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Jan and Ted looked out again. The yard was indeed filled with great heaps of snow, many of them higher than the heads of the children. The yard was a big one and at the far end was the barn.
"Oh, look!" cried Ted. "Our snow bungalow is gone, Janet!"
"Oh, it's blowed down!" cried Janet.
"No, it hasn't," said Nora. "I could just see the tip top of it when I got up early this morning, but now the snow has covered it. The bungalow is there all right, but you can't see it. It's under a big drift."
"Oh, wouldn't it be fun if we were out in it now?" cried Teddy.
"Indeed, and you'd starve and freeze," laughed Nora.
"No, we wouldn't," declared Teddy. "It's nice and warm out there. Uncle Frank said he used to make snow bungalows like that out West and he's lived in one a whole week in a blizzard."
"But he had something to eat," went on Nora, "and there's nothing in your bungalow."
"Yes, there is, a little," remarked Teddy. "We had a play party in it yesterday--Jan, me and Trouble, and we left some of the things we couldn't eat. I put 'em in a box and tied 'em up in a piece of carpet we had there. I was going to come back and make-believe I was a tramp and awful hungry, only I forgot it. There's things to eat out there, Nora.
We wouldn't starve."
"Well, I guess your mother wouldn't let you go out there and play anyhow, in this storm."
"We'll have some fun in the house," said Janet. "Oh, doesn't it snow, Ted!"
There came a big gust of wind just then and a cloud of snow hid the yard from sight. All the children could see was a lot of whiteness.
"Oh, what about Nicknack?" asked Jan suddenly.
"What you mean?" asked her brother.
"I mean will he have enough to eat? Maybe we've got to go out and feed him."
"I gave him something to eat last night," said Teddy, "and I left a big pail of water in his stable. I guess he'll be all right. Anyhow Daddy and Uncle Frank are going out to the barn and they can feed our goat."
Nicknack had a little stable, like a big dog house, built next to the main barn, of which it was a part, though he had his own little door to go in and out.
"Get your breakfasts, children, and then you can sit by the window and watch the storm," said Mrs. Martin, coming into the kitchen just then.
"Trouble is waking up and I'll want you to help take care of him. You'll all have to stay in the house to-day and play quiet games."
"Let's go and look out the front windows," proposed Janet.
She and Ted ran through the hall to the parlor. But from those windows they could see nothing, for the gla.s.s was either so crusted with snow, or the drifts were really so high in front of the windows, that it was impossible to look out.
"It is an awful big storm!" cried Janet as she went back to the warm dining-room. Not much could be seen from those windows, either.
"Maybe it will stop in a little while," said Teddy, "and then we can go out and have a ride with Nicknack."
"Indeed, Nicknack would be buried deep in the snow over his head if you took him out," said Aunt Jo, as she came downstairs. "You Curlytops haven't an idea how bad this storm is. I never saw a worse one. We may be snowed in for a week!"
"Hurray!" cried Teddy.
"It'll be fun," added Janet.
As the children sat down to breakfast, the lights being turned on because it was so dark, though it was nearly nine o'clock, their father and Uncle Frank got dressed ready to go out to the barn.
The men had on their overcoats, caps and big rubber boots. On their hands were warm gloves and each one carried a snow shovel, which the Curlytops' father had brought up from the cellar.
"We're going to try to get out to the barn," said Mr. Martin. "I'm not sure the cow and horse have enough to eat."
"Oh, can't I come?" begged Teddy.
"And me, too!" added Janet.
"No, indeed, Curlytops!" cried Mr. Martin. "You'd be lost in the snow and maybe Uncle Frank and I couldn't dig you out again. Stay here until we come back."
The children hurriedly finished their breakfasts, and then ran to the kitchen windows to see their father and Uncle Frank try to dig their way to the barn. And the men really had to dig their way, for between the barn and the house the drifts were too deep to wade through. Many of them were over the heads of Daddy Martin.
The Curlytops could see little, as the snow was still blowing and drifting. Now and then they saw their father or their Uncle Frank for just a moment, but the men were so covered with the white flakes that they looked like snow men.
Finally there was a stamping of feet in the back entry, and when Nora opened the door there stood Uncle Frank and Daddy Martin. They were covered with snow and looked very tired.
"What's the matter?" asked Mrs. Martin. "Couldn't you get to the barn, d.i.c.k?"
"No, we were driven back," her husband answered. "It is a terrible storm, and very cold. We dug a path part way to the barn, but the wind blew the snow in it, filling it up as fast as we could dig it out. I guess we can't get to the barn. We surely are snowed in!"
CHAPTER XVI
DIGGING A TUNNEL
Even seeing their father and uncle so tired out from shoveling snow and from struggling with the storm did not make the Curlytops think how bad it was to be snowed in. They still thought it was going to be fun. And so, in a way, it was, I suppose. At any rate they had a warm house in which to stay and plenty of good things to eat.
"Well, what are you going to do?" asked Mrs. Martin of her husband as, standing in the entry, he brushed some of the snow off his boots with the broom.
"We'll have to try again," said Uncle Frank.
"Is it like your out-West blizzards, Uncle Frank?" asked Teddy.
"Yes, this is almost as bad as the ones we have out there," he said.
"Only this isn't quite so cold."
"It's cold enough for me!" exclaimed Mr. Martin. "Here, Jan," he called to his little girl. "Just take hold of my nose, will you, my dear?"
"What for, Daddy?" asked the little girl.
"I want to see if it is still fast to my face," answered her father. "It got so cold when I was shoveling snow that I thought maybe it had frozen and dropped off."