Of course Meg’s attention was held at once.
“Where did you get any kittens,
Charlie?” she asked, half inclined not to believe
him.
Charlie wriggled along the ground
till he was a safe distance from Bobby, then scrambled
to his feet.
“A man gave ’em to me,”
he said. “He wants me to drown ’em!”
and away he skated as fast as he could go.
“Bobby!” Meg almost screamed.
“Bobby! don’t let him drown the kittens.”
Meg was, as her family said, “crazy”
about all animals, and kittens were her special delight.
But then Bobby didn’t like the idea of drowning
four helpless little cats in the icy cold water of
the pond, either. He started after Charlie Black,
and Meg went after him and really wished she didn’t
have a new dress for a moment because she found the
box a nuisance to carry.
Charlie could skate fairly well, but
that was when he was watching where he was going.
This time he was watching Bobby instead and as a result
he failed to see a curb and went over it with a jolt
that landed him on his knees. Before he could
rise, Bobby and Meg had caught Up with him.
“Where are the kittens?”
gasped Meg.
“In a bag,” Charlie answered sullenly.
“You give them to us,”
said Bobby sternly. “If no one wants them,
we can take them home.”
“The man said to drown them they’re
his cats and I guess he has a right to say what he
wants done with them,” Charlie retorted.
Meg thought about this a minute.
“I’ll go see the man,” she announced
calmly. “Where are the kittens?”
Now whether Charlie really didn’t
want to drown the little, soft helpless kittens, or
whether he was afraid of Bobby perhaps his
reasons were mixed as reasons often are no
one knew. But he said that Meg and Bobby could
come home with him and he would give them the kittens.
The bag was in the woodshed and it
was such a dirty old bag made of canvas
that looked as though it had been carried for years
and never washed that involuntarily Bobby
held it at arms’ length from him.
“They won’t bite you,”
said Charlie scornfully, thinking he was afraid of
the kittens they could be heard mewing inside
the bag.
“What is the man’s name
and where does he live?” Meg asked quietly.
“Ah, I was only fooling he
doesn’t care what happens to those old cats,”
said Charlie. “It’s Mr. Fritz over
on Beech Street. He’s cross enough anyway
without being asked a lot of extra questions.”
But Meg was determined to see Mr.
Fritz and she made Bobby go around to Beech Street
with her.
“It’s just as Charlie
said they are his kittens,” she argued.
“And of course if he says they have to be drowned
they have to be: only we won’t do it.”
“Don’t you want to look
at them?” asked Bobby, swinging the bag gently.
Meg shook her head.
“Not if somebody has to drown them,” she
said.
Mr. Fritz lived in a large old-fashioned
house, set back from the street. When the children
rang the door bell a deaf woman who did all the housework
for him he was an old bachelor came
to the door.
“We don’t want to buy
anything,” she declared, frowning at the bag
Bobby was carrying.
“We’re not selling anything these
are kittens,” Bobby explained, but without raising
his voice. He didn’t know she was deaf.
“What did you say?” she asked.
“Kittens!” Bobby repeated,
a little more loudly. “Mr. Fritz’s
kittens.”
“He wears gloves,” said
the maid crossly. “And my bread is in the
oven and I can’t be bothered.”
Meg stood on tiptoe and shouted.
“Is Mr. Fritz home?” she cried.
To her dismay a deep voice somewhere back in the house
answered her.
“That he is,” it said.
“Won’t you come in?” and there stood
Mr. Fritz himself, looking at her curiously.
Bobby with the bag and Meg with her
dress box, stepped inside and the maid closed the
door. That made the hall so dark that poor Bobby,
unable to see where he was going, but moving ahead
blindly, walked to the basement stairs and made the
most fearful clatter as he lost his balance and fell
half way. He managed to catch one arm around the
banister rail and check his descent, but the bag of
kittens went all the way.
“Bobby! Are you hurt?” Meg called
fearfully.
“Bless me, child, I hope you
haven’t broken anything,” said Mr. Fritz
anxiously.
Bobby felt his way to the bottom of
the stairs and found the bag.
“Not unless I smashed the kittens,”
he said cheerfully, toiling up again.
Mr. Fritz opened the door of a room
at the back of the house and enough light came out
to show Bobby and Meg how to go in. Once inside
they found it was evidently Mr. Fritz’s sitting
room. It was rather untidy, but comfortable and
warm, with books and papers spread about.
“Now what can I do for you?”
said Mr. Fritz, looking at his visitors very kindly
and trying not to show that he was surprised to see
them.
“I’m Bobby Blossom,”
Bobby introduced himself, “and this is my sister
Meg. We came to ask you if you would care if your
kittens weren’t drowned.”
“Eh? My kittens not
drowned?” repeated Mr. Fritz. “But
they are I gave that Charlie what’s
his name Black, I gave Charlie Black fifty
cents to drown them for me this afternoon.”
Meg looked ready to cry. Any
one that paid to have kittens drowned, must,
of course, get what he paid for.
“He didn’t say you paid
him,” Bobby said slowly. “Meg and
I thought perhaps you wouldn’t care and we could
keep them.”
“Are those the kittens in that
bag?” asked Mr. Fritz. “Do you mean
to tell me that worthless boy hasn’t done anything
with them? And he sends them back to me?
Wait till I catch him!”
“Oh, he didn’t send them!”
Meg cried in quick alarm. “He told us he
had them and Bobby and I wouldn’t let him drown
them. Then he said they were your kittens and
you wanted them drowned. And of course you can
do anything you want to with your kittens, but I thought
you wouldn’t mind if we kept them.”
Mr. Fritz nodded his head several times.
“I see,” he said at each
nod. “I see you want to save
the kittens and let them grow up and howl on the back
fences. Well, I think there are enough cats in
this world already. But as long as I don’t
have to take care of the kittens, it makes no difference
to me what becomes of them. You may have them,
if you wish.”
Meg thanked him and was ready to go,
but Bobby had something else on his mind.
“Do you want that fifty cents
back from Charlie Black?” he asked.
“You could get it for me, I
suppose,” Mr. Fritz said with a laugh.
“No, Bobby, let him keep his fifty cents.
After all, he earned it, for the stipulation was that
he was to dispose of the kittens. I didn’t
say they must be drowned.”
Mr. Fritz shook hands with Bobby and
Meg and asked them to come and see him again.
He went to the door with them, which was fortunate
for the hall was so dark Meg was afraid Bobby would
fall downstairs a second time, and watched them go
down the gravel path.
“We’ll have to hurry,”
said Bobby. “Mother will wonder where we
are.”
The twins saw them coming and their
sharp eyes spied the bag the first thing.
“What have you got, Bobby?”
shrieked Dot. “Bobby, what’s in the
bag?”
“You needn’t tell the
neighborhood,” Bobby said a little crossly, for
he was tired, “but kittens are in it.”
“Kittens!” Twaddles shouted,
leaping ahead to spread the news.
“Mother!” he called, racing
into the house. “Oh, Mother, come and see
the kittens Bobby has in a bag!”
Mother Blossom and Aunt Polly and
Norah came into the hall and Bobby sat down on the
rug, with Meg and the twins almost on top of him.
“They’re four,”
he explained as he began to untie the string that was
knotted around the bag. “Charlie Black was
going to drown them for Mr. Fritz, but he said Meg
could have them. Maybe they are pretty.”
He turned down the bag and a black
kitten walked out. Then a gray and white one.
Then a yellow one and next a striped “tiger”
kitten.
Norah started to laugh.
“Four, is it?” she giggled.
“Then I must be seeing double, Bobby, for there’s
six already and yes, here’s another that
makes seven!”
Well, there they were seven
kittens, none especially fat and none especially pretty,
all “just kittens,” as Twaddles named them.
But Meg thought they were lovely and
she was anxious to take them out to the garage and
give them some warm milk. The garage was always
chosen as a good place to feed stray animals, for the
cement floor could be more easily washed than the
linoleum that was the pride of Norah’s heart
in the kitchen.
“Meg, darling, we simply cannot
keep all those kittens,” Mother Blossom declared
regretfully. “Seven kittens are a great
many and I don’t believe Annabel Lee will welcome
so much company.”
“But, Mother, we can’t
drown them!” said Meg, her eyes round with horror.
“We have to take care of them.”
“I think you children will have
to find homes for them,” Mother Blossom announced.
“Think over all the folk you know and try to
find homes for these homeless little cats. That
will be something for you to do, too, Dot and Twaddles.”
“I’m going to think now,”
said Twaddles, sitting down on the lowest step of
the stairs.