Sure enough, ahead of them twinkled the pretty ornamental light that Aunt Polly had lighted on dark nights to show where the driveway went through the gates. “We’re in back of the house!” cried Meg. “See, that’s the kitchen window where the white curtain is. Don’t things look different at night?” “Hello! Hello!” came Jud’s clear call. “Bobby, Meg, is that you?” Then as Bobby answered him, they heard Jud shouting: “All right, folks, they’ve come. I told you they were all right.” Peter and Jud and a neighbor’s boy came running toward the children, swinging lanterns, and followed by Mrs. Peter Apgar and Aunt Polly and Linda. Such a time as there was, and such a hugging and kissing and explaining! “When you didn’t come home to supper, I began “You must be starved,” was Linda’s greeting. “We’ve got fried chicken and currant jelly, too.” And though it was late, Aunt Polly was sure that fried chicken would hurt no one, and while the hungry Blossoms ate, she sat by and listened to what had happened to them in the woods. “Why, darlings,” she cried over and over, “Auntie will buy you other books and toys, but I couldn’t possibly buy your mother other children if anything happened to you. Look at Dot’s feet; the poor child must have walked miles. And her face and hands are terribly scratched.” Directly after supper the tired children were ready for bed, and Linda and Aunt Polly undressed them and bathed the sore little feet and put soothing cold cream on sunburned, scratched little faces. The summer weeks flew merrily by, and when “I’ll begin, ’cause I’m the oldest and I can write in pencil,” said Bobby. “Then Meg can print, and I’ll write what Dot and Twaddles tell me to. I guess they will like that kind of letter.” Aunt Polly thought so, too, and she gave Bobby her own pretty mahogany “secretary” that was ever so old a desk, to write at. Bobby put his tongue in his cheek and worked hard for fifteen minutes. Then he was ready to read aloud. “‘Dear Daddy and Mother:’” he read. “‘We thought you would like to hear from us. Last week Peter was haying and Meg and I helped him make loads. Meg drove into the barn all by herself. It is fun to see them unload the hay, because they have a thing they call a hayfork that comes down and takes up big handfuls and carries it up to the mow. I can almost milk. “Will they know that’s from you?” asked Meg doubtfully, slipping into the chair at the desk and taking up the pencil to print her letter. “You never call yourself Robert.” “I guess I know how to write a letter,” Bobby informed her with dignity. “You always sign your real names to letters, don’t you, Aunt Polly?” “Yes, indeed, dear,” said Aunt Polly, who was doing something to a pair of overalls. Meg printed slowly and carefully, and soon her letter was ready to be read aloud. “‘Dear Daddy and Mother,’” she began proudly. “‘We hope you are well. We are. Dot most wasn’t, but I took care of her. She went out to the barn to hunt for eggs, and the turkey gobbler saw her. He thought she was carrying corn in the basket. He chased her and she ran. I heard her crying and I ran down to the barn. She was backed up into a corner and he was making noises at her. He is awful big, The twins had kept still as long as they could, and now it was their turn. “Tell Mother ’bout the snake I saw this morning,” said Twaddles. “Jud says it was a black snake after baby robins. It was on the grape arbor where there is a robin’s nest. Jud killed it.” “Tell Daddy I weeded a whole onion row for Aunt Polly,” begged Dot. “Wait a minute, I have to sign my name,” interrupted Meg. And she signed it, “Margaret Alice Blossom,” right in among the words of the twins’ letters that Bobby was patiently writing. The next day was very warm, and Aunt Polly thought they had better play in the orchard instead of picking berries, so they trooped out soon after breakfast, to find the orchard cool and shady. “I wish I had my book that was drowned,” mourned Meg. “I love to sit up in a tree and read.” “Well, I loved Geraldine better than Tottie-Fay,” said Dot, giving the old doll a shake as she spoke. “No use fussing,” advised the sensible Bobby. “They’re lost, and we mustn’t let Aunt Polly hear us, ’cause she’ll think she ought to go right off and buy us some more. I’m going to climb this tree. Who wants a ripe apple?” “I do,” and Meg jumped up. “Let me hold my apron and you throw ’em down, Bobby. Twaddles, stop teasing Spotty.” “I aren’t teasing him,” declared Twaddles indignantly. “I’m going to teach him to carry bundles.” Twaddles’ method of teaching the patient Spotty was to sit down on him with feet spread wide apart and wait for the dog to shake him off. Dot sat down quietly in the grass and began to make a bouquet of wild-flowers. It was Dot who always helped Aunt Polly weed and water When Meg had her apron full of apples she sat down near Dot, and the four ate as many sweet summer apples as four small people could who had eaten breakfast less than an hour before. “There’s Poots,” said Meg suddenly, glancing up and seeing the black cat picking her way through the grass. “Do you suppose she is hunting birds?” Poots blinked her green eyes innocently. If she were after birds, she had no intention of catching any before an audience. She sat down and began to wash her face. A mischievous idea seized Twaddles. “Rats, Spotty!” he shouted. “Rats!” Now rats sounds pretty much like “cats,” and the excited and startled Spotty did not stop to question which word Twaddles had used. He jumped up, his ears pointing forward. “Rats, sic ’em!” said bad little Twaddles. “Rats, Spotty!” Spotty barked twice sharply. Poots arose, her fur bristling. Spotty leaped at her, barking Poots ran straight for the front wall and scrambled up it, leaving Spotty to bark wildly on the ground and make futile rushes at the solid wall he couldn’t hope to climb. Some of the masonry was loose, and Poots, digging with her sharp claws, sent down a shower of dust into the dog’s eyes. He whined, and dug at his eyes with both forepaws. Then he sneezed several times. “You will chase me, will you?” Poots seemed to say, gazing down at him from her safe position. “The idea!” “Well, we might as well pick up some of this stuff,” said Twaddles, knowing that the fun was over. “It’s cooler––just feel that breeze!” exclaimed Meg. “Let’s ask Aunt Polly if we can’t go berrying after dinner.” Aunt Polly obligingly said they could, and after dinner the four little Blossoms scrambled “I wish your mother could see you,” she said, as she gave them each a bright tin pail. “No need to worry about your dress now, is there, Dot?” “Going berrying?” asked Jud, as they passed him, clipping the green hedge around the kitchen garden. “Better keep out of the sun.” The children walked down the road and turned into another field. They knew where the blackberry bushes grew, and they meant to fill their pails. “Let’s start here by this fence,” suggested Bobby. “What’s that over in Mr. Simmond’s field?” “It’s a bull,” answered Meg who knew all the animals at Brookside and on the neighboring farms by this time. “He’s as cross as can be, but he took three prizes at the last Fair.” Twaddles ate the first dozen berries he picked and then he picked another dozen for Dot’s pail. He decided that larger and better berries grew on the other side of the fence. He crawled under “You never saw such big ones!” cried Twaddles gleefully. “Meg, look!” “They are big,” agreed Meg. “Come on, Bobby, let’s go on the other side. Mr. Simmonds won’t care.” Dot was already under the fence, and Meg and Bobby stooped down and crawled under after her. The four little figures in blue overalls began to pick industriously. The berries were thick and juicy, and the bottoms of the tin pails were covered in a few minutes. Meg had just stopped to pull a briar from her thumb when she heard a bellow behind her. There stood the bull, in the middle of the field, his head down between his knees, his feet pawing the ground, and his angry eyes glaring at the berry pickers. “Oh, Bobby! The bull!” gasped Meg. “Run, Dot and Twaddles!” |