<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<h3>HAS GOD FORGOTTEN SHOCKY?</h3>
<p>"Pap wants to know ef you would spend to-morry and Sunday at our
house?" said one of Squire Hawkins's girls, on the very next
evening, which was Friday. The old Squire was thoughtful enough to
remember that Ralph would not find it very pleasant "boarding out"
all the time he was entitled to spend at Pete Jones's. For in view
of the fact that Mr. Pete Jones sent seven children to the school,
the "master" in Flat Creek district was bound to spend two weeks in
that comfortable place, sleeping in a preoccupied bed, in the
"furdest corner," with insufficient cover, under an insufficient
roof, and eating floating islands of salt pork fished out of oceans
of hot lard. Ralph was not slow to accept the relief offered by the
hospitable justice of the peace, whose principal business seemed to
be the adjustment of the pieces of which he was composed. And as
Shocky traveled the same road, Ralph took advantage of the
opportunity to talk with him. The master could not dismiss Hannah
wholly from his mind. He would at least read the mystery of her
life, if Shocky could be prevailed on to furnish the clue.</p>
<p>"Poor old tree!" said Shocky, pointing to a crooked and gnarled
elm standing by itself in the middle of a field. For when the elm,
naturally the most graceful of trees, once gets a "bad set," it can
grow to be the most deformed. This solitary tree had not a single
straight limb.</p>
<p>"Why do you say 'poor old tree'?" asked Ralph.</p>
<p>"'Cause it's lonesome. All its old friends is dead and chopped
down, and there's their stumps a-standin' jes like grave-stones. It
<i>must</i> be lonesome. Some folks says it don't feel, but I think
it does. Everything seems to think and feel. See it nodding its
head to them other trees in the woods? and a-wantin' to shake
hands! But it can't move. I think that tree must a growed in the
night."</p>
<p>"Why, Shocky?"</p>
<p>"'Cause it's so crooked," and Shocky laughed at his own conceit;
"must a growed when they was no light so as it could see how to
grow."</p>
<p>And then they walked on in silence a minute. Presently Shocky
began looking up into Ralph's eyes to get a smile. "I guess that
tree feels just like me. Don't you?"</p>
<p>"Why, how do you feel?"</p>
<p>"Kind o' bad and lonesome, and like as if I wanted to die, you
know. Felt that way ever sence they put my father into the
graveyard, and sent my mother to the poor-house and Hanner to ole
Miss Means's. What kind of a place is a poor-house? Is it a poorer
place than Means's? I wish I was dead and one of them clouds was
a-carryin' me and Hanner and mother up to where father's gone, you
know! I wonder if God forgets all about poor folks when their
father dies and their mother gits into the poor-house? Do you think
He does? Seems so to me. Maybe God lost track of my father when he
come away from England and crossed over the sea. Don't nobody on
Flat Creek keer fer God, and I guess God don't keer fer Flat Creek.
But I would, though, ef he'd git my mother out of the poor-house
and git Hanner away from Means's, and let me kiss my mother every
night, you know, and sleep on my Hanner's arm, jes like I used to
afore father died, you see."</p>
<p>Ralph wanted to speak, but he couldn't. And so Shocky, with his
eyes looking straight ahead, and as if forgetting Ralph's presence,
told over the thoughts that he had often talked over to the
fence-rails and the trees. "It was real good in Mr. Pearson to take
me, wasn't it? Else I'd a been bound out tell I was twenty-one,
maybe, to some mean man like Ole Means. And I a'n't but seven. And
it would take me fourteen years to git twenty-one, and I never
could live with my mother again after Hanner gets done her time.
'Cause, you see, Hanner'll be through in three more year, and I'll
be ten and able to work, and we'll git a little place about as big
as Granny Sanders's, and—"</p>
<p>Ralph did not hear another word of what Shocky said that
afternoon. For there, right before them, was Granny Sanders's
log-cabin, with its row of lofty sunflower stalks, now dead and
dry, in front, with its rain-water barrel by the side of the low
door, and its ash-barrel by the fence. In this cabin lived alone
the old and shriveled hag whose hideousness gave her a reputation
for almost supernatural knowledge. She was at once doctress and
newspaper. She collected and disseminated medicinal herbs and
personal gossip. She was in every regard indispensable to the
intellectual life of the neighborhood. In the matter of her medical
skill we cannot express an opinion, for her "yarbs" are not to be
found in the pharmacopoeia of science.</p>
<p>What took Ralph's breath was to find Dr. Small's fine, faultless
horse standing at the door. What did Henry Small want to visit this
old quack for?</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />