"Show them Pee-wee peeling potatoes! Show them Pee-wee flopping flip-flops!" they began yelling.
"Show them the one of me stirring soup," the kid said, grabbing me by the arm; "that's the best one!"
I said, "You crazy Indian, do you think those people in the flyer are there to see a movie show? Keep still, here come a couple of men with lanterns."
"They're going to penetrate the mystery," Pee-wee said. I guess he got that out of some book, hey? Penetrate the mystery.
I said, "As long as they didn't penetrate this car, I'm satisfied."
We could see two lights bobbing along toward us from the train. Even with lanterns it must have been a pretty risky job, walking those ties. All the while Pee-wee and I were taking down the sheet, and as soon as we loosened it from the sticks, the fellows down in the car pulled them in.
"Look how clear it shows against the hill, now the sheet isn't up," I said to Pee-wee.
I guess you know what I meant, all right. Even through the sheet the printing had shown kind of dim against a hill in back of the train, but with the sheet taken down it showed pretty clear and it seemed awful funny. And besides, now that the sheet was down we had a good look at the train; the light from the movie apparatus seemed to shine right along the tops of the cars.
All of a sudden, Pee-wee grabbed me by the arm and said, "Look! Look! On the top of the second car. Look! Do you see? Right beside that long sort of a boiler thing."
I looked, and then, for once, I had sense enough to do the right thing in a hurry. I closed the shutter in the apparatus.