Okay read carefully few people can do this
Read the book.
huck did not enjoy hiding on the island cave
Huck's comfortable feeling is interrupted by realizing that the men on the island are searching for him with bloodhounds, making him afraid and anxious about being caught.
Jim is initially startled when he sees Huck on the island, as he believes that he has seen a ghost. However, he quickly realizes that Huck is alive and is relieved to be reunited with him. Jim is happy to see Huck safe and well.
No, Tom did not reveal to Huck that the man in the floating house was his father. Huck recognized his father, but he did not tell Tom about it.
Huck finds Jim on Jackson's Island in the Misissippi River, where Jim was hiding. Mark Twain's story "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" (1884) is considered a sequel to "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" (1876) in that it features the same characters. In the story, Huck is running away from St. Petersburg and meets a black boy, a runaway slave named Jim, who is trying to reach Cairo, Illinois (which is in a "free state").
George Jackson
It's either the cavern or the two story house, I'm not positive which one.
She had seen campfire smoke on Jackson island.
He headed for Jackson Island.
Jim and Huck stayed on Jackson's Island, an uninhabited island on the Mississippi River, while they were hiding. They used it as a temporary refuge to avoid being caught.
He found the bread filled with quicksilver that was floating in the river=]
Tom initially thinks Huck is a poor, uneducated child who is not as civilized or imaginative as himself. He views Huck as a good companion for adventures but does not fully appreciate his resourcefulness or independence.