Six Little Bunkers at Grandma Bell's - BestLightNovel.com
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"Well, now, it's a funny thing, but I _have_ got that old coat yet. It's too ragged for me to wear--it got a lot more ragged after your father gave it to me--but I sort of took a liking to it, and I kept it. I've got it yet."
"Where is it?" asked Russ eagerly.
"Right here in my cabin. Mr. Barker lets me stay here while I'm cutting down trees to build his dock. I like to be by myself. I've got the coat here. I'll get it."
He went inside and came out a moment later with a ragged coat in his hand.
It was tattered and torn.
"This is the coat your father gave me," said the lumberman, "but I'm sorry to say there are no papers in the pockets. You can look yourself if you like. There isn't a paper at all!"
As Russ watched, the red-haired man thrust his hands first into one pocket and then into the others. But no papers came out. Russ looked sad and disappointed. So did Laddie.
"This is the coat all right that I got at a real estate office in Pineville," said Mr. Gannon. "But every pocket was empty when I got it. I remember feeling in them. There were no papers at all. If there were ever any in the pockets they must have dropped out before I got the coat. The pockets are full of holes, anyhow. I'm sorry!"
So were Laddie and Russ. They watched while Mr. Gannon went through each pocket of the ragged coat once more. But it was of no use. No papers were to be found.
"Come on, Laddie," said Russ in a low voice to his brother. "We'd better go back home. Good-bye!" he called over his shoulder to the red-haired lumberman.
"Good-bye," answered Mr. Gannon. "I'm sorry to disappoint you, but I haven't your daddy's papers."
CHAPTER XXV
"HURRAY!"
Slowly and sadly Russ and Laddie drove their dog-cart back toward Grandma Bell's house. They went slowly because it was uphill from Green Pond, and Zip was tired. He had chased after a rabbit and a cat, and he had pulled Russ and Laddie all the way. No wonder the dog was tired. So the boys did not try to drive him fast.
And the two boys were sad because, though they had found the right red-haired tramp lumberman--the same one that had Daddy Bunker's ragged coat--still the real estate papers were not in it.
"It's too bad," said Russ, as Zip walked along.
"Yes," agreed Laddie.
"I thought surely we'd get the papers," Russ went on.
"And I didn't ask him any riddle," said Laddie.
"Oh, well, never mind that," went on Russ.
"Maybe I can ask him again, though," said Laddie, brightening up. "We can have daddy take us there, and I can ask him then."
"What would daddy want to take us there for?" asked Russ.
"To see the old coat. Maybe Mr. Gannon has another, and that has the papers in."
"I don't guess so," answered Russ. "Gid-dap, Zip."
Zip didn't "gid-dap" very fast, but he kept on going. And when he came to the top of the hill, and began to trot down toward Lake Sagatook, he went faster. I think he knew he could have a good rest in the barn, and also have some hot supper.
For it was getting near to supper-time. The sun was going down in the west, and in a little while it would be dark. Already the shadows were longer, and it was already a little dark when the boys drove through little patches of wood.
But they did not get lost, for Zip knew the way back, and soon the dog-cart was rattling up the gravel drive of Grandma Bell's house.
"There they come!" cried a voice, and there was a general rush to the porch. Daddy and Mother Bunker, with Grandma Bell, Jane the hired girl, and the four little Bunkers looked at the wanderers.
"Where in the world have you two been?" cried Mother Bunker.
"We were worried about you," said her husband.
"And we were just going to get Tom to hitch up the horse and go to look for you," added Grandma Bell.
"Were you lost?" Rose asked.
"Did the old ram chase you?" Vi wanted to know.
Margy and Mun Bun toddled down the steps to look at Zip, who had stretched out on the gra.s.s, still hitched to the cart.
"Oh-oo-o-o! His nose is all scratched," said Margy. "Does it hurt you, Zip?" she asked, gently patting him, and the dog wagged his tail.
"Did some other dog bite him?" asked Mun Bun.
"No, a cat scratched him," answered Russ.
"What cat?" the children's mother wanted to know.
"It was the red-haired lumberman's cat," Russ went on. "We went to his cabin, over at Green Pond, where Mr. Barker lives. His name is Mike Gannon--the tramp lumberman, I mean. Mr. Hurd told us about him, and we went to see him and----"
"I forgot to ask him a riddle!" broke in Laddie.
"Never mind about riddles now, my dear," said Mother Bunker softly. "Let us hear what Russ is saying."
"Did you really find a red-haired tramp lumberman?" asked Mr. Bunker.
"Yes," answered Russ. "And he had your ragged coat, but the papers weren't in it, Daddy. And he was sorry and so were we and I'm hungry!"
"So'm I!" added Laddie, before the words were fairly out of his brother's mouth. "I'm awful hungry!"
"But what does it all mean?" asked Mrs. Bunker. "Have you two boys really been somewhere?"
"We found the red-haired tramp lumberman, I told you," said Russ, "but he didn't have those papers."
"Let me hear all about it once again," begged Daddy Bunker. He seemed as much excited as Russ and Laddie had been when they first saw Mr. Gannon.
"First let me get them something to eat," said Grandma Bell. "We had our supper--an early one," she went on, "but I saved some for you boys. You shall eat first, and then tell us your story."
"I guess Zip wants to eat, too," said Laddie. "He didn't catch the rabbit and the cat scratched him."