I remember the day the four-legged man came to town,
'cause that was the day that Mary Jane's cat bit
Billy Crandall. 'Course, I woulda remembered it even
without Mary Jane's cat, 'cause I'd never seen a
four-legged man before. Don't think no one had.
I think it was Tommy first saw him. We were playin'
behind the rain barrels next to Mrs. Bray's store,
and Tommy, he was peekin' over 'em at the street, on
the lookout for pirates. But then he suddenly stood
real still, and used that word that his daddy uses
all the time that none of us is supposed to say.
Johnny kept asking him what it was, but Tommy
wouldn't answer, just kept starin', so we poked our
heads up over the barrels, too.
And there he was, the four-legged man just amblin'
down the street in front of the store. He didn't
look like no beggar, he wasn't dirty or nothin' and
his hair was neat and he was shaved, but he wasn't
carryin' nothin' or wearin' nothin' but four-legged
overalls, and his four feet were bare, and even some
of the beggars that come through town have shoes.
But I guessed it made sense anyway, because I wasn't
a beggar and I only had shoes that I wore special for
Sunday, and buyin' four shoes must be even more
expensive. I wondered how long he'd walked those
four feet from.
Tommy, Johnny, and I just stared at him over the tops
of those barrels as he walked his four feet by. Once
he passed, and Tommy and Johnny stopped being scared,
they started giggling and pointing at the four-legged
man's behind, which sort of stuck out behind him over
his hind legs, like he might be bendin' over. I
stared at it, but it just didn't look funny to me. I
started wonderin' what it would be like to have four
legs. Kind of like a horse, maybe. Did he gallop?
But the four-legged man had arms and hands, too, and
no hooves, just four feet. I wondered if he ever
accidentally stepped on his back toes.
I didn't get long to think about it because as soon
as the four-legged man went out of sight 'round the
corner of the dress shop at the end of the street,
Tommy was draggin' me and Johnny out from our hiding
place and runnin' at top speed to find the other
kids. See, Suzy had got to tell everyone when the
crazy lady that wandered into town went and drowned
herself in the old mill pond, and Tommy wanted to be
first with this news, 'cause even a crazy lady
drownin' herself in the old mill pond couldn't hold a
candle to a real four-legged man. And he needed me
and Johnny for witnesses.
At first, nobody believed us, even though me and
Tommy and Johnny all swore up and down and crossed
our hearts and hoped to die that the four-legged man
was real. But the other kids just laughed, and Suzy
said that Tommy'd just made it up because he was
jealous.
Tommy was taking a deep breath and thinking of what
name to call her when we all heard Mary Jane scream.
We all turned and saw her cat, Primrose, go streakin'
out the front door of their house. There was all
sorts of yelling inside, and then Mary Jane came
running out the door after Primrose, and then Mary
Jane's daddy and her momma, and then old Doc
Henderson, who ain't really a doctor, but everyone
calls him that.
Mary Jane was callin' after Primrose, but the cat had
gone and vanished. Her momma and her daddy told her
what a bad girl she was for lettin' the cat escape,
and then Mary Jane's daddy ran off to find the cat,
while her momma took Doc Henderson back inside. Mary
Jane just stood there cryin'. We all went up to her
and she 'splained that Primrose got real sick, and
Doc Henderson wanted to kill her. Primrose, I mean,
not Mary Jane. And so Mary Jane had stopped him at
the last moment, and let Primrose escape, and now her
momma and daddy were real mad, and Primrose was
probably gonna die now anyway, especially if Mary
Jane's daddy found her.
We reckoned that if we found Mary Jane's cat first,
we might could save her. Johnny said we could hide
the cat up at the old mill until everything blew
over. That's where we always hid whenever there was
trouble, so it made sense.
Soon almost all the kids in town were looking for
Primrose, but it was Billy Crandall found her first,
which was bad. Billy Crandall was an older kid and
mean, and even though nobody could prove nothin',
most folks say he was responsible for what happened
to old Widow Baynes's cat when she died. They only
ever found little bits and pieces of that little ol'
cat. Billy cornered Primrose in the alley behind the
hardware store, and we knew when he'd found her
because there was a lot of hissin' and yowlin' and
then Billy yelled, "Ow! Stupid cat!"
There weren't never anythin' flowery about Primrose,
an old alley cat with brown fur and white splotches,
but when we all ran 'round behind the hardware store
to see what was goin' on, she was lookin' even worse
than usual. She was hissin' and mad and her fur was
messed up, and she was droolin' funny, which was odd
'cause we'd never seen a cat drool, and she was
limpin' funny too 'cause I think one of her legs was
broke, and I bet that Billy'd done that.
Mary Jane ran up just in time to see Billy raisin' a
big ol' board from the woodpile over his head, aimin'
for Primrose. She screamed real loud, but Billy just
laughed and said he was gonna teach that cat a
lesson.
But everyone, even Billy, stopped and stood stock
still when we heard that voice.
"Stop."
That was all he said. Not real loud, or yellin' or
anythin', but it put the fear of God in all of us, I
tell you. We all turned and there was the four-legged man, standin' there, starin' real hard at
Billy Crandall.
Billy turned white as a sheet.
The four-legged man started walkin' forward on those
four bare feet, and all of us moved out of his way
real quick. Billy started shakin', and then he
dropped the board and ran out the other end of the
alley, faster'n we'd ever seen him run before. The
rest of us just stood there, watchin'.
The four-legged man walked up to Primrose, even
though she was still hissin' and yowlin' and clawin'
at him. But he just knelt down on his four knees and
touched her, and suddenly she stopped. He gathered
her up in his arms and started strokin' her, kneelin'
there on his four knees, smoothin' out her fur, and
she curled up in his arms, not mewlin' or nothin'.
Eventually the four-legged man stood back up on his
four feet, front legs first, kinda like a horse, and
turned to us. Everyone sucked in their breath real
fast and sorta backed away, but I just stood there
lookin' at him. He stared back at me for a little
while, and then walked right up to me on his four
feet. I heard everyone behind me slide back again,
but the four-legged man just held Primrose out to me
and I took her from him.
She was perfect. Her fur was all smooth and she
looked the right shape, not all skinny and broke-lookin' like before, and she curled up in my arms and
started purrin'.
I looked back up at the four-legged man and he just
smiled at me for a moment, then turned and ambled
away with his four-legged walk down the alley and
disappeared 'round the corner.
It took a few minutes before anybody could move
again. The first person who actually said anything
was Tommy, who turned to Suzy and said, "I told you
so," and then Mary Jane let out a yell and came
runnin' up to me and took Primrose, and saw she was
okay, and then she started laughin' and dancin'
around with Primrose held high over her head.
Everyone else just started talkin' 'bout the four-legged man, and wasn't he strange, and funny-lookin',
and where did he come from, and would he be back?
When we got back to Mary Jane's house, Mary Jane's
momma screamed when she saw Mary Jane holdin'
Primrose, and Doc Henderson came up and took Primrose
from her. Mary Jane's momma started to scold her for
lettin' Primrose run away.
"But, Momma," she said, "the four-legged man fixed
her!"
And we tried to explain about the four-legged man,
but Mary Jane's momma wouldn't believe us, she just
got madder. But Doc Henderson was just standing
there, holdin' Primrose, starin' at her like he ain't
never seen a cat before.
When Mary Jane's daddy came back, he didn't believe
us neither, but then Miss Katie from the dress shop
came runnin' in, all breathless, and asked if we'd
seen the four-legged man walkin' about town, and then
they had to believe us, because Miss Katie was almost
a grown-up like them. Mary Jane's momma and daddy
still wanted to kill Primrose, but Doc Henderson said
he wasn't going to harm a perfectly healthy livin'
creature, so that was that.
The next day was a Sunday, and so all the grown-ups
had a meetin' after church to decide what to do about
the four-legged man. First they had to decide
whether it was man or animal, and some said he must
be animal because he walked on four legs, but others
said that no animal had hands like a man. They
looked in the Bible and it said stuff about the
creatures that crawleth over the face of the earth,
but nothin' about no four-legged man. Ol' Mrs. Bray
shook her cane and said that this wasn't one of God's
creatures, she was sure it was the devil in disguise,
because only the devil would walk on four legs like
animal. There was a lot of agreement to that, but
then someone in the back said that the devil ought to
have hooves like a goat, but the four-legged man had
normal feet, it was just he had four of 'em. And
then they argued a lot more, but they didn't get
nowhere, because only a few of them had even seen the
four-legged man, and none of them had talked to him.
So they all turned to Reverend, who looked a bit
nervous-like, and he said maybe they'd better just
wait and see. And then Mrs. Bray clucked her tongue
and whispered to Mrs. Cartwright that if old Reverend
Simpson were still alive, he would have already sent
this four-legged devil back from whence he came.
But nobody sent the four-legged man anywhere, and the
only person that even talked to him was Jimmy Walker,
but that weren't no surprise, 'cause Jimmy made
friends with all the undesirables who wandered into
town. Probably because he was an undesirable
hisself. Nobody knew where he came from, he just
wandered into town one day and started doin' odd jobs
for whoever needed work done. Usually one or t'other
of the farmers would let him sleep in their haylofts.
People said he was trouble, that he got kicked out of
the town he grew up in for doin' somethin' awful.
And, Mrs. Bray would always remind everyone, he
didn't go to church on Sunday.
I asked him about that once, when I was watchin' him
work on the door to Mr. Pearson's barn. I liked to
watch Jimmy work. He was really strong and good with
his hands, and I wanted to be like him someday, even
though Momma and Daddy would always scold me if they
ever caught me talkin' to Jimmy. Anyway, Jimmy just
laughed and said he'd already learned to read the
Bible, and he didn't need to go to church to have
someone read it for him and tell him what to think.
But that was Jimmy all over.
So that was the way it went: the four-legged man
stayed around town, sleepin' up at the old mill, and
everyone except Jimmy pretty much ignored him
whenever they saw him walkin' around on his four bare
feet.
But then there was the day when Mrs. Bray was closin'
up her store to go visit with her friend Mrs.
Cartwright across the road. She was just steppin'
down off the steps to the store when the four-legged
man came walkin' 'round the corner. Mrs. Bray sucked
in her breath real fast like she was scared, and
started tryin' to walk real fast, which was hard with
her cane. Mrs. Cartwright and ol' Miss Green just
watched from Mrs. Cartwright's front porch, but you
could tell they was scared, too.
Then Mrs. Bray stumbled a bit with her cane, and
almost fell over, but suddenly the four-legged man
was beside her, helpin' her back up, really steady
because he had four legs to stand on. Mrs. Bray made
her little puffing sound she makes whenever she's
angry with us kids and tried to shrug him off, so he
just stepped aside on his four feet and went off
amblin' down the road. Mrs. Bray stood there for a
moment starin' after him and then she realized she
wasn't holdin' her cane no more, which was incredible
'cause Mrs. Bray couldn't so much as turn in her
chair with our her cane, usually.
Then Mrs. Cartwright and Miss Green came runnin' down
from Mrs. Cartwright's porch to see if Mrs. Bray was
all right, but Mrs. Bray just harrumphed and picked
up her cane, mumblin' somethin' about devils quotin'
scripture. And she was still sayin' that the four-legged man ought to be kicked out of town, but
sometimes she'd forget and walk without her cane.
The only other strange thing that happened was that
in the middle of one night Mary Jane woke up because
Primrose jumped onto her bed chasin' a moth or
somethin' and Mary Jane heard laughin' outside so she
looked out her window and she saw what looked like
the four-legged man and Jimmy Walker runnin' over the
side of the hill next to Mr. Murray's corn field only
it looked like Jimmy Walker had six legs and four
arms... but everyone just thought she'd dreamed it.
It was about a month after the four-legged man first
showed up that Billy Crandall got awful sick. He was
hackin' and coughin', and he couldn't eat nothin',
nor even drink water. And ol' Doc Henderson said
that Billy had got what Primrose had, and there
weren't no medicine for it, except all the way away
in the city. So they sent for it, but it didn't look
like it'd get here in time.
When Mary Jane heard about this, she told Billy's
parents that if the four-legged man could help
Primrose, maybe he could help Billy, too. But Mrs.
Crandall wouldn't hear of it, she wasn't letting the
four-legged man anywhere near her Billy, and Mr.
Crandall said on no account was that... that creature
setting foot—any of them—in his house. And they
didn't believe her story, even though she brought me
with her as witness, and even though Primrose was
okay and not sick no more. But then Billy started
coughin' again, so Mary Jane turned to me and
whispered to go find the four-legged man, so he could
help Billy.
So I ran to the front door, and when I opened it up,
there was the four-legged man, standin' there, his
four bare feet on the Crandalls' front porch.
I was a little frightened, but I said, "Please, sir,
could you come in and help Billy? He's awful sick."
The four-legged man just smiled at me and said, "I
know." He walked in, his four bare feet slappin' on
the wooden floor, and walked straight to Billy's
room, without me even tellin' him where it was.
When they saw him at the door of the room, Mr. and
Mrs. Crandall stood right up and it looked like they
was about to start yellin' at him to get out of the
house but they suddenly shut right up and just stared
at him. The four-legged man just walked up to the
side of Billy's bed on his four legs and rested his
palm on Billy's forehead. Suddenly, Billy stopped
coughin' and just relaxed, lyin' there peaceful. And
then he opened his eyes and he was scared when he saw
the four-legged man but the four-legged man just
smiled at him and then walked away. I opened the
front door for him again and he looked down at me and
said thank you and then he just ambled off again with
that four-legged walk of his.
The next day Billy was up and playin' with the other
kids just like before, 'cept it seemed like he wasn't
quite so mean no more. But folks say that a brush
with death will do that to a person.
The four-legged man disappeared after that, no one
saw him walkin' on his four bare feet through town no
more, and us kids could start usin' the old mill as
hideout again. Seemed like most people forgot he was
ever there, but I always wondered where he came from,
and where he went to, walkin' on those four legs.
I was watchin' Jimmy work on Mr. Marshall's fence one
day, and I asked him if the four-legged man was ever
comin' back. Jimmy looked at me kinda surprised-like
and asked me why. I said I didn't know, and then I
asked him if I could be a four-legged man when I grew
up. He laughed, and said that if I still wanted to
be a four-legged man when I was grown up, then I
should come to him. And then I heard a funny sound
on the gravel, and I looked down and I thought I saw
another pair of bare feet on the ground behind
Jimmy's, but then they were gone and I guessed it was
just my imagination.