Misty of Chincoteague

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Misty of Chincoteague Page 5

by Marguerite Henry


  The Pied Piper’s ears pricked once more. That curious soft voice!

  “Oh,” Maureen breathed, as she caught sight of the stallion. “Your baby is beautiful,” she gasped. “And so is your mare.”

  “So are all your mares,” added Paul for good measure. “Excuse us, sir, but we must see the race now.” He and Maureen began backing slowly toward the fence.

  Just then a stallion from another band came over to study the Pied Piper’s family. The Pied Piper forgot Paul and Maureen in the more important business of bunching his mares behind him.

  “Whew!” said Paul breathlessly, as they scrambled over the fence, “that was a close one.”

  On the way to the race track they had to pass between the colt pens.

  “We almost forgot our promise to look at the colts!” they both exclaimed in the same breath.

  Hurriedly they squeezed in between the spectators and perched on the top rail of one of the pens. Their faces paled as they looked down.

  Round and round the pen the colts were plodding, searching for their mothers, flinging their heads up, whimpering, trying to suckle anything their muzzles could reach.

  “Why, they’re as close packed as oysters in a barrel!” exclaimed Paul.

  “They’re children, lost and scared,” said Maureen. “Let’s go!” she cried through white lips. “Let’s go! I can’t abide the nickerin’. The young things are hungry.”

  Paul felt as if he were going to be sick. “I can’t abide it, either,” he said. Then his mouth thinned to a line and he doubled his fists. “I’m going to see the fire chief about this!”

  The fire chief was a big, broad-shouldered man who walked with a cane. There were times when the cane seemed to dangle uselessly in his hands. But when he was tired, he leaned on it heavily.

  They found him now in the center of a group of visitors, both hands gripping his cane. His face was sun-blistered and weary, but his eyes lighted when he saw Paul and Maureen.

  “Here’s Paul Beebe, the lad who swam the colt ashore,” he explained to the little group. “And his sister, Maureen, who . . .”

  The crowd shifted, began surrounding Paul, pelting questions at him. “Did the colt try to drag you down like a drowning person?” “How old is it?” “How wide is the channel where you swam across?”

  Paul and Maureen scarcely heard the questions.

  “What are you two looking so hollow-eyed about?” the chief asked as he drew the children aside.

  “It’s about the colts,” Maureen stammered.

  “Yes,” said Paul. “We don’t believe they should be taken from their mothers, and we aim to do something about it—if you’ll let us, sir. We got lots of milk in the ice chest at home, and once we raised up a foal on a big nursing bottle and we still got the bottle. It’s cruel to starve the young things.”

  The fire chief stood silent and thoughtful. He looked past the grounds and out to the bay, where the masts of the fishing boats formed spider-thin lines against the graying sky.

  “I don’t know if I can make you understand about this, but I’ll try,” he began slowly. “Colts have got to grow up sometime. Their mothers can’t go on babying them all their lives. Haven’t you two seen a mare tell her youngster to rustle his own living?”

  Paul and Maureen nodded in silence.

  “She can’t tell the colt in so many words,” the fire chief continued. “She just kicks him away. Gentle-like at first. Then good and hard if he won’t understand. Sometimes she has to get pretty rough, especially when she’s going to have a new foal in a few months.”

  “But those little colts . . .”

  “Those little fellows,” nodded the chief, “are old enough to fend for themselves. Separating them from their mothers is the kindest way we know to teach them how.”

  Paul and Maureen reddened. They felt very young and foolish as they thanked the fire chief for explaining things.

  “Don’t thank me, you two. When I was rising up atwixt a youngster and a grownup, the same question worried me every Pony Penning Day. Finally, I watched a mare tell her colt to grow up and then I quit worrying. Now I want you to quit worrying, too.

  “Besides,” he added as he pulled out his watch, “it’s almost time for the race. Black Comet will be running any minute now. It’s high time,” he said, tapping his cane in the sawdust, “it’s high time we islanders raised up a competitor for Black Comet. Things have been much too easy for him.”

  “Tell him now,” nudged Maureen, her eyes shining.

  “Chief!” said Paul, trying to make his voice behave. “Next year Black Comet will have a real competitor. Maureen and I want to buy the Phant—”

  But the fire chief never heard what Paul had to say. His words were drowned by a voice blaring over the loud speaker.

  “Tonight, ladies and gentlemen, Black Comet from Pocomoke is racing against Patches and Lucy Lee of Chincoteague.”

  Chapter 11

  STORM-SHY

  FEELING much happier, Paul and Maureen joined the throngs hurrying to see Black Comet. Black Comet was five years old. For three of those years he had been brought over from Pocomoke on the mainland to race for the Pony Penning crowds on the eve of the sale. And for three years he had won. Twice he led by several lengths, and once he led only by a nose. But always he won.

  This night was no different. Black Comet pranced to the starting line, sure of himself. His jockey, too, was sure. They both seemed bored with the excited antics of the two other entries. One was a flashy black-and-white pony named Patches. He danced on his hind feet, bolted past the starting line, and had to be brought back again and again. The other entry was Lucy Lee, a nervous little mare.

  Black Comet threw back his head and let out a high horse laugh at them as if to say, “You’re wasting your time.”

  And they were! The race belonged to Black Comet from the start. He broke out in front and stayed there.

  Maureen beat her fists on the fence rail. “Come on, Patches! Come on, Lucy Lee! Don’t let Black Comet win every time!”

  “Next year the Phantom will be in there!” Paul kept saying. “Next year the Phantom.”

  Just as Black Comet crossed the finish line, a bolt of lightning split the sky.

  At that same instant Paul felt a strong hand grip his shoulder. It was Grandpa Beebe. His face was spattered with dirt and his clean blue shirt in ribbons.

  “The squall ain’t a promise no more,” he shouted against the rising wind, “it’s here! Paul, you stay and help the fire chief. Maureen, you come home with me.

  “And Paul! If the storm gits too heavy,” he called back over his shoulder, “you take shelter in our truck. It’s backed up nigh to the colt pens.”

  The grounds burst into noise and confusion. The wind whined. It caught at the tent flaps, snapping them like whips. White paper programs spiraled through the air, driven first one way, then the other. Children, over-tired and frightened, cried to be taken home. Thunder rumbled deep out of the heavens. Colts in their pens squealed. Stallions trumpeted.

  Paul fought his way to the pony pens, dodging people, dodging pieces of paper which the wind swept into his face. He could scarcely see his way. The strings of colored electric bulbs waved back and forth, throwing weird shadows.

  At last he came upon the fire chief, brandishing his cane and shouting directions: “Dan, you do this! Joe, you do that! Paul . . .”

  Paul strained his ears to hear, but suddenly the skies seemed to open and rain fell in great torrents. The swaying lights went out, plunging the island into darkness.

  “Everyone go home!” called the chief. “Nothing we can do now.” A flash of lightning showed him limping toward his car.

  Paul did not follow. The rain beat down on him fiercely. It felt cold and hard, like gunshot. How could Misty stand it? “She’s so little,” he thought. “She’s bound to be storm-shy. I know what I’ll do! I’ll carry her to the truck and shelter her until the storm is past.”

  Warmed by his de
cision, he ran past the colt pens and on to the big corral. Lightning sizzled across the sky, flooding the earth with an eerie white. It showed the wild ponies, separated into four bands. Paul’s eyes leaped from one band to another, trying to find the Pied Piper’s family, but darkness closed in. He held his breath, waiting for another flash. It came. It picked out the stallion’s creamy-white mane.

  Quickly Paul scrambled over the fence. He waited again, his eyes fastened on the spot where the Pied Piper’s band stood huddled. He held onto the fence with one hand and made a watershed over his eyes with the other. He waited again for the lightning. It came tearing across the sky. He could see the Pied Piper’s family as plainly as if it were daylight, but the Phantom and Misty were not among them. They were gone! Stolen! Some other stallion had stolen them! The thought flashed through his mind.

  Shivering and drenched, he ran from one band to the other. He stumbled over tree stumps and fell flat in the water. His mouth was gritty with sand and mud. He went on blindly, feeling every hump in the grass, every fallen log; but nowhere in all that big corral could he find the tiny foal or her wild dam.

  Running, slipping, falling, running, he made his way to the pony trucks. Most of the trucks were empty, waiting for tomorrow’s sale. A few held a colt or two—big colts, big and shaggy.

  Sick with fear for Phantom and Misty, he sought the shelter of Grandpa Beebe’s truck to think out where they might be. Could Phantom have leaped the fence? Could Misty have rolled out under it? He stopped short. There, in the body of the truck, under a piece of tarpaulin, he felt rather than saw a slight stirring. He trembled, not from cold, but from fear that what he prayed was a mare and her colt would turn out instead to be bags of feed. He cried out for a flash of lightning. It came in a streak, filling the truck with yellow light. And in that split second Paul saw the Phantom and Misty, their heads lowered in a corner like children being punished at school.

  He threw back his head for joy and let the rain beat on his face. So that was why Grandpa’s shirt was torn and his face seamed with dirt! He had brought them to shelter before the storm broke.

  Paul opened the door of the cab, half expecting Grandpa to be there. It was empty—except for Grandpa’s old rain jacket that lay on the seat, and the strong smell of tobacco. He ripped off his wet shirt, his denim pants. His teeth chattered as he pulled on the warm, dry jacket. It was so long it almost covered his underwear. He ran around to the tailgate of the truck and steadied himself on the spare tire. Slowly, cautiously, hardly daring to breathe, he climbed up and over the tailgate and into the truck.

  The storm blotted out any sound he might have made. But the Phantom sensed his presence. She neighed sharply to Misty, who caught her fear. Paul could hear the small rat-a-tat of her hooves.

  He leaned hard against the stakes of the truck, every muscle tensed. Phantom would either charge him or stay as far away as possible. He waited, counting the seconds. He could hear the rain sloshing over the tarpaulin, spilling down the sides of the truck. He could smell the steamy warmth of furry bodies. He could smell the sea. And in the occasional flashes of light, he saw the copper-and-white tail of the Phantom sweeping nervously over Misty. Paul let out a deep sigh of relief. She was not going to charge him.

  He never knew how long he stood there. He only knew that after awhile the Phantom no longer mistrusted him. She seemed to doze off for seconds at a time, as if she felt a oneness with him; as if she and her foal and this shivering, wet boy were fellow creatures caught in a storm, prisoners of the elements. Prisoners together.

  Together! The word sounded a bugle in Paul. Time stood still. There was only the wind and the rain and the three creatures together! Together!

  Aching to reach out and touch first the shaggy coat, then the silky one, he plunged his hands deep into Grandpa’s pockets to stay the impulse. His fingers felt a firm, slightly sticky object. He squeezed it. He traced a few dried stems, then paper-thin leaves pressed solidly together. It was a twist of chewing tobacco! Quickly he pulled it out of his pocket. The spicy sweetness of molasses filled his nostrils. He took long, deep breaths of it. His mind was turning somersaults. Molasses! Molasses! How ponies love it! Often he had seen Grandpa cut a quid for Watch Eyes. With trembling fingers he broke off a sizable piece and held it on his outstretched hand.

  For a long time he waited. When he could stand no longer, he sank down on the cold, wet floor of the truck, still holding his hand toward the Phantom.

  He waited, motionless.

  He listened to the storm bell tolling out in the bay, and to the rain swishing and swirling around him. He felt little rivulets of perspiration run down his back. He grew hot and chilled by turns. His arm grew numb, then began to prickle as if hundreds of red-hot needles were jabbing him. His head reeled. It ached for lack of sleep.

  And just when his hand was about to drop, he heard slow, questioning hooves placed one at a time on the floor of the truck. One step forward. Then a long pause filled in by the sobbing of the wind. Then another step. And another. Now a breath on his hand, now feelers sending chills of excitement up his arm, racing through his whole body. Now a soft muzzle lipping his palm. The tobacco gone! Lifted out of his hand by a pony so wild that she had upset a boat, so wild that for two years no one had caught her. A wild thing eating out of his hand! He wriggled his fingers in wonderment. All the numbness had gone out of them. He was not even trembling! Only this sharp ecstasy, this feeling that all of life was worth this moment. The roundup, the discovery of Misty, the swim across the channel—they all melted into this.

  The moments rushed on. The storm quieted. Paul could hear the Phantom mouthing the tobacco. He tried to keep awake to enjoy the pleasant, soothing sound, but his eyes drooped. His breath steadied. He fell into a deep sleep, unmindful when the Phantom nosed him curiously from head to foot. Then she, too, began to doze.

  At last Misty sank down in exhaustion. Her head fell across Paul’s lap, not because she wanted human comfort, but because she was tired from the hard drive and the swim. The floor of a truck or a boy’s lap were all the same to her, so long as her dam was near.

  It was thus, at dawn, that Grandpa Beebe found them.

  Chapter 12

  THE SOLD ROPE

  PAUL,” whispered Grandpa in the low voice he used when children and wild animals were asleep. “Paul, boy . . .”

  At sound of Grandpa’s voice the Phantom neighed shrilly. Misty scrambled to her feet, swayed, then slid awkwardly along the floor of the truck. With a hungry little bleat, she found her mother’s side and began nursing.

  Paul opened his eyes, then quickly shut them. If this were a dream, he wanted to spin it out and make it last until the end of time. He wished Grandpa’s voice would fade away, but it kept pricking him awake.

  “Come, boy. Grandma is nigh crazy with worry over ye. The big pine tree fell atop the house last night and the Atlantic Ocean wetted our dooryard. I just couldn’t come for ye till now.”

  Paul pulled himself up. His muscles ached. He could feel the wide stripes made by the boards of the truck across his back. He looked down at his long expanse of bare legs and suddenly remembered that he was wearing nothing but Grandpa’s jacket over his underwear. He grinned at Grandpa.

  Grandpa winked back. “I see you scamped my belongings,” he chuckled. “It’s any port in a storm, eh, lad?” Then he thought of his message. “Grandma’s mixed some goose grease with onion syrup fer ye. Yer apt to catch a terrible fever,” he quoted Grandma, but all the while his eyes were fondling the dam and her colt. “She says ye’ve got to come home and go to bed.”

  Paul felt the stickiness of his hand where the Phantom had nuzzled it. His voice tensed. “I can’t leave, Grandpa. Today’s the sale! We got to buy the Phantom and Misty.”

  “Maureen kin tend to that whilst ye get some sleep. I don’t know what in thunderation made me protect that little feller fer ye last night. I must be getting addled in my old age. Now help me get the pair of ’em outen the truck
and back in the corral so you can buy ’em legal-like at the sale.”

  But there was no need for help. With the truck backed up close to the corral gate, the Phantom flew down the ramp. She smelled the rain-washed grass. She was crazy to get to it. Misty followed, a silver fluff of a shadow.

  The pony penning grounds were waking up when Maureen rode in on Watch Eyes. Volunteer firemen were clearing the damage done by the storm. Trucks bearing licenses from Maryland, New York, North Carolina, Washington, D. C., were beginning to line up close to the colt pens. A few children, their faces still flushed with sleep, darted here and there, talking to themselves: “That little black pony. I could name him Black Beauty!” “I want the one with the white stockings!”

  “How-do, Maureen,” called Tom, who on ordinary days was an oysterer. “Yer up and about mighty early. Reckon yer sharpenin’ your appetite for the big dinner this noon! Or mebbe ye come to buy my last two chances on the sorrel pony bein’ given away Saturday.” And with a great flourish he whipped the tickets out of his pocket.

  Maureen could think of no answer. She was not interested in the sorrel pony, and she had forgotten all about the dinner to be served in the big dining hall on the grounds. She managed to smile at Tom and thank him politely. Then feeling of the money pouch around her neck, and the piece of rope over her shoulder, she stated her business quickly. “I came to see the fire chief,” she said.

  “Nowheres about. He’s been and gone.”

  “Oh!”

  “Anything I can do?”

  “Reckon not.”

  “Wal, he’ll be back afore ye can say Chincoteague Isle.”

  Tying Watch Eyes to a tree, Maureen wandered about the grounds, waiting for the chief. She stopped at the colt pens and noticed that several of the shaggy-coated youngsters already wore sold ropes around their necks. She noticed, too, that most of them were beginning to eat for themselves. Only a few were whimpering for their mothers.

 

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