a girl in my room at school last year who was double-jointed.â
âThatâs nothing. So am I,â boasted Scooter. âSee how far back I can pull my thumb.â
âI can pull my thumb back farther than that,â said Henry, jerking the rope to make the game of tug-of-war more interesting for Ribsy. The rattles and thumps of the garbage cans were growing louder, Henry thought, and the garbagemen must be almost at his house.
âAw, you guys arenât really double-jointed,â said Robert. âThis girl in my room could bend her fingers backward without pushing them with her other hand.â
The garbage truck had stopped between the Hugginsesâ and the Grumbiesâ houses. The boys watched two big men get out of the truck and balance their barrels on their shoulders. One went across the street to pick up the garbage. The other walked up the driveway between Henryâs house and the house next door.
The boys forgot about double joints. âGee, I hope I have muscles like that someday,â said Robert.
Henry did not answer. He noticed that Ribsy had dropped his end of the rope and was looking anxiously toward the back of the house. He heard the thump of the Grumbiesâ garbage can. The man came down the driveway with his barrel full of the Grumbiesâ garbage, emptied it into the truck, and walked up the driveway with the barrel once more. Ribsy watched every move he made. Then Henry heard the man take the lid off the Hugginsesâ can.
Ribsy growled deep in his throat. Henry looked at him anxiously. It was the first time he had ever heard him growl anything but a pretend growl. Suddenly Ribsy flew into a frenzy of barking and tore down the driveway toward the back of the house. Henry was too shocked to move. He sat listening to Ribsy snarl and bark. Ribsy! He couldnât believe itânot good old Ribsy. Now he really was in trouble.
Scooter was the first to move. âBoy, is he mad about something!â he exclaimed, and ran over to the driveway.
Then Henry got into action. He started down the driveway, but what he saw made him stop. Ribsy was growling and jumping at the garbageman, who was using his empty barrel to protect himself.
âRibsy!â wailed Henry. âCut that out!â
Ribsy continued to snarl and advance while the garbageman retreated down the driveway behind his barrel. When Henry tried to grab Ribsy, the garbageman picked up his barrel and ran toward the truck. He threw the barrel up onto the garbage in the back of his truck and jumped inside the cab. Ribsy had his front paws on the running board before Henry could grab him by the collar.
âYou keep that dog shut up or you keep your garbage. Understand?â The garbageman glared at Ribsy, who was still growling deep in his throat.
âBut heâs not really a fierce dog,â protested Henry, while Ribsy strained so hard at his collar that he choked and coughed.
âNot much he isnât,â said the garbageman. âYou keep him shut up when I come around. See?â
âYes, sir.â Henry knew he couldnât explain that Ribsy wasnât a fierce dogânot after the way he had just behaved.
As soon as the garbagemen drove on, Ribsy stopped growling. He looked at Henry and wagged his tail as if he expected to be praised for what he had done. Henry was too stunned to say anything for a minute. Then he said crossly, âNow look what youâve done. Youâve got us both in trouble, thatâs what.â Henry scowled at his dog. His father had told him he must keep Ribsy out of trouble if he wanted to go salmon fishing and now, for no reason he could see, Ribsy had attacked the garbageman. And if he had bitten the garbagemanâ¦Well, Henry could not bring himself to think about it, because he knew that biting dogs were sent to the pound.
Scooter was careful to stay a few feet away from Ribsy. âI wouldnât get too close to him if I