车祸所导致的男女主穿越,然而男主是高高在上的皇子,女主却是个平民百姓,两个人就这样在古代和现代中邂逅了彼此。
  • 歌吟幽深处:谁家天下

    歌吟幽深处:谁家天下

    她为寻找父亲死因卷入一场百年争斗;她为寻回失踪多年的姐姐走遍大江南北;她没有使命,却被逼迫着一步步走向漩涡深处。是旁观,还是当局?是引导者,还是主导者?
  • 废后凤华倾天下

    废后凤华倾天下

    让我做皇后?好吧,大家都对我这么好,为了大家我忍了。可,这皇帝也太不识好歹了,本姑娘愿意嫁给你是给你面子了好嘛,还敢灭姑娘全族?!给姑娘下药?!居然敢给姑娘的儿子下毒?!是可忍孰不可忍,叔可忍婶儿不能忍,婶可忍,本姑娘也忍不了了!!本姑娘不发威把姑娘我当病猫是吧,哼哼,给本姑娘等着,让姑娘我好好教教你什么叫不要惹不该惹的人!
  • 暖城寒水

    暖城寒水

    五年前他无比决绝的向她提出分手,不管她怎么挽回都无济于事,她本以为她和他从此不会再有任何交集,五年后他们再次相遇,当初他做的一切却是另有隐情,而关于家族与家族之间的秘密也渐渐浮出水面……原来他不曾忘记过她,也不曾离开过她。他伸手轻抚她的脸颊,在商界冰冷眸子竟透着难以见到的悲伤“阿兮,你知道吗,我好想你”可她的心早已在五年前就心灰意冷。而对爱情失去勇气的她总是忽视掉身后另一个男人对她的百般宠溺,他一次又一次的替她解围,陪她度过父亲去世时最难熬的时光,帮她一步一步的夺回属于她的一切……凉亭下她冷冷的看着他“说吧,你接近我的目的是什么”他却是扯唇轻笑无比认真“从始至终,我想要的不过是一个你”
  • The Guardian Angel

    The Guardian Angel

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 三小只的恋爱

    三小只的恋爱

    这一部小说是写,3位少年和3位少女的爱情故事。在阴差阳错下,成为情侣。
  • 倾世魔女:虐遍渣男要逆天

    倾世魔女:虐遍渣男要逆天

    她,二十一世纪事业型女强人,没谈过恋爱,一朝穿越,魔界教主,要风得风要雨得雨,什么?那个‘心爱’男人要成亲,原主为他要死要活?行,虐渣男,抢娇妻......
  • 武圣战记

    武圣战记

    混在三国,化身武圣、霸道、狡猾、皮厚、面黑、他暴打于毒,和左髭丈八称兄道弟,做起了廖化、周仓的小弟。
  • 看,绒花开了

    看,绒花开了

    本小说杜绝色情和暴力,用或优美,或辛辣的文字讲述校园里发生的一些美好的,或者丑恶的事情。教育不是圣地,很多教育问题是局外人所无法知晓的。
  • 综漫重生之不要再伤害我了

    综漫重生之不要再伤害我了

    明明是重生,可身边的人却不一样了,会发生什么事情呢?