TOM SAWYER, DETECTIVE

made me mournful to think how pleasant it was up to

then, and how miserable ever since.

LEM BEEBE, sworn, said — “I was a-coming along,

that day, second of September, and Jim Lane was with

me, and it was towards sundown, and we heard loud

talk, like quarrelling, and we was very close, only

the hazel bushes between (that’s along the fence);

and we heard a voice say, ‘I’ve told you more’n once

I’d kill you,’ and knowed it was this prisoner’s

voice; and then we see a club come up above the

bushes and down out of sight again. and heard a

smashing thump and then a groan or two: and then we

crope soft to where we could see, and there laid

Jupiter Dunlap dead, and this prisoner standing over

him with the club; and the next he hauled the dead

man into a clump of bushes and hid him, and then we

stooped low, to be cut of sight, and got away.”

Well, it was awful. It kind of froze everybody’s

blood to hear it, and the house was ‘most as still whilst

he was telling it as if there warn’t nobody in it. And

when he was done, you could hear them gasp and sigh,

all over the house, and look at one another the same

as to say, “Ain’t it perfectly terrible — ain’t it awful!”

Now happened a thing that astonished me. All the

time the first witnesses was proving the bad blood and

the threats and all that, Tom Sawyer was alive and lay-

ing for them; and the minute they was through, he

went for them, and done his level best to catch them in

lies and spile their testimony. But now, how different.

When Lem first begun to talk, and never said anything

about speaking to Jubiter or trying to borrow a dog

off of him, he was all alive and laying for Lem, and you

could see he was getting ready to cross-question him to

death pretty soon, and then I judged him and me would

go on the stand by and by and tell what we heard him

and Jim Lane say. But the next time I looked at Tom

I got the cold shivers. Why, he was in the brownest

study you ever see — miles and miles away. He warn’t

hearing a word Lem Beebe was saying; and when he

got through he was still in that brown-study, just the

same. Our lawyer joggled him, and then he looked up

startled, and says, “Take the witness if you want him.

Lemme alone — I want to think.”

Well, that beat me. I couldn’t understand it. And

Benny and her mother — oh, they looked sick, they

was so troubled. They shoved their veils to one side

and tried to get his eye, but it warn’t any use, and I

couldn’t get his eye either. So the mud-turtle he

tackled the witness, but it didn’t amount to nothing;

and he made a mess of it.

Then they called up Jim Lane, and he told the very

same story over again, exact. Tom never listened to

this one at all, but set there thinking and thinking, miles

and miles away. So the mud-turtle went in alone

again and come out just as flat as he done before. The

lawyer for the prostitution looked very comfortable,

but the judge looked disgusted. You see, Tom was

just the same as a regular lawyer, nearly, because it

was Arkansaw law for a prisoner to choose anybody he

wanted to help his lawyer, and Tom had had Uncle

Silas shove him into the case, and now he was botching

it and you could see the judge didn’t like it much.

All that the mud-turtle got out of Lem and Jim was

this: he asked them:

“Why didn’t you go and tell what you saw?”

“We was afraid we would get mixed up in it our-

selves. And we was just starting down the river

a-hunting for all the week besides; but as soon as we

come back we found out they’d been searching for the

body, so then we went and told Brace Dunlap all

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