Six Little Bunkers at Uncle Fred's - novelonlinefull.com
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"Oh, Mother!" she called, "where are you? I want you!"
Of course Mrs. Bunker could not hear then, for she was on her way to get Captain Roy to help search for the little girl.
Violet wandered around and around, calling now and then, and crying real tears every once in a while, until, at last, when the sun began to get lower and lower in the west, and the little girl knew it would soon be dark, she sobbed:
"Oh, what shall I do! Oh, where is my mother!"
And just then she heard a horse come trotting along. She could hear the gallop of the hoofs on the ground.
"Oh, maybe it's an Indian!" thought Vi. "We'd better hide, Su-San!"
She clasped the j.a.panese toy in her arms, and crouched down in the gra.s.s. But the trotting came nearer. Then Violet knew it was more than one horse.
"Maybe it's a whole band of Indians!" she whispered. "Oh, Su-San!"
Down in the tall gra.s.s she hid, but she kept on crying. And then, suddenly, close to her, a voice said:
"I thought I heard a child crying just now, didn't you, Jim?"
"Sounded like it, but what would a child be doing out here all alone?"
"I don't know, but I sure did hear it!"
Then another voice called:
"What's the matter over there?"
"Oh, Frank thought he heard a child crying," answered some one, and Vi thought it didn't sound like an Indian.
"A child!" cried still another voice. "Oh, I wonder----"
Then Violet didn't hear any more, for standing right over where she crouched in the gra.s.s was a big man on a big horse and he was looking right down on her.
"I've found her!" the man cried. "It's one of the six little Bunkers!"
"One of the six little Bunkers!" repeated a voice that Violet well knew.
It was her father's.
"Oh, Daddy! Daddy!" she cried. "Here I am! I got lost, and I can't find the creek, nor the willow tree, nor Mother, nor anything. Here I am!"
Violet stood up, and a moment later, her father had ridden his horse over to where she was and, reaching down, took her and the doll up in his arms.
"Well, how in the world did you get here?" he asked in surprise. "Where have you been, Violet?"
Then Violet told, and Uncle Fred, who was with Daddy Bunker and some of the cowboys, said:
"We'd better ride back to the house as fast as we can. Amy is probably wild now about losing her. Hurry back to the house!"
Then how the horses did gallop! And Vi, sitting in front of Daddy on his saddle, had a fine ride and forgot she had been lost.
They got back to the house just as Captain Roy and some cowboys were about to ride away in search of Violet. For Mrs. Bunker and the other little Bunkers had reached the ranch house with the story of the lost one.
"How did you find her?" asked Mrs. Bunker of her husband when Violet had been hugged and kissed.
"We were riding back," said Daddy Bunker, "when one of the cowboys heard a child crying. He found Violet in the gra.s.s, and then I took her up.
How did she get lost?"
Then Mrs. Bunker told about the trip to the creek and how Vi had wandered away by herself.
"But I'm never going again," said the little girl. "I thought the Indians were after me!"
"And it was only Daddy Bunker!" laughed her father.
"Did you find the lost cattle?" asked his wife, when supper was over and they had ceased talking about Vi being lost.
"No, the men who took them must have hurried away with them. We could not find them at all."
Just as the six little Bunkers were going to bed a cowboy came up to the ranch house to say that the water was coming back into the spring.
"That's good," said Uncle Fred. "But I certainly would like to know what makes it go out, and who takes our cattle."
The next day Russ and Laddie asked if they could go fishing in the creek, if they went to one place and stayed there, so they might not wander away and be lost.
"Yes, I guess so," returned Daddy Bunker. "It isn't far, and if you stay on sh.o.r.e you won't fall in."
"True," chuckled Uncle Fred, but he wouldn't tell Laddie what he was laughing at.
There were some small fish to be caught in the creek, and soon, with hooks, lines, poles and bait Russ and Laddie started for the creek.
"I hope they'll be all right," said their mother.
They had been gone about an hour when Russ came running back to the house, dragging his pole after him, and on the line was a fish, which he had not stopped to take off.
"Oh, Mother! Daddy!" cried Russ. "Laddie--Laddie----"
"Has he fallen in?" cried Mrs. Bunker.
"No, Mother! It isn't that!" said Russ. "But he's caught a riddle, and he doesn't know what to do with it."
"He's caught a _riddle_?" cried Uncle Fred. "What do you mean?"
"Well, he found it, or caught it, I don't know which," said Russ.
"How did he catch a riddle?" asked Daddy Bunker.
"On his hook. It's a funny thing, like a black stone, and it wiggles and sticks its head out, and Laddie doesn't know what it is, and when you don't know what a thing is that's a riddle, isn't it? Come and see!"
And down to the creek went Daddy and Mother Bunker to see the riddle that Laddie had caught.