First,Leon ran at the Shropshire and then jumped aside;but soon it grew so strong and quick he couldn't manage that,so he put his hat on a stick and poked it back and forth through a fence crack,and that made the ram raving mad.At last it would butt the fence until it would knock itself down,and if he dangled the hat again,get right up and do it over.Father never caught Leon,so he couldn't understand what made the sheep so dreadfully cross,because he had thought it was quite peaceable when he bought it.The first time it got after Polly,she threw her shawl over its head,pulled up her skirts,and Leon said she hit just eleven high places crossing an eighty-acre field;she came to the house crying,and father had to go after her shawl,and mother gave her a roll of butter and a cherry pie to comfort her.
The Shropshire never really got Polly,but any one could easily see what it would do to me if I dared step around that stump,and it was dancing and panting to begin.If whoever wrote that "Gentle Sheep,pray tell me why,"piece ever had seen a sheep acting like that,it wouldn't have been in the books;at least I think it wouldn't,but one can't be sure.He proved that he didn't know much about anything outdoors or he wouldn't have said that sheep were "eating grass and daisies white,from the morning till the night,"when daisies are bitter as gall.
Flop!went the fish,and its tail touched the edge of the hole.
Then I turned around and picked up the pole.I put my sunbonnet over the big end of it,and poked it at the ram,and drew it back as Leon did his hat.One more jump and mother's fish would be gone.I stood on the roots and waved my bonnet.The sheep lowered its head and came at it with a rush.I drew back the pole,and the sheep's forefeet slid over the edge,and it braced and began to work to keep from going in.The fish gave a big flop and went down the hole.Then I turned Crusader and began to fight,and I didn't care if I were whipped black and blue,I meant to finish that old black-faced Shropshire.I set the pole on the back of its neck and pushed with all my might,and I got it in,too.My,but it made a splash!It wasn't much good at swimming either,and it had no chance,for I stood on the roots and pushed it down,and hit it over the nose with all my might,and I didn't care how far it came on the cars,or how much money it cost,it never would chase me,and make me lose my fish again.
I didn't hear him until he splashed under the roots and then I was so mad I didn't see that it was Laddie;I only knew that it was someone who was going to help out that miserable ram,so I struck with all my might,the sheep when I could hit it,if not,the man.
"You little demon,stop!"cried Laddie.
I got in a good one right on the ram's nose.Then Laddie dropped the sheep and twisted the fish pole from my fingers,and I pushed him as hard as I could,but he was too strong.He lifted the sheep,pulled it to the bank,and rolled it,worked its jaws,and squeezed water from it,and worked and worked.
"I guess you've killed it!"he said at last.
"Goody!"I shouted."Goody!Oh but I am glad it's dead!""What on earth has turned you to a fiend?"asked Laddie,beginning work on the sheep again.
"That ram!"I said."Ever since Leon made it cross so it would chase Polly Martin,it's got me oftener than her.I can't go anywhere for it,and to-day it made me lose a big fish,and mother is waiting.She thought maybe she could eat some."Then I roared;bet I sounded like Bashan's bull.
"Dear Lord!"said Laddie dropping the sheep and taking me in his wet arms."Tell me,Biddy!Tell me how it is."Then I forgot I was a Crusader,and told him all about it as well as I could for choking,and when I finished he bathed my hot face,and helped me from the roots.Then he went and looked down the hole I showed him and he cried out quicklike,and threw himself on the grass,and in a second up came the fish.Some one had rolled a big stone in the hole,so the fish was all right,not even dead yet,and Laddie said it was the biggest one he ever had seen taken from the creek.Then he said if I'd forgive him and all our family,for spoiling the kind of a life I had a perfect right to lead,and if I'd run to the house and get a big bottle from the medicine case quick,he would see to it that some place was fixed for that sheep where it would never bother me again.So I took the fish and ran as fast as I could,but I sent May back with the bottle,and did the scaling myself.No one at our house could do it better,for Laddie taught me the right way long ago,when I was small,and I'd done it hundreds of times.
Then I went to Candace and she put a little bit of butter and a speck of lard in a skillet,and cooked the fish brown.She made a slice of toast and boiled a cup of water and carried it to the door;then she went in and set the table beside the bed,and I took in the tray,and didn't spill a drop.Mother never said a word;she just reached out and broke off a tiny speck and nibbled it,and it stayed;she tried a little bigger piece,and another,and she said:"Take out the bones,Candace!"She ate every scrap of that fish like the hungriest traveller who ever came to our door,and the toast,and drank the hot water.Then she went into a long sleep and all of us walked tiptoe,and when she waked up she was better,and in a few days she could sit in her chair again,and she began getting Shelley ready to go to music school.
I have to tell you the rest,too.Laddie made the ram come alive,and father sold it the next day for more than he paid for it.He said he hoped I'd forgive him for not having seen how it had been bothering me,and that he never would have had it on the place a day if he'd known.The next time he went to town he bought me a truly little cane rod,a real fishing line,several hooks,and a red bobber too lovely to put into the water.I thought I was a great person from the fuss all of them made over me,until I noticed Laddie shrug his shoulders,and reach back and rub one,and then I remembered.
I went flying,and thank goodness!he held out his arms.