The chapters begin with Huck Finn on the porch of the Grangerford’s, where he introduces himself as George Jaxon, and they question him and invite him in cautiously with guns ready to fire in case he is a Sheperdson. Huck meets Buck who tells him a riddle, though Huck does not understand the concept of riddles, and that he must stay with Buck and they will have great fun. Meanwhile, Huck conceives a detailed story to tell how he was orphaned. The Grangerford's offer Huck to stay there as long as he likes at the comfortable and kind home. Buck admires the warmhearted Colonel Grangerford and his beautiful children; Bob, Tom, Charlotte, Sophia, and Buck. One day while Buck & Huck were walking down the road, Buck tried to shoot a young man riding horseback named Harney Shepherdson. …show more content…
No one recalls how the feud started, but know two people have been killed that year, one from each family. The two feuding families attend church together, holding rifles in their laps, while the minister preaches about brotherly love. Later, Huck’s slave takes Huck deep into the swamp to show him some “water-moccasins”, but really they find Jim there who tells about how he followed Huck to shore the night they wrecked, but did not try to call out to him being scared of being caught. The next day Huck learns that Sophia ran off with Harney Shepherdson and later in the woods he witnesses Buck and another Grangerford get killed a gunfight with the Shepherdsons. Extremely disturbed, Huck goes down to Jim and the raft and they take off downstream. Huck and Jim continue down the river and on one of Huck’s voyages alone he comes across two men begging to be let on the raft and Huck takes them down one mile to safety. The men do not know each other, but are in similar situations and after exchanging stories, the two men, professional con artists, decide to team up and trick Huck &