Bunny Brown and His Sister Sue Playing Circus - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Say, that's a good way to get up on a horse's back, Ben!" called Bunker Blue, who had seen what Ben had done. "Where did you learn that trick of jumping up?"
"Oh, I--I just sort of learned it--that's all. It's easy when you practise it."
"Well, I'm going to practise then," said Bunker. "I'd like to learn to jump on a horse's back the way you did."
When the horses had had their water Bunker lifted Sue down from the back of Major.
"But I want to ride back to the barn," the little girl said.
"And in a minute so you shall," promised Bunker. "Only, just now, I want to see if I can jump up the way Ben did."
Bunker tried it, but he nearly fell.
"I can't do it," he said. "It looks easy, but it's hard. You must have had to practise a good while, Ben."
"Yes, I did."
"How long?"
"Oh, about five years!"
Bunker Blue whistled in surprise.
"Five years!" he cried. "I'll never be able to do that. Let me see once more how you do it."
Ben lifted Bunny down, and once more the strange boy leaped with one jump upon the back of the horse.
"Why, he does it just like the men in the circus!" exclaimed Sue. "Oh, Bunny, Ben will make a good jumper in our circus."
"Yes," agreed the little boy. "Do you think, Ben, you could show me how to get on a horse's back that way?" Bunny asked.
"Well, I'm afraid not--not such a little boy as you," answered Ben, as he lifted Bunny up on Prince's back once more for the ride to the barn.
The horses were tied in their stalls again, after Bunny and Sue had been lifted from the backs of the animals. Then Bunny said:
"You are going to stay here and help work on the farm, Ben. My grandmother said so. And, if you are, will you come out and look at the barn where we are going to have our circus? Maybe you and Bunker can help us put up the trapeze."
"Not now, Bunny boy," said Bunker. "We have to go and pull weeds out of the garden. We'll look at the barn right after dinner."
And this Ben and Bunker did. Bunny and Sue showed Ben the mow, and the pile of hay, into which the trapeze performers were to fall, instead of into nets.
"So they won't get hurt," Bunny explained. "We haven't any nets, anyhow."
"Do you think we could have a circus here?" Sue wanted to know.
"Why, I should think so," Ben answered, looking up toward the roof of the barn. "Yes, you could have a good make-believe circus here."
"Will you help?" asked Bunny eagerly.
Ben Hall laughed, and looked at Bunny and Sue in a queer sort of way.
"What makes you think I can help you make a play-circus?" he asked.
"Oh, I guess you can, all right," spoke up Bunker Blue. "I guess you know more about a circus than you let us think. Don't you now?"
"Oh, well, I've seen 'em," said Ben, slowly.
"And the way you jumped on the horse--why, you must have been watching pretty hard to see just how to do that," Bunker went on. "I've seen lots of circuses, but I can't jump up the way you can, Ben."
"Then he can ride a horse in our circus," said Sue.
"Can you hang on a trapeze?" asked Bunny.
"Well, maybe," the new boy answered. "But you haven't any trapeze here, have you?"
"We can make one, out of a broom stick and some clothes line," said Bunny. "I've got 'em all ready," and he showed where he had put, in a hole in the hay, the rope and stick.
"Good! That's the idea!" exclaimed Ben Hall. "Now I'll just climb up to the roof beams, and fasten the rope of the trapeze."
Up climbed Ben, and he was making fast the ropes, when, all at once Bunny, Sue and Bunker Blue, who were watching the strange boy, saw him suddenly slip off the beam on which he was standing.
"Oh, poor Ben!" sighed Sue. "He's going to get an awful hard b.u.mp, so he is!"
CHAPTER VII
BUNNY HAS A FALL
Down and down, from the big beam near the top of the barn, fell Ben Hall. And, as Bunny Brown and his sister Sue watched the new, strange boy, something queer happened.
For, instead of falling straight down, head first or feet first as you would think any one ought to fall, Ben began turning over and over. Over and over he turned, first his feet and then his head and then his back being pointed toward the pile of hay on the bottom of the barn floor.
"Oh, look! look!" cried Sue.
"What--what makes him do that?" asked Bunny Brown.
"I guess he wants to," answered Bunker Blue. Bunny and his sister thought they were going to be frightened when they saw Ben slip and fall. But when the children saw Bunker Blue laughing they smiled too.
It was queer to see Ben turning over and over in that funny way.
"I guess he likes to do it," said Bunker.
"Whoop-la!" yelled Ben as he came somersaulting down, for that is what he was doing; turning one somersault after another, over and over in the air as he fell.
And then, in a few seconds, he landed safely on his feet in a soft pile of hay, so he wasn't hurt a bit.