<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
<h3>THE CHURCH MILITANT.</h3>
<p>Bud was doubly enlisted on the side of John Pearson, the
basket-maker. In the first place, he knew that this persecution of
the unpopular old man was only a blind to save somebody else; that
they were thieves who cried, "Stop thief!" And he felt consequently
that this was a chance to put his newly-formed resolutions into
practice. The Old Testament religious life, which consists in
fighting the Lord's enemies, suited Bud's temper and education. It
might lead to something better. It was the best possible to him,
now. But I am afraid I shall have to acknowledge that there was a
second motive that moved Bud to this championship. The good heart
of Martha Hawkins having espoused the cause of the basket-maker,
the heart of Bud Means could not help feeling warmly on the same
side. Blessed is that man in whose life the driving of duty and the
drawing of love impel the same way! But why speak of the driving of
duty? For already Bud was learning the better lesson of serving God
for the love of God.</p>
<p>The old basket-maker was the most unpopular man in Flat Creek
district. He had two great vices. He would go to Clifty and have a
"spree" once in three months. And he would tell the truth in a most
unscrupulous manner. A man given to plain speaking was quite as
objectionable in Flat Creek as he would have been in France under
the Empire, the Commune, or the Republic, and almost as
objectionable as he would be in any refined community in America.
People who live in glass houses have a horror of people who throw
stones. And the old basket-maker, having no friends, was a good
scape-goat. In driving him off, Pete Jones would get rid of a
dangerous neighbor and divert attention from himself. The immediate
crime of the basket-maker was that he had happened to see too
much.</p>
<p>"Mr. Hartsook," said Bud, when they got out into the road,
"you'd better go straight home to the Squire's. Bekase ef this
lightnin' strikes a second time it'll strike awful closte to you.
You hadn't better be seen with us. Which way did you come,
Shocky?"</p>
<p>"Why, I tried to come down the holler, but I met Jones right by
the big road, and he sweared at me and said he'd kill me ef I
didn't go back and stay. And so I went back to the house and then
slipped out through the graveyard. You see I was bound to come ef I
got skinned. For Mr. Pearson's, stuck to me and I mean to stick to
him, you see."</p>
<p>Bud led Shocky through the graveyard. But when they reached the
forest path from the graveyard he thought that perhaps it was not
best to "show his hand," as he expressed it, too soon.</p>
<p>"Now, Shocky," he said, "do you run ahead and tell the ole man
that I want to see him right off down by the Spring-in-rock. I'll
keep closte behind you, and ef anybody offers to trouble you, do
you let off a yell and I'll be thar in no time."</p>
<p>When Ralph left the school-house he felt mean. There were Bud
and Shocky gone on an errand of mercy, and he, the truant member of
the Church of the Best Licks, was not with them. The more he
thought of it the more he seemed to be a coward, and the more he
despised himself; so, yielding as usual to the first brave impulse,
he leaped nimbly over the fence and started briskly through the
forest in a direction intersecting the path on which were Bud and
Shocky. He came in sight just in time to see the first conflict of
the Church in the Wilderness with her foes.</p>
<p>For Shocky's little feet went more swiftly on their eager errand
than Bud had anticipated. He got farther out of Bud's reach than
the latter intended he should, and he did not discover Pete Jones
until Pete, with his hog-drover's whip, was right upon him.</p>
<p>Shocky tried to halloo for Bud, but he was like one in a
nightmare. The yell died into a whisper which could not have been
heard ten feet.</p>
<p>I shall not repeat Mr. Jones's words. They were frightfully
profane. But he did not stop at words. He swept his whip round and
gave little Shocky one terrible cut. Then the voice was released,
and the piercing cry of pain brought Bud down the path flying.</p>
<p>"You good-for-nothing scoundrel," growled Bud, "you're a coward
and a thief to be a-beatin' a little creetur like him!" and with
that Bud walked up on Jones, who prudently changed position in such
a way as to get the upper side of the hill.</p>
<p>"Well, I'll gin you the upper side, but come on," cried Bud, "ef
you a'n't afeared to fight somebody besides a poor little sickly
baby or a crippled soldier. Come on!"</p>
<div class="figcenter"><br/> <SPAN href="images/illus-181.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/illus-181.jpg" width-obs="45%" alt="" title="" /></SPAN><br/> <b>Bud Means comes to the rescue of Shocky.</b> <br/></div>
<p>Pete was no insignificant antagonist. He had been a great
fighter, and his well-seasoned arms were like iron. He had not the
splendid set of Bud, but he had more skill and experience in the
rude tournament of fists to which the backwoods is so much given.
Now, being out of sight of witnesses and sure that he could lie
about the fight afterward, he did not scruple to take advantages
which would have disgraced him forever if he had taken them in a
public fight on election day or at a muster. He took the uphill
side, and he clubbed his whip-stalk, striking Bud with all his
force with the heavy end, which, coward-like, he had loaded with
lead. Bud threw up his strong left arm and parried the blow, which,
however, was so fierce that it fractured one of the bones of the
arm. Throwing away his whip Pete rushed upon Bud furiously,
intending to overpower him, but Bud slipped quickly to one side and
let Jones pass down the hill, and as Jones came up again Means
dealt him one crushing blow that sent him full length upon the
ground. Nothing but the leaves saved him from a most terrible fall.
Jones sprang to his feet more angry than ever at being whipped by
one whom he regarded as a boy, and drew a long dirk-knife. But he
was blind with rage, and Bud dodged the knife, and this time gave
Pete a blow on the nose which marred the homeliness of that feature
and doubled the fellow up against a tree ten feet away.</p>
<p>Ralph came in sight in time to see the beginning of the fight,
and he arrived on the ground just as Pete Jones went down under the
well-dealt blow from the only remaining fist of Bud Means.</p>
<p>While Ralph examined Bud's disabled left arm Pete picked himself
up slowly, and, muttering that he felt "consid'able shuck up like,"
crawled away like a whipped puppy. To every one whom he met, Pete,
whose intellect seemed to have weakened in sympathy with his frame,
remarked feebly that he was consid'able shuck up like, and
vouchsafed no other explanation. Even to his wife he only said that
he felt purty consid'able shuck up like, and that the boys would
have to get on to-night without him. There are some scoundrels
whose very malignity is shaken out of them for the time being by a
thorough drubbing.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid you're going to have trouble with your arm, Bud,"
said Ralph tenderly.</p>
<p>"Never mind; I put in my best licks fer <i>Him</i> that air
time, Mr. Hartsook." Ralph shivered a little at thought of this,
but if it was right to knock Jones down at all, why might not Bud
do it "heartily as unto the Lord?"</p>
<p>Gideon did not feel any more honest pleasure in chastising the
Midianites than did Bud in sending Pete Jones away purty
consid'able shuck up like.</p>
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