Bunny Brown, in his little room, and
Sue Brown, in hers, jumped out of bed and ran to the
window. They could hear the ringing of the church
bell more plainly now.
“Ding-dong! Ding-dong!”
it sounded through the silence of the night. It
was not altogether dark, for there was a big, bright
moon in the sky, and it was almost as light as a cloudy
day.
“Can you see any blaze?”
Bunny and Sue heard their mother ask their father.
“No, not a thing. But it’s
funny that that bell should ring. I’m going
out to see what it is.”
“I’ll come with you,”
said Mrs. Brown. “I’ll just put on
my slippers, a bath robe and a cloak, and come along.
It’s so warm that I’ll not get cold.”
“All right, come along,”
said Mr. Brown. “The children are asleep
and they won’t miss us.”
Bunny and Sue felt like laughing when
they heard this. They were not asleep, but their
father and mother did not know they were awake.
Pretty soon Mr. and Mrs. Brown slipped quietly down
the stairs and out of the house-out into
the moonlit night. The church bell was still ringing
loudly, and Bunny and Sue could hear the neighbors,
in the houses on either side of them, talking about
it. Everyone wondered if there was a fire.
“Oh, Bunny!” called Sue
in a whisper to her brother, when daddy and Mother
Brown had gone out. “Is you awake, Bunny?”
“Yep, course I am! Are you?”
“Yep. Say, Bunny, let’s go to the
fire; will you?”
“Yep. I’ll just put on my bath robe
and slippers.”
“An’ I will too.
We’ll go and see what it is. Daddy and mother
won’t care, and we can come home with them.”
Now while Bunny Brown and his sister
Sue are getting ready to go out to see what that midnight
alarm means, I’ll tell you a little bit about
the children, and the other books, of Which this is
one in a series.
The first book was called “Bunny
Brown and His Sister Sue.” In that I told
you that Bunny and Sue lived with their father and
mother in Bellemere, near the ocean. Mr. Brown
was in the boat business, and he had a big boy, Bunker
Blue, as well as other men and boys, to help him.
But of them all Bunny and Sue liked Bunker Blue best.
In the first book I told how Bunny’s
and Sue’s Aunt Lu came from the city of New
York to pay them a long visit, how she lost her diamond
ring, and how Bunny found it in the queerest way.
In the second book, named “Bunny
Brown and His Sister Sue on Grandpa’s Farm,”
I told how the Brown family went on a trip in a big
automobile. It was a regular moving van of an
automobile, and so large that Bunny and Sue, Mr. and
Mrs. Brown and Bunker Blue could eat and sleep in it.
They camped out during the two or more days they were
making the trip to grandpa’s.
And what fun the children had in the
country! You may read in the book all about how
they saw the Gypsies, how they were frightened by tramps
at the picnic, how they were lost, and what jolly times
they had with their dog Splash.
Then, too, Bunny and Sue helped find
grandpa’s horses, that the Gypsies had taken
away. So, altogether, the children had lots of
fun on Grandpa Brown’s farm. They even
went to a circus, and this brings me to the third
book, which is called: “Bunny Brown and
His Sister Sue Playing Circus.”
And that is just what Bunny and Sue
did. They got up a little circus of their own,
and held it in grandpa’s barn. Then Bunker
Blue, and some of the larger boys in the country,
thought they would get up a show. They did, and
held it in two tents. Of course Bunny and Sue
helped.
A week or so after the circus Bunny
and Sue, with Bunker, and their father and mother
(and of course their dog Splash) came back from the
country in the big automobile.
Bunny and Sue had many friends in
Bellemere where they lived. Not only were the
boys and girls their friends, but also many grown folk,
who liked the Brown children very much indeed.
There was Mrs. Redden, who kept the village candy
store, and there was Uncle Tad, an old soldier, who
lived in the Brown house. Bunny and Sue liked
them very much.
Then there was old Jed Winkler, a
sailor, who lived with his sister, Miss Euphemia Winkler,
and a monkey. That’s right! Mr. Winkler
did have a pet monkey named Wango, and he was very
funny-I mean the monkey was funny.
He was so gentle that Bunny and Sue often petted him,
and gave him candy and peanuts to eat. Wango
did many queer tricks.
But now I think I have told you enough
about Bunny and Sue, as well as about their friends,
so we will go back to the children. We left them
getting ready to go out into the moonlight, you know,
to see what the ringing of the church bell meant.
“Is you all ready, Bunny?”
called Sue when she had put on her bath robe and slippers.
“Yep,” he answered. “Come on.”
Hand in hand the children went softly
down the front stairs, as their father and mother
had done. Mr. and Mrs. Brown were now out in the
street, some distance away from the house. Men
and women from several other houses, near that of
the Brown family, were also out, wondering why the
bell was ringing.
“Don’t wake up Uncle Tad!”
whispered Bunny to Sue, as they walked along so softly
in their bath slippers.
“No, I won’t,” answered
the little girl. “And don’t wake up
Mary, either. She might not let us go.”
“All right,” whispered Bunny.
Mary was the cook, but, as she slept
up on the third floor, she would hardly hear the children
going out.
“Shut the door easy,”
said Bunny to Sue, as they reached the front steps.
“Don’t let it slam.”
They had found the door open, as Mr.
and Mrs. Brown had left it, and the two children,
each taking hold of it, closed it softly after them.
“Now we’re all right!”
whispered Bunny, as he started down the street on
the run, for the bell was ringing louder than ever
now, and Bunny was anxious to see the fire, if there
was one. He hoped it would not be one of his
father’s boats, or the office on the fish dock.
“Wait! Wait for me!”
cried Sue to her brother. “I can’t
run so fast, Bunny, ’cause I’ll stumble
over my bath robe. It’s awful long!”
“Hold it up, just as I do,”
said Bunny, turning around to look at his sister.
“Hold it up, and then your legs won’t get
tangled in it.”
Sue pulled the robe up to her knees,
and held it there. Bunny was doing the same thing,
the bare legs of the children showing white in the
moonlight. Bunny started off again.
“Wait! Wait!” begged Sue. “Take
hold of my hand, Bunny.”
“I can’t!” he answered.
“I’ve got to hold up my robe, or I’ll
tumble and bump my nose. Besides, how can I take
hold of your hand when you haven’t got any hand
for me to take hold of?”
That was true enough. Sue was
holding up her long robe with both hands.
“If I had some string I could
tie up our robes,” said Bunny, looking on the
moonlit sidewalk, hoping he might find a piece.
“But I hasn’t got any,” he said,
“so I can’t hold your hand, Sue. But
I’ll go slow for you.”
He waited for his sister to catch
up to him, and then the two children hurried on.
They could go faster now, for their long bath robes
did not dangle around their feet.
Down the street they hurried.
The bell kept ringing and ringing, and Bunny and Sue
could see and hear many other persons who had gotten
up to see what it all meant, and who were now hurrying
down the street.
“Oh, Bunny!” said Sue. “Isn’t
it just nice out to-night?”
“Yes,” he said. The
night was warm, and the moon was bright. Bunny
Brown and his sister Sue did not think they were doing
wrong to get up at midnight, and run down the street.
“I-I wonder where
mother is?” said Sue, as they turned a corner.
“We don’t want to see
her, or daddy either,” answered Bunny, keeping
in the shadows, out of sight.
“Why not, Bunny Brown?
Why don’t we want to see our papa or mamma?”
“’Cause they’ll
send us back to bed, and we want to see the fire.”
“Oh! do you think there is a fire, Bunny?”
“I guess so, or the bell wouldn’t
ring. But we’ll soon see it, Sue, for we’re
almost at the church.”