XXII
CAUGHT!
THOUGH Major Monkey tugged
and tugged, he couldn't pull his hand out of the pitcher.
To be sure, if he had let go
of the lump of maple sugar he might have withdrawn his hand easily
enough.
But the Major loved sweets
too dearly to loosen his hold on any such toothsome morsel –
except to pop it
into his mouth.
So he struggled and fretted.
He even tried to break the pitcher by knocking it against the floor.
It might as well have been
made of iron, it was so strong. And the Major only succeeded in hurting
his own
hand. Of course he made a great racket. And the hens, who had become
used to
his more stealthy visits, began to flutter and squawk. They made such
an uproar
at last that Major Monkey wanted to hurl the pitcher at them. But he
couldn't
do that, with his hand stuck inside it. And besides, the pitcher was
chained
fast to the wall of the henhouse.
And right there lay the
Major's greatest trouble. If the pitcher hadn't been fastened he
would have
run off on three legs, to the woods, where he might have tried in peace
and
quiet to get at the sugar inside it.
On the whole, Major Monkey
spent a most unhappy quarter of an hour in the henhouse. And the worst
moment
of all came when the window dropped with a loud bang.
Then the sound of steps on
the threshold made the Major turn his head.
There stood Farmer Green
with a broad smile on his face, and Johnnie Green with his mouth wide
open and
his eyes bulging.
And with them was a
dark-skinned man, short, and with rings in his ears, and a bright
neckerchief
tied about his throat.
"Aha-a!" cried the
little man. "Look-a da monk! He greed-a boy!" And picking Major
Monkey up in his arms, jug and all, he patted him fondly, saying,
"Ah-a!
Bad-a boy! He run-a da way from da ol' man, no?"
Then – for a soldier – Major
Monkey did a strange thing. He began to whimper. But there is no
doubt that he
was weeping because he was glad, and not because he was sorry.
The little, dark man was his
master.
And the Major was very, very
fond of him. He knew, suddenly, that he had missed the little man sadly
while
he roamed about Pleasant Valley.
Though Johnnie Green was
staring straight at him, Major Monkey clung to his captor and held his
wrinkled
face close to the little man's cheek.
"He sorra now!"
the little man said to Johnnie Green.
"What's his name?"
Johnnie inquired.
"Jocko!" said
Major Monkey's master. "Dat nice-a name, eh?"
Johnnie Green thought that
it was. And Major Monkey himself appeared to like the sound of it. It
was a
long time since he had heard it. No one had called him "Jocko" since
that day – weeks before – when he had run away from his
master, the
organ-grinder, in the village.
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