“Billy! Buster!” Pesty said softly. She knelt beside them. “Don’t you know not to make noise in a cave? Could cause a cave-in. See how the dirt seeps down on the bed already? Well. Be quiet, you guys. I’m here.”
“Pesty,” said Billy. The boys buried their faces against her. She held them close, gently rocking them. They whimpered awhile, but they soon stopped that.
“You must’ve watched Mr. Thomas come through that wall. Didn’t you? Well, come on. I’ll show you someplace nicer to play.”
The boys weren’t sure. But they let Pesty lead them. She had them tightly by the wrists. They didn’t mind being taken care of by her at all. Anybody bigger than themselves would do.
She took them into a low-ceilinged underground chamber, not far from the hidden room. There was some air circulation, but not much. The boys felt the closeness. Somehow it made them feel safe. There was light. They relaxed, and Pesty let go of their arms.
“This is my room, best of all,” she told the boys. “Mr. Thomas don’t know about this one. This one is where the orphans always stayed. See all the little beds?” There were two lanterns burning on tables next to small, low beds. The little beds were perhaps six inches off the floor on wood frames. There were grayish pallets on the frames. Each little bed had a table beside it. There were some ten beds and ten tables. Old broken things lay about on the tables. Some rags. There were a few triangles on some of the tables. Pesty had gathered most of them up and piled them across the chamber from the beds. She’d taken a box from home and filled it with the triangles. Now the box was so heavy she and her mama together couldn’t move it. But a few of the triangles she had left about to play with now and then.
“See?” said Pesty. “You are the first besides me and Mama and Mr. Pluto to know about this place. See, boys?”
They saw the low tables, the orphans’ beds. Billy and Buster both had the same thought at the same moment. They said the thought at the same time, with the same words, as they often did.
“Bears!” they said.
Pesty laughed.
“Right!” she said. “Two bears instead of three—you two! And I’m Goldilocks. Ha-ha! Want to play with my dollies?”
There were dolls in a pile across from the beds. Over there were little chairs, small chests. The dollies were mostly rags, fallen-apart dolls that Pesty had tied back together as best she could with string and twine. She added new rags or socking when the ancient rags unraveled or fell to dust.
She gave Billy and Buster each a rag doll. She took one.
They sat with their backs to the chamber wall on a little bed, playing with the dolls. The bed was small, but so were the three of them. The pallet was musty with time, flattened and almost useless with age.
“I’ll be the Indian maiden and you be the slave orphan children running for freedom—okay?” Pesty said.
“Huh?” said Buster.
“Okay,” said Billy. He didn’t understand, but Pesty was playing with them, and that was fun.
“Okay,” said Buster.
“Now the Indian maiden is taking the orphan children through the woods to here. Mr. Drear knows she is coming. She has come lotsa times, with many children. The orphans can stay here clear through October and December and through the spring. They can rest as long as they want to in this room. They can eat and play and sleep and cry and laugh in this room.” Pesty made eating motions to her dolly and began feeding Billy’s and Buster’s dolls. “Then the Indian maiden comes and moves them orphans a ways underground, and then they go overground along streams until they are safe.”
“Safe,” murmured Billy and Buster. They hugged their dolls.
“But one time the Indian maiden is followed,” Pesty told them. “She has the children hide in the trees until she lures the catchers off. She starts to run. See, she’s a decoy. See, a decoy is to get the bounty hunters, the slave catchers, away from the children. See, she runs real fast away. And they follow. See, that chile can run so fast! Nobody can catch her. But they do get her.”
When she spoke again, Pesty’s voice was somber. “They killed her. They found the children.” She sighed, held her dolly tightly. “The orphans are chained in a row and taken away. Nobody know where. And that was the last time any orphans rested in this room. ’Cept for me,” she murmured. “I rest myself here all the time.”
She made her doll run along the bed. She made the boys’ dolls hide under her ankles, which became the trees of the woods. All the while she smiled at the boys and rocked her Indian maiden. Sometimes she made the maiden die or run to exhaustion. It was an old game with always the same ending.
“Mama says the Indian maiden was Coyote Girl,” Pesty murmured. “She could outstrip anybody, any man, running. So why didn’t she beat out the slave catchers? They rode their horses, that’s why. They rode the Indian maiden down.”
Pesty bumped the Indian maiden’s head into the heads of Billy’s and Buster’s dolls. “Just a bunch of rags,” she muttered. She threw her dolly against the opposite wall. “There goes Goldilocks!” she told the boys.
They copied her, but their throws barely cleared the foot of the bed.
Pesty leaned back and closed her eyes. Billy, Buster did the same. She pretended to go to sleep. So did the boys, mimicking her every move. They did finally sleep, at last tuckered out. Pesty dozed, too.
15
“WHAT?” SAID MR. SMALL as Thomas ran in. “How you doing, Thomas?” “Papa! You’ll never believe what we found!” “Wipe your feet,” his mother told him. “Mama, we went to Mrs. Darrow’s—underground!” “Thomas!” said Mrs. Small. “You did what?” Mr. Small said. “It’s true!” said Thomas. “There’s a tunnel all the way, and before you get there, there’s a secret room. It has furniture I know must cost a fortune!”
“What?”
“Thomas!”
“It’s true!” Thomas said desperately. “Ask Great-grandmother. Pesty took me and Great-grandmother underground—”
“She did what!”
“Thomas! You know you are to stay out of any secret passages,” his mother said crossly. What he was saying hadn’t sunk in. The twins’ whereabouts, their safety were always on her mind. Life would be simpler when they were in school.
“It’s all true,” said Great-grandmother Jeffers. She was just there, right in the doorway. “Goodness!” She crept weakly over to the table.
“It’s true?” Walter asked.
“Here, let me help you—my goodness!” Martha said, before Great-grandmother could answer. “You look all tired out.”
“Grandmother Rhetty, it’s true, what Thomas said?” Mr. Small asked.
“Aren’t the boys with you?” Martha said as Great-grandmother sat down. “Did they let you come down those stairs by yourself?”
“It’s true, Papa,” Thomas broke in. “Everything I said is true. There’s—”
“Thomas, will you shut up a minute!”—spoken harshly by his mother.
“But …” Thomas began.
Mrs. Small gave him her severest stare, and he held his peace a moment.
“The boys aren’t with me,” Great-grandmother said. “I didn’t see them at all.”
“Oh, they are such pistols!” Martha said. “Walter, I am so glad there is a good play school.”
“Oh, did you see it?”
“Yes, and I talked to the director,” Mrs. Small said. She was in a hurry to get the boys. “Both Billy and Buster seemed to like it. We can start them right away.”
“It sounds good,” Walter said.
“Well, we’ll talk about it,” she said as she left the kitchen.
“I don’t get it,” Thomas said. “What is wrong with everybody today?”
“What is it, Thomas?” Mr. Small asked.
“Papa, didn’t you hear what I told you?”
“Now, calm down,” Mr. Small said. “Start over again and take your time.”
Thomas sat down beside Great-grandmother. He started over again.
Martha Small went upstairs. The rooms on either side of the upstairs hallway were silent. At the top landing she listened. She had an odd feeling of dread. Everything’s going to be fine, she thought firmly. “Billy? Buster? Come out wherever you are,” she called. There was no answer as she went from room to room, opening doors when they were closed and closing doors behind her when she found them left open. The boys knew not to play in the back rooms, but when she didn’t find them, she thought she’d just look anyway. “Billy? Buster? Come out now. Your papa is home. It’s time for something to eat. Don’t hide anymore.”