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The Keeper of the Bees

my salt water back. The Master said it was rotten, and he held me tight and rubbed off the stingers, ’cause that’s the way you must; if you pull ’em it makes them worse. And then he turned the hose on a clayey place and mixed a cool poultice of mud and spread on the stings, and he said he ought to be booted for lettin’ me go ’mong the bees when I was all smelly of dogs and horses.

“So I wiped up my eyes and I said I reckoned that was the trouble. What I ought to a-done was to put on his old bee coat and rubbed some lilies on my head and some cinnamon pinks on my britches. So I went to the back porch and got his coat and when I commenced putting it on, he asked me what I was going to do. And I told him I was going to get my scent right and ‘try, try again. He just sat there looking at me, and I never saw his eyes get so big and black and I never saw his face get whiter when the pain was hurting him the worst, and away back under his breath, so I could barely hear, he whispered, ‘Before God, you wouldn’t do it, little Scout?’

“And I said, ‘God ain’t got nothin’ to do with this. It’s between you and me, and I’m going!

“And so I buttoned up the coat and I went down to the cinnamon pink bed and I just about rolled in it. I don’t know but I treated the pinks rougher than the Master liked, but you’ll understand if you ever get stung by a Black German why I was anxious to get plenty of cinnamon on. And then I smashed the sweetest lily I could find and I rubbed it in all over my hair. And then I started down the east walk. I thought I’d try the Italian