Part 6 (1/2)
Also I was at that very minute reminded of another poem which I had seen yesterday, which was written on yellow paper and which had been pinned with a brown stick on the white stomach of a snow man.... That poem still didn't seem funny, and for some reason I decided I was going to try to be what is called a gentleman, and try to act like one in school, even if I didn't like my teacher.
I didn't hear any more of Sylvia's pop's sermon for a while, on account of I happened to look out the church window which didn't have stained gla.s.s like some of the churches in town did, and I saw somebody's barn just on the other side of the little cemetery, and there were a lot of pigeons flying around over the barn, and in the sky, right away I was remembering Shorty Long and Big Bob Till, and wondering where they were, and what they were doing.
I had a heavy feeling inside of me that they would maybe visit all of the barns of the Sugar Creek Gang's pops, and catch a lot of pigeons, and maybe they'd catch and kill the pretty brown and white pair of pigeons which had their nest in the cupola of our barn, and then what would happen to the _baby_ pigeons?...
Pop didn't come in to church at all on account of deciding to stay with Mom, but he was there in the car right afterward, and all of us including Little Jim and Tom Till and Mrs. Long and Charlotte Ann, shook hands with a lot of people and climbed into our car and drove away. Pop and all of us were talking and listening as our car went purring down the road. We were just stopping at Shorty Long's house to let Mrs. Long out when Little Jim said to me in a half whisper, ”Sylvia's pop certainly preached a good sermon. I _thought_ that was why some houses didn't have as much snow on their roofs as others, and why barns always have more snow than houses that people live in.
It was a good sermon.”
”What?” I said to Little Jim, not remembering anything in the sermon about snow on people's houses or barns. Sylvia's pop must have said that when I was thinking about snowy white wool on Poetry's lamb--or else about a snow man standing at the bottom of b.u.mblebee hill....
Pretty soon we came to Tom Till's house. Pop had already told us the doctor had been there, and Mrs. Till didn't have pneumonia, only a bad chest cold.
Pop had gone to our house to get one of our battery radios so Mrs.
Till could hear a good Christian program, and she was feeling a lot better. Pop also had told us that Bob had come home while Mom was taking care of Mrs. Till but he had gone away again. ”Did he have any pigeons?” Little red-haired Tom asked, when Pop started to get out and go in with Tom and get Mom.
”About a dozen,” Pop told him. ”He put them in the pigeon cage out in the woodshed.”
Right away I spoke up and said, ”Were there any _white_ ones?”
remembering the beautiful white pigeon with pink eyes which had her nest up in the cupola of our barn, and whose big beautiful brown husband was so proud of her and always was cooing to her when they were on the roof of our barn and was always strutting around so very proud, with his neck all puffed out like he was very important.
”I don't know,” Pop said, and I said, ”Can I go and look, Tom?” and Tom said, ”Sure, I'll go with you.”
”Let me hold Charlotte Ann,” Little Jim said, he liking to hold babies on his small lap, anyway.
Pop went in to get Mom, and Tom and I went into their woodshed to look through the chicken-yard wire cage at about fifteen very pretty pigeons.
All of a sudden, while I was looking, I got a hot feeling all inside of me, 'cause right there in front of my eyes with the other different colored pigeons, was a beautiful albino one--the prettiest snow white one I ever saw with pretty pink eyes, and I knew right away it was my favorite pigeon, old Snow-white herself, who had her nest in the cupola of our barn.
”There's my pigeon!” I cried to Little Tom, and when he asked me which one and I told him, he said, ”Are you sure?”
”I'm positive,” I said. ”See that little brown spot just below the left pink eye. I'm going to get her out, and take her home.”
Little Tom looked, and swallowed and got a very scared expression on his face, and started to say something, and then stopped.
”'Smatter?” I said, and he said, ”Nothing, only--”
”Only what?” I asked him.
”Only--only Bob's got a terrible temper, and he's already mad at me.”
Say, when I saw the scared expression on that little guy's face, I realized that if I let Snow-white out of that cage, Tom would maybe get a terrible beating-up-on from his big brother, and it'd be my fault. Just that minute, Pop and Mom came out of the side door of Tom's house, and it was time for us to go home. Mom was going to hurry with our own dinner, which had nearly all been cooked yesterday, and we were going to bring some nice chicken soup back in the car for Tom's mom's dinner, and also some chicken for Tom, himself.
I still didn't know who was coming to our house for dinner, and whoever did come would have to wait awhile, on account of Mom would have to finish preparing it. ”Who's coming to our house for dinner?” I asked, and Mom said, as we all started down the road toward Little Jim's house, ”A certain very fine gentleman named Little Jim Foote, of the Sugar Creek Gang,”--and was I ever glad? But as the car glided down the white road, I kept thinking of my pretty Snow-white in Bob Till's cage, and I knew that Bob would maybe kill her along with all the other pigeons and sell them at the Sugar Creek Poultry Shop....
Just that second, just as we were getting close to Little Jim Foote's house, Little Jim said, ”Hey, Bill! Look! There goes a white pigeon, flying all by itself.”
I looked out the car window, and sure enough there was, a snow white pigeon, with its white wings flapping, and it was diving along through the Sugar Creek sky right past our car and straight for Sugar Creek and in the direction of our house on the other side of the woods. All of a sudden I got a choked-up feeling in my throat, 'cause I just _knew_ that was my very own Snow-white, and that Tom Till liked me so well he was going to run the risk of getting a terrible beating-up-on by his brother Bob, by opening their pigeon cage and letting Snow-white out so she could fly home.
For some reason all of a sudden, I liked Little red-haired Tom Till so well that I wished I could do something very wonderful for him and his sick mother. I just kept my eyes strained on the sky above Sugar Creek and the woods where I'd seen Snow-white disappear, when I heard Little Jim say to me beside me, ”Nearly all the snow's melted off our house now.”