Six Little Bunkers at Aunt Jo's - BestLightNovel.com
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"No, don't!" laughed Aunt Jo. "Alexis has just been given a bath by William, and our dog pet is wet. He'd be worse for the floor than a few crumbs are. I'll have them swept up, Mun Bun. But come, let's get ready for the auto ride."
When the time to go came, Russ and Laddie said they wanted to stay at home. This was unusual. Generally they were the first to want to go.
"Why aren't you coming?" asked Rose of Russ. "Maybe we might find my doll that sailed away with the balloons."
"Oh, I don't guess you will," said Russ.
"Anyhow, Laddie and I are going to make some things when you're gone.
We've got to make 'em so we can fly 'em with Tom Martin. He's going to make one, too."
"Will it fly?" asked Rose. "Oh, is it an airs.h.i.+p?"
"No, it's just a kite," said Russ. "I started to make one, but I didn't finish. Now I'm going to make a good one so it will fly away up high.
And so are Laddie and Tom. That's why we don't want to go in the auto."
"All right, then we'll leave you and Laddie at home with your father and William," said Aunt Jo, for she was going to run the car herself.
"Be good boys," begged Mrs. Bunker.
"We will!" promised Russ.
"And you won't spin tops and break any more windows, will you?" inquired Aunt Jo.
"Nope!" agreed Laddie. "We'll just fly kites, and they can't break windows, or do any thing else."
But you just wait and see what happens.
After Aunt Jo and the others had gone off in the car, Russ and Laddie got their paste, paper and string, and began making kites. Russ knew how pretty well, and he showed Laddie. They made kites with tails on them, as these are easier for small boys to build, though they are not so easy to fly as the kind without tails. The tails of kites get tangled in so many things.
"Now mine's done," said Russ, as he held up his finished toy.
"I wish mine was," replied Laddie.
"I'll help you," offered his brother, and he did.
The two boys were soon ready to go to a vacant lot not far from Aunt Jo's house, to fly their kites.
"A city's no place to fly kites," said Laddie. "We ought to be in the country."
"We ought to be at Grandma Bell's," agreed Russ. "That was a dandy place to fly kites--big fields and no telegraph wires to tangle the tail in."
However, they managed, after some hard work, to get their kites up into the air, and then they sat in the lot, holding the strings and sending up messengers.
CHAPTER XX
THE JUMPING ROPE
"My kite's higher than yours," said Laddie, as he looked at his plaything, away up in the air, and then at his brother's.
"Well, I haven't let out all my string yet," Russ answered. "I can make mine go up a lot higher than yours when I unwind some more cord, and I'm going to."
"I'm going to send up another messenger," said Laddie. "I haven't got any more string to let out, but maybe I could get some."
He took a small piece of paper, put a hole in it, and then slipped through this hole the stick to which his kite cord was tied. Then the piece of paper went sailing up the kite string, twirling around and around until it was half way to the kite itself.
"Look at my messenger go!" cried Laddie, as the piece of paper whirled around and around in a brisk breeze. "Why don't you send up one, and we can have a race?"
"I will!" exclaimed Russ. "We'll have a race with the paper messengers, and then I'll get some more string, and send my kite higher."
"So'll I," decided Laddie. "Oh, Russ, we can even have a race with the kites!" he went on. "We'll see whose kite will go highest."
"Yes, we can do that," agreed the older boy. "Now I'll make a messenger."
So Russ did that, and as the messenger Laddie had put on was, by this time, nearly up to his kite, he put another on the string. The boys held them from going up until both were ready, and then, just as when they sometimes had a foot race, Russ cried:
"Go!"
They took their hands off the paper messengers, and up the strings they shot, the wind blowing them very fast.
"Look at 'em go! Look at 'em!" cried Laddie, dancing about in delight.
"And you'd better look out and not let go of your kite string, or that'll go, too," said Russ. "Your kite'll fly away same as Rose's balloon airs.h.i.+p did."
"I wonder if they'd go to the same place," said Laddie. "If my kite would be sure to fly to where Rose let the balloons fly to I'd let it go."
"Why would you?" asked Russ.
"'Cause then I could find Rose's doll for her. I could walk along by my kite string and keep on going and going and going, and then I'd come to the place where the kite was and there would be the basket with the doll in it."
"Yes, that would be nice," said Russ. "But I don't guess they'd go to the same place. You'd better hold on to your kite."
"I will," agreed Laddie. "I wonder how high we could let our kites go up?" he went on, as he watched the messengers whirling around the strings. "How far would they go?"
"They'd go as far as you had cord for," said Russ.
"Could they go away up to the sky?" asked Laddie.
"'Course they could," said Russ.
"The sky's awful far," went on Laddie, looking up at the blue part, across which the white, fleecy clouds were flying.
"Yes, it's far," a.s.sented Russ. "But we could get an awful lot of string, and let the kites go up."
"Could we do it now?" the smaller boy wanted to know. "I'd like to see my kite go up to the sky."