Six Little Bunkers at Grandma Bell's - novelonlinefull.com
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"I guess it was, Little Helper," answered her mother, the next morning when Rose told about it.
After breakfast, eaten at little tables in the dining car, the lady brought the baby down for Rose and all the other little Bunkers to see.
"Oh, isn't she cute?" cried Rose, "I wish we could keep her!"
"I'm glad you like her," said the baby's mother, "but I want to keep her for myself."
Once more it was daylight, and as the train rumbled on toward Lake Sagatook, the Bunkers looked from the windows, or looked again at the picture books their father had bought for them.
"When shall we be there?" asked Russ, for perhaps the tenth time. He was getting a bit tired of train travel.
"We'll get in at the station about noon," his father told him, "but we have to drive about five miles in a wagon or an auto to get to Grandma Bell's place. That is on the sh.o.r.e of Lake Sagatook."
"And I hope none of you fall in," said Mrs. Bunker.
"We'll get a boat," said Russ.
"And I hope it won't sink," added Vi, remembering her last boat ride.
"Oh, say! I've thought of a new riddle!" shouted Laddie. "Why don't the tickets get mad when the conductor punches 'em? Why don't they?"
"I don't know--I give up," said Daddy Bunker. "What's the answer?"
"Oh, I haven't thought of a good answer yet," said Laddie with a laugh. "I just thought of the riddle!"
And he sat by the window, murmuring over and over to himself:
"Why don't the tickets get mad when the conductor punches 'em?"
On and on rumbled the train. They were getting near the end of the trip, and the children were counting the time before they would get to the station where they could start to drive to Lake Sagatook and Grandma Bell's house, when the conductor came through the coach and told Mr.
Bunker that if he changed cars, and took another train at a junction station, he could save all of an hour.
"We'll do that," decided the children's father. "We'll change at Clearwell, and get on a train there that will take us to Sagatook earlier." The name of the station where they were to start to drive to grandma's was Sagatook. The lake was five miles back in the woods.
They were soon near the junction, where two railroad lines came together, and there the Bunkers were to change. They gathered up their belongings and stood ready to get off the car in which they had been nearly a whole day.
Clearwell was quite a large place, and the station, where the two different railroad trains came in, was a big one. There was quite a crowd getting off the train on which the Bunkers had ridden, and more of a crowd on the platform.
"Follow me!" called Daddy Bunker to his wife and children. "And don't lose any of your bundles."
He was carrying Mun Bun, while Mrs. Bunker had Margy in her arms. Russ, Rose, Laddie and Vi came along behind.
Laddie stopped for a moment to look at some pictures on the magazine covers at the news stand, and then, as he gave a quick glance, and saw the others crossing the platform, and leaving him, he ran on to catch up to them.
He saw a man's hand dangling among others in the crowd, and in another instant, Laddie had grasped it. He thought it was his father's, and he called, above the noise of the crowd:
"Why don't the tickets get mad when the conductor punches 'em?"
"Eh? What's that? Tickets? A conductor? I'm not the conductor!" a voice exclaimed. "Who's this grabbing my hand?"
Laddie looked up.
He had hold of the wrong daddy!
CHAPTER XI
THE FUNNY VOICE
The man whose hand Laddie had taken hold of in the crowd, thinking it was his father's, looked down at the little fellow and smiled. And when Laddie saw the smile he felt better.
"What was it you were asking me, little boy?" the man kindly inquired.
"I was--I was asking you a riddle," said Laddie.
"What about?" the man wanted to know.
"It was about a conductor punching tickets on the train," said Laddie.
"But I don't know the answer."
"First, what is the question?" the man inquired, still smiling.
"It's why don't the tickets get mad when the conductor punches 'em?"
Laddie repeated.
"Hum," mused the man. "I don't believe that I know the answer to that riddle. Did you think I did?"
"Well, I--I didn't know," said Laddie slowly. "n.o.body seems to know the answer to that riddle. But, you see, I thought you were my father when I took hold of your hand."
"Oh, you did!" and the man laughed and gave Laddie's hand a gentle squeeze. "Well, I thought you were my little boy, for a moment. But then I happened to think that he is away down in New York City, so, you see, it couldn't be my little boy. But are you lost?"
"Oh, no," answered Laddie. "That is, I'm not very much lost. You see, we're going to my Grandma Bell's, and we changed cars here."
"How many of you are going to Grandma Bell's?" asked the man as he stopped in the crowed and began looking around.
"My father and my mother and six of us little Bunkers," answered Laddie.
"Six little Bunkers!" repeated the man. "Is that another riddle?"
"Oh, no. But you see there _are_ six of us. There's Russ and Rose, and Vi and Margy, and then there's me--I'm Laddie--and Mun Bun."
"Mun Bun!" cried the jolly man. "Is that some pet?"
"No, he's my little brother," explained Laddie. "His real name is Munroe Bunker, but we call him Mun Bun for fun."
"Oh, I see," and the man laughed again. "Six little Bunkers, on a train arrive, one gets lost and then there are five," he chanted.