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"I guess so," agreed her brother. "Here, Jumbo!" he went on. "Here's some meat for you!"
"Jumbo's getting real big," said Sue, as she watched the largest of the pets.
"And Judy is growing," added Bunny. "I wish we had had these 'gators when we gave our show."
"Yes," agreed his sister. "Well, maybe we can have another show. Or we could put the alligators in a store the next time we play."
"Yes," said Bunny. "Only maybe you couldn't wrap up a 'gator in a piece of paper. He might bite his way out."
"That's so," said Sue. "Well, we could----"
But she did not finish what she was saying, for a loud barking suddenly sounded outside the barn. At this noise Bunny and Sue started on a run for the door.
CHAPTER III
SOMETHING IN A DESK
Splash, the dog, was barking loudly at something up in a tree near the barn. Bunny and Sue could not see what it was, but it was something that had caused Splash to get very much excited. He leaped up and down and ran in circles about the tree, barking loudly all the while.
"It's a cat!" exclaimed Sue.
"Can't be a cat," Bunny answered. "Splash likes all the cats around here."
"Maybe it's a strange cat," went on Sue.
"That's so," agreed Bunny Brown. "Here, Splas.h.!.+" he called. "What you barking at a cat for?"
The only answer the dog made was to bark again.
Bunny and his sister, forgetting all about their pet alligators, ran to the foot of the tree, up in which was something that had caused Splash to cease his play in another part of the yard and run toward the barn.
The rain had now stopped, and the sun was getting ready to s.h.i.+ne.
"What is it, Splash? What is it?" asked Bunny, trying to peer up among the leaves of the tree.
"I see it!" suddenly cried Sue. "It's w.a.n.go, Mr. Winkler's pet monkey!"
"Oh, yes! I see it now!" called Bunny. "Here, Splas.h.!.+ Stop barking at w.a.n.go!" ordered the little boy. "Don't you know he's a friend of yours?
Stop it, Splas.h.!.+"
Splash finally ceased barking and sat down to look eagerly up into the tree. He would not have hurt the monkey, for the two animals were good friends. I suppose Splash had seen the monkey leaping from the branches of one tree into another, and, not realizing that it was his friend w.a.n.go, had given chase. w.a.n.go was a bit frightened at first, even by the barking of his dog friend Splash, and had taken refuge in the tree near the barn.
"Come on down, w.a.n.go! Come on down!" invited Bunny.
"Yes, please do," added Sue. "We won't let Splash hurt you. Don't you bark any more, Splas.h.!.+" she cried, shaking her finger at the dog.
Splash whined. He really only meant to have a little fun with w.a.n.go. But the monkey did not come down. He clung to the tree branch with his hands and tail and looked at the children, whom he well knew, for they were kind to him.
"I know how to get him down," said Bunny. "You go into the house and get a piece of cake for him, Sue. Take Splash with you. Then w.a.n.go won't be afraid."
"All right," agreed the little girl. She was always ready to run errands like this when she and Bunny could have fun. "Come on, Splas.h.!.+" she called, and the dog followed her, looking back once at Bunny, as if to ask why the boy, too, was not following. But Bunny stayed near the tree in which w.a.n.go still clung.
"Mother," cried Sue, tramping into the house in her rubber boots, "please may Bunny and I have some cake for w.a.n.go?"
"You can't go over to Mr. Winkler's in the rain," said Mrs. Brown.
"You'd better stay out in the barn and feed your pet alligators."
"Oh, but the rain is over," Sue explained. "The sun is coming out. And w.a.n.go isn't over at his own home. He's up in one of our trees. Splash chased him up there, I guess, and barked at him. And he won't come down--I mean w.a.n.go won't. And will you please keep him in here till I take him out some cake. I mean," explained Sue, half out of breath, "you please keep Splash here in the house while I take some cake out to Bunny to feed w.a.n.go to get him down from the tree."
"My, what a lot of talk for a little girl!" laughed Mrs. Brown. "Well, I suppose w.a.n.go has run away again from Jed. You and Bunny may take the monkey back. Ask Mary to give you a bit of cake. I'll keep Splash in the house."
Sue got the cake, but it was rather difficult for Mrs. Brown to keep the dog in. He was eager to follow Sue back to the tree again. But it would be hard work to get w.a.n.go down, once the monkey was frightened, if Splash kept on barking, which he was pretty sure to do. He even barked loudly, Splash did, while he was being held in the house by Mrs. Brown.
Sue ran out with the cake to Bunny, who was waiting beneath the tree.
"Is w.a.n.go there yet?" the little girl wanted to know.
"Yes," Bunny answered. "But he's coming down a little."
And the monkey came down still farther when he saw the cake, of which he was very fond. He was soon perched on Bunny's shoulder, eating the treat, Sue feeding him little pieces one at a time.
"Let's take him back to Mr. Winkler's house," suggested Bunny, as the sun now came out bright and warm. "I guess the sailor will be looking for him."
"Yes, I guess so," agreed Sue.
w.a.n.go had a great habit of running away from his master's home, and, more than once, Bunny Brown and his sister Sue had taken back the sailor's pet. This they now did again, and as they knocked at the side door, Miss Winkler opened it.
"Here's your monkey back," said Bunny, after the first greetings.
"Huh! 'Tisn't _my_ monkey!" declared Miss Winkler. "It's Jed's! I shouldn't ever worry if it never came home! Still, that isn't saying it's your fault, Bunny and Sue. I know you mean to be kind, and Jed will thank you, even if I don't. w.a.n.go, you rascal, why don't you stay away when you run off? I don't want you around! What with the poll parrot----"
"Polly wants a cracker! Polly wants a cracker!" shrieked the green bird.
"A fire cracker's what you ought to have!" sniffed Miss Winkler, who did not like the two pets her sailor brother had brought back with him from one of his voyages.
"Cracker! Cracker! Put the kettle on the fire! Polly wants a cracker!"
yelled the bird, and w.a.n.go began to chatter, the two of them making such a racket that Miss Winkler held her hands over her ears while Bunny and Sue could not help laughing.
"Stop it! Stop it!" yelled the maiden lady, and finally the monkey and the parrot grew quiet.
"Put w.a.n.go in his cage, Sue, if you please," said Miss Winkler. "And I'll tell Jed, when he comes home, how good you were to bring w.a.n.go back--not that I want the creature, though. Well, it's cleared off, I'm glad to see. And now maybe you two will have a piece of cake for yourselves. I won't give w.a.n.go any, though!"
"Yes'm, I could eat a bit," said Bunny, with a smile.
"I like it, too," added Sue.