The foolish little puppy crouched
down directly in the path of the lumbering motor-truck.
The children could feel the ground quivering as the
weight of the heavy wheels jarred at every turn.
Brother forgot that he had promised
to be careful about automobiles. He forgot that,
bad as it would be for a motor-driver to run over a
puppy dog, it would be twenty times worse for him
to run down a little boy. He forgot everything
except the fact that his dog was in danger!
“Look out!” shrieked Nellie Yarrow.
“Roddy, come back!”
A huge red touring car, filled with
laughing girls, whizzed past him, and after that a
light delivery car that had to swerve sharply to avoid
striking him. As Brother reached the dog he thought
the motor-truck was going to roll right over him,
and he closed his eyes and made a grab for Brownie.
When he opened them, the truck was standing still,
two wheels in the ditch, and three men were climbing
down and starting toward him.
“Are you hurt, Roddy?”
cried Sister, skipping into the road, followed by
Nellie. “My, I thought that truck was going
to run over you sure!”
“Come out of the road, you kids!”
ordered one of the men roughly, pushing the three
children not unkindly over in the direction of the
ditch. “This is no place to stand and talk hasn’t
your mother ever told you to keep out of the streets?”
The driver of the truck, who was a
young man with blue eyes and a quick smile, patted
Brownie on the head gently.
“I saw the dog,” he explained
to Brother. “I wouldn’t have run over
him, anyway. Next time, no matter what happens,
don’t you run into the road. Cars going
the other way might have struck you, and I didn’t
know which way you were going to jump after you got
the dog. No driver wants to run over a dog if
he can help it, and you children only make matters
worse by dashing in among traffic.”
“I didn’t mean to,”
said Brother sorrowfully. “Only I didn’t
want Brownie to get hurt. I hardly ever dash
among traffic, do I, Sister?”
“No, he doesn’t,”
declared Sister loyally, while Nellie stood silently
by. “Mother always makes us promise to be
careful ’bout dashing.”
The three men laughed.
“Well, as long as you don’t
make it a practice, we won’t count this time,”
said the man who had told them not to stand talking
in the road. “Now scoot back to the sidewalk or,
here, George, you take them over. That’s
a nice dog you have.”
George, it proved, was the driver,
and he took Sister by one hand and Brother by the
other. Nellie held Sister’s other hand and
Brother carried Brownie, and in this order they made
their way safely back to the pavement on the other
side of the street.
“Good-bye, and don’t forget
about keeping out of the street,” said the truck-driver
cheerfully, when he had them neatly lined up on the
curb.
They watched him run back to his machine as
Brother observed, he didn’t look to see whether
any motor-cars were likely to run him down, but then,
of course, he was grown up and used to them saw
him mount to the high seat, and waved good-bye to
all three men. Then they walked on, for the sand-toys
were still to be bought.
Brother and Sister were the most careful
of shoppers, and with Nellie to help them by suggestions,
they managed to find a set of tin sand-dishes, a windmill
that pumped sand, a little iron dumpcart that would
be very useful to carry loads, and a string of tin
buckets that went up and down on a chain and filled
with sand and emptied again as long as anyone would
turn the handle.
“Come over after lunch and we’ll
play,” said Sister as Nellie left them at her
own hedge.
Nellie did come over and the three
children had a wonderful time with the new toys and
the clean white sand, while Brownie slept comfortably
under the tree. Before Nellie was ready to go
home, however, a thunder storm came up and her mother
called her to come in. Mother Morrison came out
and helped Brother and Sister to carry their box into
the barn, where the sand would not get wet.
“You don’t want to play
with the sandbox all the time, dearies,” she
said, leading the way back to the house. “If
you play too steadily with anything, presently you
will find that you are growing tired of it. Now
play on the porch, or find something nice to do in
the house, and tomorrow Jimmie will put the box under
the tree again for you.”
It was very warm and sticky, and Sister
tumbled into the comfortable porch swing, meaning
to stay there just a few minutes. She fell asleep
and slept all through the storm, waking up a little
cross, as one is apt to do on a hot summer afternoon.
The rain had stopped and Brother had gone over to
see Grandmother Hastings.
“Hello, Sister,” Louise
greeted her when she raised a flushed, warm face and
touseled hair from the canvas cushions. “You’ve
had a fine nap. Want me to go upstairs with you
and help you find a clean dress?”
“No,” said Sister a bit crossly.
“You’ll feel much better,
honey, when your face is washed and you have on a
thinner frock,” urged Louise, putting down her
knitting. “Come upstairs like a good girl,
and I’ll tell you what I saw Miss Putnam doing
as I came past her house this afternoon.”
Sister toiled upstairs after Louise,
feeling much abused. She had not intended to
take a nap, and now here she had slept away good playtime
and was certainly warmer and more uncomfortable than
she had been before she went to sleep.
But after Louise had bathed her face
and hands in cool water and had brushed her hair and
buttoned her into a pretty white dress with blue spots,
Sister was her own sunny self. She had not been
thoroughly awake, you see, and that was the reason
she felt a little cross.
“What was Miss Putnam doing?”
she asked curiously, watching Louise fold up the frock
she had taken off.
“She was out in her yard nailing
something on the fence,” said Louise. “I
saw her when I was a block away, hammering as though
her life depended on it. A crowd of boys were
watching her at a safe distance and
when I came near enough I saw she had a roll of wire
in the yard. She was nailing barbwire along the
fence pickets!”
“How mean!” scolded Sister.
“No one wants to climb over her old fence, or
swing on her gate.”
“Well, I think it is a shame
the way the boys torment her,” declared Louise
severely. “Jimmie says he caught a little
red-headed boy the other day throwing old tin cans
over her fence. You know what Daddy would say
if he ever thought you or Brother did anything like
that.”
“We don’t,” Sister
assured her earnestly. “We never bother
Miss Putnam.”