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Out of the Ordinary

Month: March 2008

  • Joshua and His Gang ; Chapter Eight

    HUGH AND THE CAPER

    It wasn’t until two days later that the
    gang saw Hugh again.

    Joshua thought Hugh might be feeling badly
    about almost crying in front of them and was likely avoiding the gang. So when he saw Ellen in the corner store and
    she was staring at a just-put-up circus poster and hugging herself he thought
    about Hugh and telling him about the circus.

    "I’d forgotten it was coming!"
    Ellen said, dancing on one foot and then the other. "I forgot it was
    coming. Oh, I can hardly wait."

    Joshua stood with a dancing-around-Ellen
    and looked at the bright yellow and red poster. He read the large print. He read the small print. Then he read the little box in the lower
    right hand corner and he wanted to dance too.

    "Look at that," he whispered to
    Ellen because he was afraid he might shout. "Look at that, will you!"

    Ellen looked. "Oh," she said but
    she was not all that interested. She
    liked to watch the daredevil motorcyclists ride up the side of a huge barrel
    but she didn’t care that they were going to raffle off one of their
    motorcycles.

    "It’s likely an old one," she
    told Joshua but he was so excited he barely heard her and would not have cared
    – in fact, he would likely have preferred an old bike, it would carry the
    excitement of its history.

    "I’ll tell the gang," Ellen
    said.

    "I’ll tell Hugh," Joshua said.

    Ellen stopped on her way out of the store
    and Joshua, who was hurrying along behind her, crashed into her.

    "Oooomph," they both said. "Who’s Hugh?" asked Ellen.

    "You know, the new kid in the
    neighbourhood. That English boy."

    "Why do you want to tell him?"
    Ellen wanted to know. She had seen the smile he gave Ingrid and the memory of
    it made her wrinkle her nose.

    "I don’t know. Maybe he’s lonely and would like to come
    along with us."

    Ellen went to the right to find Lucy and
    Ingrid and Piya and Sam. Joshua started
    off down the street to the left to tell Bill but then when he got to Orchard
    Street he turned there and decided to tell Hugh first.

    He was worried about having to walk up to
    the McGregor’s old house and ring the bell. He was nervous about doing something new – he’d never called on Hugh
    before – but mostly he was scared to see the changes in the McGregor’s house. He didn’t like change. He’d liked Mr. and Mrs. McGregor and their
    pretty grown-up daughter even if she was "still unmarried and living at
    home" as Bill said his mother said. He didn’t want to see new furniture and another car in the driveway.

    But he didn’t have to go up to the
    door. Hugh was sitting on an old tire
    in the front yard. Mr. McGregor had
    buried it half way in the ground and painted it white and then drawn his house
    numbers on it. The 4 and the 2 had worn
    completely away but you could still see part of the 8. Hugh was straddling it
    like a horse.

    "Hi," Joshua said.

    "Hi," Hugh answered.

    "Want to go to the circus?"
    Joshua asked.

    "Where and when and ‘ow much?"
    Hugh asked in a funny voice and then laughed, "That’s what my mum will say
    when I ask her. For myself – I’ll just
    say – Yeah,"

    Joshua laughed. "Well, for her – the answers are it starts Friday night up
    at the Park and it costs to get into the tents but you can walk around the
    midway for free. Sometimes they’ll let
    you take a peek into the tents without paying."

    Hugh was pulling a thread in the top of
    his socks and Joshua wondered if the circus did not appeal to him.

    "We could win a motorcycle," he
    added.

    "What?" asked Hugh, perking up.

    "We could win a bike. The Daredevils are going to raffle off one
    of their bikes. Boy, would I ever love
    to have a bike the Daredevils rode." He curled his fists around imaginary handlebars and curved his back
    toward them.

    "My uncle has a motorbike back
    ‘ome," Hugh said, his voice quiet. "He took me out couple o’ times. It was grand."

    "You can play on it if we win
    it," Joshua said.

    "Who’s we? Your gang?"

    "I guess."

    "How’s the raffle work?"

    Joshua looked at Hugh curiously. He thought everyone knew about raffles.
    "You buy tickets."

    "I know that. I mean, is it for
    real?"

    "Of course," said Joshua who had
    no idea if it was or not or even what Hugh was talking about.

    "Well, that’s fine then, isn’t
    it. So all we have to do is weight the
    odds by buying enough tickets to make sure we win. How much are they?"

    "A nickel each. Six for a
    quarter."

    "Aye. And how many are they selling?"

    "I – I don’t know," Joshua
    faltered.

    "Well, we’ll just buy steady then,
    won’t we. How much money have we?"

    Joshua ran the toe of his sneaker along
    the edge of the tire.

    "I don’t really know. I’ve got two dollars and something."

    Hugh made an explosive sound and fell
    backward off the tire onto the ground. Joshua leaned over in startle and concern. "Are you hurt?" he started to ask and then realized
    Hugh was laughing.

    "You are silly," Hugh said when
    he could manage to talk. "You’ll
    need hundreds of dollars to win the bike."

    Joshua shrugged. He could BUY a bike if he had hundreds of dollars. Winning could take a lot less.

    Hugh was strangely quiet for a
    moment. He lie on the ground, staring
    at the sky, his fingers tapping on his chest. He seemed to be thinking. Then
    he scowled and looked toward the house. He seemed to come to a decision.

    "Right – we’ll just have to get
    several hundreds of dollars." He
    sat up and hugged his knees.

    "How?" Joshua wanted to know.

    "We could always nick it," said
    Hugh. "That’s what my gang would
    have done, likely."

    "Nick?" asked Joshua, not sure
    he had heard correctly.

    "Nick. Steal. Lift." Hugh
    replied calmly.

    "Oh," said Joshua, "Uh, no,
    I don’t want to steal it."

    "Guess you’re afraid, right?"
    asked Hugh, squinting his eyes.

    "You’re darned tooting I’m
    afraid. Besides, we’d get caught."

    "Not using my methods," Hugh
    said. He’d heard someone say that in a
    radio play and it sounded good then and it sounded good now. And he was rather amazed and a bit impressed
    by a boy who could say straight out he was afraid to do something. "But I guess if you don’t want to steal
    then we can’t. I’d need a trained bunch
    to carry that off. My gang could have
    done it in a jif." He missed his
    gang, he did. He wondered what they
    would say if they could hear him giving them such a reputation. They would have had a right good laugh.

    "Right – so we don’t nick the
    money. I’ll think of something. I’ve got an idea," he began to say but
    then a car turned into the drive and he stood up and put on a sullen look as he
    headed back toward his house.

    A nice looking lady got out of the
    car. "Is this your friend, then,
    Hughie?" she asked, smiling back at Joshua.

    "Just a kid," Hugh said and
    slouched into the house. Hugh’s mother
    shrugged at Joshua and followed Hugh.

    The next afternoon the entire gang was in
    the used car lot. It had rained in the
    night and it always smelled like metal and grass after a rain beside the old
    railway tracks. So the gang often chose
    this spot to gather at such a time.

    Ingrid was having her hair braided in
    three plaits instead of two by Lucy to see how it would look. John said it was unbalanced. Joshua and Bill and Sam were trying to
    figure out how to get money for the raffle tickets on the motorcycle. The carnival opened in three days time. Piya was pulling grass between her toes and
    letting the flower ends stick to make foot bouquets. Ellen had a sore ear from swimming and was just lying quietly
    against the side of the old Volkswagen.

    "You’re blinking hard to find!"
    Hugh yelled as he suddenly appeared around the weed tangled fence of the junk
    yard.

    "Ooooh," said Ellen, holding her
    ear. She’d jumped as he hollered.

    The gang looked at him and nodded or said
    hi. Joshua moved over on the running
    board of the almost rusted away VW so Hugh could sit but he plopped down by
    Bill’s feet and put his face down inside his shirt and rubbed his sweaty
    forehead with the cloth. Then he came
    out again and beamed at them.

    "The bike’s good as ours," he
    announced and waited happily for the response. He was not disappointed. Only
    Ellen remained where she was but even she looked interested. Everyone else gathered around with various
    comments, "How?" "Really?" "Aw,
    you’re kidding," they said. Sam shouted, "Cricket soup!" and
    punched the air with his fists in his excitement.

    "We’ve kidnapped a dog," Hugh
    announced. "That little white one
    in the blue house just around the corner from me. The ransom we get for it will pay for the raffle tickets."

    The gang was speechless.

    "You kidnapped the Widow Taylor’s
    dog?" Ellen asked into the
    silence. "You kidnapped
    Sweetums?"

    "If that’s the name of the dog, then
    yes, WE kidnapped it," said Hugh.

    "Where is it now?" Joshua asked. Everyone else seemed to have gone numb with shock.

    "In your garage. In the rabbit cage."

    "My garage?" Joshua stared.

    "Yes," said Hugh. "The lady next door to us told me where
    you lived and I went to call on you and tell you about my plan. You weren’t there but your mum told me where
    I ought to be able to find you. Then,
    when I was leaving, I went along your garage and I saw the cage and all the
    rest of the junk in there so I guessed you didn’t put your car in as well.
    Then, when I went and got the dog I put him in the cage. He’s real quiet. He ate the meat I gave him and just sat down and looked around."

    Hugh stopped for breath. The entire gang was still in shock.

    "I don’t believe you took Mrs.
    Taylor’s dog," Ellen said and put her head back against the car and closed
    her eyes.

    "She could have a seizure," Piya
    gulped. "She’s old."

    "I did it for you blokes," Hugh
    said, starting to realize the gang was not exactly thrilled with his
    efforts. "And I thought up the
    wording for the ransom note but someone else has to write it out because I
    can’t write clearly and it has got to look right proper."

    He dug a sheet of paper out of his pocket,
    smoothed it out, and held it for the gang to see. It read, "IF YOU WANT TO SEE YOUR DOG AGAIN PUT $100 IN $2
    BILLS IN A PAPER BAG AND LEAVE IT ON YOUR FRONT STOOP WHEN YOU GO TO BED
    TONIGHT. DO NOT TELL ANYONE AND IF YOU
    DO AS YOU ARE TOLD YOUR DOG WILL BE BACK TOMORROW MORNING. IF NOT – TOO BAD FOR YOUR DOG.

    Piya said, "Oh," and started to
    cry. Ingrid was chewing furiously on
    her braids. Lucy jumped up and tore the
    note out of Hugh’s hand and ripped it to pieces. Bill started to bite his nails and did not even care if his
    mother would notice.

    John said, "I don’t want a bike THAT
    bad."

    Joshua didn’t know what to say. Hugh looked mad and sad both at the same
    time.

    Then Ellen said, "You must be pretty
    mad at your parents for making you move."

    They all turned to stare at her.

    She nodded her head slowly because her ear
    was now hurting worse than ever. "I know how you feel. When we moved here from just across the city
    I was so mad at my mom and dad I failed my first spelling test just to show
    them. And I hid my braces for a week
    and pretended I’d lost them"

    Lucy looked at her twin in
    astonishment. "You never told ME
    all this."

    "You wouldn’t have understood. You
    didn’t mind moving like I did." She closed her eyes again. "Oh, my ear."

    Hugh turned away from the gang and rested
    his arms against the roof of the Volkswagen while he stared across the old
    railway tracks. Monarch butterflies
    were like hairbows dancing in the air.

    "I’ll take Sweetums back,"
    Joshua said to him. "I’ll pretend
    he ran away and I found him."

    "It’s a girl," Ingrid said
    around her braids, slowly but distinctly. "Sweetums is a girl."

    Hugh gave a huge sigh but did not say
    anything. Joshua left and Bill went
    with him.

    The rest of the gang continued to sit
    quietly in the warm smell of grass and metal. Piya stopped crying.