The Cat in Grandfather's House - LightNovelsOnl.com
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CHAPTER IX
"_Tell us a story about a hoodoo, Uncle Jonah,_"--
Andy had driven Tom and Jerry in from the upper pasture for Uncle Jonah, who was forced to admit that Andy wasn't so bad a boy as he had thought. It seemed a good time, therefore, to ask Uncle Jonah about the hoodoo.
"What is the hoodoo, Uncle Jonah?" Hortense asked.
"How come yo' 'quire 'bout dat?" Uncle Jonah asked. "Ah dunno nuffin'
'bout no hoodoo."
"You said Tom and Jerry were hoodooed," said Andy and Hortense together.
"Jes' foolish talk," said Uncle Jonah.
"Tell us a story about a hoodoo, Uncle Jonah," Hortense begged.
"Ah don' know nuffin' 'cept about Lijah Jones an' old Aunt Maria," said he at last.
"Tell us that," said Andy and Hortense together.
Uncle Jonah put a coal from the fire in the palm of his hand, and while Andy and Hortense watched breathlessly to see whether he would burn himself, he slowly lighted his corncob pipe. Then he began.
One mawnin' dis yere Lijah Jones was a-traipsin' along when he met Aunt Maria.
"Mawnin'," says Lijah, keerless like, "yo' been a hoodooin' any one lately, Aunt Maria?"
Dis yere Aunt Maria, she got a bad name and Lijah know it. Aunt Maria, she stopped an' looked kinder hard at Lijah.
"Huh," she says, "Don' yo' fool wid me, n.i.g.g.ah."
Lijah, he step along faster, not sayin' nothin' but feelin' kinda oneasy. He wisht he ain't said dem words.
Dat evenin' Lijah come back fum town wid some co'n meal an' a side o' bacon. As he come thu the woods by Aunt Maria's cabin, he kinda s.h.i.+vered 'cose it wuz gettin' late an' de owl wuz a-hootin'. Dey wan't no light in Aunt Maria's cabin, but dey wuz a little fiah in de back yah'd, an' Lijah, he seed some one a-stoopin' ovah it.
Lijah wuz dat curyus he crep' roun' de co'nah of de cabin an' stuck his head out. Sho'nuf, dey wuz Aunt Maria a-stirrin' a big black pot an' a-croonin' somefin' dat make Lijah tremmle lak a leaf. He don' make out wat she say 'cept, "Hoodoo Lijah Jones."
Dat was 'nuf, an' Lijah, he crep' away quiet an' hurry home thoughtful-like. He don' believe in no hoodoo, but he wuz oneasy.
Dat night he say nuffin' 'bout it to his wife, but he go to bed early.
Bambye he wake up. Dey wuz a kinda noise goin' on by de ba'n, but Lijah, he ain't got no likin' fo' to get up an' see wat's de mattah. So he tu'n ovah, an' bambye he ain't heah no mo' noise, an'
he go to sleep ag'in.
In de mawnin' w'en he go to milk de cow, sho'nuf dey wuz a hawg a-lyin' on its side, daid. Lijah, he scratch his haid an' tu'n de hawg ovah wid his foot. He don' know what happened to it, but he kinda s'picioned.
De nex' day w'en he wuz a-goin' down de road, 'long comes Aunt Maria ag'in.
"Mawnin'," says Aunt Maria.
"Mawnin'," says Lijah, kinda scaihed-like.
Dat was all dey said. Aunt Maria, she laugh an' go 'long, an'
Lijah, he don' lak de soun'.
Dat night nuffin' happen, an' Lijah, he feel bettah. But de nex'
night Lijah wake up ag'in an' heah somefin', an' sho'nuf in de mawnin' bof his mules wuz dat wo'n out lak dey been a-runnin' in de mud all night, dat he cain't do no wuk wid 'em.
Lijah, he kinda desprit wid dis, an' so dat night he don' go to bed but sit up an' hide in de ba'n. Sho'nuf, 'bout twelve o'clock 'long comes somefin', an' quicker'n nothin' bof dem mules wuz out'n dey stalls an' away down de road. Lijah, he reckon he seed somefin'
a-ridin' em, an' he know mighty well wat it wuz.
In de mawnin' bof de mules was back ag'in, wo'n out, wid dey eahs droopin', and ag'in Lijah, he cain't do no wuk.
Dat night he don' set up 'cose 'tain't no use. But he wek' up sudden an' heah somefin' a-sayin', "Go to de ole house by de swamp and mebbe yo' fin' somefin'."
In de mawnin' he membah wat he heah an' he feel brave an' sco'nful, but dat night he don' feel so brave 'cause he knowed 'bout dat house. n.o.body live in it but ha'nts, an' he don' like ha'nts nohow.
Howsomevah he made up his min' t'go, an' 'bout nightfall he fin'
his way to de ole house by de swamp. It mighty lonely deh and Lijah, he tremmle a bit. He strike a match an' look 'roun'. On de table dey wuz a lamp, an' Lijah, he light de lamp an' feel a heap bettah.
Den he set deh a long time, an' all he heah wuz de hootin' of de owls and de crickets a-chirpin' in de gra.s.s. Lijah, he drowse a bit. Bambye he open his eyes an' deh, across de table, wuz a big black cat a-settin' an' lookin' at him.
Lijah, he don' say nothin' an' de cat say nothin', jes' look outa'
his big green eyes. Bambye de lamp, it go down an' den it flame up bright, an' Lijah, he look at de cat an' he think it biggah dan befo'. De cat, it riz up and stretch an' it seem powahful big.
Lijah, he riz up, too.
"What fo' yo' goin'?" say de cat.
"Ah bleeged to go home," say Lijah, an' he out's thu dat doh quicker'n nothin' wid de cat aftah him. Lijah, he run fo' his life.
Bambye he catched up wid a rabbit a-lopin' along.
"Outa' my way, rabbit," sez Lijah, "an' let somebody run wat kin run."
An' all de time dat cat kep' right aftah him, an' he mos' feel its claws on his back.
Lijah was nigh wo'n out w'en he come to his house. He opens the doh quick an' slams it shut; den he heahs de cat a-scratchin' on de doh an kinda' sniffin' 'bout, an' Lijah, he lays down on de bed plumb wo'n out.
In de mawnin' he tell his wife all 'bout it. She sez nothin' fo' a while but jes' set a-figgerin'. Den she sez, "Yo' one fool, n.i.g.g.ah.
Go an' kill de bes' hawg an' cut him up. Den yo' take one side to Aunt Maria an' be mighty perlite."
Lijah, he don' like dis nohow, but he done what his wife tole him.
He tote dat side of hawg to Aunt Maria, an' she smile wicked when she see him comin'.
"I brung yo' a side of nice hawg what I jes' kill't," says he perlite.