The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn Mark Twain (best thriller novels to read txt) đ
- Author: Mark Twain
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Well, last I pulled out some of my hair, and blooded the axe good, and stuck it on the back side, and slung the axe in the corner. Then I took up the pig and held him to my breast with my jacket (so he couldnât drip) till I got a good piece below the house and then dumped him into the river. Now I thought of something else. So I went and got the bag of meal and my old saw out of the canoe, and fetched them to the house. I took the bag to where it used to stand, and ripped a hole in the bottom of it with the saw, for there warnât no knives and forks on the placeâ âpap done everything with his clasp-knife about the cooking. Then I carried the sack about a hundred yards across the grass and through the willows east of the house, to a shallow lake that was five mile wide and full of rushesâ âand ducks too, you might say, in the season. There was a slough or a creek leading out of it on the other side that went miles away, I donât know where, but it didnât go to the river. The meal sifted out and made a little track all the way to the lake. I dropped papâs whetstone there too, so as to look like it had been done by accident. Then I tied up the rip in the meal sack with a string, so it wouldnât leak no more, and took it and my saw to the canoe again.
It was about dark now; so I dropped the canoe down the river under some willows that hung over the bank, and waited for the moon to rise. I made fast to a willow; then I took a bite to eat, and by and by laid down in the canoe to smoke a pipe and lay out a plan. I says to myself, theyâll follow the track of that sackful of rocks to the shore and then drag the river for me. And theyâll follow that meal track to the lake and go browsing down the creek that leads out of it to find the robbers that killed me and took the things. They wonât ever hunt the river for anything but my dead carcass. Theyâll soon get tired of that, and wonât bother no more about me. All right; I can stop anywhere I want to. Jacksonâs Island is good enough for me; I know that island pretty well, and nobody ever comes there. And then I can paddle over to town nights, and slink around and pick up things I want. Jacksonâs Islandâs the place.
I was pretty tired, and the first thing I knowed I was asleep. When I woke up I didnât know where I was for a minute. I set up and looked around, a little scared. Then I remembered. The river looked miles and miles across. The moon was so bright I could a counted the drift logs that went a-slipping along, black and still, hundreds of yards out from shore. Everything was dead quiet, and it looked late, and smelt late. You know what I meanâ âI donât know the words to put it in.
I took a good gap and a stretch, and was just going to unhitch and start when I heard a sound away over the water. I listened. Pretty soon I made it out. It was that dull kind of a regular sound that comes from oars working in rowlocks when itâs a still night. I peeped out through the willow branches, and there it wasâ âa skiff, away across the water. I couldnât tell how many was in it. It kept a-coming, and when it was abreast of me I see there warnât but one man in it. Thinkâs I, maybe itâs pap, though I warnât expecting him. He dropped below me with the current, and by and by he came a-swinging up shore in the easy water, and he went by so close I could a reached out the gun and touched him. Well, it was pap, sure enoughâ âand sober, too, by the way he laid his oars.
I didnât lose no time. The next minute I was a-spinning down stream soft but quick in the shade of the bank. I made two mile and a half, and then struck out a quarter of a mile or more towards the middle of the river, because pretty soon I would be passing the ferry landing, and people might see me and hail me. I got out amongst the driftwood, and then laid down in the bottom of the canoe and let her float.
I laid there, and had a good rest and a smoke out of my pipe, looking away into the sky; not a cloud in it. The sky looks ever so deep when you lay down on your back in the moonshine; I never knowed it before. And how far a body can hear on the water such nights! I heard people talking at the ferry landing. I heard what they said,
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