The Mostly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg (11 page)

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Authors: Rodman Philbrick

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BOOK: The Mostly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg
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That does it. It can’t be true love. Mr. Willow has eyes like a sick kitten. You might love a sick kitten but you don’t marry it, you keep it as a pet.

“I’ve got an idea,” I tell him, tugging at his sleeve. “Give me the money. I’ll keep it safe until we get to New York.”

Mr. Willow looks at me like I crawled out from under a rock. “Trust the money to a poor orphan boy?” he asks, focusing on me like I just came to his attention. “Certainly not. And for that matter, how do we even know you even have a brother? Has anyone seen this so-called brother? Maybe you’ve been scheming all along to defraud Mr. Brewster. Anything is possible with an orphan boy.”

That shuts my mouth. Here I been feeling sorry for poor Mr. Willow, that he’s being made a fool of, and all along he’s never trusted me. Or maybe it’s an idea Frank Nibbly put in his empty head. Doesn’t matter how it got there, what scares me is that other folks will believe it, too.

 

 

M
ISS
N
IBBLY PRETENDS TO BE
nice about it, but makes it clear that orphan boys are not invited to society weddings.

“Poor boy, you have the attitude of a ruffian,” she says, sniffing daintily. “I’m sure it’s not your fault, considering your upbringing, but there it is. We can’t have ruffians. Ruffians will not be allowed. Ruffians will not be tolerated.”

So I’m not just an orphan boy, which is bad enough, I’m a ruffian orphan boy that can’t be invited to weddings, or allowed to stay in the cabin when weddings are being planned.

Frank calls in the steward, the one with the funny little hat and the ice-chip eyes, and tells him to remove me from the premises.

“The boy will be happier in steerage,” Frank says. “Among his own kind.”

The steward grabs hold of my collar.

“I’ll tell the captain!” I shout, threatening to expose their evil plan. “I’ll tell him how you tricked Mr. Willow, and that you’re both liars!”

Kate sighs and rolls her eyes. “What the captain may or may not think is no concern of ours. We have no need of the captain. My brother is a duly licensed justice of the peace. He shall marry us, isn’t that right, Frank?”

Frank smiles and consults his pocket watch. “The hour is upon us, Mr. Willow. Are you ready to tie the knot?”

I saw a man in Pine Swamp once who had been kicked in the head by a horse and nearly died. He had a look about him, like he could see all the way to Heaven, and didn’t care about this world no more. That’s how Mr. Willow looks when he takes Kate’s hand.

“You’re making a terrible —!”

I mean to say “terrible mistake,” but the sneering steward clamps a hand across my mouth and yanks me out of the cabin and shuts the door behind us.

“Do you want to live?” the steward hisses, trotting me along the passageway. “If you want to live, shut your filthy little mouth.”

That’s when I bite him on the hand, as hard as I can. The steward yelps and drops me and then I’m running full steam for the exit.

“Rotten brat!” he shrieks, reaching out to grab me.

I’d have gotten away for sure, except for the slippery deck. I’m coming around a corner, heading for the door to the deck, when I hit a waxy spot and crash headfirst into an iron pipe.

That’s the last thing I remember, the pipe coming at me like a big gray bullet, and then nothing but darkness, and the smell of pigs.

 

 

F
OLKS IN
P
INE
S
WAMP LIKE
to tell the one about Silas Wiggin, who used to work at the dry-goods store. How Silas loved pork above all things. Ham, ribs, chops, cutlets, bacon, fried cracklings, liver and kidney and pickled trotters — if it wasn’t pork Silas wouldn’t eat it. The pigs must have loved him, too, and proved it one Saturday night when he came stumbling home the worse for corn liquor, and made the mistake of passing out in the pig sty.

Hogs ate him. Nothing left but his hat and boots.

The story of Silas Wiggin comes to mind when I wake up in the smelly dark with a pig licking at my foot. I kick at the little pig and it scurries to the far side of the crate and commences to squealing. The other pigs join right in.

I’m in a pig crate deep inside the ship, trapped with the livestock.

“Help!” I shout. “Down here! Help! Help!”

With all the noise from the pigs and chickens, it takes me a while to notice the big steam engine has ceased thumping. Feels like the ship has stopped moving, too.

“Help! Help! Somebody help me!”

I scream and shout for an hour or more, until my throat is so sore and dry I can’t get a word out. My head aches from where it crashed into the pipe, and my belly hurts from not eating, and I’m thirsty and exhausted but fearful of falling asleep. Wishing I was back in the barn, sleeping on a pile of nice clean hay. Squinton Leach used to beat us and starve us, but he never fed us to the pigs. Good old Squint, I’d take him over Frank Nibbly any day. Or Mr. Willow for that matter.

After about a hundred years of feeling miserable and scared, there comes a loud rumble as the hatch lifts from the deck. Daylight pours into the hold. This would be a good time to scream and shout for help but my voice is gone, wasted on the dark. All I can do is cling to the slats and make pitiful little noises as the crate is lifted out of the hold and swung up over the side of the ship and set down on the docks with the other crates of livestock.

The pigs are squealing so loud that somebody kicks the side of the crate and yells, “Settle down, you miserable critters!”

I manage to get my hand through the slats and tug on his trouser leg. Next thing a big, red, whiskery face is up close, studying me. “Holy smokin’ chimney!” he exclaims, leaping back. “That pig looks just like a boy!”

“Eew, eew,” I croak, pointing at my throat, trying to let him know my voice don’t work.

“Sam! Jack! Ezra! Come take a look at this!”

Soon enough a crowd gathers to gawk.

“I heard of children raised by wolves,” someone says. “This the first I seen raised by pigs.”

“Poor creature never learned to speak, so all he can do is croak and squeal.”

“Maybe he’s really half pig — he’s dirty enough.”

“Check his feet, see if he’s got hooves!”

“Oh look, the little thing is getting mad. Squeal, little pig boy, squeal!”

They start poking sticks into the cage to torment me. I grab one and poke back, which makes them all laugh. I’m spittin’ mad, but my throat is still too ragged and sore to get a word out. All I can manage is some noises that probably sound like oinks, which only makes things worse.

“Squeal!” they shout, urging me on. “Squeal!”

Somebody pokes another stick at my face and I snatch it away with my teeth, just like an animal.

“Look at him snarl! The pig boy has strong teeth. Good thing he’s in the crate!”

My tormentors are dockworkers and merchantmen and sailors and a few boys not much older than me. One of the boys has been sent to feed the pigs a pail of slops but decides it’d be more fun to throw the stuff at me. Getting spattered with rotten vegetables don’t improve my mood. I shriek and spit and bare my teeth. Before long they’re backing away, fear in their eyes, half convinced I’ve got rabies like a mad dog.

Can’t talk but I can snarl, and when a hand comes near the crate I snap at it,
grr grr
, just like the animal they think I am.

Now the crowd of onlookers is laughing themselves silly. They’ve never seen anything as funny as the amazing pig boy. The kid who threw the garbage gets inspired enough to go fetch another pail of slops.

When he slings the bucket at me, everybody applauds and cheers.

“Eat, pig boy! Eat!” they all chant.

I’m wiping garbage off my face when a pair of knee-high polished boots strides up to the side of the crate. Can’t quite see the owner of that fine pair of boots, but he makes himself heard soon enough.

“Who’s in charge here?” the boot man demands. “Who does this boy belong to? Speak up! You’re mighty free with your taunts but you can’t answer a simple question, is that it? I ask again, who is in charge of this boy?”

The big man with the whiskery red face scowls and folds his arms. “Who wants to know?”

“Fenton J. Fleabottom, Professor,” he announces, and as he scrapes and bows, sweeping away a stovepipe top hat, I catch a glimpse of a long narrow face, a curly blond mustache, and lively gray eyes that sparkle with mischief. “And who are you, my good sir? Is this your crate? Are these your pigs?”

The man won’t give his name. “The pigs are mine, right enough.”

“And the boy?”

“Never seen him before.”

“Never seen him? Remarkable. Raised him with your pigs, but never noticed he was a boy?”

“Yur twistin’ my words!”

Professor Fleabottom squares up with his hands on his hips. “Consider yourself fortunate that I don’t twist your pimpled nose,” he says in a voice so powerful and commanding that the crowd of tormentors starts to melt away, as if shameful of what they’ve done. “If I hadn’t just had these boots polished I would kick your pig-smelling backside from here to New Jersey. Now unlock this crate before I whistle for the coppers and have you arrested!”

The man hurries over, and a moment later the side of the crate falls away. The little pigs stay huddled in the corner, but I scoot out and crawl to my feet, stinking of garbage and manure. I never felt so miserable and empty and mad all at once, and when the red-faced man sees the anger in my eyes he backs slowly away.

“Bring a bucket of clean water!” Professor Fleabottom demands.

It takes more than one bucket to rinse off the smell of pigs. They soak me down until I’m drenched. Then Professor Fleabottom hands me a ladle of cool, clean water, and the soothing drink eases my throat and brings my voice back. I’m able to look up at Professor Fleabottom and say, “Thank you, sir,” like a real human being.

Fenton J. Fleabottom doffs his tall stovepipe hat and makes a short bow from the waist. “I am yours to command, young man,” he says. “Remarkable act you’ve got! You play an outraged swine like you were born to the part. A rare talent indeed. Tell me, young man, are you otherwise engaged?”

Turns out Professor Fleabottom owns a traveling medicine show, and he wants to hire me.

“Our geek just died, poor fellow. Choked on a chicken head,” he says. Seeing the look on my face, he adds, “Don’t worry, my boy, you needn’t bite the heads off live chickens. Any small bird will do.”

 

 

P
ROFESSOR
F
LEABOTTOM
has a way of listening that makes you think he really and truly wants to hear what you have to say. It’s something about the way his kindly, humorous eyes seem to soak up every word, eager for more. Even his waxed yellow mustache looks interested, the way it quivers as he listens. Before I know it I’ve told him all about Uncle Squint, and how he made me and Harold live in the barn and work ourselves to the bone and never fed us proper, and how Squint sold Harold to the army, and how I aim to save him from dying in the war, because Harold is so true and brave he’s bound to be killed. I tell him about the clergyman Webster B. Willow and the horrible Nibblys, and how they stole a sum of money intended to buy my brother out of the army and had me put in with the pigs.

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