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"But it flew off!" Sunny Boy began to cry. "The string broke, an' it went over the brook into the woods."
Mrs. Horton, coming into the sitting room to remind Sunny Boy to wash his face and hands before dinner, found her little boy crying as though his heart would break in Grandpa's arms.
"What in the world--" she began.
"There--there--it's all right," soothed Grandpa. "We're in a peck of trouble, Olive, because we took some papers from Grandpa's desk to make a kite with and now they turn out to be two Liberty Bonds. And the kite--like the pesky contrivance it is--got away and is hiding somewhere in the woods. But we're going out right after dinner and hunt for it, aren't we, Sunny Boy?"
Sunny Boy felt Mother's kind hand smoothing his hair.
"Oh, my dear little boy!" said Mother's voice. "My dear little son! How could you? Didn't you know how wrong it was to touch a single thing on Grandpa's desk?"
"I forgot," said Sunny Boy in a very little voice.
"Why I wouldn't have believed that my Sunny Boy could forget," grieved Mother. "And now Grandpa's money is lost! And Daddy coming next week!
What will he say?"
"We're going to find it long before Daddy comes," said Grandpa stoutly.
"Right after dinner we're going over to the woods. Sunny can remember about where he thinks the kite fell. Cheer up, Olive--we're sorry we didn't remember about 'hands off' when other people's property is about, but every one forgets once in a while. And I was careless--I'm as great a sinner as Sunny. And now forgive us both before we're quite drowned in our tears."
Mother and Sunny Boy had another little cry all to themselves upstairs and he told her that never, _never_ would he touch anything that did not belong to him again without first asking. Then they both bathed their faces in clear cold water and felt better. No one mentioned bonds at dinner, and there was strawberry short-cake which Sunny Boy declared was as good as his favorite chocolate ice cream. And right after dinner he and Grandpa went out to hunt for the lost kite.
CHAPTER X
GOING FIs.h.i.+NG
But though Grandpa and Sunny Boy hunted and hunted and hunted, till it seemed as though they must have covered every inch of the big woods; though they searched the tangled thickets where the briery blackberry bushes grew along the edge of the brook; though they looked up at the trees till their necks ached, hoping perhaps to find the kite caught in the branches; still they had to come home without the precious Liberty Bonds.
"Never mind," said Grandpa, as they made their way toward home over a little pathway of stones tumbled together in the brook to make a bridge, "Never mind, Sunny. If we can't find them, we can't, and there is no use in feeling bad about it any longer. You didn't mean to lose the bonds, we all know that, so we'll just stop crying over spilled milk and cheer up and be happy again."
But it was a very unhappy little boy who went to bed early that night--for the long tramp had tired him--and for several days after the loss of the kite Sunny Boy kept rather closely to the house.
He liked to be in the kitchen with Araminta or on the side porch with Grandma and Mother. Jimmie and Bruce tried to coax him to go with them, but he said politely that he didn't feel like it.
However, as the time drew near for his father's visit Sunny Boy cheered up, and by the morning that Daddy was expected he felt quite like his usually sunny self.
"Are you going to meet Daddy?" he asked Mother that morning, as he brushed his hair after she had parted it for him.
"I don't believe I'll go down," answered Mrs. Horton. "If you and Grandpa go, that will be enough and I'll be at the gate waiting for you."
"Daddy's coming!" Sunny Boy pounded his spoon against his bread and milk bowl.
"Sunny!" said Mother warningly.
"He's most here now!" and Sunny's feet hammered against the table so that the coffee pot danced a jig.
"Sunny Boy!" implored Grandma.
"I'm going to meet him!" This time Sunny Boy upset his gla.s.s of water with a wild sweep of his arm.
Grandpa pushed back his chair.
"I think we'd better start," he observed, "before a certain young man goes out of the window. If you're as glad as all this to think that Daddy's coming, what are you going to do when you really see him?"
But Sunny Boy was already out of the room and down at the gate where Jimmie stood holding Peter and Paul already harnessed to the carryall.
"Let me feed 'em sugar," teased Sunny Boy. "Hold me up, Jimmie, I'm not 'fraid of their teeth now."
"You pile in," said Jimmie good-naturedly. "If you're going to meet that train, you want to start in a few minutes. Say, Sunny, what ails you this morning?" for Sunny Boy had gone around to the back of the carriage, scrambled up over the top of the second seat, and was now tumbling head first into the cus.h.i.+ons of the front seat.
Grandpa came out in a more leisurely fas.h.i.+on and took the reins.
"All right, Jimmie, we're off. In case anything happens to the team, Sunny has enough push in him this morning to pull the carriage there and back."
Peter and Paul trotted briskly, and Sunny's tongue kept pace with their heels. His shrill little voice was the first thing Mr. Horton heard, for the train had beaten them to the station after all, and as the carriage turned the corner of the street a familiar figure stood on the platform waving to them. Grandpa had to keep one hand on his grandson to prevent him from falling out over the wheels.
"Well, well, Son, isn't this fine!" Daddy had him in his arms almost before the horses stopped. "How brown you are! and yes, you've grown, too. I'll put the suitcase in--don't try to lift it."
Daddy put Sunny Boy down and turned and kissed Grandpa.
"You're his little boy!" Sunny thought out loud. It was the first time he had thought about it at all.
"I'm his daddy," said Grandpa proudly. "Pretty fine boy, all things considered, isn't he?"
Sunny Boy laughed because this was probably a joke. Anyway, Grandpa laughed and so did Daddy. Then they all got into the carriage and Daddy drove Peter and Paul. How Mrs. Horton laughed when she saw them drive up to the gate, all three of them crowded together on the front seat.
"You three big boys!" she teased them. "I suppose you had so much to talk about that you had to be together."
Daddy put one arm around Mother and the other about Grandma.
"Make the most of me," he said gayly. "I can stay only three days."
Then there was a great to-do. Mother and Grandma had counted on having him for three weeks. Three days, as Mother said, was "no vacation at all."
"But better than nothing," Mr. Horton pointed out. "We can do a great deal in three days. And if I can't get up again, at least I'll come up to get you and Sunny when you're ready to go home."
Well, being sensible people and not given to "crying over spilled milk"
(which was Grandpa's favorite proverb) they soon decided to enjoy every minute of Daddy's stay and to begin right away.
"Sunny and I are going fis.h.i.+ng," announced Daddy firmly. "We'll go to-day--if Araminta can give us a lunch--and Mother is coming with us, if she wants to. Then to-morrow she and I are going for a long drive, and the last day I'm going to be a farmer and help Father with the work. Come on, Sunny, upstairs with you and get on high shoes. We don't go fis.h.i.+ng in sandals and socks."
Araminta made them sandwiches and packed a box of lunch, putting in a whole apple pie. Daddy had brought his fis.h.i.+ng rod with him, and he promised to make Sunny one as soon as they found a place to fish. Mother thought she would not go, for she was already tired from a long walk the day before. So Sunny Boy and Daddy set off alone for the brook in the woods where the speckled trout lived.
"Shall I catch one?" asked Sunny Boy, scuffling along. He did like to scuffle his feet and Daddy did not seem to care how much noise he made.
"Shall I fish?"