Tom Sawyer, Detective
en we got home that we never stopped on our road, but made a break for the sycamores as tight as we could go, to
bunch and heard two or three terrible screams for help. "Poor Jake is killed, sure," we says. We was scared through and through, and broke for the tobacker field and hid there, trembling so our clothes would ha
seemed like being that close to a ghost, and it give me the cold shudders. The moon come a-swelling up out of the ground, now, powerful big and round and bright, behind a comb of trees, like a face l
-what'
by surprise that way. I'm 'most ready
's something coming o
't,
errible
dy-lordy
it's a-comin
ail and gazing-yes, and gasping too. It was coming down the road-coming in the shadder of the trees, and you couldn't see it good; not till it was pretty clos
two; then it was gone. We talked
y, or like they're made out
the goggles and the wh
loud countrified Sunday clothes-
stcot, fire-red a
s of the breeches legs and on
and th
for a ghos
ind-a black stiff-brim stove-pipe, very high, and n
if its hair was
id, then again it s
t it had its bag alo
can there be a
-stuff. They've got to have their things, like anybody else. You see, yourself, that its clothes was
ult with it. Bill Withers and his brother
u reckon he
ut it was p
gger stealing corn from ol
allowed I wouldn't
's me
unpopular old Uncle Silas had got to be now. They wouldn't 'a' let
s and getting louder, and sometimes a cackle of a
ubiter
es
about an hour ago, just before sundown-him and the parson. Said he guess
red, I
orks s
you
g after them, because they was going our way and it wouldn't be comfortable to
ber-a Saturday. I sha'n't ever forg