Sugar Creek Gang Set Books 13-18

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Sugar Creek Gang Set Books 13-18 Page 30

by Paul Hutchens


  “I still don’t see what of it,” I heard Dragonfly say, but I noticed that his voice didn’t sound as if he was as disgusted with Little Jim as he had been.

  And as we all rambled along in the dancing shadows, I had one of the happiest feelings I ever had in my life. The One who made everything in nature was more wonderful than anything in the whole world. And I was glad that one day in the haymow of our barn I had given my heart to Him, which I told you all about a long time ago in my very first story, The Swamp Robber.

  Boy oh boy! When I wrote that exciting story, I never had any idea how many other exciting adventures would happen to us or that I’d find time to tell you about them.

  Even as I get ready to put a period at the end of this story, I’m remembering another interesting adventure that was different from any we’d ever had. If Big Jim hadn’t been along with us on it, we all might have died, and that would have been the end of the Sugar Creek Gang. I was certainly glad that Big Jim had brought his .22 rifle along that day. If he hadn’t, our lives wouldn’t have been saved.

  Maybe I’ll have time to write that story for you next. I hope so.

  The Sugar Creek Gang Series:

  1 The Swamp Robber

  2 The Killer Bear

  3 The Winter Rescue

  4 The Lost Campers

  5 The Chicago Adventure

  6 The Secret Hideout

  7 The Mystery Cave

  8 Palm Tree Manhunt

  9 One Stormy Day

  10 The Mystery Thief

  11 Teacher Trouble

  12 Screams in the Night

  13 The Indian Cemetery

  14 The Treasure Hunt

  15 Thousand Dollar Fish

  16 The Haunted House

  17 Lost in the Blizzard

  18 On the Mexican Border

  19 The Green Tent Mystery

  20 The Bull Fighter

  21 The Timber Wolf

  22 Western Adventure

  23 The Killer Cat

  24 The Colorado Kidnapping

  25 The Ghost Dog

  26 The White Boat Rescue

  27 The Brown Box Mystery

  28 The Watermelon Mystery

  29 The Trapline Thief

  30 The Blue Cow

  31 Tree house Mystery

  32 The Cemetery Vandals

  33 The Battle of the Bees

  34 Locked in the Attic

  35 Runaway Rescue

  36 The Case of Missing Calf

  Paul Hutchens

  MOODY PUBLISHERS

  CHICAGO

  © 1950, 1998 by

  PAULINE HUTCHENS WILSON

  Revised Edition, 1998

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Original Title: Lost in a Sugar Creek Blizzard

  ISBN-10: 0-8024-7021-1

  ISBN-13: 978-0-8024-7021-8

  We hope you enjoy this book from Moody Publishers. Our goal is to provide high-quality, thought-provoking books and products that connect truth to your real needs and challenges. For more information on other books and products written and produced from a biblical perspective, go to www.moodypublishers.com or write to:

  Moody Publishers

  820 N. LaSalle Boulevard

  Chicago, IL 60610

  5 7 910 8 6

  Printed in the United States of America

  PREFACE

  Hi—from a member of the Sugar Creek Gang!

  It’s just that I don’t know which one I am. When I was good, I was Little Jim. When I did bad things—well, sometimes I was Bill Collins or even mischievous Poetry.

  You see, I am the daughter of Paul Hutchens, and I spent many an hour listening to him read his manuscript as far as he had written it that particular day. I went along to the north woods of Minnesota, to Colorado, and to the various other places he would go to find something different for the Gang to do.

  Now the years have passed—more than fifty, actually. My father is in heaven, but the Gang goes on. All thirty-six books are still in print and now are being updated for today’s readers with input from my five children, who also span the decades from the ’50s to the ’70s.

  The real Sugar Creek is in Indiana, and my father and his six brothers were the original Gang. But the idea of the books and their ministry were and are the Lord’s. It is He who keeps the Gang going.

  PAULINE HUTCHENS WILSON

  The Sugar Creek Gang Series:

  1 The Swamp Robber

  2 The Killer Bear

  3 The Winter Rescue

  4 The Lost Campers

  5 The Chicago Adventure

  6 The Secret Hideout

  7 The Mystery Cave

  8 Palm Tree Manhunt

  9 One Stormy Day

  10 The Mystery Thief

  11 Teacher Trouble

  12 Screams in the Night

  13 The Indian Cemetery

  14 The Treasure Hunt

  15 Thousand Dollar Fish

  16 The Haunted House

  17 Lost in the Blizzard

  18 On the Mexican Border

  19 The Green Tent Mystery

  20 The Bull Fighter

  21 The Timber Wolf

  22 Western Adventure

  23 The Killer Cat

  24 The Colorado Kidnapping

  25 The Ghost Dog

  26 The White Boat Rescue

  27 The Brown Box Mystery

  28 The Watermelon Mystery

  29 The Trapline Thief

  30 The Blue Cow

  31 Treehouse Mystery

  32 The Cemetery Vandals

  33 The Battle of the Bees

  34 Locked in the Attic

  35 Runaway Rescue

  36 The Case of Missing Calf

  1

  The first time I saw that big dangerous-looking snake, it almost scared me half to death. It flattened out its ugly head, with its fierce-looking, shovel-shaped nose, and at the same time expanded its neck until it was almost three times as big as it had been. The snake was making a hissing sound like air being let out of a tire of my blue-and-white bicycle.

  I stood stock-still and stared at it, my whole body tense with fright. It was lying in a half coil and had been sunning itself on the sandy path that leads from the two big pignut trees above our garden to an old iron pitcher pump at the other side of our farm.

  If anybody had seen me staring at that savage-looking, mad-looking, mad-acting, reddish-yellow, thick-bodied snake with irregular-shaped brownish-black blotches scattered all the way down its length from neck to tail, he’d have said my eyes had widened until they were as big as the puffed-out head and neck of that snake.

  I was barefoot too, so if the snake had wanted to, it could have bitten my foot or my ankle or one of my ten bare toes—I was that close to it. I didn’t even have a stick in my hand as I sometimes have when I walk around our farm, so I couldn’t sock the snake the way a boy likes to do when he sees one.

  “Hiss-s-s-s!” the big-bodied snake said to me fiercely.

  Its ugly head was shaped like a triangle in our arithmetic book in school, and its nose turned up at the tip as if it was trying to smell to see what kind of strange animal I was myself.

  As I said, I was scared stiff. My greenish-gray eyes must have been almost bulging out of their sockets as I wondered what on earth to do to kill the snake. If I tried to jump back, would it make a lunge for me and strike me with its fangs?

  I couldn’t help but think of one of the members of the Sugar Creek Gang whose name is Dragonfly. When he sees something exciting before the rest of us do, he always hisses like a snake, and his own eyes get big and round like a dragonfly’s eyes are all the time, which is why we call him by that name.

  Well, not having a stick to sock the snake, and not knowing what else to do, and being scared anyway, I let out several screams. In fact, I screa
med maybe a half-dozen times, because the snake was not only puffing out its neck and hissing, but its triangle-shaped head was darting in and out in my direction very fiercely.

  I must have come to life all of a sudden, for the next thing I knew, I had leaped back about six feet and was looking all around for a rock to hit the snake with. But I couldn’t find any because Dad and I had been picking up all the rocks from our farm for years and taking them out of the fields so we could raise better crops.

  Even though I didn’t find any rock, I did spy a big clod of dirt almost as big as my little sister Charlotte Ann’s pretty round head, so I quick stooped, grabbed it up in my big-for-a-boy’s hands, lifted it high over my head, and with all my fierce, half-scared, half-mad strength hurled it down toward the snake’s shovel-shaped snout.

  But as much as I hate to have to admit it, I missed. The dirt clod squished itself into a million particles of dirt and dust right beside where the snake’s head had been a second before the clod got there.

  And then the queerest thing I ever saw happened. That big forty-inch-long, yellowish-red snake all of a sudden opened its mouth wide and began to twist itself into and out of several kinds of knots as though I had actually hit it and injured it terribly. The next thing I knew, it gave itself a sideways flip-flop and landed on its back, exposing its pretty yellowish-green snake’s stomach to the hot sun, which was shining down on both of us.

  And the second it got on its back, it all of a sudden quit wriggling and twisting and just lay there as if it was absolutely dead.

  What on earth! I thought. I must have hit it after all! And yet, I knew I hadn’t, because I’d seen my clod of dirt miss by almost six inches. All that had happened to it was that maybe a lot of dust and dirt had spattered it in the eyes and on the side of its angry head and three-inch-wide puffed-out neck.

  But there it lay, not making a move and looking like a terribly big fishing worm that was as lifeless as a fishing worm is when a robin has pecked it to death, just before feeding it to one of her babies.

  Well, what do you know? I thought. I scared him to death! I didn’t know if it was my clod of dirt or the way I had yelled at it. But, of course, it couldn’t actually be dead.

  I looked around and saw a long stick, which I hadn’t seen before, and, just to make sure, I picked up the stick and poked at the snake. It didn’t even move the end of its tail but lay absolutely quiet.

  I don’t know what made me do what I did just then, but I all of a sudden felt very brave, sort of like maybe David in the Bible story, when he had killed a giant with one little stone out of his slingshot. I remembered that David was supposed to have had red hair, like mine, so I looked down at that giant shovel-nosed snake and yelled down at it, “Get up, you coward! Get up and fight like a man!”

  Having the long stick in my hand, I knew I could kill it, as I had a lot of garter snakes and water snakes around Sugar Creek. So I yelled at it again, calling it a coward to let a ten-year-old boy scare it to death.

  And then I got another surprise. From the direction of the iron pitcher pump, which is right close by the stile that we go over to go to school in the fall and winter and spring, I heard a boy’s yell. I knew it was the voice of my friend Poetry, the barrel-shaped member of our gang, who was my almost best friend and whose house I was on my way to when I had run into the snake.

  “Who’s a coward?” Poetry yelled to me from the top of the stile, where he was when I looked up and saw him. Then he scrambled his roly-poly self down the stile’s four steps and came puffing toward me, walking up the dusty path.

  “I just killed a great big snake.” I said. “A fierce-looking one about six feet long and as big around as your wrist.” It wasn’t quite that big, but now that I was a hero, it seemed the snake was bigger than it was. Besides, I wanted Poetry to think it was until he got to where he could see it himself. Then I’d tell him I was only fooling, which different members of the gang were always doing to each other anyway.

  I stood there, looking at Poetry lumbering toward me. Also I kept glancing at my defeated enemy, wondering how on earth I’d managed to scare it to death.

  In a minute Poetry was there, and both of us were standing back about eight or ten feet and looking down at the yellowish-green, upturned stomach of the snake.

  “How’d you do it?” Poetry asked. “What’d you hit him with—that stick?”

  “I scared him to death!”

  “Scared him to death! That’s just plain dumb. You can’t do that to a snake. You have to hit him with something.”

  “I did,” I said with a mischievous grin in my mind. “I threw my voice at him, and it hit him, and he just twisted himself up into a couple of knots, like a boy does when he gets the cramps from eating green apples, and he plopped himself over on his back and died, right in front of my eyes. I’m a ventriloquist. I can throw my voice, you know.”

  Well, it was fun kidding Poetry. Then I told him I’d missed the snake with a clod of dirt but that he’d died anyway.

  “Maybe there was a rock in the clod,” Poetry said, “and when the clod hit the ground six inches from his head, and burst in pieces, the rock flew out and hit him on the head, and it just sort of accidentally killed him.”

  That reminded me again of red-haired David. If there was anything in the world I’d rather do than anything else, it was to imagine myself to be somebody else—like a hero in our history books at school or a brave character in the Bible. Right that second, I remembered that David’s one small smooth stone had socked Giant Goliath, killing him deader than a doornail. David had rushed up to the fallen giant and had stood on him, and it seemed maybe I ought to do that to my giant-sized, shovel-nosed snake.

  “That’s Giant Goliath,” I said to Poetry, “and I’m David. I’m going to stand on him and cut off his head and—”

  “Stop!” Poetry said. “He might not be dead. Here, give me that stick.”

  He took my stick, eased himself up closer to the snake, and poked at it. But it didn’t move at all, not even its tail.

  “It’s dead, all right,” I said, feeling even prouder of myself than I had been, because of what I had done.

  Right that second, Poetry looked at his wristwatch and frowned at it and said, “Hey, we’ve got to get going! There’s a gang meeting down at the spring. Big Jim just phoned our house, and it’s very important. He tried to call you, but nobody answered your phone, so I was on my way over to get you.”

  2

  I forgot to tell you that my folks had gone to town, and they had told me I could go over to Poetry’s house that afternoon just as soon as I had finished hoeing a few rows of potatoes. Dad hadn’t said how many rows, so I asked him, and he said, “Let your conscience be your guide. But there are several that ought to be done.”

  My conscience wasn’t sure how to be a guide to a boy that didn’t like to hoe potatoes. So I thought I ought to know exactly how many “several” was and maybe that would help. As soon as Dad and Mom and Charlotte Ann had gone, I looked up the word in our brand-new dictionary, and it said, “Indefinite: more than one or two, but not many.” The only thing was, I forgot and left the dictionary open right where I had been looking, and when Dad came home later, he found out what I had done and—but that’s getting ahead of the story.

  Anyway, just to be sure I’d hoed several, I actually hoed three, which was more than one or two but wasn’t many.

  Then I had left my hoe in the shade, leaning it up against one of the big pignut trees at the end of the garden, and had started down the dusty path toward the stile, over which I was going to climb and then hurry as fast as I could to Poetry’s house. That’s when I had run into the snake on that dry, sunny path.

  Whenever Big Jim called a meeting and wanted it in a hurry, we all tried to get there as quick as we could. So when Poetry told me about the gang meeting, we decided to go right away.

  “What kind of a snake is it?” Poetry asked.

  I said, “I don’t know, but maybe
Dad will know. He knows pretty near everything there is to know about snakes and birds and toads and fish and things.”

  “My pop does too,” Poetry said.

  And even though I knew that my dad knew more than Poetry’s dad any day, I didn’t say so.

  We started to go back up the path toward the pignut trees and our garden. In a little while we’d be going past our house with its big green ivy that covers nearly all the south side—it had just a little open space upstairs where my bedroom window is—and also past another iron pitcher pump at the end of a board walk about twenty feet from our back door. Then we’d go on past the mailbox at the side of the road that says on it “Theodore Collins,” which is my dad’s name. And then we’d swish across that dusty gravel road and vault over a rail fence. Once in the woods, we’d start running, and quicker than a jackrabbit could do it, we’d be at the spring where the gang was going to meet.

  Poetry, being as sure as I was that the snake was dead, did what lots of boys do to dead snakes. He picked it up by the tail and dragged it along behind him till we got to the pignut tree. Then he draped it over the rail fence at the edge of our garden, and we left it there till Dad should get home in the late afternoon. I was going to show it to him and ask him what kind of a snake a boy could scare to death with just his voice or by missing him with a big clod of dirt.

  We stopped to look at the snake, hanging there with its head on one side and its tail on the other, and it really looked BIG—almost as long as Little Jim is tall. Little Jim was the littlest member of the Sugar Creek Gang, a super guy with brown curls on the top of his round head, and blue eyes, and a very serious face, though sometimes his face was mischievous.

  All of a sudden Poetry looked at our garden and said, “You been hoeing potatoes this afternoon?”

  “Sure,” I said, half proud of myself.

  “It’s hard to believe,” Poetry said and ducked to get out of the way of my flying fist, which I wouldn’t have hit him hard with, since he was my almost best friend.

 

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