Six Little Bunkers at Cousin Tom's - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"But that'll be a white flag, Russ, and soldiers don't ever have a white flag lessen they give up and surrender. We didn't surrender, 'cause we haven't even got our fort built. We don't want a white flag."
"Oh, well, I didn't mean to have a white flag. That's just the start.
We'll take a white handkerchief for a flag and we can make it red and blue."
"How?" Laddie certainly was asking questions.
"Well, Cousin Tom has some red and blue pencils. I saw 'em on his desk the other night. He marks his papers with 'em. You go and ask Cousin Ruth if we can't take a red and a blue pencil and then I'll show you how to make a red, white and blue flag out of a handkerchief."
"You won't make the fort till I come back, will you?"
"No, I'll only start it. Now you go and get the pencils."
Laddie ran back to the bungalow and Cousin Ruth let him have what he wanted. He promised not to lose the pencils, and soon he was helping Russ mark red stripes and blue stars on Laddie's white handkerchief.
They did make something that looked like our flag, and then, finding a long piece of driftwood to use as a flag-pole they planted it on top of the hill.
Making a fort in the damp sand at the seash.o.r.e is very easy. It is even easier than making one of snow, for you don't have to wait for the snow to fall and often after it has snowed the flakes are so cold and dry that they will not pack and hold together. But you can always find damp sand at the seash.o.r.e. Even though it is dry on top if you dig down a little way you will find it moist. Now, on account of the rain, the sand was wet all over and was just fine for making forts.
Russ and Laddie had some toy shovels their mother had bought for them.
The shovels had long handles and were larger than the kind children usually play with at the sh.o.r.e, so the boys could dig faster with them.
"How do you make a fort?" asked Laddie.
"Well," explained Russ, "you dig a sort of hole and you pile the sand up in front of you in a sort of half ring and then you can lie down behind it and if anybody throws bullets at you they won't hit you."
"Do you have a roof to your fort?"
"No! Course forts don't ever have a roof."
"Then you get wet when it rains."
"Yes, but a soldier doesn't ever mind rain. All he minds is bullets, and they can't hit him in the fort."
"Supposin' they come over the top where there isn't a roof?"
"I don't guess they'll come that way," said Russ. "Anyhow, you mustn't throw any that way."
"Oh! am I going to throw the bullets?"
"Yes," Russ replied, "We'll take turns being in the fort. After we get it made I'll be captain of it and you must come up and try to take it away. You must shoot bullets at me."
"Real ones?"
"No, course not! Make 'em of paper. Then they won't hurt. After a while I'll take down the flag--that means I surrender--and you can be in the fort and I'll fire bullets at you."
"That'll be fun!" exclaimed Laddie.
"Lots of fun!" agreed Russ.
So they dug in the sand with their shovels, piling it up in front of them in a long ridge shaped like a half circle. The ridge of sand which was to be the outer wall of the fort was in front of the hill over which floated the red, white and blue handkerchief flag. Between the hill and the outer wall of the fort was a hole which was made as Laddie and Russ tossed out the sand.
"I'll sit down in this hole," Russ explained, "and then it will be all the harder for you to hit me with the paper bullets."
The boys fairly made the sand fly as they dug with their shovels, and soon they had quite a high ridge of it half way around the little hill with the flag on top. There was also quite a hole for Russ to stand in and throw paper bullets back at Laddie.
"Now I guess we can have the battle," said Russ. "You get a lot of paper, Laddie, and roll it up into bullets."
"And I'll make some big ones!" exclaimed the little fellow.
"We can call the big bullets cannon b.a.l.l.s," said Russ, and Laddie agreed to this. "I'll help you make the bullets," Russ offered.
There were plenty of old papers at the bungalow, and soon Russ and Laddie were tearing them up on the beach near their fort and wadding and rolling them up into "bullets" and "cannon b.a.l.l.s."
"I guess we have enough," said Russ at last. "Come on now, we'll have a battle."
"Are Rose and Vi going to play?" asked Laddie.
"Nope! Girls never can be in a battle. They can be Red Cross nurses if they want to. But we won't call 'em until after the fight. They'd only holler like anything."
Rose and Violet were up in the bungalow playing jackstones, while Margy and Mun Bun had gone for a walk with their mother. So Russ and Laddie had the beach to themselves to play on.
Russ got inside the fort and crouched down in the hole he had dug.
Laddie took up his position not far away, a little distance down the beach, having with him a pile of paper wads that he was to throw at his brother.
"Are you ready?" asked Laddie.
"All ready!" answered Russ. "Go ahead and fire!"
"Bang! Bang!" shouted Laddie, making believe he was shooting off a gun.
The boys often played this game so they knew just how to do it. "Bang!
Bang!"
Then Laddie began throwing large and small wads of paper at the sand fort behind which crouched Russ. And Russ threw wads of paper at his smaller brother.
The sand walls of the fort kept Russ from being "shot" in the battle.
Laddie's "bullets" and "cannon b.a.l.l.s" hit the sand walls of the fort more often than they struck his brother and Russ only laughed at them, at the same time he was pelting Laddie.
"Oh, say! this is no fun," complained the smaller boy after a bit. "I'm getting hit all the while and you don't get any at all."
"I do so! I got hit twice!"
"Well, that was when I threw cannon b.a.l.l.s up in the air and they came down on your head like rain."
"Well, you shoot me a few more times and then I'll let you come into the fort," agreed Russ. "I'll pull down the flag and surrender. Go on, shoot me some more!"
So Laddie got together more paper "bullets" and "cannon b.a.l.l.s" and threw them at his brother. But hardly any of them hit Russ. The fort was a good protection and with the flag floating from the top of the hill made a fine place for him to stay.
"This is the last time I'm going to shoot!" cried Laddie, and he took good aim with a large wad of paper which he called a "double cannon ball."