Six Little Bunkers at Grandma Bell's - BestLightNovel.com
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Zip gave Russ, Rose and Vi as nice a ride as he had given the two boys, and the girls clapped their hands in glee and laughed joyously as they rattled along over the paths.
Then came the turn of Margy and Mun Bun, and they liked it more than any one, I guess, and didn't want to get out of the cart.
"But Zip is tired now," said Mrs. Bunker. "See how fast he is breathing, and how his tongue hangs out of his mouth," for the dog had been pulling the cart for over an hour. "Get out, Mun and Margy, and you may have another ride after Zip rests."
The little children loved the dog, and wanted to be kind to him; so, when their mother told them this, they got out of the cart, and Zip was unharnessed and given some cold water to drink and a nice bone on which to gnaw.
"If he was a horse he could have oats," said Russ. "But I guess he likes a bone better."
"I guess so, too," said Grandma Bell, and she smiled.
With the dog-cart, taking rowing trips on the lake now and then, going fis.h.i.+ng, hunting for berries and walking in the woods, the six little Bunkers at Grandma Bell's had a fine time that early summer. There seemed to be something new to do every day, or, if there wasn't, Russ or Laddie made it.
"And I've thought up a new riddle," said the smaller boy one day.
"What's it about?" asked Russ.
"It's about Zip," Laddie replied. "Why is Zip like a little boy when he's tired? I mean when Zip is tired. Why is he like a little boy then?"
"'Cause he wants to sit down and rest," answered Russ.
"Nope; that isn't the answer," said Laddie, shaking his head.
"Why isn't it?"
"'Cause it isn't. I know the answer, and it isn't that. Tom helped me think the riddle up. Maybe it's an old one, but Tom said it was good. Why is Zip, when he's tired, like a little boy?"
Russ thought for a while, and then he said:
"I don't know. I give up. Why is he, Laddie?"
"'Cause his breath comes in short pants. You see when Zip is tired his breath is short--he pants, Tom told me. And a little boy, like you and me, Russ, wears short pants. So that's why Zip is like one."
"Oh, I see!" laughed Russ. "That's pretty good. I know a riddle too, Laddie."
"What is it?"
"This. What makes a miller wear a white hat?"
Laddie thought over this for a moment or two and then said:
"He wears a white hat so the flour dust won't show so plain."
"Nope; that isn't it," Russ declared.
"Is it because n.o.body would sell him a black hat?" asked Laddie.
"Nope. Shall I tell you the answer?"
"No. Let me guess!" begged the smaller boy.
He gave several other answers, none of which, Russ said, was right, and at last Laddie murmured:
"I give up! Why does a miller wear a white hat?"
"To keep his head warm, same as anybody else!" laughed Russ. "Tom told me that riddle, too," he added.
"Well," said Laddie slowly, as he took off his own hat to run his fingers through his hair, "that isn't as good a riddle as the one about Zip's breath coming in short pants."
"Maybe not. But it's harder to guess," said Russ.
Then the two boys, after waiting for Zip's breath to come out of short pants--that is, waiting for him to get rested--went for a ride in the dog-cart.
As they were going down the road they saw, coming toward them, a man with bright red hair. He was driving a horse and carriage.
"There's Mr. Hurd," said Russ. "He's the one we thought was the tramp lumberman that got daddy's real estate papers."
"I see him," said Laddie. "Look! He's waving to us! Let's go over and see what he wants."
Mr. Hurd was driving down a cross road, and waited for the boys to come up to him.
"h.e.l.lo, Russ and Laddie!" he called, "I've got some news for you!"
"News?" asked Russ.
"Yes. Do you remember when you took me for the red-haired lumberman that you thought had your father's papers: Remember that?"
"Yes," answered Russ, "I do. But you weren't him. I wish we could find him."
"Maybe you can," said Mr. Hurd, and Russ looked at him in a queer way.
What did Mr. Hurd mean?
CHAPTER XXII
OFF ON A TRIP
"Are you sure this tramp lumberman who took the old coat with your father's papers in it, had red hair?" asked Mr. Hurd as Zip came to a stop near the carriage, and lay down in the shade, for, not being a big horse, the dog could do almost as he pleased when harnessed up.
"Yes, he had red hair," said Russ. "But he really didn't mean to take the papers. I heard my father say. It was just a mistake."
"Yes, I guess that was it," agreed Mr. Hurd. "Well, your father would like to get those papers back, wouldn't he?"
"Indeed he would!" exclaimed Russ. "He and mother were talking about 'em only last night. Daddy would like to get 'em very much."