Mary Jane--Her Visit - BestLightNovel.com
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"So that's the reason you wouldn't read Mother's letter yesterday,"
said Mary Jane.
"That's it," agreed Grandfather.
"And that's the reason you were so tired last night," continued Mary Jane. "You'd been working so hard to 'sprise me."
"Well," admitted Grandfather, "that may have had something to do with it."
"I think I've got the _bestest_ grandfather!" exclaimed Mary Jane suddenly, and she threw her arms around him so hard, oh, ever so hard.
"And now do we work here?"
"Not to-day," said Grandfather, "because you couldn't work with my big tools. Tomorrow morning I'll drive into the village and get you a little set of tools just your size like you have at home. This afternoon we'll look around and see if everything's all right in my garden. Then to-morrow we can go to work, as soon as we come home."
Mary Jane took hold of his hand and together they went back into his nice big garden.
"Um-m-m," said Grandfather suddenly as he bent over his carrot bed. "I was afraid so, I was afraid so!"
"What's the matter?" asked Mary Jane who couldn't see that much was wrong.
"See those nibbled off carrots?" asked Grandfather.
Mary Jane looked closely and saw the broken tips.
"We'll have to catch that thief," said Grandfather. "I guess we need Bob after all." Grandfather stuck his finger to his mouth and made a loud whistle. Then he called, "Here Bob! Here Bob! Here Bob!"
Bob came bounding down the garden path, wagging his tail and eager to be of use.
"See that?" demanded Grandfather, pointing to the broken tips.
Bob sniffed and sniffed. He twisted his ears backward and forward and sniffed again. Then he started briskly over to the back of the garden.
"We'll find him!" exclaimed Grandfather. "Come on, Mary Jane! Bob's not much of a hunter but I'll guess that he'll find him and we'll scare him off!"
Mary Jane, who didn't in the least understand who "him" was or what was going to be found or done, trotted along behind her grandfather and Bob eager to see something new.
THE GARDEN THIEF
"What are we doing, Grandfather?" asked Mary Jane as she trotted along behind her grandfather and Bob. "What are we doing and where are we going and who's the thief?"
"No time to talk," called Grandfather over his shoulder. "You'll see!
Come along and take hold of my hand."
Mary Jane ran as fast as ever she could till she caught up with her grandfather and got a firm hold of his hand. Then she felt better: for when a little girl doesn't know what _is_ going on, she wants to have hold of _something_--you know how that is yourself. Bob led them out of the corner of the garden; across the small cornfield back of the barn; across the pasture and into the woods beyond. There he stopped and sniffed in the bushes and through the dead leaves in what Mary Jane thought was the most curious way she had ever seen a dog act.
"Well!" exclaimed Grandfather disgustedly, "if you can't find him any better than that--I'll hunt myself!" And to Mary Jane's amazement, he too, began hunting in the piles of dead leaves where Bob was diligently sniffing.
Suddenly he cried, "Mary Jane! Mary Jane! Come here this minute!"
Mary Jane, who had been standing by a stump where her grandfather left her when he followed Bob into the woods, eagerly ran over to where he stood. He waited quietly till she was clear up to him and then he reached down and lifted up a pile of dead leaves and rubbish.
"Oh, Grandfather!" exclaimed the little girl, "what are they?"
"What do you think they are?" he asked.
"I don't think," replied Mary Jane, "'cause I never saw them before.
But they look like the Easter things at the store."
"Right you are!" exclaimed Grandfather much pleased. "They're baby rabbits--and in one of the prettiest little nests I ever found. I'm glad you were along to see."
"Were they what you were hunting, Grandfather?" asked Mary Jane as she half timidly bent over the little bundle of gray and white fur. "They wouldn't steal your garden, would they?"
"No, not those pretty little things," replied Grandfather, "but their father would. Can't say as I blame him though," continued Grandfather, laughing, "with such a family to feed he'd naturally have to get whatever he could. Usually the rabbits don't bother my garden. Well, p.u.s.s.y, what shall we do with them?"
"Do with them?" asked Mary Jane. "What is there to do?"
Grandfather looked down at the little girl; by this time she was on her knees beside the nest, and bending over the little rabbits as though she'd like to touch them but didn't feel quite well enough acquainted.
"Shall we leave them out here or--"
But Mary Jane didn't give him a chance to finish his sentence.
"Oh, Grandfather!" she exclaimed, "could we take them home?"
"I guess we could if you wanted to," he said. "Your mother was always a great hand for pet rabbits and I believe that the very house I once built for her, is up in the loft to this day. Let's cover them over again and go find it."
"Will they stay here while we're gone?" asked Mary Jane as he tenderly laid the leaves back over the little creatures.
"They will till their mother gets a chance to take them away," answered Grandfather. "If she thinks we'll hurt them, she'll carry them to some other hiding place. But if we hurry, we'll get them first."
"Won't she know that we'll take good care of them?" asked Mary Jane.
"She won't know it at first," replied Grandfather, "but she'll soon find out. We'll fix them up in a comfortable box and they'll be as safe and happy and perhaps even better fed than if they'd stayed out here in the woods where stray dogs might hurt them. Come on, now, p.u.s.s.y; let's hurry for the box."
Mary Jane took hold of his hand again and they hurried back through the pasture and the cornfield to the barn.
It didn't take Grandfather long to find the little rabbit house he had made for Mary Jane's mother years ago. "The box part is good as new,"
he said, "and I'll get some fresh screening from the attic to cover over this open side."
Mary Jane trotted along beside him up to the mysterious, big attic at the top of the house, where, from a dark corner, he pulled a strip of new wire screen. They took it down to the back porch where he had left the box and in less than half an hour he had the new home all ready for the rabbits.
Of course Grandmother heard them working around and came to see what was going on.
"Oh, the cunningest bunnies, five of them, we found," Mary Jane told her, "little and soft and gray and white just like the Easter bunnies in the store, and we're going to bring them up to your house to live so not any bad dogs will hurt them and so I can feed them."
"Won't that be fun," said Grandmother approvingly, "but how are you going to carry them?"