The Bobbsey twins keeping house

By Laura Lee Hope

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Title: The Bobbsey twins keeping house

Author: Laura Lee Hope

Release date: August 9, 2024 [eBook #74217]

Language: English

Original publication: New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1925

Credits: Carol Brown, Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)


*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOBBSEY TWINS KEEPING HOUSE ***



[Illustration: BERT WENT ABOUT, PRETENDING HE WAS A PULLMAN WAITER.

_The Bobbsey Twins Keeping House._      _Frontispiece_ (_Page 140_)]




                           The Bobbsey Twins
                             Keeping House

                                  BY
                            LAURA LEE HOPE
                 AUTHOR OF “THE BOBBSEY TWIN SERIES.”

                            [Illustration]

                    This book, while produced under
                wartime conditions, in full compliance
                      with government regulations
                     for the conservation of paper
                   and other essential materials, is
                        COMPLETE AND UNABRIDGED

                            [Illustration]

                               NEW YORK
                           GROSSET & DUNLAP
                              PUBLISHERS

                 Made in the United States of America




                           COPYRIGHT 1925, BY
                            GROSSET & DUNLAP

                   _The Bobbsey Twins Keeping House_




                               CONTENTS


                CHAPTER                          PAGE

                     I. DOWN IN A PIPE              1

                    II. A BROKEN WINDOW            12

                   III. THE LOST RING              25

                    IV. BAD NEWS                   37

                     V. AUNT SALLIE PRY            47

                    VI. LOST TWINS                 60

                   VII. SAM GOES AWAY              73

                  VIII. BERT’S TUMBLE              83

                    IX. NAN IS WORRIED             95

                     X. A CALL FOR DINAH          105

                    XI. LUMBAGO                   117

                   XII. THE SCHOOL BELL           132

                  XIII. SNOWED IN                 143

                   XIV. NAN’S BISCUITS            154

                    XV. BROKEN WIRES              168

                   XVI. A GREAT CRASH             179

                  XVII. BERT FALLS OFF            190

                 XVIII. AUNT SALLIE IS WORSE      202

                   XIX. IN CHURCH AGAIN           214

                    XX. DANNY’S RING              226

                   XXI. FIRE                      237

                  XXII. JUST IN TIME              253




                    THE BOBBSEY TWINS KEEPING HOUSE




                               CHAPTER I

                            DOWN IN A PIPE


“Now it’s Freddie’s turn!” called Nan Bobbsey. “Get ready to catch the
ball,” and she motioned, showing that she was going to toss it to her
small brother.

“No, I want to have it once more!” cried Flossie, who was Freddie’s
twin sister. “Come on, Nan! Please throw it to me!” and she jumped up
and down, her light, fluffy hair tossing about her head. It was cold
out in the yard where the children were playing, and that is one reason
why Flossie jumped up and down. Another reason was that she was excited
about the ball game Nan had gotten up for the smaller twins. “Come on,
toss it to me!” begged Flossie.

“But it isn’t your turn, dear!” objected Nan. “It’s Freddie’s turn.
He wants to catch, too,” and she held the big rubber ball, looking at
Flossie meanwhile.

“Oh, just one more turn for me!” Flossie begged, jumping up and down
faster than ever.

“Oh, all right! Let her have it!” agreed Freddie, good-naturedly. “I’ll
wait.”

“That’s kind of you,” said Nan. “All right, Flossie, you may have this
next toss! Get ready!”

“One more turn for me!” sang Flossie gaily. “One more turn for me!
Hurry up, Nan, please!”

Flossie stopped her jumping-jack movements, and with outstretched hands
and shining eyes awaited the ball, which Nan tossed across an old
flower bed. In the past summer bright blossoms had made this part of
the garden very gay. But now, with winter coming on, the flowers had
been killed by Jack Frost and the stalks were sear and brown.

“I got it!” cried Flossie. But she spoke a moment too soon, for the
ball just touched the tips of her fingers, bounced off, and rolled
across the frozen ground of the flower garden right to Freddie’s feet.
He picked it up.

“Oh, dear!” sighed Flossie. She had so much wanted to catch the ball
this last time, but she had missed it.

“You muffed!” cried Freddie. He had heard his older brother Bert speak
like that when, in a real ball game, some boy failed to hold the ball.
“You muffed it, Flossie!”

Then, seeing that there were tears in his twin sister’s eyes, Freddie
did a very manly and generous thing.

“You can have another turn,” he said. “Toss it to Flossie again, Nan. I
don’t mind waiting.”

“That’s nice of you, Freddie,” said Nan.

“Thank you!” cried Flossie, quickly “squeezing back” her tears. “I’ll
give you some of my candy, Freddie!”

“Will you?” he exclaimed. “What kind is it, Flossie?”

“It isn’t any kind yet, ’cause I haven’t got it,” the little
golden-haired girl explained as Nan took the ball from her small
brother and got ready to throw it again. “But I mean, when I do get
some candy I’ll give you a piece.”

“Oh!” exclaimed Freddie, somewhat disappointed. “Well, anyhow, you can
have another turn to catch the ball.”

“Maybe if Nan should take us down town now she would buy us some
candy,” went on Flossie, getting ready for this next attempt to catch
the rubber ball. “Then I could give you some, Freddie.”

“Ho! Ho!” laughed Nan. “That’s a gentle hint, I suppose, Flossie, for
me to take you after candy. But I’m afraid I can’t to-day. Now get
ready. If you miss the ball this time it won’t be fair to make Freddie
wait any longer.”

“I’ll catch it this time!” cried Flossie, and she did. Right in her
hands she caught the bouncing rubber, and then she threw it back to Nan
while Freddie got ready for his turns.

Meanwhile, Flossie danced about, waiting until the ball would again
come to her. Flossie was a lively little girl--always dancing,
running, singing, or doing something. And Freddie was about the same.
In fact, the Bobbsey twins were a lively set of youngsters.

Freddie had caught the ball four times and Nan was getting ready to
toss it to him for the fifth when a whistle was heard around the corner
of the house.

“Here comes Bert!” cried Flossie, and she darted off to meet her older
brother. Bert was Nan’s twin and these two were a few years older than
the smaller Bobbsey twins.

“Maybe Bert will want to play ball,” suggested Freddie, as he caught
the rubber sphere for the fifth time, making a perfect score for him.

“We’ll see,” replied Nan.

But when Bert came whistling around the corner of the house, Flossie
holding him by one hand, he seemed to have something else in mind than
playing toss-ball with his smaller brother and sister.

“You can’t guess what I know!” he called, swinging Flossie around in a
circle by her two hands, her feet flying off the ground.

“Have you got candy?” the little girl demanded, when Bert had set her
down.

“Candy? No!” he laughed. “But there’s a new horse in our garage.”

“A horse in our garage!” cried Nan. “Do you mean a runaway?”

“No, he isn’t running away--he’s just standing there,” Bert answered,
with a grin.

“How did a horse get in our garage?” asked Flossie.

“A man put it there,” Bert answered.

“Oh, I don’t believe you!” exclaimed Nan.

“A horse couldn’t get in our garage!” added Freddie.

“Why not?” Bert wanted to know. “It’s big enough--our garage is. And,
anyhow, it used to be a stable with horses in it before daddy made it
over for automobiles. Of course a horse could be in our garage.”

“Well, maybe it could,” admitted Nan. “But what’s the horse doing
there?”

“Just standing still.”

“Is he eating?” Flossie wanted to know.

Bert thought this over for a moment before he answered:

“No, the horse isn’t eating.”

There was something in her brother’s voice that made Nan look at him
sharply. Then she cried:

“Look here, Bert Bobbsey, there’s something queer about this! What kind
of a horse is it?”

Before Bert could answer Freddie asked:

“Has the horse four legs?”

“Yes, indeed, it has four legs! I’m sure of that for I just counted
them!” and Bert seemed so very positive on this point that Nan didn’t
know what to think.

“Come on and I’ll show you the horse if you don’t believe me,” offered
Bert, moving off toward the garage.

All thoughts of keeping on with the ball game were now forgotten by
Flossie and Freddie. They were eager to see the strange horse in their
father’s garage. Nan could not imagine how the animal could have been
put there.

“But maybe one of the store wagons broke and they had to leave the
horse in our garage until they get the wagon fixed,” she thought to
herself.

Into the garage ran the Bobbsey twins, Flossie and Freddie merrily
laughing, Bert with a queer look on his face, and Nan ready for almost
anything.

“Where’s the horse?” demanded Freddie, entering first and looking
around.

“I don’t see any horse,” added Flossie, who had closely followed her
small brother.

“There it is!” exclaimed Bert.

He pointed to a carpenter’s sawhorse in one corner of the building.

For a moment the smaller children looked at it in surprise. Then
Freddie burst out laughing.

“Oh, ho! A sawhorse! A sawhorse!” he exclaimed.

“But it has got four legs--one, two, three, four!” counted Flossie.
“Oh, isn’t it funny! I thought you meant a real horse, Bert.”

“So did I!” said Freddie.

“And I did, too, for a little while,” admitted Nan. “But pretty soon I
thought it must be a joke. And I don’t think it’s a very good joke,
either, Bert Bobbsey, so there!”

“Well, let’s see you think of a better joke!” laughed Nan’s twin
brother. “Ha! Ha! I had you all fooled! It’s a sawhorse, and you all
thought it was a real horse! Oh, ho!”

“I can get on the back of this sawhorse,” announced Freddie. “Look at
me!” He ran toward the wooden thing.

“Don’t fall!” cautioned Nan. But this Freddie almost did in climbing up
on the sawhorse, which was rather a high one. Bert caught him just in
time.

“How did it get here?” Freddie asked, when he was seated on the back of
the “animal.”

“The carpenters have been working here, and they left it,” Bert
explained. “When I saw it I thought it would be a good joke to make
believe it was a real horse. And I fooled all of you!”

Nan was going to say again that she had not been fooled very much when
Flossie, looking out of the window, cried:

“Oh, it’s snowing! It’s snowing!”

“Is it? Really?” Freddie wanted to know. “Are you fooling like Bert was
with the sawhorse, Flossie?”

“No, it’s really snowing!” the little girl answered.

“Oh, hurray! I want to see it!” cried Freddie, and he was in such a
hurry to descend from the back of the sawhorse that this time he fell
in real earnest. However, as there was a pile of shavings on the floor,
left there by the carpenters, Freddie fell into them and was not hurt
at all. But he was covered with the shavings.

However, Nan picked him up and brushed him off, and then he ran to the
window out of which the others were looking.

“It really is snowing!” said Nan.

“Looks as if it would last, too,” added Bert.

“Oh, can I have my sled out?” begged Flossie.

“I want mine, too!” chimed in Freddie. “Oh, I’m so glad it’s winter
and we’re going to have ice and snow! Come on, let’s go sleigh-riding!
Hurray!”

“Don’t be in such a rush,” advised Bert. “There’ll have to be more
snow than this before you can use your sleds.”

“But quite a lot has fallen, and it’s still snowing hard,” said Nan.
“It must have started soon after we came in here.”

The twins had been in the garage some little time, laughing and talking
about Bert’s joke and playing on the carpenter’s sawhorse, and in that
period the ground had been whitened with the flurry of flakes.

“I’m going out and see how deep it is,” announced Freddie.

Before either Nan or Bert could stop him, if they had wanted to, the
little fellow went to a side door of the garage and, opening this,
rushed out. But he did not go far.

Right at the door a new drain was being put in. A large sewer pipe was
set upright in the ground. Work around it was not yet finished, and
that was why the side door had been closed.

But Freddie opened it. Then he slipped on the newly fallen snow and a
moment later disappeared down the drain pipe!




                              CHAPTER II

                            A BROKEN WINDOW


For a moment following Freddie’s accident there was silence. Even the
little fellow himself was so frightened that he forgot to cry out. But
a second or two later he found his voice and set up a series of yells.

“Oh! Oh! Get me out! Help me, Bert!” he begged.

“Oh, Freddie, you poor boy!” gasped Nan.

“Is he dead? Will we ever get him up?” Flossie wanted to know, and she
burst into tears.

“Yes! Yes! I’ll get him out! He can’t fall any farther!” shouted Bert.
“I’ll lift him out in a minute! You’re all right, Freddie,” he went on.
“Don’t cry any more!”

“I am _not_ all right!” wailed the little chap. “I’m down in a pipe!
How can I--be all--all right--when I’m in a pipe?”

He was crying and Flossie was sobbing. Nan did not know what to do.

Bert, however, seemed to know what he was about. He hurried to the edge
of the drain pipe, down which his small brother had slipped, and began
to consider the best way to get Freddie out.

And while Bert is doing that I shall take just a moment to tell my new
readers something about the four children. They were first introduced
to you in the book called “The Bobbsey Twins,” and in that you read
about Mr. Richard Bobbsey and his wife, Mary, who lived in the eastern
city of Lakeport on Lake Metoka. Mr. Bobbsey owned a lumberyard there.

There were two sets of twins. Bert and Nan were the older. They had
dark brown hair and brown eyes. Flossie and Freddie had light hair and
blue eyes. Thus the Bobbsey twins were quite a contrast, and when the
four walked down the street together more than one person turned to
look at them.

The children had good times and many adventures. They went to the
country, to the seashore, and of course attended school. Once they
visited Snow Lodge and were storm-bound. They had traveled on the deep
blue sea, gone out West, spent some time in Cedar Camp, and had gone
through some exciting times at a county fair. They had also camped out.

The book just before this one is called “The Bobbsey Twins and Baby
May,” and tells how they found a strange little baby and what happened
to it.

Now winter was coming on again, and the children counted on having more
fun. Bert had played his joke about the sawhorse, and then had followed
Freddie’s fall down the drain pipe.

“Can you get him up?” asked Nan anxiously.

“Sure I can!” Bert answered. “You stand over there, Nan, on the other
side of him. Reach down in the pipe and put your hand under Freddie’s
left arm.”

Nan did this while Bert did the same thing on the other side. The drain
pipe was about as large as Freddie’s body. He had slid into it feet
first, and his hands were down at his sides. The pipe was not large
enough for him to lift his hands over the edge, or he might have pushed
himself out.

But with Bert and Nan to lift him, he was soon pulled from the drain,
more vexed than hurt. Though it was found later that he had skinned one
shin rather painfully.

“There you are!” cried Bert, as he and Nan set their little brother on
his feet out on the snow-covered ground. “You are all right, Freddie.
And don’t go jumping down any more pipes!”

“I didn’t jump down!” declared the little fellow, with some
indignation. “I slipped in!”

“You went in so quick,” observed Flossie, “it was as if the sawhorse
kicked you in, wasn’t it, Freddie?”

“Yes, it was,” he said, and then he laughed. So did Bert and Nan. A
moment later, however, a look of pain passed over Freddie’s face and he
put one hand down on his left shin.

“What’s the matter?” Nan asked.

“My leg hurts!”

“Maybe it’s broken,” suggested Flossie.

“How could I walk if my leg was broken?” the little boy demanded, and
he strutted about, though he limped a little.

“Let me look,” suggested Bert, and when he had pulled down Freddie’s
stocking they all saw that the shin had been skinned and was bleeding
slightly. It had been scraped on the edge of the drain pipe.

“Oh, look!” cried Flossie. “He’s got the nose bleed on his leg!”

Freddie had been going to cry at the sight of the blood. But when
Flossie said this in such a funny way he laughed, and so did Bert and
Nan.

“We’d better take him in the house and fix his leg,” said Bert to his
twin.

“Yes,” Nan agreed.

“Can’t I go sleigh-riding?” Freddie wanted to know. “Look how nice it’s
snowing!”

The white flakes were, indeed, swirling down faster than ever. For the
first snow of the season, it was quite a storm, and the ground was now
covered with the soft flakes.

“Oh, my dear, what has happened?” cried Mrs. Bobbsey, when she saw
Freddie, covered with snow, limping toward the house, escorted by Nan,
Bert and Flossie.

“I--I fell in a pipe!” Freddie answered.

“A _pipe_? What sort of game were you playing?” his mother wanted to
know.

“It wasn’t a game,” said Bert, and then he explained.

Freddie’s leg felt better after his mother had bandaged it with some
soothing salve, and then he was allowed to go out and play in the snow
on his sled with Flossie.

Bert had thought the snow would not amount to much, but a little later
he, too, got out his sled.

Nan did likewise, and the Bobbsey twins and some of their friends had a
jolly time on a little coasting hill not far from the house.

“Winter’s come pretty early this year,” said Charlie Mason, one of
Bert’s chums, as the two boys went down the hill together, bobsled
fashion.

“Yes,” agreed Bert. “We’ll have a lot of fun at school to-morrow,
making a snow fort. That is, if the snow doesn’t melt.”

But there was plenty of snow on the ground when the children awakened
the next morning, though the storm had stopped and the sun was shining.

“I hope the sun doesn’t melt all the snow,” sighed Flossie, as she got
ready to accompany her twin brother to school. They were in a lower
class than Bert and Nan, but the smaller twins generally walked along
with the older brother or sister.

It was when the Bobbsey twins were almost at school that John Marsh, a
boy of about Bert’s age, came running around the corner of the street.
John seemed rather out of breath and excited.

“What’s the matter?” asked Bert.

“Oh, that Danny Rugg and Sam Todd are pegging snowballs at me,” said
John. “I wouldn’t mind soft ones, but they’re using hard balls. And
they’re two to one--Sam and Danny both pegged at me.”

“That isn’t fair!” cried Bert. “They ought to fight square--even on
both sides--and with soft balls. Come on, I’ll help you!”

Together the two lads went back and around the corner to the street
where Danny and his rather mischievous crony were standing, leaving Nan
to go with Flossie and Freddie on to school.

“Hi! There’s John again!” yelled Sam Todd, as he caught sight of the
boy who had run away.

“Soak him!” shouted Danny Rugg.

But a moment later the two little bullies, for that is what they were,
caught sight of Bert Bobbsey with John and the hands they had raised to
throw the hard snowballs fell back at their sides.

“Hello, Danny!” called Bert, for they were on somewhat friendly terms.

“Hello,” said Danny, not very cheerfully.

“Do you want to snowball fight?” demanded Sam Todd.

“No, not now,” Bert answered. “But, anyhow, when you do fight you ought
to use soft balls, and not two of you fellows go for one.”

“We didn’t use hard balls!” Danny declared.

“You did so!” cried John. “And you both pegged at me at once!”

“Aw, well, it was only in fun,” grumbled Danny. Now that Bert had
joined John the odds were against the bullies, for Sam Todd was not a
very large lad. “We’ll fight you after school if you like,” went on
Danny. “Hard balls or soft balls, and the same number on each side.”

“And we’ll lick you, too!” boasted Sam.

“We’ll see about that!” laughed Bert. “I don’t know if I want a
snowball fight or not. But I’m not going to throw any now, I know that.
It’s too near the school,” for the boys had been walking along as they
talked.

“We aren’t within a block yet,” declared Danny. “It’s only against the
rule to throw snowballs within a block of the school,” and he rounded
in his hands a ball he had been making.

“I’m not scared to throw one now,” declared Sam, and he tossed a ball
at a signboard, hitting it a resounding whack.

“Neither am I!” exclaimed Danny, and he also threw. As he did so Bert
and John saw something on Danny’s finger gleaming golden in the sun.
The flash seemed to remind Danny of an important matter, for he held up
his right hand and cried: “Look at that! Isn’t that a peach? It’s a new
gold ring I got for my birthday.”

“You’re lucky,” remarked Bert, as Danny held the ring out to be admired.

“I guess I am,” boasted Danny. “No fellow in our school has a valuable
gold ring like that! My father gave it to me.”

“I should think you wouldn’t like to wear it for fear you might lose
it,” remarked John.

“Naw, I won’t lose it,” drawled Danny. “Go on, Bert!” he cried. “I dare
you to throw a snowball at the signboard. You can’t throw as straight
as I did!”

“Yes, I can!” said Bert, who did not like this said of him.

“Go on! Let’s see you!” cried Sam Todd.

As the lads were still more than a block away from the school, they
could, without breaking the rule, throw snowballs.

Accordingly, Bert and John tossed a few, and Bert made much better
shots than did either Danny or Sam, though John did not do so well.

“That’s because I ran and got out of breath when you two were pegging
hard balls at me,” he said to the two bullies.

“Aw, we were only in fun,” Danny said.

“Two to one isn’t fair, though,” cried Bert.

“Well, you’re two now--do you want to fight?” asked Sam, who seemed
eager for a battle in the snow.

Before Bert or John could answer the clanging of a bell sounded on the
clear, frosty air, and Nan Bobbsey, who came through a side street with
Flossie and Freddie, cried:

“That’s the next to the last bell! You’d better hurry if you don’t want
to be late, Bert!”

“All right, I’m hurrying,” he said.

Even Danny Rugg, bold as he sometimes was, did not seem inclined to
break the school rule and throw balls within the block limit set by Mr.
Tarton, the principal. However, he still held one of the white missiles
in his hand. This he tossed up and down, catching it before it had
time to reach the ground. Danny’s new, gold birthday ring sparkled in
the sun.

“Let me wear that ring of yours sometime, will you, Danny?” asked Sam,
as he walked on beside his crony.

“Maybe,” was the answer.

“And if Bert and his crowd want to have a snowball fight after
school,” went on Sam in a low voice, “I know where I can find a lot of
horse-chestnuts.”

“What good’ll horse-chestnuts be in a snowball fight?” Danny wanted to
know.

Sam looked around to make sure no one would hear him, then he said:

“We can put a horse-chestnut inside a soft snowball and make it sting
like anything when it hits! I can get a lot of ’em. Shall I?”

“Maybe,” agreed Danny. He was a bully, but not quite as mischievous as
was Sam.

On toward the school hurried the boys and girls. The echoes of the next
to the last bell were ringing in their ears.

“Better get rid of our snowballs, I guess,” said Bert to John, as they
crossed the street which would put them within one block of the school.
“Mr. Tarton might see us.”

“That’s right,” agreed John. “Chuck your balls away, fellows!” he
called. “We’re within a block.” He got rid of his own sphere of snow
and Bert tossed his to one side. Several of the other boys who were
near did likewise.

Then, suddenly, there was a crash of glass and the pupils looking up
in startled amazement, saw that a snowball had gone through one of the
beautiful stained-glass windows in a church near the school. A large
piece was broken out from the window picture.

“Oh! Oh!” yelled many voices.

“Who broke the window?” cried the girls and boys.

Then, as the last bell began to ring, they all began to run so they
would not be late.




                              CHAPTER III

                             THE LOST RING


Into the lower halls and corridors of the school poured the children.
The last bell was still clanging, and they would not be marked late if
they reached their classrooms before the last peal. The bell would ring
for several minutes yet.

On all sides, as the boys and girls hurried in, could be heard talks
and gasps of astonishment, not unmixed with fear, about the breaking of
the church window.

“Oh, did you see it?”

“Did you hear it?”

“Didn’t it make a big crash!”

“What’ll the church people say?”

“I guess that window must ’a’ cost a thousand dollars!”

“Who did it?”

This last question was the one most often asked.

But no one seemed to know, or, if any one did, he or she was not
telling about it. Nan hurried with Flossie and Freddie to their
classroom, and then she hastened back toward her own. Bert was in Nan’s
room, and, seeing her brother just before she entered the door, Nan
whispered:

“Bert, did you break the church window?”

“No,” he answered, “I didn’t. Of course I didn’t do it!”

“Do you know who did it?”

Bert did not answer for a second or two. For the moment he and Nan were
by themselves, just outside their classroom door. Then Bert looked down
the corridor and saw Danny Rugg and Sam Todd coming along.

“Do you know who did it?” repeated Nan.

“Maybe I do,” Bert answered slowly. “And maybe I don’t,” he added, as
Nan gave a gasp of surprise. “Anyhow, I’m not going to tell.”

That was all there was time to say. The last bell was giving its final
strokes, and Bert and his sister hurried to their seats. Danny and
Sam, with other boys and girls, also hastened in to their room; and
then came silence, for they were not, of course, allowed to whisper in
class.

The pupils had been sitting quietly a minute or two when an electric
bell in the room rang. This was the signal for the children to march to
the big assembly hall where the morning exercises were held.

“Attention!” called Miss Skell, who taught Bert and Nan. “Rise! Turn!
March!”

There was the tramping of a hundred feet and the children were on their
way to the auditorium.

It was at the close of the exercises, after the Bible reading and the
singing of patriotic songs, that the principal, Mr. James Tarton,
stepped to the edge of the platform and said:

“Boys and girls, I have an unpleasant announcement to make. I am very
sorry to have to speak of it. But an accident happened this morning.
Perhaps some of you may know what it was.”

By the gasps and murmurs that ran through the room it was easy to tell
that a number of the pupils knew about what the principal was going to
speak.

“Some one--a boy I think it must have been, for I doubt if a girl could
throw so hard and straight. Some boy broke the rule about snowballing
within a block of the school,” went on Mr. Tarton, “and threw a ball,
or a chunk of ice, against one of the stained-glass windows of the
church. The window was broken, and of course must be paid for. It is
only right that the boy who broke it should pay for it. Now I am going
to ask the boy who threw the snowball against the church window to be
man enough to stand up and admit it. He will not be punished if he
frankly confesses, but of course he or his father will have to pay for
the broken glass.”

Mr. Tarton stopped speaking and waited. It grew very still and quiet in
the room. If any one had dropped a pin it could have been heard in the
farthest corner. But no one dropped a pin. Nor did any one speak. Nor
did any boy stand up to say he had broken the window.

The silence continued. The teachers, sitting in a row back of Mr.
Tarton on the platform, looked at the faces of the boys and girls in
front of them.

“Well,” said the principal in a low voice, “I am waiting.”

Still no one got up. Some of the boys and girls began to shift uneasily
in their seats and shuffled their feet. They were getting what an older
person would call “nervous.”

“It does not seem,” went on Mr. Tarton, “that the boy who broke the
window is going to be man enough to own up to it. I dislike to do this,
but I must ask if any one here knows anything about it. I mean did any
of you see any one throw a snowball at the church window?”

There was a further silence, but only for a few seconds. Then up went
the hand of Sam Todd. Some of the girls gasped loudly, seeming to guess
what was coming next.

“Well, Sammie,” said Mr. Tarton kindly, “what do you know about
breaking the church window? Did you do it?”

“No, sir!”

“Do you know who did?”

“Yes, sir!”

More gasps of surprise.

“Who broke the window?” asked the principal.

“Bert Bobbsey!” said Sam in a firm voice, and Nan was so excited that
she cried out:

“Oh!”

Nor did the principal or any of the teachers scold her. But Bert was
not one to sit quietly and be falsely accused. In an instant he was on
his feet, raising his hand that he might get permission to speak.

“Well, Bert,” said Mr. Tarton quietly.

“I didn’t break that window!” cried the Bobbsey lad. “I didn’t even
throw a snowball toward it. I didn’t do it at all!” His face was very
red.

“Sammie, did you actually see Bert Bobbsey throw a snowball at the
stained-glass window and break it?” asked Mr. Tarton, and his voice was
stern.

“No, sir, I didn’t really see him break the window,” Sam replied. “But
I saw a snowball in his hand. I saw him raise his hand to throw the
snowball, and right after that I heard the glass crack. Bert Bobbsey
did it!”

“I did not!” exclaimed Bert.

“Quiet! That will do!” the principal called, raising his hand for
silence. “We will not go further into the matter here. Bert, come to my
office after school, and you also, Sam. We will talk about the broken
window then. The classes will now go to their own rooms.”

The teacher at the piano began to play a lively march, but there was
not much spring in the steps of Bert and Nan Bobbsey as they filed
back to Miss Skell’s room. Bert was hurt and indignant that Sam should
accuse him of breaking the window. Nan, too, felt sure that her brother
had not done it.

“Don’t let him scare you, Bert!” whispered Charlie Mason, one of Bert’s
best chums, to the Bobbsey lad in the corridor. “We know you didn’t do
it.”

Of course it was against the rule for Charlie to whisper thus in the
hall, but he was not caught at it. Bert was glad his chum had spoken
to him.

“Now, children,” said Miss Skell, when her pupils were again in their
seats, “we are going to forget all about the broken church window.
Mr. Tarton will attend to that. And please forget that Bert has been
mentioned as doing it.

“I, for one,” and Miss Skell smiled down at the blushing Bobbsey boy,
“don’t believe Bert would do such a thing. I think Sammie must be
mistaken. Now we shall go on with our lessons.”

Neither Danny nor Sam were in the room with Bert and Nan, and for this
the two Bobbseys were glad. Sam and his crony were in the same grade
with Bert and Nan, but, because of its size, the class recited in two
different rooms under separate teachers.

It took a little time for the class to quiet down after the unusual
excitement, but at length the recitations were proceeded with.

It was when Bert and Nan were hurrying home at the noon recess with
Flossie and Freddie that Nan said to her brother:

“Who broke that window, Bert? If you know you ought to tell, especially
since they say you did it.”

“Nobody says I did it except that sneak, Sam Todd, and he isn’t telling
the truth!” exclaimed her twin.

“Do you know who did it?” persisted Nan. Flossie and Freddie had run on
a little way ahead to play with children from their own class, and did
not hear what the two older Bobbseys were saying.

“I’m not sure,” answered Bert, looking about to make certain no one was
near enough to catch what he said, “I didn’t actually see him throw the
snowball, but I believe Danny Rugg broke that window.”

“Oh, Bert, do you, really?” gasped Nan.

“I sure do! I can’t prove it, for I didn’t see him. But he had a
snowball in his hand and he chucked it away when he was near the
church. And right after that the window broke. But I’m not going to
tell.”

“Oh, Bert, maybe you ought to! Do you remember the time Mr. Ringley’s
shoe store window was broken?”

“Yes,” answered Bert, “I remember that time.”

“They said you did that,” went on Nan. “But afterward old Mr. Roscoe
said he saw Danny Rugg throw the chunk of ice that broke the window.
And when Danny found out Mr. Roscoe had seen him, then Danny owned up
that he did it. Don’t you remember?”

“Yes, he broke Mr. Ringley’s window,” admitted Bert, speaking of
something that happened in the first book of this series, “The Bobbsey
Twins.” In that volume you meet Danny Rugg as a bad boy, who was very
unfriendly toward Nan and Bert. Then, after a fight, Danny seemed to
have reformed, and he became a better boy.

“He’s as bad as ever--breaking windows and things like that!” went on
Nan.

“We don’t know for sure that he did it,” cautioned Bert.

“It would be just like him to do it!” declared Nan. “Are you going to
tell mother?”

“Sure!”

And when Mrs. Bobbsey heard what had happened she advised Bert to speak
nothing but the truth and not to accuse Danny unless he was sure that
lad had broken the window.

“That’s the trouble,” sighed Bert. “I can’t be sure, but I feel pretty
certain that Danny did it.”

“It will all come out right,” his mother told him. “And of course you
must not say that you broke the window if you didn’t. Mr. Tarton is too
fair a man to let you be accused without good proof.”

And it was not very good proof that Sam Todd could give when later in
the day he and Bert went to the principal’s office. Sam told his story
over again.

“Yes,” Bert admitted, “I did have some snowballs in my hand. Danny Rugg
and Sam had been throwing at John Marsh, and he ran to where I was. I
was going to help John fight, but there wasn’t any need. And I tossed
away my snowballs before I got within a block of the school.”

“So did I,” said Sam. “And I think I saw you throw yours at the church
window, Bert. Maybe you didn’t mean to break it, but you did.”

“No, I didn’t!” insisted Bert stoutly.

“I think we had better have Danny Rugg in here to see what he knows
about it,” suggested Mr. Tarton. “It would not be fair to punish Bert
on just your say-so, Sammie. You might be honestly mistaken. Go out and
see if you can find Danny and bring him in here.”

But there was no need to go after Danny Rugg. Just as Sam was leaving
the principal’s office Danny came hurrying in, much excited.

“Oh, oh, Mr. Tarton!” he exclaimed.

“What is it?” asked the head of the school. And Bert found himself
wondering whether Danny was going to confess having broken the
stained-glass window of the church.

“Oh, Mr. Tarton!” gasped Danny. “I’ve lost my gold ring! My birthday
ring is gone!” and he held up his hand. No longer did the gold band
glitter on it.




                              CHAPTER IV

                               BAD NEWS


Mr. Tarton had not been principal of the Lakeport school a number of
years without knowing how to deal with the boys and girls.

He was used to all kinds of excitement, having girls fall downstairs
and stopping boys from fighting. And often the pupils lost things in
school. So the news that Danny had lost his ring did not startle Mr.
Tarton very much.

“Well, that’s too bad, Danny,” said the principal. “I’m sorry about
your ring. I’ll announce before the school to-morrow that you have lost
it, and perhaps some one has found it. What kind of ring was it?”

“A birthday ring.”

“Yes, I know. But was it gold or silver and did it have a stone in it?”

“It was gold, and all carved. It didn’t have any stone in it, but on
top it had the letters of my name--D. R. For Danny Rugg, you know.”

“Yes, I know,” returned the principal, while Bert looked at Danny and
Sam rather soberly. For Bert did not like being accused of having
broken the window when he had not even thrown at it, and he thought
Danny should be man enough to own up that he did it.

“I was just going to send for you, Danny, to ask you about the broken
church window,” the principal went on. “But finish telling me about
your ring, so I will know what to say when school starts to-morrow.”

“Well, I had my ring on when I came to school this morning,” Danny
said. “And just now, when I was going home--I was waiting outside for
Sam,” he explained. “Just now I saw it wasn’t on my finger. I went back
in my classroom to look for it, but it wasn’t there.”

“Very likely you dropped it somewhere around the school,” said Mr.
Tarton. “I will inquire about it. But now as to this broken window. Sam
says he thinks Bert did it.”

“But I didn’t!” burst out Bert Bobbsey.

“Just a moment, please, Bert,” said Mr. Tarton, in a low voice. “Did
you see Bert break the window, Danny?”

“No, sir, I--now--I didn’t exactly see him break it,” answered Danny
slowly. “But I saw him have a snowball in his hand.”

“You had one yourself!” cried Bert. “And so did Sam!”

“I didn’t throw it at the church, though!” Sam cried.

“Neither did I!” declared Bert.

Danny said nothing, but he did not look at Bert.

The principal questioned the boys for a long time, but he could learn
nothing more. Sam stuck to it that Bert had broken the window, and
though Danny did not actually say so, it was easy to see that he wanted
Sam’s story to be believed. And of course Bert said he did not break
the stained glass.

“Well, Bert, do you know who broke the window?” asked Mr. Tarton, at
last.

For a moment the Bobbsey boy was silent. Then in a low voice he said:

“Yes, sir, I think I know who did it. But I’m not going to tell.”

Danny Rugg’s face grew rather red at this, and he seemed very much
interested in looking at something outside the window.

“Well,” said Mr. Tarton, at length, “I can’t make you tell, Bert, and
I don’t know that I want to. I hope that the boy who broke the window
will be man enough to confess and pay for it. Meanwhile, we shall let
the matter rest. You boys may go.”

Danny and Sam hurried out ahead of Bert, who walked more slowly. Since
morning many things had happened, and Bert no longer felt as friendly
toward Danny as he had before.

“Danny’s a whole lot meaner since he got so thick with Sam Todd,” said
Bert to himself, as he walked out of the school. He could hear the two
cronies talking together just ahead of him.

“Did you really lose your gold birthday ring, Dan?” asked Sam.

“Sure I did!” was the answer. “Dad’ll scold me, too, when he finds it
out. I wish I could get it back.”

“Don’t you know where you lost it?” Sam wanted to know.

What Danny answered Bert could not hear, for by this time the two boys
had run on ahead. They were making snowballs and throwing them.

“Trying to break more windows, I guess,” murmured Bert, as he passed
the church and looked up at the hole in the beautiful stained-glass
window. Then he saw a man’s head thrust out of the hole--for it was
large enough for that, and Bert recognized the church sexton, Robert
Shull. Mr. Shull was about to fasten a piece of plain glass over the
hole in the colored window.

“Hello, Bert!” called Mr. Shull, for the Bobbseys attended this church
and the sexton knew the twins.

“Hello!” Bert answered.

“I’ve got to mend this hole to keep out the snow until this window can
be fixed with new stained glass,” the sexton said. “It’s going to cost
quite a lot of money, too.”

“Yes, I guess so,” agreed Bert.

“Some of you boys broke this,” the sexton went on, his head still out
of the hole. He was picking from the window frame small bits of broken
glass that had not fallen when the snowball crashed through.

“Yes, I guess one of our fellows did it,” admitted Bert.

“I heard it was you,” went on Mr. Shull.

“Well, I didn’t!” Bert cried.

“No, I don’t believe you did. You aren’t that kind of a boy. Maybe you
know who did it?” Mr. Shull seemed to be asking a question.

“Yes, maybe I do,” Bert admitted. But that was all he would say. He
walked on toward home.

When Bert reached his corner and was about to turn down the street on
which he lived, he saw Danny and Sam throwing snowballs at a signboard.
The two cronies caught sight of him and Danny called:

“Want to get up a snowball fight, Bert Bobbsey?”

“No, I don’t!” was the answer, not very pleasantly given.

“He’s afraid of being licked!” taunted Sam.

“I am not!” cried Bert. “I’ll snowball fight you any time I feel like
it, Sam Todd, but I don’t feel like it. And you needn’t go around
saying I broke that church window, for I didn’t!”

“It looked just like you did it,” Sam said, not quite so sure of
himself as he had been.

“Aw, stop talking about it,” advised Danny Rugg. “And say, Bert, if you
find my gold ring I’ll give you a reward.”

“All right,” answered Bert in a low voice, and passed on. He did not
feel much like talking to Danny and Sam.

“I’ll give you twenty-five cents!” Danny called after him. But Bert did
not turn his head or answer.

On reaching home, Nan told her mother why Bert had been kept in. Mrs.
Bobbsey felt sorry for her son, but she knew he had not broken the
window, and she felt sure that in time the truth would be known.

So when Bert finally reached home, half an hour later than usual, he
found his mother waiting for him. She asked him what had happened, and
Bert told her.

“Do you really think Danny did it?” asked Mrs. Bobbsey.

“I’m almost sure of it,” Bert answered. “If I could only prove it I’d
be glad, for then everybody would know I didn’t do it.”

“Never mind,” soothed his mother. “Perhaps, some day, you can find a
way of making sure that Danny did it. Then your name will be cleared.
But until you are sure, don’t say that Danny broke the window.”

“No, Mother, I won’t,” promised Bert.

“Did you say Danny lost his new birthday ring?” went on Mrs. Bobbsey.

“Yes and he was all excited about it.”

“Well, of course it’s too bad,” said Bert’s mother. “But he shouldn’t
have worn a valuable ring to school--especially at snowballing time.
Things lost in the snow are hard to find.”

Bert went out to play in the snow with his brother and sisters. He
looked up at the evening sky and saw it covered with clouds.

“There’s going to be more snow,” Bert decided. “If a lot falls we can
coast on the big hill, and we can make snow forts and snow men and
everything!”

Bert, like the other Bobbsey twins, liked the fun that came with
winter. He liked summer fun, also. In fact, Bert and the other three
Bobbsey twins liked all kinds of fun, just as you and I do.

It was after the evening meal, when Mr. Bobbsey was telling Bert not
to mind so much being accused of breaking the church window, that the
doorbell rang. Dinah, the colored cook, big, fat and jolly, answered
and came back with a yellow envelope in her hand.

“A telegram!” exclaimed Mrs. Bobbsey. “I hope it isn’t any bad news!”

Every one grew quiet while Mr. Bobbsey opened the message.

“Well, it is bad news--of a sort,” he said.

“What?” asked his wife.

“Uncle Rossiter is very ill,” answered Mr. Bobbsey. “He wants you and
me, Mary, to come to him at once. I think we’ll have to go. It may be
his last illness. We’d better start in the morning.”

“Oh, will you take us with you?” begged Nan. “I remember Uncle
Rossiter. Can’t we go with you?”

“Take us! Take us!” begged Flossie and Freddie.

Mr. Bobbsey shook his head.

“No,” he answered slowly, “it would be out of the question to take you
twins. You’ll have to stay at home and keep house by yourselves. Mother
and I will need to leave in a hurry. We can’t take you.”

Sad looks were on the faces of all the Bobbsey twins.




                               CHAPTER V

                            AUNT SALLIE PRY


Mr. Bobbsey got out some railroad time-tables and began looking at
them, trying to decide how early he and his wife must leave the next
day to get to Uncle Rossiter’s home, which was several hundred miles
away.

“Is Uncle Rossiter very sick?” asked Bert of his mother, who was again
reading the telegram that had arrived.

“I’m afraid he is,” was the answer. “Poor old man! He is all alone in
the world. Your father and I are the only relations he has left, so
that’s why he wants to see us.”

“I do wish we could go with you,” sighed Bert.

“You wouldn’t want to quit school, would you?” asked his father,
looking up from the time-tables.

“School isn’t so nice when a lot of fellows in it think you broke a
window,” grumbled Bert.

“Nonsense!” laughed Mr. Bobbsey. “You know you didn’t do it. We know
you didn’t do it, and so do your friends. The others don’t matter. And
in time it will be found out who really smashed the glass.”

“But if you and mother are going away and leave us here all alone, it
won’t be any fun,” said Bert.

“Oh, I think it will!” cried Nan. “We can keep house by ourselves. I
love to cook and wash the dishes.”

“You won’t be alone,” Mrs. Bobbsey said. “Dinah will be here to cook
and look after you. Sam will shovel the snow, if any more falls, and
he’ll look after the fires. You’ll be all right with Sam and Dinah.”

Sam Johnson was Dinah’s husband, and though he was not as fat as was
she, he was quite as good-natured and jolly.

“Besides,” went on Mrs. Bobbsey, “I will ask a woman to come in to help
you keep house, Nan.”

“Who, Mother?”

“I’ll send for Mrs. Pry.”

“Oh, Aunt Sallie!” exclaimed Bert.

“Yes, Aunt Sallie,” his mother answered. “She is a very good
housekeeper and will look after you very well. She is a little deaf,
it’s true, but if you speak a little louder than usual and quite
plainly, she will hear you. Flossie and Freddie aren’t going to mind
staying at home and keeping house while daddy and mother are gone, are
you?” and she looked at the smaller twins.

“I like to keep house,” said blue-eyed Flossie. “I’ll help Nan wash the
dishes.”

“I like Aunt Sallie,” said Freddie. “She makes nice cookies, and maybe
she’ll tell us stories.”

“Oh, that’ll be fun!” cried Flossie.

Mrs. Pry was an elderly lady who went about doing housework, and Mrs.
Bobbsey had engaged her on other occasions when it was necessary for
her to leave home for a time.

“I won’t worry about the children when Aunt Sallie is with them,” Mrs.
Bobbsey said. “And now, if we are to leave early in the morning,
Dick,” she said to her husband, “we had better begin packing now. You
do that and I’ll telephone to the boarding house where Mrs. Pry lives
and leave word for her to come early to-morrow.”

Then began a busy time in the Bobbsey house.

“My, what a lot of things have happened since yesterday!” said Nan a
little later when she was helping her mother put Flossie and Freddie to
bed. “Freddie fell down a drain pipe, it snowed, the church window was
broken, and now you’re going away, Mother!”

“Yes, but daddy and I won’t be gone any longer than we need be, my
dear. And I know you will help Dinah and Aunt Sallie keep house.”

“Oh, yes, I’ll help--I love to!” answered Nan.

After the first shock of it was over and Bert and Nan had passed the
disappointment of not being allowed to make the journey with their
father and mother, the older Bobbsey twins rather began to like the
idea of keeping house.

“I guess Aunt Sallie will give me all the cookies I want,” thought
Freddie, as he went to bed.

Mr. and Mrs. Bobbsey remained up later, to pack in readiness for the
early morning start. Word came from Mrs. Pry that she would come as
soon as she could.

“Now, doan you all worry, Miz Bobbsey,” said Dinah to the children’s
mother when the taxicab came to take the travelers to the railroad
station. “Sam an’ me we’ll look after de chilluns jes’ same’s if you
all was heah!”

“I know you will, Dinah,” said Mrs. Bobbsey. “Now, you be good
children, won’t you?” she asked, kissing them all again.

“We will,” promised Nan.

“I’m going to make a snow man!” declared Freddie.

“An’ I’m going to make a snow lady,” said Flossie.

“I’ll write you a letter,” promised Bert, “and let you know everything
is all right.”

“Yes, Son, do that,” begged his father. “And if it is found out who
broke the window, put that in your letter.”

Bert promised he would do this. More good-byes were said, Mrs. Bobbsey
kissed the children for the third time all around, and then, trying not
to let them see that her eyes were shining with unshed tears, she ran
out to the taxicab, followed by her husband.

“Doan you worry now!” were Dinah’s parting words. “Everyt’ing am gwine
to be all right!”

But little did Dinah, nor any of the others, know what was going to
happen when the Bobbsey twins began keeping house.

So early had breakfast been served that morning, in order that Mr. and
Mrs. Bobbsey could take the train, that it was not yet time for school.
So Bert went out to the garage where Sam Johnson was at work, for Bert
wanted to fix something on his sled.

“I believe it’s going to snow more,” Bert said, looking up at the
clouded sky, “and I want my clipper in shape for the big hill.”

“Yes,” agreed Sam, “I shouldn’t wonder myse’f but whut we’d hab mo’
snow. Feels mighty like it! Come in, Bert, an’ shut de do’,” he added,
for Bert was standing in the garage with the door partly open as he
scanned the sky.

“If it’s going to storm,” said the boy, as he got out his sled to mend
one of the runners that was loose, “I hope it doesn’t get too bad
before dad and mother reach Uncle Rossiter’s.”

“Yes,” agreed Sam. “’Twouldn’t be no fun to hab dem snowed in--fo’ a
fac’ it wouldn’t!”

Nan wanted to help Dinah wash the dishes, as she said she had time
before school. But the fat, good-natured cook chuckled and said:

“Nebber mind, honey lamb. I got loads ob time. You jes’ see dat mah
odder two sweethearts am ready fo’ school, bress dere hearts!” She
meant Freddie and Flossie.

So Nan looked after the younger twins and then, as the hands of the
clock pointed toward half past eight, the Bobbsey twins--all of
them--went to their classes.

“But what about Aunt Sallie Pry?” asked Bert of Nan. “I thought she was
coming to keep house for us.”

“I guess she’ll be at the house when we come home to lunch,” Nan said.

That morning, before the assembled classes, Mr. Tarton mentioned Danny
Rugg’s lost birthday ring, speaking about the gold initials on top.

“If any of you children find Danny’s ring,” went on the school head,
“either give it to him or bring it to my office.”

Danny Rugg raised his hand for permission to speak.

“What is it, Danny?” asked the principal, while the whole school
wondered what was coming next. Bert Bobbsey had a wild idea in his head.

“Maybe Danny’s going to confess that he broke the window,” said the
Bobbsey boy to himself.

But what Danny said was:

“I’ll give twenty-five cents to whoever finds my lost ring.”

Some of the teachers laughed a little at this, and even Mr. Tarton
smiled, but he said:

“All right, Danny. You have heard the offer of the reward,” he went on
to the school. “And now about another matter. Yesterday it was said
here that Bert Bobbsey broke the church window. I want to say that
there is no proof of this. Bert says he did not do it, and we are bound
to believe him.

“I do hope that whoever broke the stained glass will be manly enough to
admit it, and pay for the damage to the church. I have heard from Mr.
Shull, the sexton, that it will cost about ten dollars to repair the
window.”

Several of the children gasped at this. To most of them ten dollars was
a great deal of money. And Bert thought Danny looked a trifle pale on
hearing this news.

But nothing more was said about the broken window, and the classes
marched to their several rooms and the school day went on.

Hurrying home at noon, the Bobbsey twins were rather surprised to find
that Aunt Sallie Pry had not yet arrived to help Dinah take charge of
the house.

“Maybe she isn’t coming,” suggested Bert.

“Oh, yes, she’s suah to come!” Dinah stated. “Mrs. Pry, she done
tellyfoam me dat she’d be ober dis ebenin’.”

“Is anything the matter?” Nan wanted to know.

“She done say she got a li’l touch ob de misery in her back,” Dinah
explained.

“What’s misery?” Freddie wanted to know.

“A sort o’ pain,” Dinah told him. “Now eat you lunch, honey lambs, so’s
you kin git to de head of de class when you goes back to school.”

“I’m head of the class now, Dinah,” said Freddie. “That is, I’m head of
the boys. Flossie is head of the girls’ side.”

“Aw right, honey lamb!” chuckled Dinah. “Den you all had done bettah
eat a good lunch so’s you all kin stay at de head!”

Back to school went the Bobbsey twins, and when the classes were out
later in the afternoon they hurried home again. As they reached the
house a few flakes of snow began to fall.

“Oh, look!” cried Freddie. “More snow! Hurray!”

“Hurray!” cried Flossie. “Oh, won’t we have fun!”

The wind began to blow and the snow fell more thickly.

“It’s going to be quite a storm,” said Bert.

“I wonder if mother and daddy won’t be snowed in on the train?” said
Nan. “Trains do get snowed up, don’t they, Bert?”

“Sometimes they do, I guess,” he answered. “But maybe mother and dad
are at Uncle Rossiter’s by this time.”

“No, they won’t get there until late to-night,” Nan said. “It’s a long
journey.”

“Oh, well, maybe they won’t get snowed in,” said Bert.

“I’m going to play with my sled!” cried Flossie. Then she opened her
mouth wide, trying to catch snowflakes on her rosy tongue.

“So’m I!” added Freddie.

“Well, you may play out for a time,” said Nan, acting the part of a
“little mother.” Then she told the two smaller twins to go in and get
on their rubber boots and old coats, so if they fell down, as they
often did when playing, no damage would be done.

After some jolly fun out of doors the Bobbsey twins entered the house
by the side door to get ready for the evening meal. As they did so the
bell at the front door rang.

“I guess that’s Aunt Sallie,” said Nan. “She telephoned that she’d be
here about this time.”

“Is the misery in her back better?” asked Freddie.

“I guess so,” Nan answered as she went to the door, followed by the two
smaller twins. And when Nan opened the door, there stood Aunt Sallie,
her bag in her hand, and the snowflakes swirling around her.

“Well, my dears, here I am,” she announced.

“We’re glad you came,” said Nan politely.

“How’s your back?” asked Freddie.

“What’s that?” cried the old lady. “You say the train ran off the
track? Good gracious! I hope your folks weren’t hurt! Oh, dear!”

“No, no!” exclaimed Nan, trying not to laugh. “Freddie didn’t say
anything about the train running off the track. He asked how was your
back.”

“Oh, my back! That’s a lot better, thank goodness,” said the old lady,
as she entered the hall, shaking off the snowflakes.

Bert came out to greet the visitor, who was to remain several
days--until Mr. and Mrs. Bobbsey returned--and said:

“It’s going to be quite a storm, isn’t it?”

“What’s that? You say your clothes are torn?” cried the old lady.
“Well, don’t worry. I brought needles and thread with me. I’ll soon
mend your torn clothes.”

“No,” chuckled Bert, “I said it’s quite a storm!”

“Oh! Storm! Yes, indeed!” murmured Mrs. Pry. “I’m afraid I’m getting
a little deaf,” she went on. “You children will need to talk a bit
louder.”

“A lot louder, I’ll say,” murmured Bert to himself.




                              CHAPTER VI

                              LOST TWINS


Mrs. Pry was a “little deaf,” as she called it. She also was a
good-natured person. And she was no stranger to the Bobbsey twins. She
had worked in their house many times before, and knew her way about
very well.

“I suppose, Nan,” she said, “that I’m to take the room I always have?”

“Yes, Aunt Sallie,” answered Nan, for Mrs. Pry wanted to be called by
the more affectionate name. “Mother said your old room was ready for
you.”

“Then I’ll just take my bag up and be right down to help get supper,”
and she started up the stairs.

“I guess Dinah has everything all cooked, ready to eat,” Nan said.

“Oh, you’re going to have boiled beets, are you? That’s good! I’m
very fond of boiled beets,” and Mrs. Pry smiled and went on upstairs,
not knowing that she had misunderstood Nan. But Nan did not take the
trouble then to correct the old lady. She had all she could do, did
Nan, to keep Flossie and Freddie from laughing out loud at Mrs. Pry’s
queer mistakes.

Bert and Nan at first felt a trifle lonesome because their father
and mother had gone away, but this feeling wore off as the evening
advanced. There was a jolly little party at the table when the evening
meal was served, and Mrs. Pry made many more queer mistakes because she
did not catch just what the children or Dinah said. And as the Bobbsey
twins were nearly always laughing, anyhow, a few laughs, more or less,
at Mrs. Pry’s mistakes did not matter. She did not know they were
laughing at her, and, really, it did no harm.

“Anyhow, you can’t help it,” said Bert to Nan afterward. “I thought I’d
burst right out snickering when I asked her to pass the bread and she
thought I was saying I couldn’t move my head!”

“Yes, that was funny,” agreed Nan. “Is it still snowing, Bert?” she
asked, as she got out her books, ready to do some studying for the next
day.

“Yes, snowing hard,” Bert reported as he held his hands to the sides of
his face so he could peer out into the darkness. “Going to be a regular
blizzard, I guess.”

“Oh, Bert! I hope not that!”

“Why not?”

“Because, I don’t want father and mother snowed-up.”

“Oh, I guess a train can get through pretty big drifts before it’s
stuck. Don’t worry.”

Flossie and Freddie had gone to bed earlier, and about all they talked
of was the fun they would have in the snow the next day.

“If it snows too hard they ought not to go to school,” said Nan to
Bert, speaking of the smaller twins.

“No, I guess it would be better for them to stay at home with Aunt
Sallie and Dinah--if the snow’s too deep,” he agreed. “But maybe it
won’t be.”

Flossie slept in Nan’s room, while Freddie “bunked,” as he called it,
with Bert. Just how long she had been asleep Nan did not know, but she
was awakened by hearing her sister calling her.

“Yes, dear, what is it?” asked Nan sleepily.

“I’d like a drink of water,” Flossie answered.

“All right,” Nan said kindly. She often got up in the night to get
Flossie a drink. Now she slipped on her robe and slippers and went
into the bathroom. “It’s still snowing,” said Nan to herself, as she
listened to the wind blowing the flakes against the window. “I do hope
mother and daddy will be all right.”

Nan was carrying the water in to her sister when the door of Aunt
Sallie’s room, farther down the hall, opened, and the old lady put out
her head. Nan noticed the old-fashioned night-cap Mrs. Pry wore.

“Is anything the matter, Nan?” asked Mrs. Pry. “Has anything happened?
Are burglars trying to get in? If they are, telephone for the police at
once. Don’t try to fight burglars by yourself.”

“It isn’t burglars,” answered Nan. “I was just getting Flossie a drink.”

“What’s that?” exclaimed the old lady. “You say Flossie has fallen into
the sink? Poor child! But what is she doing at the sink this hour of
the night?”

“Not sink--drink!” exclaimed Nan, trying not to laugh. “I am getting
Flossie a drink.”

“Oh--drink! Why didn’t you say so at first, my dear? Well, I must get
in bed or I’ll have that misery in my back again.”

Flossie turned over and went to sleep once more after taking the water.
But Nan was a bit longer finding her way to dreamland. Somehow or
other, she felt worried, just why she could not say.

“But I feel as if something were going to happen,” she told herself.

However, Nan was a strong, healthy girl, and when you are that way you
do not lie awake very long at night. So Nan soon dropped off to sleep
and then the house remained quiet until morning.

“Oh, it snowed a lot!” cried Flossie, running to the window to look out.

“Get back into bed!” ordered Nan. “You’ll catch cold in your bare feet.
Is it still snowing, Flossie?”

“No, it isn’t snowing but there’s a lot on the ground.”

“Well, I’m glad the storm is over,” said Nan, as she got up to dress,
after which she would look after Flossie.

So much snow had fallen in and around Lakeport that, though it was
still early in the season, it looked as if winter had come to stay. Of
course all the boys and girls liked this, though when Sam Johnson went
out to shovel paths it can not be said that he liked the snow.

“Makes too much wuk!” Sam said to his wife.

“You ought to be glad you has yo’ health, Sam!” chuckled fat Dinah.
“An’ when you comes in I’s gwine to hab hot pancakes an’ sausages an’
maple syrup fo’ you!”

“Yum! Yum!” murmured Sam. “Dat’s good!”

“Are we going to have pancakes, too?” asked Freddie, overhearing this
talk.

“Indeed you is, honey lamb!” said Dinah, smiling at him.

On the way to school, Danny Rugg and Sam Todd began throwing snowballs
at Bert and John Marsh. Bert did not mind this much, since Danny and
Sam were using soft balls. But pretty soon Joe Norton, a chum of
Sam’s, happened along, and he joined forces with Danny. This made
three against two, and Bert and John were getting the worst of it when
Charlie Mason, with whom Bert was very friendly, ran up.

“Let me get a shot at ’em!” cried Charlie, and he made snowballs so
fast and threw them so straight, hitting Danny, Sam and Joe, that
though the sides were even, Danny and his two chums turned and ran away.

“Ho! Ho!” taunted John. “You’re afraid to stay and fight!”

“We are not,” said Danny. “But it’s almost time for the last bell.”

“That’s a good excuse!” laughed Charlie.

“I’ve got some horse-chestnuts in my pocket,” said Sam to Danny as they
ran on. “This afternoon we’ll put some inside snowballs and we’ll soak
Bert and his gang good and hard.”

“All right,” agreed Danny.

Though the snow had stopped falling, the skies had not cleared and the
storm did not appear to be over, except for a little while. And there
was so much snow on the ground that Mr. Tarton announced at the morning
exercises that the children of the primary grades would be excused from
returning in the afternoon.

“I also want to add,” the principal went on, “that we shall do this
winter as we have done in past years. If on any morning the weather is
too bad, or the storm too heavy, to make it safe for you to come out,
the bell will be rung three times, five strokes each time, as a signal
that there is to be no school. Then you need not start.

“So, children, in case of a storm, listen about half past eight
o’clock. And if the bell rings five times, then is silent, then rings
five times more, then is silent, and then rings a last five strokes,
that means there will be no school.”

“I wish it would ring that way every day,” whispered Danny Rugg to Sam,
as they were marching back to their room.

“So do I,” agreed Sam. “I hate school!”

And the worst of it was that his teacher heard him and Danny
whispering, and each one had to remain in ten minutes later than the
others that afternoon when school was dismissed.

Bert and Nan took Flossie and Freddie home at noon and left the smaller
twins, who at once said they would go out and play in the yard which
was covered with snow.

“Well, don’t get your feet wet, my dears,” cautioned Mrs. Pry. “The
reason the principal let you stay at home was so you wouldn’t get wet
in the snow. And if you’re going out in the yard to get wet feet, you
might just as well go back to your classes.”

“We’ll be careful,” promised Freddie.

“And if any snow gets down my rubber boots, I’ll take ’em off and
empty the snow out,” said Flossie.

It was Freddie who, a little later, thought of a way to have some fun.
Floundering about in the snowy yard he saw back of the garage the
big kennel in which Snap, the dog, used to sleep. A few weeks before
this story opens, Snap had been taken sick, and had been sent to a
dog-doctor to be cured. He was to remain away several months. So Sam
had cleaned out the kennel and put it back of the garage.

“I know how we can have lots of fun, Flossie,” said Freddie.

“How?” asked the little girl.

“We’ll play we’re snowed-in at Snap’s kennel,” went on the little boy.
“We’ll crawl inside and make believe we’re at the north pole. It’ll be
nice and warm in the dog house, ’cause there’s a blanket nailed over
the door. It’s like a curtain.”

“All right--let’s do it!” agreed Flossie. “And if we could have
something to eat in the dog house it would be like a picnic.”

“I’ll get something to eat,” offered Freddie.

“What’ll you get?”

“Some of Aunt Sallie’s molasses cookies. She just baked a lot of ’em!”

“All right--get some, and we’ll play snowed-up in the dog house,” said
Flossie.

Mrs. Pry was glad to have Freddie ask for some of her cookies, since
the old lady was rather proud of the way she made them.

“What are you going to do with them?” she asked, as she handed Freddie
the cookies.

“Eat ’em,” he answered.

“Of course, my dear, I know that!” laughed Aunt Sallie. “But where are
you going to eat them?”

“Out by the garage.” Freddie didn’t want to say anything about the dog
house, for fear Mrs. Pry or Dinah would say he and Flossie couldn’t
play in it.

“Dat’s aw right,” announced Dinah. “De honey lambs will be safe out by
de garage, ’case as how my Sam’s out dere. But don’t stay out too late,
Freddie.”

“We won’t,” he promised.

With the cookies, he and Flossie crawled into Snap’s kennel. It was
plenty large enough for them, and they could almost stand up in the
middle, though the sloping roof made it lower on each side.

As Flossie had said, there was a curtain, an old piece of carpet,
tacked over the front to keep the cold wind out. And Sam had put some
clean straw in the kennel, ready for the time when Snap should come
back.

“Oh, this is a lovely place!” exclaimed Flossie, as she snuggled down
in the straw.

“It’s fun!” agreed her brother. “Now we’ll pretend there’s a big snow
storm outside and it’s all piled up against our house and we can’t get
out to find anything to eat.”

“We don’t have to,” said Flossie. “’Cause you got cookies, didn’t you?”

“Yes,” answered Freddie. “I got a lot of cookies.”

“Then we’ll make believe some is roast turkey and some is cranberry
sauce, and it’s ’most Christmas,” went on Flossie. Soon the two
children were pretending in this jolly way.

Bert and Nan were a bit late coming home from school that afternoon.
Bert stayed in to do something for Mr. Tarton, and Nan helped Miss
Skell clean off the blackboards.

But when the two older Bobbsey twins reached home they noticed that
Flossie and Freddie were not in the house. It was getting dark,
too--getting dark earlier than usual because of storm clouds in the sky.

“Where are Freddie and Flossie?” asked Nan of Mrs. Pry.

“Playing out in the garage,” was the answer.

But when Nan went out there Sam was locking the garage for the night.

“Flossie an’ Freddie?” repeated the colored man. “No, Nan, I haven’t
seen ’em. Dey haven’t been out heah all dis afternoon!”

“Then where can they be?” faltered Nan. “Oh, I wonder if they can have
wandered away and are lost! Oh, Sam!”




                              CHAPTER VII

                             SAM GOES AWAY


“Dose chilluns aren’t lost!” declared Sam Johnson when he heard what
Nan said.

“Are you sure?” asked the Bobbsey girl.

“Cou’se I is!” replied Sam. “Where could dey be losted at?”

“They might have gone away over the fields to roll a big snowball, or
something like that,” suggested Nan. “And then they might have wandered
to the woods and now can’t find their way back.”

“No, I don’t believe dat,” said Sam. “You say dey came out to play in
de garage?”

“That’s what Mrs. Pry says,” answered Nan. “Freddie came in to get some
of her cookies, and when she asked him what he was going to do he said
he and Flossie were going to play in the garage.”

Sam shook his head.

“I been out here ’most all de afternoon,” he said. “I didn’t see
Flossie or Freddie. Cou’se dey might hab slipped in when I went to de
house to git a bucket of hot watah. I’ll take a look around to make
suah!”

He opened the garage again and turned on the electric lights, for it
was so equipped. Then Nan and Sam looked all over the first floor
without finding a sign of the children.

“What’s the matter?” asked Bert, hurrying out to the garage, having
heard from Mrs. Pry and Dinah that Nan had gone to bring in the smaller
twins.

“Oh, Flossie and Freddie are lost!” half sobbed Nan.

“I don’t zackly believe dey’s lost,” Sam stated. “Dey’s jest in some
place we don’t know. I’ll take a look upstairs. Maybe dey went up dere
to play house.”

“Oh, maybe!” eagerly exclaimed Nan. There was a sleeping room over the
garage, but it was seldom used, Dinah and Sam having quarters in the
Bobbsey house. But Flossie and Freddie had often gone to this bedroom
to play.

However, they were not up there now, and Nan cried some real tears when
several more minutes passed and her little brother and sister could not
be found.

“Is anything the matter?” asked Mrs. Pry, who had thrown a shawl over
her head and hurried outside.

“We can’t find Flossie and Freddie,” stated Bert.

“What’s that? Is supper almost ready?” inquired the deaf old lady.
“Why, yes, it will be in a minute. Bring the little ones in and we’ll
eat.”

“We can’t find them! We can’t find Flossie and Freddie!” called out
Bert, this time so loudly that Mrs. Pry heard.

“Oh, my goodness!” she exclaimed. “Why, they came in and got some
cookies--at least, Freddie did. Have you called for them? Maybe they’ve
fallen asleep in the snow. I’ve heard that being out in the snow makes
one sleepy.”

“Say, we haven’t called!” said Bert. “I’ll give a shout!”

He did, several of them. He called at the top of his voice for Flossie
and Freddie, standing outside the garage.

And then, to the surprise of all, Freddie’s voice answered:

“Here we are! What’s the matter?”

“Where are you?” asked Bert, for he could not locate the voice.

“In the dog house!” answered Freddie, and a moment later he and
Flossie, rubbing their eyes--for they had fallen asleep--came around
the corner of the building. Bits of straw were clinging to the children.

“Where in the world have you been?” cried Nan. “We’ve been looking all
over for you!”

“We were in Snap’s kennel,” explained Freddie. “We went in there to
play snowed-in.”

“And we made believe the molasses cookies were turkey and cranberry
sauce,” went on Flossie. “And then we went to sleep.”

“For the land sakes!” cried Mrs. Pry.

Sam Johnson was laughing. He picked up Flossie and Freddie in his
strong arms and carried them to the house. Dinah was just getting
ready to come out and see what the trouble was.

“Mah good land ob massy!” exclaimed the fat colored cook when she heard
the story. “To t’ink ob mah honey lambs bein’ out in de dog house!”

“It was a nice place, with clean straw,” stated Freddie.

“An’ the cookies were awful good!” added Flossie. “But we ate ’em all
up and I’m hungry again.”

“Suppah’s ready,” Dinah announced.

“And you mustn’t go in the dog house again,” said Mrs. Pry. “Next time
we might not find you, or maybe you couldn’t get out.”

“Oh, we could get out easy enough,” said Freddie.

Thus the lost ones were found, and though Nan laughed at how funny the
two twins looked as they came, sleepy-eyed, out of the dog house with
straw clinging to them, she had been anxious for a time.

That evening Flossie and Freddie went to bed early, for they were still
sleepy from having been out in the fresh air nearly all afternoon.
Grace Lavine came over to see Nan, and Charlie Mason called to play
some games with Bert.

“I came past Danny Rugg’s house on the way over,” Charlie said to Bert.
“What do you think he was doing?”

“Breaking more church windows?” asked Bert.

“Breaking church windows? What do you mean? Do you think Danny smashed
the one near our school?” asked Charlie.

“Yes, I do,” said Bert in a low voice. “But don’t say anything about
it. I’m trying to find a way to prove that he did it so I’ll be
cleared.”

“All right, I won’t say anything,” promised Charlie. “But that isn’t
what I saw Danny doing.”

“Was he looking for his lost gold ring?”

“No, it was too dark for that. But he was out in the lots near his
house--he and Sam and Joe and some other fellows--and they’re making a
big snow fort.”

“Getting ready to have a snowball fight, I guess,” suggested Bert.
“Well, I’m not going to fight, if he asks me. I’d rather have a fight
with some other crowd.”

“So’d I,” agreed Charlie. “And I know something else.”

“What?”

“Well, I saw Sam Todd taking a lot of horse-chestnuts into the fort
they’re building. They’re going to put ’em in snowballs to make ’em
harder.”

“It’s just like Danny Rugg and his crowd!” growled Bert. “They never do
anything fair! Well, none of our fellows will take sides against ’em.”

“I guess not!” agreed Charlie.

Grace Lavine laughed when Nan told her about Flossie and Freddie having
been “lost” in the dog house that afternoon.

“Oh, I think they’re the cutest children!” exclaimed Grace. “Don’t you
just love them, Nan?”

“Yes, of course. But they’re always into some mischief or other. I was
glad mother wasn’t here to be worried about them.”

“When is she coming back?”

“I don’t know--not until Uncle Rossiter is better, I guess.”

“And are you twins keeping house all by yourselves?”

“Oh, no, we have Aunt Sallie Pry.”

Just then Charlie, who was playing a game of checkers with Bert, made
such a sudden “jump” with one of his kings that he kicked over a chair
near him. It fell to the floor with a crash.

“What’s that?” asked Aunt Sallie from the kitchen where she was helping
Dinah with the last of the evening’s work.

“It was only a falling chair,” said Nan.

“Somebody combing their hair! Well, they made noise enough about it, I
must say!” exclaimed the old lady, and Grace and Nan had to stuff their
handkerchiefs in their mouths to keep from laughing aloud.

Charlie and Grace went home about nine o’clock, and soon after that the
older Bobbsey twins went to bed. Nan was feeling lonesome and wished
for her mother’s return. However, she said nothing about it.

It was the next afternoon when Bert came hurrying home from school
that more news awaited him and Nan.

“Where’s Sam?” Bert called to Dinah, as he hurried into the kitchen. “I
want him to fix that runner on my sled. It came loose again. Where’s
Sam, Dinah?”

Nan gave a quick look at the colored cook and guessed at once that
something had happened.

“Is anything wrong, Dinah?” asked Nan, for she noticed a sad look on
the kindly black face.

“Yes, honey lamb, dey is somethin’ wrong,” Dinah answered.

“Is it Uncle Rossiter?” asked Bert. “Or is it----”

He was afraid to ask about his father and mother.

“No, honey, ’tisn’t quite as bad as dat,” said Dinah. “But Sam, he done
had to go away.”

“Sam had to go away!” gasped Nan.

“Is he sick?” inquired Bert.

“No, he isn’t sick,” Dinah answered. “But his brother down South is
terrible sick, an’ a tellygram come sayin’ dat Sam mus’ come right off
quick. So he went on de noon train.”

“Oh, well, maybe Sam’s brother will get better,” replied Bert.

“’Tisn’t dat I’s worryin’ so much about,” explained Dinah. “But wif Sam
gone dey isn’t no man around de house now, an’ we’s likely to hab mo’
bad storms. Dey isn’t any man heah!”

“I can look after things!” cried Bert. “I can shovel snow ’most as good
as Sam. And I can shovel coal, too.”

“Oh, we’ll be all right,” added Nan. Though, deep in her heart, she had
a feeling that keeping house with Sam, the big, strong protector gone,
was not going to be as much fun as it had seemed at first.




                             CHAPTER VIII

                             BERT’S TUMBLE


Truth to tell, Dinah had worried more on the children’s account than on
her own when it was found necessary for Sam to go to his brother, after
a telegram had been received calling him to the South.

“I kin git along by myse’f, without any man,” Dinah had said to Mrs.
Pry when they had talked it over before the children came home from
school. “But wif Mr. and Mrs. Bobbsey away, I don’t want mah honey
lambs to git frightened.”

“I don’t believe they will,” said the old lady. “The Bobbsey
twins--especially the older ones--seem quite able to look after
themselves, even if Sam has to go.”

And so it proved. Bert took a manly stand nor did Nan seem much
worried, or, if she was, she did not show it.

As for Flossie and Freddie, nothing worried them very much nor for very
long at a time. In fact, they did not pay a great deal of attention to
the going of Sam Johnson. They had seen him around in the morning, and
he was gone when they came home. That was all there was to it. If Dinah
had had to leave--well, that would be quite a different thing.

The short early winter afternoon was fading. It would soon be dark. Sam
had brought in a lot of wood and had carried up a whole box full of
coal before he went away, so Bert did not have this to do.

“But I’ll go out and lock up the garage,” he said to Nan. “Sam always
does that the last thing at night, even if none of the cars have been
taken out. Now I’ll do it.”

Mr. Bobbsey kept two automobiles, but neither was in use now that he
and his wife had gone to Uncle Rossiter’s.

“And be sure the house is locked up well, too, Bert,” warned Mrs.
Pry. “Go over every door and window to make sure. We don’t want any
burglars coming in, with Sam away.”

“Huh! If any of dem burglar men come in, I’ll fix ’em!” declared Dinah.

“What would you do?” asked Bert, looking at Nan.

“Hit ’em wif mah rollin’ pin--dat’s whut I’d do!” cried Dinah, shaking
the rolling pin, with which at that moment she was flattening out the
dough for a batch of biscuits.

“I guess that would fix ’em!” laughed Bert. “But I’ll lock up
everything so the burglars can’t get in.”

That evening when Flossie and Freddie had, as usual, gone to bed early
and while Bert and Nan were studying their lessons, a knock sounded on
the side door.

“My goodness! what’s that?” cried Mrs. Pry, almost jumping out of the
chair in which she was sitting mending stockings. Dinah was out in the
kitchen, “setting” the pancakes for the next morning.

“Some one’s at de side do’,” said the colored cook. “I’ll go see who
’tis.”

“What’s that?” cried deaf Mrs. Pry. “Did you say you fell on the floor,
Dinah?”

“No’m, Miz Pry. I said I’d go to de do’!”

“I wonder who it is and why they didn’t ring the front door bell?”
asked Nan of Bert in a low voice. “Do you suppose it could be a tramp?”

“Supposing it is?” asked Bert. “I’m not afraid. Tramps won’t hurt
anybody.”

“No. But he’d be awfully cold and want to come in,” returned Nan.

But it was no tramp. The next-door neighbor, Mr. Flander, having seen
Sam leave that day with a valise, guessed that the colored man had been
called out of town. And knowing that Mr. and Mrs. Bobbsey had left, Mr.
Flander called to see if the Bobbsey twins needed anything.

“Oh, thank you, we’re all right,” said Bert, when he learned who it was.

“That’s good,” Mr. Flander said. “No, I won’t come in, Mrs. Pry. I just
ran over the side garden instead of ringing the bell at the front door.
Well, if you want anything just let me or my wife know. Don’t let the
Bobbsey twins go hungry or cold, you know.”

“I guess there’s no danger of that,” laughed Mrs. Pry.

The kind neighbor took his departure, and soon after that Nan and Bert
went to bed.

One of the first things Bert did the next morning when he came
downstairs to breakfast, was to put on his cap and run out on the porch.

“Where are you going?” asked Mrs. Pry, who let Dinah do the cooking
while she managed the house and saw to it that the twins had plenty to
eat.

“I’m just going out to look and see if it’s going to snow any more,”
Bert answered.

“Land sakes! do you want more snow?” laughed the old lady.

“Sure we do,” Bert answered. “There isn’t quite enough for good
sleigh-riding, and it takes a lot to make snow houses and snow forts.”

When he came back into the house, Nan and the other children having in
the meanwhile taken their places at the table, Bert shook his head.

“I don’t believe it will snow to-day,” he said. “We’ll have to go to
school.”

“Of course you’ll have to go to school,” said Mrs. Pry. “You don’t stay
at home just because it snows, do you?”

“Well, if it was a bad storm we wouldn’t have to go,” explained Bert.
“If it snows so hard in the morning that it’s bad for going to school,
we must stay home, Mr. Tarton said. The bell will ring five strokes,
three times, and we stay home. But I guess it won’t ring that way
to-day.”

“I guess it won’t,” agreed Nan. “But maybe the postman will bring us a
letter from daddy and mother to-day.”

“Oh, I hope he does!” exclaimed Bert. “It seems as if they’d been away
a week, doesn’t it, Nan?”

“Longer than that,” Nan answered.

Just then Flossie began to tap her fork on her plate and exclaim:

“Make him stop! Make Freddie stop!”

“Make him stop what?” Bert wanted to know. “He isn’t doing anything,
Flossie.”

“He was looking over at my plate,” went on the little girl. “Make him
stop it! Now you quit, Freddie Bobbsey!”

“Looking at your plate! The idea!” laughed Nan. “As if that did any
harm! What’s the matter with you this morning, Flossie? Why don’t you
want Freddie to look at your plate?”

“’Cause he looks at it so hungry-like,” Flossie explained. “He’s eaten
his own griddle cake all up, and the maple syrup, too, and maybe he’s
going to take mine.”

“I am not!” cried Freddie.

“Well, you looked so!” insisted Flossie. “Now you stop looking at my
plate!”

“Oh, don’t be so fussy,” said Nan. “Dinah will give Freddie another
griddle cake, and you, also, Flossie, if you want one.”

“I want one,” Freddie quickly said. “I was looking at hers,” he
admitted; “but I wasn’t going to take it.”

Then Dinah came in with another plate of the smoking, brown cakes and
peace was restored between the two small Bobbsey twins. A little later
breakfast was over and the four children started for school.

“If a letter comes from mother, please put it where we’ll see it the
first thing when we come in, Mrs. Pry,” said Nan to the old lady.

“What’s that? You’ve lost your ring?” exclaimed Aunt Sallie. “Oh, my
dear, you must look for it. Lost your ring--that’s too bad!”

“No, I didn’t say anything about a ring!” answered Nan, speaking more
loudly. “I said put mother’s letter, if it comes, where we can see it
the first thing.”

“Oh, yes, my dear, I’ll do that. I thought you spoke of a ring. I
don’t seem to hear so very well this morning. I think it must be going
to snow again. My hearing is always worse just before a storm. But I
hardly believe your folks would have had time to write yet. They’ll be
very busy with your sick uncle. But if a letter does come I’ll take
care of it.”

“It’s funny she thought I said ring,” remarked Nan to Bert as they
walked along to school. “And that reminds me--did Danny Rugg find his
ring?”

“Not that I heard of,” answered Bert. He looked down at his bundle of
books and suddenly exclaimed: “Oh, I forgot and left my arithmetic at
home. I’ll run back and get it. You go on with Flossie and Freddie.”

“Don’t be late!” cautioned Nan.

“No, I won’t,” promised her brother, as he sped back toward the house,
only a few blocks away. Flossie and Freddie wanted to know where Bert
was going, and Nan told them. Then she hastened on with them toward
school.

But Bert did not find his book as quickly as he thought he would, not
remembering where he had put it the night before, and when it was
found, and he was hurrying back on his way to school, Nan and the
others were out of sight.

However, Bert still had plenty of time, though he kept to a jog trot
which soon brought him within sight of the school. But Nan and the
others had taken a short cut, and were already inside the building.

Just as Bert was approaching the church, the stained-glass window of
which had been broken by a snowball, the Bobbsey boy saw ahead of him
Danny Rugg. Danny was alone, and before the trouble Bert would have run
up and joined him, for he and Danny were friendly. But that was before
the window was broken. Now Bert did not care to be friends with this
boy, and so he hung back.

“I’ll wait until he turns into the school yard before I go in,” said
Bert to himself.

But there was a surprise in store for him. Instead of keeping on to
school, when he got in front of the church, a short distance from the
school, Danny gave a quick look around. Just then Bert happened to be
behind a tree. From here he could see Danny, but Danny could not see
him.

And, as it happened just then, no other boys or girls were near the
church. Seeing this, Danny Rugg gave a quick little run and darted
inside the church, a side door of which was open.

“Well, what do you know about that!” exclaimed Bert, half aloud. “Why
is Danny Rugg going into the church this time of morning? Maybe he’s
going to ring the bell for a joke.”

But as he thought of this, Bert did not believe it could be done. The
rope of the church bell was high in a belfry and the door was kept
locked. Bert knew this because once some boys had gotten in and rung
the bell in the middle of the night. Since then the bell rope room had
been kept locked.

“But why did Danny go in the church?” asked Bert of himself again.

There was only one way which the question could be answered, and so
Bert decided on doing a bold thing. He looked at the clock in the
church steeple. It was barely half past eight, and he had plenty of
time.

So, waiting until Danny should have had a chance to get well within the
church, Bert followed, walking softly to make no noise. And all the
while Bert was puzzling over the reason why Danny had entered.

Coming in from out-of-doors, with the ground covered with snow, which
dazzled him, Bert could see hardly a thing in the dark church entry.
The side door opened into a vestibule in the rear of the church.

Unable to see where he was going, Bert stood still a moment. He knew
that his eyes would become accustomed to the gloom in a little while,
and he would be able to see better.

He listened, and heard Danny walking about.

“Why, he’s going upstairs--to the balcony!” whispered Bert. “I can hear
him going upstairs! I wonder why he’s doing that?”

Bert took a few steps forward and then suddenly felt himself falling.

“Oh! Oh!” he gasped as he realized what had happened. He had stepped
into an open trapdoor in the center of the vestibule floor, and was
tumbling into the cellar of the church!




                              CHAPTER IX

                            NAN IS WORRIED


Bert Bobbsey was not a long while falling through the trapdoor. In
fact, it took hardly a second. But in that short time the boy had time
to hear Danny Rugg come clattering down the stairs that led to the
balcony of the church. And from the speed with which Danny ran, Bert
guessed that the other boy was frightened.

“I guess the noise I made when I stumbled and yelled scared Danny,”
thought Bert. Later he learned that this was so.

But poor Bert did not have time to think of much. He felt himself
falling, he heard Danny’s frightened rush out of the church, and then
Bert landed on what seemed to be a pile of old bags in the basement of
the church.

Then Bert felt a sharp pain in his head, which struck something
hard, and a moment later stars seemed to be dancing in front of his
eyes--stars in the darkness. Then Bert knew nothing more. He was
unconscious, just as if he had fainted.

And there the poor lad was, alone in the dark basement.

Danny Rugg did not know who or what it was that had made the noise. He
did not stop to inquire, but darted to the side door of the church,
and, making sure by looking up and down the street that no one saw him,
he slipped out and ran on to school.

Nan Bobbsey, with the smaller Bobbsey twins, had gone in some time
before. Leaving Flossie and Freddie in their classroom, Nan went to
hers to do a little early studying. She expected Bert to come in soon,
and when it got to be a quarter of nine and her brother had not yet
entered, though several other pupils had, Nan was not worried. She
thought Bert, after going back after his arithmetic, had met some of
his chums and was having fun with them on the way to school.

Bert was seldom late, but often he and some of his chums entered the
classroom just as the last bell was ringing its last strokes.

But when the hands of the clock pointed to five minutes of nine, when
Miss Skell was at her desk, and most of the other boys and girls were
in their seats, Nan began to get uneasy. Each time footsteps sounded in
the hall outside the room she hoped it would be Bert who was coming.
But he did not enter.

The last bell began to ring. Nan moved uneasily in her seat. She did
not want her brother to be late.

The last bell stopped ringing.

“Oh, dear!” thought Nan, with a sinking heart. For now Bert could not
enter without being marked tardy. And to Nan, as well as to many other
pupils, this was a sad thing to have happen.

Miss Skell took out her roll book and began to call the names of the
pupils. They were arranged in alphabetical order, beginning with those
whose last name started with the letter A. And of course Bobbsey,
beginning with B, was soon reached.

“Bert Bobbsey!” called Miss Skell.

There was no answer. The teacher raised her eyes from the book and
looked around the room.

“Bert Bobbsey!” she called again, for Bert was seldom absent and Nan
could not remember when he had been late.

There was no answer, of course. For at that moment, though none in the
room knew it, poor Bert was lying unconscious in the church basement.

Then Miss Skell looked at Nan, whose name was next on the list. She
marked Nan as being present, and then asked:

“Is Bert sick to-day, Nan?”

“Oh, no, Miss Skell,” said Nan, very seriously. “He started for school
the same time I did. Then he didn’t have his arithmetic and went back
after it. I don’t know what happened to him. I don’t know why he isn’t
here.”

Nan’s voice began to tremble a little. A thought entered her mind that
perhaps, when Bert went back to get his book, something had happened at
home--either to Dinah or Mrs. Pry--and Bert had had to stay to look
after things.

“Or,” thought Nan to herself, “maybe a telegram came with bad news
about Uncle Rossiter--or mother or daddy--and Bert had to go out there.”

But on second thoughts she hardly believed this possible. Bert would
not start alone on a long journey without telling her.

Miss Skell saw that Nan was troubled, so the teacher said:

“Probably Bert had an errand to do that detained him. Or, after coming
to school, Mr. Tarton may have met him downstairs and asked him to
do something. I think that is it--Bert has gone on an errand for the
principal. In that case I will not mark him tardy. I will wait until
after the morning exercises.”

Nan Bobbsey breathed a sigh of relief. After all, Bert might have been
sent somewhere by the principal. The Bobbsey boy had often gone on
errands for the head of the school, and this, of course, always excused
one from being marked tardy.

Miss Skell went on calling the roll, and soon the boys and girls
marched to the big assembly hall where the morning exercises were held.
Mr. Tarton was in charge, as usual, and as Nan looked at the principal,
up on the platform, she wished she could ask him whether or not he had
sent Bert on an errand.

Miss Skell, however, seemed to know what was going on in Nan’s mind,
for when the class was back in its room the teacher said:

“Nan, you may go to Mr. Tarton’s office to ask whether he sent Bert on
an errand. Then come back and tell me.”

The Bobbsey girl hurried down the stairs and into the office where Mr.
Tarton sat at his desk. Many books were in cases about the room. The
principal’s office was rather a solemn place, and especially so for any
of the boys or girls who were sent there when they had done something
against the rules. However, Nan was easy in her mind on this point,
though she was worried about her brother.

“Well, Nan, what is it?” asked Mr. Tarton. Though he had a large
school, he knew nearly every pupil in it by his or her first name.
“Did Miss Skell send you with a note to me?” he went on.

“No, sir,” answered Nan. “But she said I might come to ask about my
brother Bert.”

“What about Bert?” asked the principal, with a smile. “Has he been
throwing any more snowballs? I won’t ask if he has broken any more
windows, for, even though Sam Todd says Bert did it, I have doubts in
my mind on that point. But what about Bert?”

“Did you send him on an errand?”

“Why, no, Nan. What do you mean?”

“Bert isn’t in his class. He didn’t come to school. He started with
me and ran back to get his arithmetic, and I--I don’t know what has
happened to him.”

Nan’s voice faltered and she was about to cry. Mr. Tarton noticed this
and said kindly:

“Don’t worry. We’ll find Bert for you. Very likely when he got back
home your mother sent him to the store. He may come a little late, but
if he does, and has a good excuse, he will not be marked tardy.”

“Oh, my mother couldn’t send Bert to the store, because she and my
father have gone away!” exclaimed Nan.

“Well, then some one at your house may have sent Bert to the store.”

“Yes, Mrs. Pry or Dinah might,” admitted Nan.

“We can soon find out,” went on the principal. “You have a telephone,
haven’t you?”

“Yes, sir.”

“I will call up and ask if Bert went anywhere. Wait a moment.”

The principal was about to call up the Bobbsey house when he happened
to think of something.

“Perhaps I had better not do this,” he said to Nan. “It might be that
Bert went off by himself. I don’t mean that he played truant, Nan,”
he said, as he heard the girl gasp. “I mean he might have met some
one from your father’s office, or something like that. Those at your
house--the servant or this old lady that you told me was helping you
keep house--would know nothing about it, and it might worry them if we
asked about Bert.”

“I’ll tell you what to do. I’ll ask Miss Skell to excuse you, and you
may go home to see if Bert is there. If he isn’t, come back and let me
know. Then I will do something else. You need not alarm Dinah or Mrs.
Pry. I will ask you to go home to get me a certain book. Let me see, I
remember Bert once brought to school a book of your father’s containing
a number of fine poems for recitation. I’ll send you home to get that
book. Then you won’t worry the old lady. How will that do, Nan?”

“It will be a good plan, I think,” Nan answered. “And I hope I’ll find
Bert there.”

“Yes. Or at least learn whether or not he has been sent on an errand,”
added the principal. “Give this note to Miss Skell.”

He hastily wrote one, and when Miss Skell read it she said to Nan:

“Get on your hat and coat and go.”

The boys and girls in the room, noting that Bert was not present and
seeing Nan go out, did not know what to think. It was very mysterious.

But it was more than mysterious to Nan Bobbsey when she reached home
and saw nothing of Bert. Mrs. Pry saw the girl coming up the steps and
opened the door for her.

“Why, my dear, school isn’t out already, is it?” asked the old lady.

“No, I came back to get a book for Mr. Tarton,” Nan answered. “Did Bert
get his arithmetic?” she inquired.

“Yes, he found it,” said Mrs. Pry, “and he hurried right out with it. I
told him to hurry so he wouldn’t be late for school.”

So Nan learned, without really asking, that Bert had not been sent on
an errand by either Mrs. Pry or Dinah.

“Oh, where can he be?” thought poor Nan, as she hurried back to school
with the book of poems. “What has happened to him? How can Mr. Tarton
ever find him?”




                               CHAPTER X

                           A CALL FOR DINAH


How long Bert Bobbsey lay unconscious in the basement of the church he
did not know. It seemed a very long time to him, but it was probably
not more than an hour--perhaps not that long.

The last thing he remembered was seeing a lot of what appeared to be
brightly dancing stars in front of his eyes. And he saw them even
though it was very dark in the basement. This was caused when his head
struck something. And Bert also remembered, as among the last things
that sounded in his ears, the footsteps of Danny Rugg as he hurried out
of the church.

And now, as Bert recovered consciousness, or “came to,” as it is
sometimes called, he heard some one moving about near him in the
basement. He also saw a light glinting about.

At first the lad thought this was Danny Rugg, and Bert felt so ill and
helpless that he would have been glad of help even from Danny.

“Hey! Hey!” Bert faintly called.

Then a voice answered--a voice which wasn’t that of Danny--it was the
voice of the church sexton, Mr. Shull. Bert remembered this voice very
well.

“Good gracious!” exclaimed Mr. Shull. “What’s that? Is any one here in
the basement?” he asked.

Bert saw the light coming nearer and then he knew the sexton was moving
about with one of those small electric flashlights.

“Is anybody here?” asked the sexton again.

“Yes, I am,” answered Bert, but his voice was so weak that the man, as
well as he knew Bert, did not recognize the tones.

“Who are you?” called Mr. Shull, coming nearer with the light.

“Bert Bobbsey,” was the answer.

“Good gracious! how did you get here? Why, you’re hurt!” the man
cried, as he flashed the light on Bert. “How did it happen?”

He saw Bert lying huddled on a pile of bags and old pieces of carpet
just beneath the open trapdoor. But for the moment the sexton did not
think of the opening in the floor above. So Bert said:

“I came in here----” He was going to tell why he entered, then he
happened to think perhaps this would not be wise. He did not want to
mention Danny Rugg. “I saw the door open and I came in,” went on Bert.
“It was dark, and I walked across the vestibule, and then I fell down
the trapdoor. I guess I’ve been here a long while.”

“You poor boy!” exclaimed Mr. Shull, laying his flashlight down on a
box and leaving it still glowing as he raised Bert up. “I’m so sorry! I
opened the trapdoor to throw down some old bags and pieces of carpet.
Then I had to fix the furnace and I forgot about the trap being open.

“But you haven’t been here so very long, Bert, for I only opened the
church about two hours ago. It’s only a little after ten o’clock now,
maybe not quite that.”

“Then I’ve been here about two hours,” decided Bert, for he remembered
it was about half past eight when he followed Danny into the church.

“Well, you don’t seem to be hurt much,” the sexton went on, as he saw
that Bert could stand up. Mr. Shull flashed the light over the boy from
head to foot. No bones were broken, though Bert’s clothes were a bit
dusty and covered with cobwebs. The boy put his hand to his head.

“Is that where it hurts you?” asked Mr. Shull.

“Yes, sir. I hit my head on something when I fell.”

“It was this box,” and the sexton focused his light on one that rested
on the floor just below the opening of the trapdoor. “Let me see, Bert.”

Very gently, while he held the light in one hand, so it was shining on
Bert’s head, the sexton passed his fingers over the lad’s scalp.

“It isn’t even cut,” he said. “You’re all right. The blow made you
unconscious for a time, but that’s all. I’m very sorry it happened.
I’ll help you upstairs and get you a drink of water. That will make you
feel better.”

Bert did feel decidedly better after drinking some water, and then the
sexton turned on an electric light in the vestibule and made Bert sit
down in a chair.

“The first thing I’ll do is to close that trapdoor,” said Mr. Shull. “I
don’t want any one else falling down there.”

Bert wondered how it was that Danny Rugg hadn’t fallen down, but he
decided the other boy must have passed to one side of the opening.

“There!” exclaimed Mr. Shull, as he slammed the trapdoor shut. “I
shouldn’t have left that open but I didn’t expect anybody to come in
the church at this time of day. And it’s mighty lucky for you, Bert,
that I had tossed those old bags and carpets down right under the trap.
Falling on them probably saved you from having broken bones.”

“Yes, I guess so,” Bert said. He was glad the sexton did not think to
ask him why he had come into the church. To tell that would mean to
mention Danny Rugg. And, somehow or other, Bert wanted to keep this a
secret. He had an idea that Danny had a secret reason for going into
the church.

“And maybe I can find out why,” thought Bert to himself.

He was feeling much better now, and when the sexton gave him another
drink and then got a whisk broom and flicked the dust and cobwebs off
Bert’s clothes, the Bobbsey boy was almost himself again.

There was a lump on his head where it had struck against the edge of
the box, and his head felt sore, while one of his shoulders ached. But
Bert had been hurt worse than this playing football, and he was not
going to mind now.

“Do you want me to take you home Bert?” asked the sexton.

“Oh, no! I have to go to school!” the boy exclaimed.

“I guess they’ll excuse you from school when they hear what’s
happened,” said Mr. Shull. “But do you feel able to go back to your
class?”

“Oh, yes, I think so,” Bert said. His head was clearer now and did not
ache so badly. “I’ll be late, though, I suppose,” he added.

“Just a little,” chuckled the church sexton. “But I’ll tell Principal
Tarton about it, and he’ll excuse you, I’m sure.”

Making certain that Bert’s clothes were now well brushed, Mr. Shull
started for the side door of the church, keeping near the boy in case
he felt “tottery on his pins,” as the sexton spoke of it afterward,
meaning that Bert might be weak in his legs. But he wasn’t, and when he
got out in the fresh, cold air he felt quite himself again.

Mr. Shull walked with Bert as far as the schoolyard gate, and there saw
Henry Kling, the school janitor.

“Hello, Bert!” exclaimed Mr. Kling. “What’s the matter? Your sister
just came in. She’s been back home looking for you.”

“Nan has been looking for me!” cried Bert.

“Yes. You didn’t come to school and she was worried. Mr. Tarton let
her go home, thinking maybe you’d been sent on an errand some place.
But Nan just came back. She was ’most crying and I asked her what the
matter was. So she told me. Where in the world have you been?”

“Down in the church basement,” Bert answered, with a smile.

“Not playing hookey? Don’t tell me you tried to play hookey!” cried the
janitor, who liked Bert.

“No, I fell through a trapdoor,” the boy said, and he briefly explained
what had happened.

“Well, you’d better hurry right into Mr. Tarton’s office and tell him
about it,” advised Mr. Kling. “The whole school will be looking for you
if you don’t.”

You can imagine how glad Nan was to learn that Bert had been found.

She went back to tell Mr. Tarton that her brother had not gone on any
home errand. Then, by telephoning to the lumber office, they learned
that none of the men there knew any reason why Bert should not be at
school. The principal did not know what to think. And then Bert came
in, much to the surprise, but also to the joy, of his sister.

“Well, the lost boy is found!” exclaimed the principal. He smiled at
Bert, for he could see that it was not the boy’s fault that he was late
for school.

Bert explained matters and again he was glad that no one asked him why
he had gone into the church.

“I think you may be excused for the remainder of the morning, Bert,”
said the head of the school. “And you needn’t come back this afternoon
unless you feel quite well.”

“Oh, I feel all right!” Bert was quick to say. “I’d rather stay now
than go home. If I go home, Mrs. Pry will think I’m sick, and she might
make me take some medicine.”

“Oh, I see!” chuckled Mr. Tarton. “Well, suit yourself. Here is a note
to Miss Skell, telling her not to mark you tardy,” and he hastily wrote
a few lines on a piece of paper.

“Thank you,” said Bert.

Then he and Nan went to their room, where their entrance created no
little excitement. All the other boys and girls wondered why Nan had
gone out and why Bert came in late.

They found out at noon time, for Bert told his story. But still he did
not say anything about having followed Danny Rugg into the church.

Of course Danny heard the story of Bert’s tumble, and Danny must have
known that it was the sound of Bert’s fall that had caused the noise
which frightened him away.

But Danny said nothing to Bert on the subject, nor did Bert mention it
to Danny. In fact, he and Danny did not play together any more. They
were not exactly “bad friends,” but they were not on good terms, and
hardly did more than nod or say “hello!” when meeting.

“I’m just as well satisfied,” Bert said to Nan when they were on their
way home to lunch that noon. “I don’t like Danny any more.”

“Why did he go into the church, do you think?” asked Nan, for of course
Bert told his twin about following the other lad inside.

“I don’t know why he went in,” Bert answered. “It was queer. I wanted
to find out. That’s why I went in after him. But I didn’t think there’d
be a hole for me to fall into.”

Nothing was said at home about Bert’s fall, for he did not want
Dinah or Mrs. Pry to worry needlessly. And he felt all right again,
especially after a good lunch.

“Did any letter come from mother or daddy?” asked Nan.

“No, my dear,” answered Mrs. Pry. “Perhaps one will come to-morrow.
Don’t worry--your folks are all right.”

But that afternoon when it began to snow again, though Bert and the
boys greeted the swirling flakes with shouts of joy, Nan felt much
worried.

As the storm seemed likely to be a heavy one, as soon as she was out of
school Nan hurried home with Flossie and Freddie. The younger twins had
not heard the talk about Bert’s fall, and so would not mention it to
either Mrs. Pry or Dinah.

Bert did not go home with Nan and the smaller children. He stayed to
have some fun in the snow with Charlie Mason and John Marsh. And he had
so much fun and felt so much better, after his fall, to be out in the
air that it was not until it was almost dark that he ran home.

“Oh, Bert!” cried Nan, meeting him at the door. “Something has
happened!”

“Uncle Rossiter!” cried Bert. “Is he----”

“No, it isn’t about Uncle Rossiter,” answered Nan. “Oh, I’ve been
waiting and waiting for you to come home to tell you! Dinah has gone
away!”

“Dinah gone away!” cried Bert blankly. “What for?”

It seemed as if the bottom had dropped out of everything with the
faithful colored cook away from the house and with Sam also gone.

“What happened?” asked Bert.




                              CHAPTER XI

                                LUMBAGO


“Come on in and shut the door,” said Nan before she took time to answer
her brother’s question about what had caused Dinah to go away. “Mrs.
Pry doesn’t like the cold. We must keep the house warm for her, she
says.”

“’Tisn’t cold!” declared Bert, whose cheeks were rosy red from having
been playing in the snow. But he hurried in, closed the door, and then,
turning to Nan, while he listened to the voices of Freddie and Flossie
having one of their endless disputes in the playroom, the lad asked:
“What happened to Dinah? What made her go away?”

“It’s on account of Sam,” answered Nan.

“Do you mean Sam came back and took Dinah away?”

“Oh, no, Sam didn’t come back,” went on Nan. “That’s the reason Dinah
had to go--because Sam didn’t come back.”

“Say!” cried Bert with a little laugh, though he could see by the look
on his sister’s face that she did not feel very jolly, “this is like
one of the puzzles Charlie Mason asks. Where in the world is Dinah,
anyhow?”

“She had to go down South--I don’t remember just where--to look after
Sam,” explained Nan. “Something has happened to him--he’s sick, or
something--and a telegram came for Dinah. She must have got it while we
were at school, for when I got home, and I came ahead of you, I found
Mrs. Pry all excited and Dinah was packed up, all ready to go. She
wanted to wait until you got back, to tell you good-bye, but I told her
to go, or else she’d miss her train.”

“That’s right,” agreed Bert. “But how did she know Sam was sick? Who
told her?”

“A telegram came, I told you.”

“Oh, that’s so--you did. So many things are happening that I forget
about some of them. But did Dinah have to walk to the station and carry
her bag? I wish I’d been here--I’d ’a’ carried it for her.”

“She didn’t have to walk,” explained Nan. “Just before it was time for
her to go Mr. Batten called up from the lumber office. Daddy left word
before he and mother went to Uncle Rossiter’s that Mr. Batten was to
call up every day and find out if we were all right.

“So when Mr. Batten called, I told him about Dinah having to go down
South where her husband, Sam, was sick, and Mr. Batten said he’d have
one of the men stop around in an auto and take her to the station, and
he did. So Dinah went down in style all right.”

“I’m glad of that,” Bert said. “But say, Nan, we’re almost all alone,
aren’t we?”

“Yes, only Mrs. Pry left to keep house for us.”

“Oh, I guess we could keep house all by ourselves if we had to,” Bert
said. “Don’t you think so, Nan?”

“I guess so. But is your head all right now, Bert?”

“Oh, yes, it doesn’t hurt at all.”

“Why do you s’pose it was that Danny Rugg went into the church?”

“I don’t know,” answered Bert, as he thought the matter over for a
second or two. “Maybe he went in to see if he could mend the broken
window so he wouldn’t have to pay for it.”

“How could he mend a broken window, Bert? It’s got all different
colored pieces of glass in it. Danny couldn’t mend it, even if he could
find all the bits of broken glass. They wouldn’t stick together.”

“No, I guess that’s right. Well, I don’t know why Danny went in. But if
he goes again maybe I’ll find out next time.”

By this time the voices of Flossie and Freddie had become high and
shrill. They were evidently having trouble of some kind. And as Bert
and Nan stood talking in the hall, Mrs. Pry was heard to say:

“Freddie! Freddie! Stop that!”

Then Flossie’s voice joined in with:

“Give me my doll, Freddie Bobbsey! Give me my doll else I’ll tell
mother on you.”

“Mother isn’t at home, so you can’t tell her!” taunted Freddie.

“Well, I’ll tell her when she does come home. Give me my doll!”

“I guess we’d better go see what it is,” suggested Nan.

“Yes,” agreed Bert. “Dinah could make Flossie and Freddie mind better
than Mrs. Pry can. But Dinah isn’t here, so we’ll have to do it.”

The two older Bobbsey twins hurried up to the playroom on the second
floor. There they saw Mrs. Pry standing in the middle of the carpet,
looking helplessly at Flossie and Freddie. The little girl was trying
to pull one of her dolls away from her brother, who held on to it with
all his might.

“Here, Freddie, you let go of Flossie’s doll!” ordered Bert.

“Yes, make him give her to me!” begged Flossie.

“Shame on you, Freddie Bobbsey!” cried Nan. “Why do you want to tease
your sister--and you’re a big boy? Daddy used to call you his fireman,
but he wouldn’t call you that now!”

“Oh, well, I wasn’t going to hurt her old doll,” answered Freddie, as
he slowly let go his hold on the doll’s legs. Nan’s appeal to him,
and the mention of “fireman,” which was his father’s pet name for the
little chap, made Freddie feel a bit ashamed of himself. “I wasn’t
going to hurt the doll,” he said.

“Oh, he was too!” cried Flossie. “He was going to make her stand on her
head.”

“Well, that wouldn’t hurt her,” Freddie answered, with a laugh.

“It would so!” declared Flossie. “Once I stood on my head and it may
me feel funny and my face got red and Dinah said the blood would come
out of my ears if I didn’t stand up straight, so I did. I don’t want my
doll to have blood come out of her ears.”

“I don’t believe that would happen,” said Nan. “But Freddie should
leave your doll alone and play with his own things. Now don’t tease
Flossie any more.”

“All right, I won’t,” Freddie promised, for he was not a bad little
fellow, only mischievous at times. And so was Flossie, for that matter.
She wasn’t a bit better than Freddie. Being twins, they were much alike
in many things.

“I’ve been trying to keep peace between them, but I don’t seem to know
how to do it,” sighed Mrs. Pry. “I hope now, with Dinah and Sam gone,
as well as your father and mother, that you will be good children,” she
added.

“I think they will,” said Nan.

“What’s that? You’re going to take them out on the hill?” cried the
old lady. “Oh, I wouldn’t do that! Don’t take them coasting now. It’s
almost dark and supper is nearly ready.”

“I didn’t say I’d taken them to the hill,” answered Nan. “I said they
will be good children now.”

“Oh, yes! Well, I’m sure I hope so,” sighed Aunt Sallie Pry. “I must
see the doctor about my ears,” she went on. “I can’t hear half as good
as I could five years ago, or else people don’t speak as plainly as
they used to. Well, now that Bert is home, we’ll have supper. Oh, dear,
I hope we don’t get any more snow.”

“When’s Dinah coming back?” asked Freddie, as he came out of the
bathroom, where he washed his hands ready for the meal.

“Oh, pretty soon, I guess,” answered Nan.

“When are mother and daddy coming back?” Flossie wanted to know.

“Well, I guess they’ll come home pretty soon, too,” said Bert, with
a look at his sister. A little later, while Flossie and Freddie were
taking their places at the table, Bert whispered to Nan: “Don’t you
think it’s queer we haven’t had a letter from mother since she went
away?”

“Yes, it is queer,” agreed Nan. “I wish we’d get some news. But maybe
Uncle Rossiter is too sick for them to have time to write.”

“Well, couldn’t they send a telegram?” Bert inquired.

“Maybe they thought a telegram would scare us,” suggested Nan. “Dinah
was frightened when that one came about Sam.”

“That’s so,” agreed her brother. “I guess maybe that’s why mother
didn’t telegraph us.”

“Or maybe the snow’s so deep where they are that the mail can’t get
through,” went on Nan. “Lots of times, in winter, they can’t deliver
the mail on account of snow.”

“That’s right,” said Bert. “I guess maybe they’re all right. Anyhow,
there’s no good of worrying. And we’ll have fun keeping house by
ourselves, won’t we?”

“Lots of fun,” agreed Nan.

However, a little later, it did not seem quite so much fun, for
something happened that would not have happened, very likely, if Mrs.
Bobbsey had been at home.

With Dinah away, it made more work for Mrs. Pry, who got the evening
meal, though Nan and Bert helped all they could. They knew how to do
many things about the kitchen and the dining room, for their mother had
allowed them to help Dinah so they would have good training.

It happened that when Mrs. Pry was coming from the kitchen with a plate
of slices of bread, Flossie saw her. All at once it entered into the
mind of the little girl that she ought to help, as she had seen Nan
doing. So, climbing down out of her chair, Flossie, with the kindest
heart in the world, ran to Mrs. Pry, calling:

“I’ll help you, Aunt Sallie! Let me help! I’ll carry the plate of bread
for you.”

“No, no, my dear!” objected the old lady. “You might spill the bread
off the plate.”

“Oh, no I won’t!” cried Flossie.

“If she spills the bread, that wouldn’t break,” laughed Freddie.

“No, but she might drop the plate, and that would crack,” Nan said.
“Flossie, dear, go back to your place!”

But Flossie did not want to do this. She had made up her mind to help
about the meal in some way. So she reached up to take the plate away
from Mrs. Pry, and the old lady, naturally, held the plate out of
Flossie’s grasp.

“I’ll jump up and get it!” the little girl cried. “Mother said I was
to be good and help Dinah all I could. And now Dinah’s gone, I’ll help
you, Aunt Sallie!”

“But I don’t need to be helped, my dear,” said Mrs. Pry. “I can carry
this plate of bread.”

“Oh, let me do it!” begged Flossie.

Her first jump was not quite high enough, so she leaped a second time,
and, though Mrs. Pry held the plate above Flossie’s head, the little
girl got hold of it. She pulled it from the old lady’s hands, but,
instead of keeping hold of it herself, Flossie let it slip from her
fingers.

Down fell the plate of bread to the floor. The slices tumbled off and
the plate itself was broken in three pieces.

“Oh, now you’ve done it!” cried Freddie. “Oh, look what Flossie did!
She broke a plate! Flossie broke a plate! Flossie broke a plate!” he
cried in a sing-song voice.

Flossie looked at the damage she had done and then her lips began to
quiver, her eyes filled with tears, and a moment later she burst out
crying.

“Oh, don’t tell mother!” she begged. “Don’t tell mother! I didn’t mean
to break the plate! I wanted to help!”

“Don’t cry, my dear,” said Aunt Sallie kindly. “Of course you didn’t
mean to do it. It’s all right. I guess it was only an old plate.”

“The bread didn’t bust, anyhow,” observed Freddie. “I can pick that up
and we can eat it!”

“Freddie Bobbsey, you stay right in your chair!” cried Nan. “Something
else will happen if you get down. And, Flossie, never mind. You can
help with something else. Go to your chair and we’ll eat.”

Bert picked up the pieces of plate while Nan gathered up the bread.
Luckily the slices had fallen in the same sort of pile that Mrs. Pry
had put them in on the plate, and only the bottom slice had to be laid
aside because there might be dirt on it from the rug.

“I’ll feed that to the birds to-morrow,” said Bert, as he laid this
slice aside.

Flossie stopped her crying and soon supper was going on merrily--that
is, as merrily as was possible when the Bobbsey twins were without
father, mother, Dinah and Sam.

Mrs. Pry did her best, and though she misunderstood a number of things
that were said, on account of not hearing well, the children did not
laugh at her. They felt sorry for the old lady.

Nan helped clear away the supper dishes, with Bert lending a hand
now and then. Flossie and Freddie, forgetting all about their little
dispute, played together until it was time for them to go to bed.

Bert and Nan did their studying for the next day, and then Bert went
about locking the doors and windows, Mrs. Pry telling him to be
especially careful.

“For burglars might come in, now that we’re more alone than ever
before,” said the old lady.

“Do the burglars know we’re alone?” asked Bert, grinning at his sister,
for neither of them felt any fears.

“They might. You never can tell,” answered Mrs. Pry. “Anyhow, don’t
leave any doors open.”

And of course Bert would not do that.

Just before he and Nan went up to their rooms, Bert went to the front
door to look out.

“Is the weather doing anything?” Nan asked.

“It feels like snow,” Bert answered. “It’s cold and sharp out, and it’s
cloudy. Maybe it’ll snow to-morrow. I hope it does.”

“I don’t,” Nan said.

“Why not?” her brother wanted to know.

“Because if it does maybe we’ll not get a letter from mother or daddy
for a long time. Maybe they’re snowed-up now and if it storms again
they’ll be snowed-up worse. I don’t want any more.”

“Well, maybe it’ll come anyhow,” Bert said with a laugh, as he closed
and locked the door.

The children were soon sound asleep and were not disturbed during the
night. Even Flossie did not wake up as usual and want Nan to get her a
drink.

Nan awakened first the next morning. She looked at a little clock on
her bureau and was surprised to note that it was half past eight.

“Oh, we’ll be late for school!” she cried, jumping out of bed. “Mrs.
Pry must have forgotten to call us. Oh, dear!”

Nan hurried about, putting on her gown and slippers, to go and call
Bert and also to arouse Freddie. Flossie had opened her eyes when she
heard Nan moving. Then a voice from Mrs. Pry’s room said:

“Nan! Nan, dear!”

“Yes, Aunt Sallie, what is it?” asked Nan. “Are you sick?” The old
lady’s voice sounded different, somehow.

“Yes, Nan, I’m afraid I’m sick,” was the answer. “That’s why I wasn’t
able to get down and cook the breakfast. The lumbago has hold of me in
the back. The lumbago has gotten a bad hold of me. Oh, dear!”

While Nan stood in the middle of the floor, hardly knowing what to do,
Flossie burst into tears.




                              CHAPTER XII

                            THE SCHOOL BELL


Poor Nan was upset by hearing that Mrs. Pry was ill in bed when the
old lady should have been up getting breakfast, and Nan was also
rather worried about not hearing from her father and mother, so that
when Flossie burst out crying it seemed as though too many things were
happening.

“Why, Flossie, what’s the matter?” asked Nan of her little sister.
Nothing special had happened, as far as Nan could see. Flossie had not
fallen out of her bed, that was certain. “Are you sick, too, Flossie?”
asked Nan.

“No-oo-oo, I’m not sick,” sobbed Flossie. “But I--I’m afraid.”

“Afraid of what?” Nan wanted to know. “There is nothing to be afraid
of. It’s morning. We’re late, and maybe we’ll be tardy at school, but
that isn’t anything to cry about.”

“I’m not--now--I’m not crying about school!” Flossie sobbed. “I’m
scared about Aunt Sallie!”

In her bedroom across the hall the old lady heard.

“Don’t be afraid about me, my dear,” called Aunt Sallie. “I’m not as
badly off as all that, though I don’t believe I’m able to get around.
The lumbago has me by the back.”

“There! That’s what I’m scared of!” cried Flossie. “I don’t want the
lumbago to get me! Shut the door, Nan!”

Then Nan understood, and so did Mrs. Pry.

“The little dear,” sighed the old lady. “You won’t catch the lumbago,
Flossie. Little girls don’t catch the lumbago.”

“No, but maybe the lumbago will catch me!” and Flossie still sobbed.
“Shut the door, Nan, and keep the lumbago out!”

Then Nan laughed and said:

“Why, I do believe she thinks the lumbago is a sort of animal! Do you,
Flossie?”

“Ye-ye-yes,” was the halting answer. “Isn’t the lumbago like the wolf
in Little Red Riding Hood?”

“Bless your heart, no!” chuckled Mrs. Pry, in as jolly a manner as she
could, though it hurt her to laugh. “The lumbago is something like
rheumatism. It catches one in the back and keeps them in bed. I’ve had
it before. I’ll be better in a few days. Bless you! the lumbago isn’t a
wolf, though it pains a lot. Don’t be afraid. Though I don’t know what
you are going to do, Nan. I’m not able to get out of bed, I’m afraid.”

“I’ll manage all right,” Nan said, though her heart was sinking with
all the troubles that seemed flocking around. “I’ll make you some
coffee, as I do when mother has a headache.”

“Do you think you can, my dear?” asked Aunt Sallie. “I’m so sorry I’m
laid up with this lumbago!”

“I can manage,” replied Nan bravely, while she hurried with her
dressing. “We children will just have to keep house by ourselves in
real earnest,” she said to herself.

Nan was helping Flossie dress, and then she intended to hurry down to
the kitchen to make coffee. Nan could get up a simple breakfast, her
mother and Dinah having taught her this. But as Nan fastened Flossie’s
buttons she heard Bert moving around in his room.

“Whoop-ee!” yelled the boy as he danced around his apartment. “Oh,
look, Freddie! It’s snowing like anything! It’s a regular blizzard!”

“Oh, let me see!” begged the small Bobbsey lad.

“Don’t run around barefooted!” warned Nan from her room. “I don’t want
you catching cold, Freddie, for then I’ll have some one else sick to
nurse.”

“Oh, is Flossie sick?” called Bert who, having looked from the window
to see that it was snowing hard, had now begun to dress. “Is Flossie
sick?” he called again.

“No. It’s Mrs. Pry,” Nan answered. “She has the lumbago in her back,
and I’ll have to stay home from school and nurse her. You and Flossie
and Freddie can go, Bert--that is, if the storm isn’t too bad. But
you’ll have to hurry. We’re late!”

“Late! I should say we were late!” cried Bert as he looked at a clock
on his bureau. “It’s after half past eight and----”

Just then, above the noise of the swirling snowflakes hitting against
the windows and the sound of the howling, cold wind, another noise came
to the ears of the Bobbsey twins.

A bell rang out in the distance. Five strokes were sounded, then a
pause and five strokes more. Another pause, then another five strokes.

“It’s the storm signal on the school bell!” cried Bert. “The three
fives! Hurray, no school to-day!”

He danced around the room, half dressed.

“Are you sure?” asked careful Nan.

“Sure!” answered Bert. “There it goes again!”

There was no doubt of it this time. Fifteen strokes rang out, five
strokes at a time. It was the signal Mr. Tarton had told the children
to listen for in case of a storm. And this surely was a storm! The wind
blew harder and the swirling, white flakes came down more thickly.

“No school! No school!” sang Freddie as he began to dress.

“No school! No school!” echoed Flossie, as she followed Nan to the
kitchen.

“Hush, my dears, not so much racket!” begged Nan in a low voice. “Mrs.
Pry is sick, and she may not like noise.”

“Oh, I’m not fussy that way,” said the old lady who, in spite of her
deafness, seemed to have heard what Nan said. “Don’t keep the children
quiet on my account. And you’ll have to hurry, Nan, or they’ll be late
for school.”

“There isn’t any school,” Nan said.

“What’s that--some one fell over a stool?” cried Mrs. Pry. “Oh, dear!
And me flat on my back with lumbago! Who fell over the stool, Nan?”

“Nobody,” answered the Bobbsey girl. “I said there was no school!”

“Oh! No school! You mustn’t mumble your words, my dear. I can hear
every time if you speak out. No school, eh? I’m glad of that, for if
there was, you’d be late and on account of me. Oh, dear, I wish I could
be around to help with the work!”

“We’ll do the work, Aunt Sallie,” said Nan kindly. “Don’t you worry
or fuss. Just stay in bed and keep warm, and I’ll bring you up some
breakfast. Would you like a hot flatiron for your back?”

“Well, it would help the misery a lot,” the old lady answered. “But I
don’t like to be such a bother.”

“It isn’t any bother at all,” said Nan kindly. “Bert will help me get
breakfast, won’t you, Bert?”

“Sure,” he answered, sliding down the banister rail. “But I’ve got to
shovel the walks of snow.”

“They can wait,” said Nan. “There’s no use shoveling walks until it
stops snowing.”

“I guess maybe that’s right,” agreed her brother. “Say, it’s a big
storm,” he cried, as he saw how much snow had fallen in the night. “I
hope father and mother are all right--and Sam and Dinah, too.”

“Yes, so do I,” agreed Nan. “And I hope some mail comes in to-day. I’d
love to have a letter from mother.”

Flossie and Freddie crowded eagerly to the windows to look out at the
storm. The house was snug and warm, but outside it was cold and blowy,
and though the small twins did not mind snow or cold weather they were
just as glad, this morning, that they did not have to tramp out to
school.

Nan had often watched her mother and Dinah get breakfast, and so had
Bert, so together the two older Bobbsey twins soon had coffee boiling
on the stove, and the oatmeal which had been made ready the night
before was being warmed.

“I’m going to fry me some bacon!” declared Bert.

“Do you know how?” asked Nan.

“Sure I do,” he declared. “Once Charlie Mason and I made a fire in the
woods and fried bacon. It was good, too.”

“Well, first I wish you’d get some oranges out of the pantry for
Flossie and Freddie,” said Nan. “Do that while I’m taking Mrs. Pry
up this hot coffee,” she added, as she filled a cup with the steaming
drink and put some slices of bread and butter on a tray.

“All right--the oranges will be ready in a minute,” laughed Bert.
“First call for breakfast! First call for breakfast!” he shouted, as he
had heard the waiters in the dining car announce as they came into the
Pullman coaches on the railroad.

“It’s fun being snowed-in like this, isn’t it, Flossie?” asked Freddie,
as he tried to see how flat he could make his nose by pressing it
against the window.

“Lots of fun,” agreed the little girl. “But I’m hungry. I want my
breakfast, Nan.”

“Bert will give you your oranges now,” Nan answered. “And I’ll dish out
your oatmeal when I come down after I take Mrs. Pry her coffee.”

This satisfied the smaller twins, and they laughed at the funny faces
Bert made as he went about, pretending he was a Pullman waiter. In fact
Freddie laughed so hard that some of his orange went down the “wrong
throat” and Bert had to pat his small brother on the back to stop the
choking.

Nan carried the coffee into Aunt Sallie’s room. Mrs. Pry had not gotten
out of bed and the shades were drawn down over the windows.

“Shall I make it lighter for you?” asked Nan. “It’s snowing again.”

“What’s that? You say the pig is out of the pen? Land sakes, child, I
didn’t know you kept a pig! Dear me, and Sam isn’t here to chase him
back into the pen! Oh, the misery in my back! If it wasn’t for the
lumbago I’d get after the pig!”

“I didn’t say anything about a pig or a pen,” answered Nan, trying not
to laugh. “I said it was _snowing again_!”

“Oh, snowing again,” Mrs. Pry remarked. “Well, why didn’t you say so
at first, my dear? Dear me! We’re having a lot of snow this winter,
and early, too. That’s right; raise the curtains so I can see out. And
thank you for the coffee. Ah, it makes me feel better,” she said, as
she sipped it.

“Is it all right and strong enough?” asked Nan.

“Plenty strong, and very good, my dear. You’re quite a little
housekeeper.”

Nan thought that she would need to be, and so would Bert, if they were
to be left alone with a sick woman to look after. But Nan said nothing
about this.

She helped Mrs. Pry sit up in bed, for the old lady could hardly raise
herself on account of the pain in her back. Nan propped the pillows
up against her, and then started downstairs to get the hot flatiron,
leaving Mrs. Pry sipping the coffee and eating the bread and butter.

As Nan started down she heard the shrill voices of Flossie and Freddie,
and she heard Bert calling:

“Come back in here! Come right back in, you little tykes!”

“Oh, what are they doing now?” thought poor Nan.




                             CHAPTER XIII

                               SNOWED IN


Nan Bobbsey was glad her brother Bert was at home, helping her keep
house. Without Bert she felt that she never could look after things,
see to Flossie and Freddie and nurse the sick Mrs. Pry. And when Nan
heard her small brother and sister squealing this way, which always
meant mischief of some sort or other, she was more than glad that she
also heard Bert’s voice calling to the small twins.

Nan got to the foot of the stairs in time to see Bert running out of a
side door after Flossie and Freddie who, bare-headed and with no wraps
on, had run out into the storm.

“Oh, you mustn’t do that!” exclaimed Nan. “Bring them in, Bert!”

“That’s what I’m trying to do,” he answered, but he could not help
laughing, so jolly and full of fun were Flossie and Freddie, though
they were also full of mischief.

“Now, I have you!” cried Bert as he caught Flossie before she had time
to get very far away from the bottom of the steps.

“But you haven’t got me!” shouted Freddie, making a dash through the
piles of snow on the ground and also through the cloud of swirling
flakes falling from the sky. “You haven’t got me!”

“But I will get you!” shouted Bert. “Here, Nan,” he called to his older
sister, “you hold this little tyke while I chase after this Freddie
boy!”

Nan, with a sigh and yet with a little laugh, held Flossie, who, truth
to tell, was herself laughing and giggling so hard at the trick she and
Freddie had played on Bert that she could not have run much farther, no
matter how much she wanted to.

Freddie had counted on Bert having to drag Flossie along with him on
the second part of the chase. But when Bert turned Flossie over to Nan,
that left him free to run, and he caught his small brother before the
latter had taken more than half a dozen steps.

“Prisoner number two!” cried Bert, picking Freddie up in his arms and
carrying him back to the house. “Lock ’em up, Nan!”

“I shall have to, if they aren’t better,” Nan said, with a shake of her
head as she put Flossie down in the hall while Bert did the same with
Freddie.

“No, you don’t!” suddenly cried Bert, as he locked the door out of
which the mischievous ones had darted. He saw Freddie making a sly
attempt to open it again.

“What happened?” asked Nan. “I was coming down to get the flatiron for
Aunt Sallie and I heard the children scream.”

“They were only yelling for fun and because they played a trick on me,”
laughed Bert. “They wanted to go out and get some snow, but I wouldn’t
let them.”

“Of course not!” agreed Nan. “The idea!”

“But we got out, anyhow, didn’t we, Flossie?” laughed Freddie.

“Yes, we did!” she giggled.

“I went to the front door to see if the man had left the milk,”
explained Bert, “for he leaves it on the front steps when it storms
too much to come around to the back. And when I opened the door these
two prisoners,” and laughingly he shook a finger at them, “wanted to go
out and get some snow to bring in the house.

“I said they couldn’t, and I only had time to get the door shut to keep
them in. Then I went to the side door, leaving them trying to unlock
the front door, which they couldn’t do, because I took the key out,”
and with another laugh Bert held up the key. “But all of a sudden they
crawled past me while I was looking on the side porch for the milk, and
that’s how they got out. I had to run after them.”

“I was wondering what happened,” said Nan. “Did you bring the milk in,
Bert?”

“No, I didn’t Nan. There isn’t any milk.”

“Oh, didn’t the milkman come?”

“Guess he didn’t,” Bert answered. “It isn’t the first time he’s missed
us in a storm.”

“Well, I think we have enough left for to-day,” said Nan. “I’m pretty
sure there is a bottle in the pantry. But if he doesn’t leave any
to-morrow, Bert, you’ll have to go after some. But I guess the storm
will stop by then.”

“I don’t know,” said Bert, while again he shook his finger at Flossie
and Freddie who were laughing together in a corner, plotting more
tricks, it is likely. “It looks as if it’s going to snow for a week,
Nan.”

“Oh, I hope it doesn’t do that!” she cried. “Mother and father would
never get home and we’ll never have any word from them.”

“I guess there’d be some way out,” answered Bert. “But I don’t
believe there’ll be any mail delivered to-day. I could go down to the
post-office after it, though.”

“No, I don’t want you to go out in the storm!” objected Nan. “I don’t
want to be left here all alone, with Mrs. Pry sick. Maybe you couldn’t
get back.”

“I’ll stay with you,” promised her brother good-naturedly. “But is Aunt
Sallie very sick?”

“Well, she has lots of pain in her back,” explained Nan. “That’s why
I’m going to take her the hot flatiron. Then I must wash the dishes
and see about getting lunch.”

“Could we play picnic and make believe take our lunch to the woods to
eat?” asked Flossie.

“Oh, that would be lots of fun!” cried Freddie. “We could make believe
up in the attic was woods. Let’s do that!”

“I’ll see about it,” answered Nan. “Now you look after them a little
while, Bert, and I’ll take this iron to Aunt Sallie. And don’t you two
little tykes dare to run out in the snow again!”

“We won’t,” promised Flossie.

Nan found the old lady moving restlessly about in bed with the pain of
the lumbago in her back.

“Do you think I ought to get the doctor for you?” asked the girl.

“Oh, no, dearie, I’ll be all right in a day or so,” answered Mrs. Pry.
“This hot iron will help a lot. Then if I had some of my liniment to
rub on my back, I’d feel better.”

“Shall I get Bert to go to the drug store after the liniment?” asked
Nan.

“You won’t need to do that, dearie,” answered Mrs. Pry. “I have some of
the stuff in a bottle in my valise. If you’ll hand it to me I’ll rub it
on my back, and then I’ll go to sleep awhile. I didn’t sleep much all
night. But I fell asleep toward morning, and I slept so hard I didn’t
wake up in time to call you to go to school.”

“Well, there isn’t any school, so that didn’t matter,” Nan said.

She found the bottle of queer-smelling liniment in the old lady’s
valise, and gave it to her. Then Nan said:

“Well, I’ll go down now and wash the dishes.”

“What’s that?” exclaimed Mrs. Pry. “You say Bert is going out and try
to catch some fishes? Land sakes, child! he never can catch any fishes
in this snow storm! Don’t let him go! Besides, I don’t like fish,
anyhow!”

“I didn’t say anything about fishes!” replied Nan in louder tones. “I
said I was going to wash the _dishes_!”

“Oh! Dishes!” murmured Mrs. Pry. “Well, my hearing isn’t what it once
was. But I surely thought you said fishes.”

Holding back her merriment, Nan went downstairs. Flossie and Freddie
were so filled with joy over their plan of going up in the attic and
playing they were on a picnic in the woods that they had become very
good and quiet indeed, making no trouble for Bert, who had “picked up”
the dishes, ready for washing.

“I’ll dry them for you,” he told Nan, and he added: “We might as well
give Flossie and Freddie some crackers and cookies, and let them play
up in the attic where they won’t bother Aunt Sallie. They’ve got to do
something to keep out of trouble, and they can’t go out in the storm.”

“Yes, we’ll do that,” decided Nan.

Accordingly, she put some odds and ends of cookies, cakes and crackers
in two boxes and gave them to the smaller twins. Then Flossie got one
of her dolls and Freddie took a little iron fire-engine, one of his
favorite toys, and the small twins went up to the attic. Nan went up
with them and remained a little while, to be sure it was warm enough
for them.

“I’ll keep up a good fire,” Bert had promised, and he was as good as
his word, for the attic was as “warm as toast.” Bert knew how to put
coal on the furnace, and though he could not toss on quite as big
shovelfuls as could Sam, who always looked after the heater, Bert did
very well.

With the small twins thus out of the way for a while and with Mrs. Pry
feeling better because of the hot flatiron and the liniment, Nan and
Bert had a chance to do some of the housework.

“How do you like keeping house, Nan?” asked Bert, as he dried the cups
and saucers.

“Well, it’s fun, but it’s a little bit lonesome,” she answered.

“I feel that way, too,” Bert said. “If Dinah and Sam were here it
wouldn’t be so lonesome. But with them gone, and daddy and mother away,
it isn’t so nice. But we’ve got to stick it out, Nan.”

“Of course we have,” she said. “I wonder what I had better cook for
lunch?”

“Bacon,” quickly answered Bert.

“Ho! Ho!” laughed his sister. “You’d have bacon three times a day, I
guess.”

“Well, it’s what fellows always have in camp, and this is like camp,”
Bert explained.

“It is, a little,” agreed Nan. “My, how the snow keeps up!”

“And the wind, too!” added Bert as a sudden gust howled around the
corner of the house, sending the hard snowflakes rattling against the
windows.

With Bert to help her, Nan tidied the rooms and set the house to
rights. Then she looked in the pantry and saw that they had enough food
for another day. She caught sight of a package of prepared flour, out
of which she had often seen Dinah make griddle cakes.

“We’ll have griddle cakes and maple syrup for lunch,” decided Nan.

“Hurray!” cried Bert. “That’s better than bacon. But can you bake
griddle cakes, Nan?”

“Of course,” she answered.

“Let me turn them for you,” begged Bert.

“I’ll see,” was all Nan would promise.

It was shortly before noon that Nan went to the side door to look out
and see if, by any chance, the belated milkman had been along. But the
door would not open, though Nan tugged at it. Then, looking from a side
window, she saw that a big drift of snow had piled up on the steps
against the door, to which, as well as to the door jambs, the snow had
frozen.

“Oh, Bert, we’re snowed-in!” cried Nan. “We’re snowed-in, Bert!”

Bert came running from the kitchen at the sound of his sister’s voice.
At the same time, up in the attic sounded loud shouts from Flossie and
Freddie.

“Oh, what else has happened?” wailed poor Nan.




                              CHAPTER XIV

                            NAN’S BISCUITS


Bert Bobbsey at first thought something had happened to Nan when he
heard her call out. But as he came in from the kitchen and saw her
standing safely by the door, he asked:

“What’s the matter with you?”

“Nothing is the matter with me,” answered Nan. “But the door is snowed
fast. We can’t get out.”

“We can go to another door then,” said Bert, not much excited. “Once
last winter we couldn’t get the back door open because a lot of snow
had drifted against it, and we had to use the front door. That’s
nothing.”

“Well, maybe it isn’t,” Nan agreed. “But listen to that!”

She pointed upward, and Bert heard Flossie and Freddie in the attic
screaming and shouting.

“Those tykes again!” Bert cried with a laugh as he started for the
stairs. “I’ll fix ’em!”

“Oh, Bert, you’ll have to be kind to them!” pleaded Nan. “If you’re
cross and they start crying, they’ll want daddy and mother and then we
can’t do a thing with them! And there’s so much trouble now, with Aunt
Sallie in bed. Oh, dear!”

“Don’t worry,” replied Bert. “I’ll be kind to ’em, all right. I guess
Freddie is just teasing Flossie. She always yells when he teases her.
Don’t worry, Nan. Everything will be all right.”

“I hope so,” sighed Nan.

“And I’ll get a shovel and clear that snow away from the door when
I see what’s the matter with those two tykes,” went on Bert, as he
hastened upstairs. He liked to call his small brother and sister by the
funny name of “tykes,” which means a mischievous little person.

Hurrying up to the attic, Bert found the cause of the trouble. Flossie
and Freddie, tired of playing picnic in the “woods,” had started a
circus game, each one pretending to be an animal. When Bert got up
there he saw Flossie lying on the floor with one foot and leg thrust
through the lower part of a chair. Freddie was pulling his sister by
the arms, and as her leg was caught between the chair rounds, she could
not get loose. The chair was being dragged along with Flossie. She was
crying and Freddie was shouting.

“What’s the matter? What’s the matter?” called Bert. “Stop this kind of
play!”

“This isn’t play,” Freddie explained. “We were playing, but Flossie got
her foot caught and she couldn’t get it out and I can’t pull it out!”

“And it hurts me!” sobbed Flossie. “Oh, Bert, have I got to stay here
forever?”

“Of course not,” answered Bert. “I’ll soon have you loose. Stop
pulling, Freddie. You’ll only jam her foot in tighter. Let go!”

Freddie let go of Flossie’s arms and then, as she lay on the floor,
Bert turned her foot a little way around, so that it was crossways
with the chair rounds, instead of up and down against them, and a
moment later Flossie was free.

“Goodness!” laughed Bert, when he saw that his sister was not hurt,
though she still sobbed, “it sounded like a den of wild animals up
here!”

“I was a wild lion,” explained Freddie.

“And I was an elephant,” said Flossie. “Freddie said I must be a bad
elephant and kick the old chair over. So I kicked and my foot went in
and I couldn’t get it out again.”

“I pulled her and pulled her, but it didn’t do any good,” explained
Freddie.

“I should say not--the way you were pulling!” laughed Bert. “But I
guess you’ve had enough of playing up here. Come on downstairs. You
must have frightened Aunt Sallie out of her wits, banging around the
way you did and yelling.”

“Could we see Aunt Sallie?” asked Flossie, as she and her brother
followed Bert down the attic stairs.

“I guess so, if she isn’t asleep,” said Bert. “I’ll look in her room.”

When he did so he found the old lady sitting up in bed. She smiled at
Bert and said:

“Are there any birds up in the attic? Seems to me, Bert, I heard birds
fluttering around up there.”

The noise made by Flossie and Freddie had been very loud, so loud that
Nan had heard it away downstairs. But the deaf old lady had thought it
was only the twittering of birds. Bert wanted to laugh, but he did not.
He just said:

“No, there weren’t any birds, Aunt Sallie. It was just Flossie and
Freddie playing with a chair.”

“Oh, you say Flossie cut Freddie’s hair? She shouldn’t do that! She
might cut him or herself with the scissors. Besides, she is such a
little girl she can’t cut his hair straight. Flossie shouldn’t cut
hair. Moreover, I never knew that hair-cutting made so much noise.”

“No, no!” explained Bert. “Nobody was cutting _hair_. I said Flossie
and Freddie were playing with a _chair_!”

“Oh! Chair!” repeated Mrs. Pry. “You should speak a little more
plainly, Bert, my dear. Don’t mumble your words. But how are Flossie
and Freddie, anyhow? I haven’t seen them all day.”

“They’re out in the hall now,” explained Bert. “They’d like to see you
if you’re not too sick.”

“Bring them in, Bert. I’m feeling a little better now. Nan is a good
nurse. The hot flatiron she brought me helped the lumbago in my back.
Bring the children in.”

Flossie and Freddie looked curiously at Aunt Sallie. They had never
before seen her in bed, and as she sat up, propped against the pillows
with a blanket around her and a cap on her head, Flossie exclaimed:

“Oh, you look just like the pictures of little Red Riding Hood’s
grandmother!”

“Do I, my dear?” asked the old lady. “Well, if I’m the grandmother, the
lumbago in my back must be the wolf. Not a real wolf,” she added. “Just
make believe, you know.”

“I know,” said Freddie. “I was playing I was a lion up in the attic.”

“And I was an elephant,” explained Flossie. “And I got my foot caught
in a chair and I couldn’t get it out!”

“Well, you’re all right now,” said the old lady, with a smile. “Be good
children now, for you’ll have to help Nan and Bert keep house until I
get better. It’s a sad time.”

“Oh, we like it,” laughed Freddie. “We can stay at home and don’t have
to go to school.”

“You say somebody lost his mule?” asked Mrs. Pry. “That’s too bad! The
mule was lost in the storm, I expect.”

Flossie and Freddie looked at each other wonderingly, and then at Bert.
They were not quite so used to the misunderstandings of the old lady as
were Bert and Nan. So Bert, before his brother and sister should laugh
at Mrs. Pry, made haste to say:

“They didn’t say anything about a mule, Aunt Sallie. Freddie said he
was glad there wasn’t any school!”

“Oh, school! Yes! Well, there’s no sense in going to school when its
such a bad storm. But I guess it will soon stop!”

However, it did not soon stop. The small Bobbsey twins went downstairs
from Mrs. Pry’s room, and the snow was still falling and the wind was
still blowing. Not that the little twins minded this--they liked it all
the more, snug and warm as they were in the house.

But Nan, getting the lunch and putting another flatiron on to heat for
Mrs. Pry’s back, shook her head more than once as she looked out of the
window.

“What’s the matter?” asked Bert as he noticed how serious his twin
sister seemed.

“I’m beginning to get worried about mother and daddy,” answered Nan. “I
don’t see why we haven’t had some word from them--a letter or a post
card.”

“I guess the mails are late on account of the storm,” Bert remarked.
“If we don’t get any to-day, and I guess we won’t, for I haven’t heard
the postman’s whistle, to-morrow I’ll go down to the post-office and
ask if there are any letters for us.”

“You can’t go if it storms this way,” Nan said.

“It will stop by to-morrow,” declared Bert.

With her brother’s help Nan managed to get up a nice little lunch for
the family, consisting of some baked potatoes, an omelet, and some
bread and preserves. She made toast for Mrs. Pry and took it up to her
with a cup of hot tea. Flossie and Freddie begged to be allowed to
help, so Nan let them carry the toast--each one had a slice wrapped in
a napkin.

“They can’t hurt the toast, even if they drop it,” Nan whispered to
Bert. But the small twins were very careful, and the toast arrived
safely in the invalid’s room.

“You are very good to me, Nan,” sighed Aunt Sallie. “I think I will try
and get around to-morrow.”

“No, you must stay in bed until your lumbago is all gone,” insisted
Nan. “I’ll bring you up another hot iron as soon as you take your toast
and tea.”

“Yes, heat is the best thing for lumbago,” said Mrs. Pry. “That and my
liniment will cure me, I expect. But my liniment is nearly gone. And
how to get more I don’t know.”

“Bert will get it for you,” offered Nan kindly.

The afternoon passed. Bert got out on the porch in his big coat and
rubber boots and cleared away some of the snow. Flossie and Freddie
wanted to go out with him, but Nan would not allow this. She got the
smaller twins into a room where they could not see Bert at work with
the snow shovel, and told them stories.

“How is it outside, Bert?” asked Nan when her brother came in, having
cleared the side door against which the big drift had blown.

“Pretty bad,” he answered. “It seems to snow harder than ever, and the
wind is blowing and it’s getting colder. I’m glad we’re inside with a
warm fire and plenty to eat.”

“That’s just the trouble,” said Nan in a low voice. “We haven’t plenty
to eat, Bert.”

“Not enough to eat--what do you mean?”

“Well, I mean we haven’t any bread. I toasted the last of it for Mrs.
Pry. There’s no bread for supper.”

“I’ll go to the store and get a loaf,” Bert offered.

“No!” cried his sister quickly. “I don’t want you to go out in the
storm. You might get lost!”

“But what’ll we do for supper?” asked Bert. “I’ve got to have bread and
butter.”

“We have plenty of butter,” explained Nan. “I’ll make a batch of
biscuits,” she added. “They’re as good as bread.”

“Better!” declared Bert. “But can you make biscuits, Nan?”

“I guess so. Mother’s told me how and I’ve watched Dinah make them lots
of times. You just mix up some flour, milk, baking powder, water and
lard and roll it out and then cut the biscuits into round shapes and
put them in a pan and bake them in the oven.”

“It sounds easy,” remarked Bert. “I’ll help you.”

When Flossie and Freddie heard what Nan was going to do, they, also,
wanted to help.

“We can’t all do it,” laughed Nan. “But you can come in the kitchen
and watch me.”

“Can I have some sugar on my bikset when it’s baked?” asked Flossie.

“Ho! Ho!” laughed Freddie. “Listen to what she called ’em! Bikset!
Bikset!”

“That’s their name,” insisted Flossie.

“’Tisn’t!” cried Freddie. “It’s buskit! Guess I know!”

“You’re both wrong!” laughed Bert. “But no matter how you call them,
they’re going to be good when Nan bakes them. Now you two sit down in
chairs where you’ll be out of the way.”

Nan told Bert what to bring her from the pantry so she could make the
biscuits, and then, putting on an apron and rolling up her sleeves, she
began.

As she had seen Dinah do, she mixed the flour and lard together first,
kneading it with her hands.

“It’s just like making mud pies,” said Freddie.

“’Cept it isn’t brown mud--it’s white,” said Flossie.

“I wish I could squeeze ’em like that,” went on Freddie, as he saw Nan
working up the dough.

“Well, you can’t, so just you sit still!” Nan told him, with a laugh.

Remembering what her mother had told her, and what she had seen Dinah
do, Nan soon had rolled the biscuit dough out on the floured board, and
then with a shiny tin thing, she cut out little round, flattened bits
of dough, which she put in a buttered pan, ready for the oven.

“I’ve got enough dough for two pans of biscuits,” said the little cook.
“So I’ll set this first pan down in a chair and get another pan ready
for the oven. Then they’ll both bake at the same time.”

“We’ll have lots of buskits!” said Freddie. “I’m glad, because I like
buskits!”

“And I’m going to have sugar on my bikset, ain’t I, Nan?” asked Flossie.

“We’ll see,” said the young cook, giving all her attention to cutting
out the second batch.

Flossie and Freddie both liked to watch this part of the work, so they
left their chairs to stand beside the table. They stood on their
tiptoes, so eager were they.

“Now I’ll put these in the pan, and pop them into the oven,” said Nan,
when the last of the biscuits had been cut out. “Sit down in your
chairs, Flossie and Freddie, so you won’t be in my way when I open the
oven door.”

Flossie and Freddie went back to where they had been sitting, and all
would have been well if Flossie had taken the same chair out of which
she had slid a little while before to watch Nan. But, instead, Flossie
backed up to the wrong chair.

It was the chair on which Nan had set the first pan of biscuits, and a
moment later Flossie “plopped” herself down right on top of the soft
bits of dough!

“Oh! Oh!” yelled Freddie, but too late. “Look! Look! Flossie sat on the
buskits! Flossie’s sitting on the buskits!”




                              CHAPTER XV

                             BROKEN WIRES


Nan jumped so, because of Freddie’s shouts and Flossie’s screams, that
she almost dropped the batch of biscuits she was just then putting into
the oven. But she managed to get them in and close the door. Then she
turned and said to Freddie:

“You shouldn’t fool me that way! Oh, how you startled me!”

“He isn’t fooling you,” said Bert. “Flossie did really sit in the
biscuits!”

By this time the little girl herself had come to know that something
was wrong. She felt something soft in the chair where she had been
sitting--something soft with a hard rim around it that had not been in
it when she got up to watch Nan use the biscuit-cutter.

“Oh! Oh!” screamed Flossie. “What is it?”

“Don’t yell so. You aren’t hurt!” said Nan.

“But the buskits are hurt!” yelled Freddie. “They’re all squashed flat!
Look at ’em!”

This was quite true--Flossie had sat down rather hard on the biscuits
and they were “squashed,” as Freddie said.

“But you can roll ’em out again, Nan,” suggested Bert. “They aren’t
spoiled. Flossie’s dress is clean--I mean it was clean before she sat
in the biscuits.”

“Is my dress--now--is it dirty?” asked Flossie, trying to turn herself
around to look at the back of her garment.

“It’s all sticky dough and flour,” stated Freddie. “You look like a
buskit yourself, Flossie!”

“Oh, dear!” sighed the little girl, and she would have burst into tears
but for Nan, who put her arms about her and kindly said:

“Never mind. Your dress will wash and the biscuits aren’t hurt much. I
can roll them out again, and I’ll give you two with sugar on.”

“Oh, all right,” agreed Flossie, and her face brightened. Then, as
Freddie said, she “squeezed back” her tears, and they all laughed at
the funny accident.

Bert picked most of the dough off Flossie’s dress while Nan took the
“squashed” biscuits from the pan, rolled the dough out again on the
moulding board, and made that batch over. Soon they were baking in the
oven with the others.

“They smell good!” declared Freddie, when his sister opened the oven
door to see how the biscuits were browning.

“They’ll taste a lot better,” laughed Bert, while Nan took Flossie
upstairs to put a clean dress on her.

In spite of the accident, Nan’s biscuits turned out very well, only a
few of them being burned, and the children ate many of them for supper.

“Has Dinah come back?” asked Mrs. Pry, when Nan took her up a tray with
her supper on it.

“Dinah come back? No, what makes you ask that?” inquired Nan, in
surprise.

“Well, I see you have hot biscuits,” went on Mrs. Pry, with twinkles
in her eyes, “and I thought Dinah had come back to make them.”

“No, I did it!” exclaimed Nan, and she felt very proud that Mrs. Pry
should think the biscuits as good as those which Dinah could make.

“You made these biscuits! My, that’s wonderful!” said Aunt Sallie,
tasting one. “You are certainly a good little housekeeper.”

This pleased Nan more than ever and the lonesome feeling that was
coming over her again, as night began to fall, seemed to pass away for
a time.

After supper, or dinner, as it was called when Mr. and Mrs. Bobbsey
were at home, Bert and Nan washed and dried the dishes. Flossie begged
so hard to be allowed to help that Nan let her dry a few.

“But you must be careful and not drop any, or they’ll break,” cautioned
Nan.

“I’ll be careful,” promised Flossie.

But alas! She was wiping a saucer when Freddie, who was playing on the
floor with his train of cars, made a sudden movement.

“Look out!” cried Flossie. “Don’t jiggle me!”

But her small brother must have “jiggled” her, or done something, for
the saucer slipped from Flossie’s hands.

Crash! It fell to the floor, breaking into half a dozen pieces.

For a moment Flossie stood there, looking at it with open mouth. Then
as she realized what had happened she burst into tears and gasped:

“Freddie made me do it! That’s all your fault, Freddie Bobbsey. It’s
your fault!”

“Oh, it isn’t!” cried Freddie. “I wasn’t wiping the dish!”

“But you--you--now--you jiggled me!” sobbed Flossie.

“That’s what he did,” declared Bert, who had seen what had happened.

“Never mind, my dear!” soothed Nan. “It was an old saucer anyhow, and
it was cracked.”

“Was--was it?” faltered Flossie.

“Yes, it was,” Nan replied, and this was true. It was an old dish
which had had a fall before. But this was the end of it. “Dinah often
said she was going to throw that old saucer away,” went on Nan. “Now
I’ll do it.”

It made Flossie feel better to know that she had not broken a good
dish. So she dried her tears. But Nan decided that she would take no
more chances with letting the little girl dry dishes.

“You two go in the other room with Bert and pop corn,” she suggested,
looking straight at Bert to tell him to get the small twins out of the
way. “I’ll finish the dishes,” Nan whispered to him.

“Oh, pop corn! Pop corn!” cried Freddie, dancing around. “How I love
pop corn!”

“So do I!” echoed Flossie. “I’m going to have some pop corn, ain’t I?”
she asked.

“Sure!” said Bert.

A little later, when Nan had finished the dishes, she joined Bert and
the small twins in the living room, where Bert popped corn over the gas
log. Flossie and Freddie laughed as the kernels cracked with the heat,
bursting out into queerly shaped, big, white objects.

“They look like crooked snowflakes,” was Freddie’s comment.

“But they taste better’n snowflakes,” said Flossie.

Bert wanted to melt some sugar and pour over the corn, so he could make
balls of it, but Nan said this would be too sticky. So they melted some
butter, poured that into the pan of popped corn, and then sprinkled on
some salt.

“Oh, yum! It’s good!” mumbled Bert as he filled his mouth with the
crisp corn.

“Yes,” agreed Nan, “it is. And it would be jolly fun here if only the
storm would stop.”

“It’s snowing yet,” remarked Bert as they grew quiet a moment and
listened to the flakes striking against the windows.

Though the older Bobbsey twins were a bit worried over keeping house
all by themselves, with Aunt Sallie Pry ill in bed, Flossie and Freddie
were not at all alarmed. It was a perpetual picnic for them, and they
had so much fun, playing about the room, eating pop corn and playing
they were sailors shipwrecked on a desert island, and rushing to door
or window to see the storm that Nan had hard work to get them to go to
bed.

But at last they were tucked in, and then Nan came down to sit for
a while with Bert, having first gone in to see if Mrs. Pry needed
anything.

“We’ll have to get her some more liniment in the morning, Bert,” Nan
told her brother.

“Yes, I’ll go to the store,” he agreed. “I don’t mind the snow.”

“Then you can bring in some bread,” added Nan.

“And I’ll see if there is any mail for us at the post-office,” added
her brother.

The Bobbsey twins were rather surprised the next morning when they
looked out and found that the storm had stopped. At least, the snow had
ceased falling, though a mass of gray clouds in the sky seemed to tell
of more to come.

“I can get out to the store now!” cried Bert as he quickly dressed.
“And I’ll get the mail, too!”

“I’m coming with you!” shouted Freddie.

“So am I!” echoed Flossie.

“Not much, you aren’t!” exclaimed Bert. “You’d freeze your ears off.
It’s cold out!”

He could tell this, even though he had not been out of doors, by
listening to the “squeak” of the snow as wagons were drawn along the
street in front of the house. For the snowfall had been so sudden that
few sleighs were out as yet.

“Well, I don’t want to freeze my ears,” said Freddie.

“I don’t, either,” agreed Flossie. So they no longer teased to be
allowed to go out and play.

Nan got breakfast and then gave Bert Mrs. Pry’s liniment bottle to have
filled at the drug store. She also told her brother what to bring from
the store, besides bread. Then, well wrapped up and wearing his rubber
boots, Bert started out. The snow was deep, and it was cold, as he
had said. But he did not mind even though it took his breath to plow
through it.

He stopped in the drug store first, and handed Mr. Renner the bottle to
fill with liniment.

“How’s everybody up at your house, Bert?” asked the druggist.

“We’re all right--what there is of us,” Bert answered. “My father and
mother are away, and so are Sam and Dinah. And Mrs. Pry’s in bed with
lumbago. The liniment is for her.”

“That’s too bad,” said Mr. Renner. “Winter isn’t the best time to have
lumbago--in fact, I don’t know when it is a good time to have it. Quite
a storm we had. Lot of trains stalled, wires down and all that, I hear.”

“Trains stalled?” exclaimed Bert quickly. “When?”

“Oh, that happened yesterday when the storm was at its worst,” the
druggist said, and Bert felt easier, for he thought his mother and
father had reached Uncle Rossiter’s before they could have been
snowed-in.

“And are the wires down?” Bert asked.

“Yes, a lot of telephone and telegraph wires are broken. My telephone
is out of order and I don’t know when they’ll get it fixed.”

Bert took the liniment and went on to the post-office. There he found
a number of men gathered about the letter window. Mr. Anderson, the
postmaster, was speaking to them and Bert listened.

“There isn’t any mail in--hasn’t been for a couple of days,” said the
postmaster. “I don’t know when there will be any. A lot of mail trains
are stuck in the drifts. And the wires are down to a lot of places so I
can’t get any word as to when the mail will arrive. You’ll just have to
wait--that’s all. Blame it on the storm.”

Bert felt a sinking feeling around his heart. Still he made up his mind
he was going to ask if there was any letter from his father or mother.




                              CHAPTER XVI

                             A GREAT CRASH


Waiting until some of the men had moved aside from the delivery window,
Bert made his way to it. Mr. Anderson knew the Bobbsey boy, for in the
summer Bert had often gone to his father’s lumber office, and, more
than once, had been allowed to go down to the post-office for the mail.

“No letters for the lumber company to-day, Bert,” the postmaster said,
with a smile. “There were a couple yesterday, but Mr. Jones got them.”

“I didn’t come for the office mail, Mr. Anderson,” explained the boy.
“But the postman hasn’t been at our house for two or three days, and I
thought maybe there’d be some mail here for my sister or me.”

“I’ll look, but I don’t believe there is any, Bert,” said Mr.
Anderson. “None of the men went out yesterday, on account of the heavy
storm.”

He went back to the long table where the mail was sorted, but when he
again approached the window there were no letters in his hands.

“Sorry, Bert, nothing for you folks,” said Mr. Anderson. “You see
everything is upset. The trains are late, and some are stuck in deep
snow up further north, I hear. And the worst of it is that a lot of
wires have been blown down so we can’t get any word. Tell your mother
the man will go out with mail as soon as any comes in.”

“I can’t tell my mother that,” stated Bert.

“Why not? Is she sick?”

“No, but Mrs. Pry is. She came to keep house for us while mother and
dad went away. Then she got sick, and Dinah and Sam went away, and----”

“You don’t mean to tell me you Bobbsey twins are keeping house all by
yourselves!” interrupted the postmaster in astonishment.

“That’s what we’re doing,” answered Bert. “That’s why I wanted to get
a letter--to hear if my father and mother were all right.”

“Oh, I guess they’re all right, Bert,” said Mr. Anderson kindly when he
had heard the story of the trip Mr. and Mrs. Bobbsey had to take. “It’s
only that the mails are late. Probably your folks have written you, but
you won’t get the letters for a few days yet.”

“Nan and I wrote to them, telling about Sam and Dinah going away,”
explained Bert. “But I guess our letters didn’t get to them, either.”

“No,” agreed the man at the letter window. “I don’t believe they did.
And you can’t telegraph or telephone them, either, Bert, on account of
the wires being down. But I guess things will be better in a few days.”

“I hope so,” murmured Bert, as he turned away from the window. Others
were coming in to make inquiries. “Nan will feel sad about not getting
a letter,” thought the boy.

However, there was nothing he could do. So he left the post-office and
went to the store to get the things Nan had said were needed--a loaf of
bread, some condensed milk--since the milkman had left no bottles--and
half a dozen other things.

Now that the snow had stopped, at least for a time, the streets of
Lakeport were filling with people who had not been able to get out of
their houses during the storm. Many others besides the Bobbsey twins
needed to buy things to eat.

“Well, you’ve got quite a bundle to carry, Bert,” remarked Mr. Fink,
the grocer, as he did up the things the boy had bought. “Think you can
manage it all?”

“Oh, yes,” was the answer. “I’ve got to get the stuff home. Don’t want
to go hungry, you know. And it looks as if it was going to snow some
more.”

On his way home with the bundle of food, Bert saw Danny Rugg just ahead
of him. Danny also had his arms filled with bundles, for he, too, had
been to the store. Seeing Bert, Danny stopped and grinned.

“Plenty of snow for a snowball fight now,” Danny said.

“I haven’t any time to fight,” answered Bert, in no very friendly
tones. He more than half suspected Danny had suggested to Sam the idea
that Bert had broken the church window.

“Aren’t mad, are you?” Danny wanted to know.

Bert was going to answer and say he was not exactly “mad” when Sam,
coming along the street, called to Danny and the latter hastened off to
join his crony.

“I’d just like to find out why you went into the church that time I
fell down the trapdoor,” mused Bert, as he struggled along, for it was
hard going. “It had something to do with the broken window, I’m sure.”

The wind was rising again and it was very cold. The gale whipped
snowflakes from the ground into Bert’s face with stinging force.

“Maybe we’ll have another blizzard,” he thought. “It sure does look
like more snow,” and he glanced up at the gray clouds.

Bert reached home at last and found Nan trying to amuse Flossie and
Freddie in the house. It was hard work, for the small twins, now that
they could look out and see that the fall of snow had stopped, at least
for a time, wanted to go outside and play in the drifts.

“I think it will be all right for them to come out with me for a little
while,” suggested Bert, when he saw how Flossie and Freddie were
“pestering” Nan. “They can put on their boots, dress warmly, and I’ll
take care of them.”

“Well, all right,” agreed Nan. “But they mustn’t stay out too long.
Mother wouldn’t let them if she were here.” At the mention of her
absent mother Nan felt her eyes filling with tears, so she quickly
turned her head away.

“Hurray! Hurray! We can go out!” shouted Freddie, capering about the
room like a pony in a pasture.

“And I’m going to make snowballs!” declared Flossie. “But don’t you
dare wash my face, Freddie Bobbsey!”

“All right, I won’t,” he promised, on his good behaviour for a time,
lest Nan change her mind about letting him out.

“Did you get any letters from daddy or mother?” asked Nan, as Bert put
his bundles on the kitchen table.

“No mail, and the wires are down,” he said. “But I guess we’ll get a
letter to-morrow.”

“I hope so,” sighed Nan. “Did you get Mrs. Pry’s liniment?”

“Yes, here it is.”

“I’m glad you got it,” went on Nan. “She’s asked for it two or three
times. Her lumbago seems to be getting worse.”

“Maybe we’ll have to get the doctor for her,” suggested Bert.

“Oh, I hope not,” exclaimed Nan. “If she got very sick, I don’t know
how I could wait on her and look after the house.”

“It would be hard,” agreed Bert. “But maybe everything will be all
right. Now I’ll take Flossie and Freddie out for a while. It will make
them sleep better to-night to have some fresh air.”

He and the small twins had some jolly fun in the snow. Well wrapped up
and with rubber boots which kept their feet and legs dry, Flossie and
Freddie raced about, made snowballs and tossed them to and fro, and
even began to make a snow man.

But it was so cold that the snow did not pack well, or stick together.
Snow must be a trifle wet to roll big balls or build snow forts and
construct snow men to guard them.

However, Flossie and Freddie had lots of fun, and Bert was a good
brother. He let them throw snowballs at him, though it must be said
that Flossie and Freddie did not hit him often, for they could not
throw very straight. And when they did hit Bert the balls did not hurt.

Then Bert pretended he was a horse and raced about with them through
the drifts until the merry laughs of Flossie and Freddie could be heard
by Nan who was taking Mrs. Pry up some more tea, toast, and preserves.

“Well, I’m glad they’re having a good time,” sighed Nan. “They’ll be
easier to manage after they’ve had some fun.”

Poor Nan was not having much fun herself. But she was a brave girl, and
she knew she and Bert must keep house until mother and daddy returned,
or at least until Sam or Dinah got back.

No word had been received from either of the faithful colored servants
since they had gone. But this would not have been surprising, even if
the mail trains had been running since neither of them knew much about
writing letters.

Panting and laughing, with rosy-red cheeks, Flossie and Freddie came
into the house with Bert, stamping and brushing the snow off their feet
on the side porch, from which Bert had shoveled most of the big drift.

“Oh, we had lots of fun!” panted Freddie.

“Lots of fun!” echoed Flossie.

“We’re going out again after we eat,” went on Freddie.

“I’ll see about that,” was all Nan would promise.

And after she had given the small twins something to eat and had gotten
something for herself and Bert, the latter, going to the window,
exclaimed:

“It’s snowing again!”

And so it was.

“Oh, can’t we go out?” cried Flossie.

“Just for a little while!” begged Freddie, for they seemed to know that
with the white flakes again falling their outdoor fun would end.

“I’ll take them out for just a little while,” said Bert. “They’ll be
easier to manage when they get good and tired,” he whispered to Nan.

So, once again, the small twins were bundled up, and Bert took them out
in the snow. They played about for a time, but the storm grew worse
quickly, the wind being cold and the snowflakes stinging the faces of
Flossie and Freddie, so that soon they were glad to go in again.

Just as Bert had thought, letting Flossie and Freddie play out of doors
made the small twins sleepy, and they were ready for bed much earlier
than usual that evening.

Bert and Nan were also tired, so about ten o’clock the Bobbsey house
was quiet and dark, every one being in bed. The last thing Bert
remembered hearing was the howl of the wind outside and the tinkle of
snowflakes against the windows.

“It’s storming hard again,” he said to himself.

And the first thing he heard, when he awakened in the dim, gray light
of morning, was still the noise of the storm.

“It kept up all night,” thought Bert. “My, but the snow will be deep!
And how that wind blows! It shakes the house!”

He was aware of a furious blast howling outside. And really, at times,
the house trembled.

“Oh, Bert!” called Nan from her room. “Are you awake?”

“Yes, I’m going to get right up.”

“Oh, it’s a terrible storm, isn’t it?”

“Yes, I guess it’s pretty bad,” admitted her brother. “But we’ll be all
right.”

Hardly had he spoken than the wind howled louder than ever, and to the
ears of the Bobbsey twins came the sound of a great crash. It was the
noise of breaking wood and shattered glass.

“What’s that?” cried Nan.




                             CHAPTER XVII

                            BERT FALLS OFF


Bert Bobbsey did not know what had caused that crashing sound any more
than did Nan. For a few moments he was frightened, as was his sister.
Certainly that crash was enough to scare any one, coming as it did in
the midst of the storm. And when you take four children, none of them
very old, and put them in a house all alone, except for Aunt Sallie
Pry, ill in bed, there is some reason for them to be afraid.

“Oh, what was it?” cried Nan again. “There it goes some more!” she went
on, as the banging, crashing sound repeated itself. “What is it, Bert?”

“I don’t know,” he answered. “But I’ll soon find out.”

By this time Flossie and Freddie had been awakened. They, too, heard
the terrifying noise and the banging which jarred the house.

“Maybe that’s Santa Claus coming down the chimney,” suggested Flossie.

“It’s too early for Santa Claus,” called Freddie as he quickly began
to dress. “But maybe it’s an airship, Bert, and it banged into our
chimney. It sounds like a chimney, doesn’t it?”

“It sounds like almost anything,” Bert answered as he made haste in
putting on his clothes.

In her room Aunt Sallie had caught the word “chimney,” spoken by
Flossie and Freddie, but she had not heard what else the small twins
said. She did hear the banging sound, however, and she called:

“Oh, Nan, what is it? Is the chimney on fire? If it is, throw a lot of
salt in the stove. Salt will put out chimney fires,” which was true
enough, only the chimney was not blazing--at least, Bert and Nan hoped
it was not.

Nan answered the old lady, saying:

“We don’t know what it is, Aunt Sallie. I don’t believe the chimney is
on fire. Bert is going to look.”

“Oh, Bert dropped a book, did he?” exclaimed Mrs. Pry. “Well, that’s
all right--you can’t help dropping things once in a while, and you
can’t break a book by dropping it. But it must have been a very large
book to make so much noise.”

“Ho! Ho!” silently laughed Freddie as he was dressing with his brother.
“She thought Nan said a book, but she said you were going to look.”

“Don’t laugh,” whispered Bert. “Aunt Sallie can’t help being deaf.”

And as they did not want to agitate the old lady, neither Nan nor Bert
told her that something worse had happened than the mere dropping of a
book.

That some danger was at hand Nan and Bert were very sure. The crashing,
banging sound kept up, and at times the whole house shivered and shook,
and it was not the wind which was doing this, either.

“Bert, I am afraid!” whispered Nan, as she and her brother met in the
hall outside their rooms. Flossie and Freddie had followed them.

“You needn’t be afraid,” Bert answered, quite bravely for a boy of his
size. “I’ll soon see what it is.”

“Maybe somebody rolled a big snowball on our stoop,” suggested Freddie.

“Or else a big icicle fell,” added Flossie “Is it snowing yet, Nan?”

“Yes, it’s snowing hard, and the wind is blowing. But, Bert,” she
added, “I believe Flossie and Freddie are right--the noise is outside,
it isn’t in the house.”

“It does sound outside,” Bert said. “Let’s listen a minute.”

They stood quietly in the hall. Mrs. Pry, believing it was a book that
had fallen which made the noise, was waiting patiently in bed until Nan
should bring her a cup of coffee.

And as the twins listened there came to their ears that banging sound
again, and this time it clearly came from the front of the house and
not far from where they stood. Mrs. Pry heard the noise too, and she
must have felt the house tremble.

“Is Bert dropping more books?” she called.

“I’ll bring your coffee right away,” Nan answered, thinking this was
the best thing to say, rather than to speak of their fears.

“Yes, my dear, I’ll feel better after some coffee,” said the old lady.

“The noise comes from there,” and Nan pointed, as she whispered, to the
big front “spare,” or guest, room of the house.

“I’ll go in and see what it is,” offered Bert. “You shut Aunt Sallie’s
door so she won’t get nervous.”

It was well Nan did this, for as soon as Bert opened the door of the
guest bedroom, out blew a blast of cold air, followed by a cloud of
snow. In a glance Nan, Bert and the smaller twins saw what had happened.

A big branch from a tree in front of the house had broken off and had
crashed through the front window of the bedroom, breaking out all the
glass. Through this opening the cold wind was blowing the snow, until
there was a pile of the white flakes on the floor. The limb was not
broken entirely off the tree, but hung by a few shreds of wood. It was
as though it was on a hinge, like a door, and each time the wind blew
the branch swayed to and fro, banging against the side of the house
and on the porch roof, which extended across the front of the house,
and beneath the guest-room windows.

“That’s what made the noise!” cried Freddie, pointing.

“And look at the snow on the floor!” exclaimed Flossie. “I’m going to
make a snowball!”

“No you aren’t!” cried Nan, catching her little sister by the arm as
she was about to dash into the room. “Oh, Bert, what are we going to
do?” Nan asked. “The window is all smashed.”

“And maybe that branch will poke a hole in the side of the house,”
added Freddie, as the wind, swaying the limb, banged it up against the
window frame. There was no more glass left to break.

“I’ll soon fix this!” cried Bert. “I’ll get a hatchet and chop the
branch loose. Then it won’t bang any more.”

“But you can’t put in a new window!” said Nan.

“We can tack a blanket or something over it, and that will keep out
the snow and wind,” decided Bert. “I’ll get a hatchet!”

It seemed to be the only thing to do. For, as Freddie had said, the
branch, if left to sway to and fro, would keep hitting against the side
of the house and might in time break the clapboards and smash a hole
through the plaster.

“Can you chop that branch off?” asked Nan, anxiously.

“Sure!” declared her brother. “I’ll just get out on the porch roof, and
I’ll soon cut through that limb. It only hangs by a few shreds. It’ll
be easy.”

Nan saw what Bert meant to do. They went a little way into the guest
room, but it was so cold, now that the window was smashed, and the wind
blew the snow about with such swirling gusts that Nan thought the small
twins might catch cold.

“Come out and we’ll shut the door,” she called, pulling Flossie and
Freddie toward her. “That will keep the rest of the house from getting
freezing cold until we can tack a blanket over the window.”

“I’m going to help! Can’t I, Bert?” asked Freddie.

“I’ll see,” was all Bert would promise. “You go ahead and make the
coffee for Aunt Sallie, Nan, while I get the hatchet.”

“And I want my breakfast!” cried Flossie.

“So do I,” chimed in Freddie.

“Now, just go easy,” advised Nan. “I can’t do everything at once. Oh,
dear,” she sighed, “so many things are happening! I do wish mother and
daddy would come back!”

“Oh, we’ll get along all right,” replied Bert. “This isn’t anything.
’Tisn’t half as bad as if the chimney had fallen down, for then we
couldn’t have any fire.”

“No, I suppose not,” agreed Nan. “But I’ll be glad when you get that
limb chopped off. Listen to it bang!”

As she spoke the wind suddenly whistled around the house in a burst of
freezing air, howling and moaning, while the swaying tree branch banged
louder than ever.

“Nan! Bert! I’m sure that was the chimney blowing down!” cried Aunt
Sallie, for Nan had opened her door when they came out of the cold
guest chamber.

“No, it’s only a tree branch near the house banging against the side,”
Nan answered.

“What’s that you say? You’re going to take the children for a ride? Oh,
I wouldn’t do that so early in the morning, Nan. It must be very cold,”
said Aunt Sallie.

“No, no! I said that noise was a tree branch banging against the side
of the house,” repeated Nan in louder tones.

“Oh, a tree branch,” murmured the old lady. “I thought it was some one
knocking at the door. Is my coffee ready, dearie?”

“I’ll have it for you right away,” was the answer.

So Nan made Aunt Sallie a hot drink while Bert went down in the cellar
to get a sharp hatchet with which to cut loose the dangling tree
branch. Nan managed to keep Flossie and Freddie quiet by letting them
set the table for breakfast.

When she took up Aunt Sallie’s coffee and toast, Bert followed up the
stairs, having put on his rubber boots, mittens, and a warm jacket.
For he would have to climb out on the snowy roof to cut the tree limb.

As soon as he opened the door out rushed more cold wind and snow. But
he quickly closed it again, and Nan waited until he was inside before
she opened Aunt Sallie’s door, which she had gone up to close just
before Bert was ready to begin.

On the carpet beneath the broken window was a pile of glass and snow.
Nearly all the glass was broken out of the window, only a few jagged
pieces remaining, and these Bert knocked out with his hatchet so they
would not cut him as he crawled through.

The dangling branch was half way across the window, but there was room
enough for Bert to dodge through without getting hit by the swaying
limb. Once out on the sloping porch roof, covered as it was by a
blanket of snow, the Bobbsey lad looked up to see the best place to
start cutting.

As he had said, the branch was attached to the part that was not broken
off by only a few shreds of wood. Chopping through these would cause
the branch to fall, and it could then be pushed off the roof. But the
place where he must do the cutting was above Bert’s head.

“I’ve got to get something to stand on,” he decided.

He looked around inside the room and saw a small box. In it Mrs.
Bobbsey had packed away the lace curtains for the guest room. And when
the curtains had been hung the box had not been taken out.

“I’ll stand on that,” Bert decided. He pulled the lace curtains of the
window to one side. The curtains were wet with snow, but Bert thought
he and Nan could take them down and dry them later in the day.

Bert first put the box out on the porch roof in the snow. Then he
crawled out himself. As he did so the wind swayed the branch and it
nearly hit him, but he managed to scramble out of the way.

Then, standing on the box, he began to chop at the shreds of the
swaying branch. It was hard work, but the boy kept at it. The sharp
hatchet shaved through the thin wood.

“One more shot, and down you’ll come!” exclaimed Bert.

He aimed a hard blow at what was left of the shreds. The hatchet cut
through them and the branch fell to the porch roof. No longer would it
bang against the house.

But in making his last stroke, Bert reached over too far. He felt
himself slipping. The box on which he stood slipped on the snow of the
roof.

The next moment Bert toppled over, fell on his side, and went rolling
toward the edge of the slanting roof.

“Here I go!” he cried, trying to hold himself back.

But there was nothing which he could grasp, and an instant later he
slid over the edge of the roof.




                             CHAPTER XVIII

                         AUNT SALLIE IS WORSE


While Nan Bobbsey was putting breakfast on the table for Flossie and
Freddie, and also for herself and Bert, the smaller twins were amusing
themselves by running to and fro in the house. They ran into the front
room, up to the windows, out of which they looked at the storm, and
then they ran back into the dining room.

“Don’t make so much noise!” begged Nan, while she wondered how Bert was
getting along with cutting off the tree branch.

“We’re playing horse,” explained Freddie. “Horses have to make noise.”

“He’s the horse and I’m the driver,” said Flossie.

“Come on!” cried her twin brother. “We have to go to a fire now!”

Into the front room the smaller twins raced again, and as they reached
the windows they saw Bert fall off the roof. They knew it was their
brother.

“Oh! Oh!” screamed Flossie. “Look at Bert!”

Freddie gazed for a moment. Then he rushed back to the dining room
where Nan was putting the oatmeal on the table and cried:

“Bert jumped off the roof! Bert jumped off the roof into a snowdrift in
the front yard! Oh, Nan, you ought to see him!”

Nan gazed wide-eyed at her small brother. Why should Bert jump off the
roof, especially when he had a sharp hatchet? Perhaps something worse
than this had happened.

Nan hurried into the front room, followed by Freddie. Flossie was still
at the window looking out.

“Bert’s stuck in a snowdrift,” she reported. “Look, he can hardly get
out!”

And this was true. So deep was the snow in front of the house, and so
far down in the drift had Bert plunged when he toppled off the roof,
that it was all the boy could do to scramble out. Still he was making
headway, floundering about to reach the front steps.

Nan ran to the door and opened it.

“Bert Bobbsey!” she cried. “What did you want to jump off the roof for?”

“I didn’t jump,” Bert said, somewhat out of breath as at last he
managed to free his legs and reach the porch.

“Freddie says you jumped,” went on Nan.

“No I didn’t! I fell,” panted Bert. “I cut the tree branch--and--then
I slipped--off the box. I was standing on a box. I rolled--off--the
roof--but I’m not hurt because I--fell in a snow bank.”

“Oh, I’m glad of that!” exclaimed Nan.

“You are?” cried Bert, with a laugh. “Well, you wouldn’t be glad if you
had as much snow down your back as I’ve got down mine!”

“Oh, I didn’t mean that!” Nan exclaimed. “I mean I’m glad you didn’t
get hurt.”

“So’m I,” said Bert. “Falling in the snowdrift, even off the porch
roof, was like landing in a feather bed.”

“The hatchet might have cut you,” went on his sister.

“I dropped that up on the roof when I fell, I guess,” stated Bert.
“Well, anyhow, I cut the branch loose, and it won’t bang any more. Now
we’ve got to nail a blanket over the window so the wind and snow won’t
blow in.”

“You better have your breakfast first,” Nan suggested.

“No, I’m all snow now and I might as well finish,” decided Bert. “But I
guess you’ll have to help me put the blanket on, Nan. I can’t hold both
sides up at once.”

“I’ll do that,” his sister agreed.

“We’ll help, too!” cried Freddie, speaking for himself and his twin
sister.

“No, you two get your breakfast,” decided Nan. “It’s all on the table
ready for you. And be good children, now.”

“We will,” promised Flossie. “I’ll let Freddie eat out of my oatmeal
dish if he wants to.”

“Each of you has a dish,” laughed Nan. “There’s no need of sharing
them. Now come on, Bert, and we’ll fix that window.”

Nan knew where her mother kept the extra bed clothes, and from the
closet she took a heavy woolen blanket. Bert got some big tacks from
his father’s tool box down in the cellar, and then the two older
Bobbsey twins began work to keep out the wintry blast which seemed to
howl with glee as it rushed through the broken window.

Bert found where he had dropped the hatchet in the snow on the roof
before he rolled off.

“I’ll bring that in to hammer with, and we can stand on the box,” he
told Nan.

“Oh, what a lot of snow on the carpet! And broken glass, too!”
exclaimed the girl. “Mother would feel badly if she saw this.”

“I’ll clean it up as soon as we get the blanket tacked on,” said Bert.

It was not easy for him and Nan to put up the heavy blanket and tack it
fast to the sides of the window. For the wind would blow hard every now
and then, spreading the blanket out like a sail of a boat. But at last
they managed to get it in place, and then the wind could no longer
enter, nor did any more snow sift in.

“We’ll have to get a glass man to fix the window,” said Nan.

“Can’t get anybody until after this storm is over,” was Bert’s opinion.
“A glass man might fall off the roof and break the new pane he brought.
I guess this will be all right for a while. Nobody sleeps in here,
anyhow.”

“Yes,” agreed Nan, “it will be all right. It doesn’t matter if this
room is cold.”

Bert got broom and dustpan and cleaned up the snow before it should
melt on the carpet. He also picked up the broken pieces of glass,
taking care not to cut his fingers, and put them in an ash can in the
cellar.

“And now I guess it’s time I had my breakfast,” he decided, when
everything had been made as nearly right as possible.

“I’ll eat with you,” said Nan.

“Haven’t you had your breakfast, either?” asked Bert, in surprise.

“I haven’t had time,” explained Nan. “I had to look after Aunt Sallie
and the twins.”

She and Bert were on their way to the dining room, when suddenly they
heard the voices of Flossie and Freddie.

“Stop! Now you stop, Freddie Bobbsey! Quit, I’ll tell Dinah on you!”
Flossie wailed.

“Dinah isn’t here!” retorted Freddie.

“Guess those two need more looking after,” laughed Bert to Nan.

“Oh, they’re always up to something!” she sighed, as she hurried into
the dining room.

Nan and Bert saw Freddie trying to pull away from Flossie the oatmeal
dish the little girl had been using. Flossie was clinging to one side
of it, and at the same time shouting:

“Stop! Stop! Now you stop, Freddie Bobbsey!”

“Give me the dish! Let me have it!” insisted the little boy.

“Stop, Freddie!” called Nan. “Why are you trying to take away Flossie’s
dish?”

“She’s through with it. She’s eaten up all her oatmeal,” Freddie said.
“I’m going to take the dish out in the kitchen and wash it.”

“No, you mustn’t do that,” said Nan.

“I want to help you wash the dishes!”

“Thank you, dear, but I don’t need any help this morning,” Nan said.

“And he sha’n’t have my dish! I haven’t eaten all my oatmeal!” wailed
Flossie.

“Oh, you did so eat it all up! There isn’t any left!” exclaimed Freddie.

“There is so!” retorted Flossie, trying hard to pull the dish away from
her brother. “There’s sugar and milk in my dish and I want it, Freddie
Bobbsey.”

Bert had a look in the dish over which there was such a dispute. There
was only a very little milk on the bottom--hardly a spoonful. But
sometimes Flossie could be very fussy over little things, and this was
one of those occasions.

“Her dish is empty and it ought to be washed,” Freddie said, and he
would not let go his hold until Bert took his fingers off, saying:

“Come on, Freddie, I’ll let you help me make the water wheel as soon as
I’ve had something to eat. Let the girls do the dishes.”

“Oh, all right,” agreed the little boy. Then to Flossie he cried:

“Girls are cry babies and they have to wash dishes! Boys make things,
and I’m going to make a water wheel!”

“I am not a cry baby, am I, Nan?” appealed Flossie.

“No, dear, you aren’t, of course,” Nan answered. “You mustn’t call
names, Freddie.”

“Well, then why didn’t she let me take her dish out when it was empty?”
the little boy wanted to know.

“’Tisn’t empty! I’m going to eat the rest of my oatmeal,” said Flossie,
and she began to scrape up with her spoon what little milk remained.
There was hardly enough to show, but Flossie made as much work over it
as though the dish were half full.

“You can help me with the dishes, Flossie, as soon as Bert and I have
our breakfast,” Nan said, and this pleased the little girl. And Freddie
forgot about his dispute with Flossie when he thought of helping Bert
with the water wheel.

The storm kept up all that morning, and it was so severe that though
Bert wanted to go to the post-office to inquire if any mail had come
in, Nan would not let him.

“You might get stuck in a drift and never get back,” she said.

“Pooh! I guess I could get out of a drift!” laughed Bert. “Didn’t I get
out of the one I fell into off the roof?”

But Nan was so worried over the storm and about being left alone that
Bert said he would stay at home.

It was still snowing at noon when Nan served lunch. Though as she
looked in the pantry she said to herself:

“Somebody will have to go to the store to-morrow or we’ll not have much
to eat. I don’t believe the stores will deliver anything. But maybe
Bert can get out in the morning if the snow stops.”

After Nan had seen to it that things were put on the table for Bert,
Flossie and Freddie, she carried something up to Aunt Sallie, without
waiting to get anything for herself.

As Nan entered the old lady’s room she saw Mrs. Pry tossing from side
to side in the bed, just as Nan had once seen Flossie toss in a fever.

“Who--who is that?” murmured Mrs. Pry in a faint voice, as Nan set the
tray of food down on a table near the bed. “Is that the doctor?”

“No. This is Nan Bobbsey,” said the little girl. “Don’t you know me,
Aunt Sallie?” She feared the old lady was out of her head with fever.

“Oh, yes, I know you, Nan,” was the low answer. “But I thought you were
the doctor. When is the doctor coming?”

“Why, I don’t know,” and Nan was puzzled. “Did you want me to send for
the doctor?”

“Yes, dearie, I wish you would. I called down to you to send for him,
but I guess you didn’t hear me.”

“Flossie and Freddie were making so much noise, I guess I didn’t hear
you,” said Nan. “But I’ll get the doctor right away, if you think you
want him.”

“I’d better have him, Nan. I’m much worse, I fear. I’m very sick and
the lumbago is worse. That liniment doesn’t seem to help me any. Send
for the doctor. Dr. Martin is the best one, and he doesn’t live far
from here.”

“I’ll have Bert telephone for him right away,” promised Nan. “And see,
I have brought you up something to eat.”

“I’m too sick to eat, dearie,” moaned Aunt Sallie. “Get the doctor as
soon as you can.”

Nan hurried downstairs and told Bert. He went to the telephone, but
after waiting some time he heard no voice of the operator asking what
number he wanted.

“I guess the telephone wires are broken, Nan,” he said. “I’ll have to
go over to Dr. Martin’s house to tell him to come.”

“Oh, dear!” sighed Nan, and she looked out of the window at the storm
which was still raging fiercely.




                              CHAPTER XIX

                            IN CHURCH AGAIN


There was no help for it. If the doctor was to come to Aunt Sallie to
help her, Bert must go after him. The telephone would not work.

“It isn’t far,” Bert said to Nan when he had tried several more times
to get an answer from the telephone operator. “I can soon push my way
down to Dr. Martin’s office.”

“Maybe he won’t come back with you,” suggested Nan. “Maybe he’ll think
the storm is too bad for him to come out in.”

“Doctors aren’t that way,” declared Bert. “They go out in any kind of a
storm when anybody is sick.”

So he made ready to go out, again putting on his boots and getting out
his long overcoat and mittens.

In order to leave his legs free, when he was chopping at the tree
branch Bert had put on a short “pea jacket,” as sailors call them. But
now to venture out on the streets in the storm, he decided his longer
overcoat would be best.

Inside the warm, cosy house the storm had not seemed quite as terrible
as it was to Bert when he stepped outside. At first the wind nearly
took away his breath, and the snowflakes, tossed this way and that way
by the wintry blast, stung the boy’s cheeks.

But he laughed and shouted, pretending that he was a soldier fighting
the storm, and he floundered out into the drifts and down toward Dr.
Martin’s house. There were very few persons out in the tempest, which
was, in fact, a blizzard. Bert saw no one whom he knew, but a man who
was tramping his way through the snow called to the boy:

“Quite a storm!”

“That’s right,” panted Bert, stopping to get his breath.

“More wires down than before,” the man went on. “And a lot of trains
are stuck in the snow.”

Bert felt a sinking feeling in his heart, and he hoped his father and
mother had not started back from Uncle Rossiter’s only to be snowed-in.
Bert decided he would say nothing to Nan about what this man had told
him.

Floundering on through the snow, falling down once, but getting up
quickly again with a laugh, Bert at last reached the doctor’s house and
rang the bell. A maid let him in the office.

“The doctor will see you in a few minutes,” she said.

“I don’t want him to see me,” replied Bert. “I’m not sick. It’s Aunt
Sallie Pry. She’s staying at our house and she has the lumbago.”

The maid smiled at the boy, and the doctor, who happened to be in the
next room, opened the door, for Bert had spoken rather loudly.

“Oh, Bert, it’s you, is it?” asked Dr. Martin, for he knew the Bobbsey
twins. “What’s the trouble at your house?”

Bert told him, mentioning that his father and mother, as well as Sam
and Dinah, were away.

“And you twins are keeping house all alone, are you?” asked the doctor.

“Sure we are,” said Bert, a bit proudly.

“Well, you’re a fine family of children, I’ll say that for you!” said
Dr. Martin admiringly. “I’ll come over and see what I can do for Aunt
Sallie in a little while.”

“Bring something for the lumbago,” advised Bert.

“Yes, I’ll do that,” the doctor promised, laughing. “And don’t get
stuck in a snowdrift going back, Bert.”

“I won’t,” said the boy. “But I was stuck in one early this morning,”
and he told about having fallen off the roof.

Out again into the storm stepped Bert Bobbsey. Back over the way he had
come he floundered again. When a little way from home he heard a faint
mewing sound.

“It’s a cat!” cried Bert. “I wonder if that could be our cat Snoop come
back?” For Snoop, with Snap, the dog, had been sent away to an animal
doctor’s for a time. The mewing of the cat sounded more plainly, and
Bert looked around.

Then, up in a tree, but not far above the ground, he saw a little
maltese kitten.

“Oh, you poor little cat!” exclaimed Bert. “I guess you’re lost in the
storm. I’ll take you home.”

He reached up, and, by standing on his tiptoes, managed to get hold of
the pussy. She dug her claws into the bark of the tree, for she was
afraid of falling. But Bert gently pulled her loose, and then cuddled
her in his arms, murmuring:

“Oh, you’re a nice little kitten! I’m glad I found you! Flossie and
Freddie will just love you and Nan will give you some warm milk. I
guess you got out of some house and don’t know how to get back.”

However, there were no houses very near the tree in which Bert had
found the little cat. So, not knowing to whom she belonged he took her
home with him. At first the pussy mewed pitifully as Bert cuddled her
in his arms. But soon she began to purr contentedly.

“Now you’re happy,” said the boy.

Nan opened the side door for Bert, for she was watching for him to come
back, and at first she did not see the cat.

“Is the doctor coming?” Nan wanted to know.

“He’ll be here in a little while,” was the answer.

Then the pussy in Bert’s arms moved and Nan caught sight of the bright
eyes and the little tail waving.

“Oh, the darling!” she cried. “Where did you get her, Bert?”

“Found her mewing up in a tree.”

By this time Flossie and Freddie, having heard Bert enter, ran to greet
him, and they, too, saw the pussy.

“Oh, can I have her?” Flossie wanted to know, reaching up to stroke the
animal in Bert’s arms.

“Is that Snoop growed little?” Freddie asked, for Snoop was a very big
cat.

“This is Snowflake--a new cat,” Bert answered. “I named her Snowflake
because I got her out in the snowstorm.”

“Oh, I just love her!” cried Flossie. “Please let me hold Snowflake!”

“I want to hold her, too,” broke in Freddie.

“Now look here!” said Bert, somewhat sternly. “There must be no pulling
this pussy apart by you two to see who’s going to hold her. You must
take turns. As soon as I hear you disputing over the pussy I’ll put her
back in the tree where I found her.”

This was such a terrible thing to think of having happen that Flossie
and Freddie were quite alarmed.

“I won’t pull the pussy,” promised Freddie.

“And I won’t, either,” said Flossie. “Freddie, you can take her now for
a little while, if you like. And I’ll take a turn afterward.”

“All right, Flossie, thank you,” said Freddie politely.

Very gently he took the pussy in his arms, and Nan and Bert looked at
each other, smiling over the heads of the smaller Bobbsey children.

“It’s a good thing you said that to them, or else they’d be disputing
all the while,” whispered Nan. “Now they’ll be quiet for a time.”

Dr. Martin came in a little while and went up to see Mrs. Pry.

“Where does it hurt you the most?” he asked the old lady.

“What’s that?” cried Aunt Sallie, sitting up in bed. “You say you fell
over a post? I hope you didn’t get hurt, Dr. Martin.”

“No, I didn’t fall over a post,” said the doctor, and then he looked
up to see Nan behind Mrs. Pry’s back motioning to her ears, to let him
know the old lady was deaf. “I asked you where the pain hurt _most_?”

“Oh, the pain--yes. You don’t speak as loudly as you used to, Dr.
Martin, or else my hearing is getting bad. Why, the pain mostly is in
my back.”

The doctor then asked her other questions and left some medicine for
her, saying he thought she would be better in a few days.

“Keep her warm,” he told Nan, as he was leaving, having promised to
come the next day. “Heat is the best thing for lumbago.”

“I’ve been giving her hot flatirons for her back,” Nan explained.

“That’s a good idea--keep it up,” said Dr. Martin. “And how are you
getting on with your housekeeping, alone as you are?”

“Oh, pretty well,” Nan said. “Of course we’re lonesome without father
and mother. And when the window got smashed early this morning we were
all frightened. But Bert fixed it.”

“Yes, and he nearly fixed himself at the same time,” laughed the doctor
as he remembered what Bert had told him about falling off the porch
roof. “Well, good-bye and good luck,” he said, as he went out into the
storm. “And keep Aunt Sallie warm.”

Nan felt better, now that the doctor had called, and she was glad
Flossie and Freddie had the kitten to play with. But soon Freddie came
to Nan in the kitchen and said:

“Snowflake is hungry. She wants some milk, I guess.”

“We haven’t any milk, except sweetened condensed, and I don’t believe
she’ll like that,” Nan said. “I wish we had some fresh milk and some
other things from the store.”

“I’ll go,” offered Bert. “It isn’t snowing quite so hard now.”

This was true. The flakes were not falling quite so fast and the wind
had gone down a little. So Nan thought it would be all right for Bert
to venture out. Freddie, of course, wanted to go, but it was not hard
to persuade him to stay in to help Flossie look after Snowflake.

Nan told Bert what to buy at the store and gave him a basket in which
to carry the groceries.

“I’ll stop at the post-office and see if there’s any mail in yet,”
decided the Bobbsey boy as once more he went out into the snow.

He went to the post-office first, and was much disappointed when he
learned that there were no letters for him or Nan.

“The trains snowed up yet?” asked Bert.

“Most of them must be,” said the postmaster. “Anyhow, no mail has come
in. Maybe there’ll be some to-morrow.”

Bert certainly hoped so, and he could not help worrying about his
father and mother. They might be in a train that was buried deep in a
great heap of snow, and there might be nothing to eat in the cars.

“I wish they’d come home,” sighed Bert.

He found several men and boys in the store, buying things to eat, for
it had not been possible to make any deliveries. Charlie Mason was
there, getting things for his folks.

“Say, it’s fun, not to have to go to school, isn’t it?” asked Charlie.

“Yes, some fun,” Bert admitted. “But I guess it will open in a few days
now. This storm can’t last much longer.”

“No, I guess not,” answered Charlie. “Seen anything of Danny Rugg?”

“Yes, I saw him the other day,” Bert answered. “But I don’t like him
any more.”

“Nor I,” agreed Charlie. “Danny is getting bad again--like he used to
be.”

The two boys parted outside the store, Charlie going one way with his
basket of food, and Bert the other. And it was when Bert came in front
of the church--the same church where the window had been broken--that
Bert once more saw Danny Rugg.

This time the young bully did not see Bert, for Danny was intent on
slipping in the side door of the church, which was open. Danny also had
a basket of food.

“Say, this is queer!” murmured Bert to himself. “What’s he going into
the church again for? I’m going to find out. Maybe he’s going to try to
mend that broken window,” and Bert looked up at the stained glass. It
had not yet been repaired, a plain piece of white glass having been put
over the hole.

Waiting a moment, until Danny was inside the church, Bert softly
followed. He set his basket of groceries down in the vestibule, stood
still and listened.

He heard Danny tramping up to the balcony.

“Now I’ll catch him at whatever he’s up to,” whispered Bert to himself.
“And I’m not going to fall down any trapdoors, either!”




                              CHAPTER XX

                             DANNY’S RING


Bert knew that he must be very careful and cautious this time. Not only
must he watch out for the open trapdoor, but he must take care that
Danny neither saw nor heard him.

“For if he hears me,” said Bert to himself, “he’ll run out and then
I can’t find why he came in here. Danny’s smart, but I’ve got to be
smarter.”

Moving slowly across the vestibule floor and looking back to see that
his basket of groceries was safe, Bert soon reached a place where he
knew the trapdoor to be.

“It’s closed,” he told himself. “That’s good! No danger now of falling
down. And I hope nobody else comes in here. They might take the things
in my basket, and Nan and the others would go hungry. But I guess I’d
have to go back to the store and get more,” silently chuckled Bert.

Having made sure that the trapdoor, down which he had fallen on his
previous visit to the church, was closed, Bert stood near it for a
while and listened. He could hear Danny moving about “upstairs,” as you
might call it, though really it was in the gallery of the church.

This gallery held the big pipe organ, which made such thunderous music
on Sundays, and in this gallery the choir singers also had their places.

The remainder of the balcony was given over to pews for the
congregation to sit in, when the pews on the main floor of the church
were filled. The boys always liked to sit up in the balcony, for they
seemed off by themselves when they did this. But the ushers and some of
the deacons did not like the boys to go to the gallery, for fear the
lads would “cut up.” And sometimes this very thing happened. And you
may easily guess that Danny Rugg was among the “cut-ups.”

“Maybe that’s the reason he’s going up there now,” thought Bert to
himself. “Maybe he’s getting ready to play some trick in church next
Sunday--he and Sam Todd. He couldn’t be coming up to mend the broken
window. He wouldn’t know how to put in all the different pieces of
colored glass, and, anyhow, he didn’t have any glass with him when he
came in here.”

Bert’s thought that Danny might be preparing for some trick to be
played in church the following Sunday came about because once before,
about a year ago, Danny and Sam had hidden a little dog up in the
gallery one Saturday night. And the following Sunday, when the
minister was preaching, the dog crawled out from beneath a pew, walked
downstairs and up the middle aisle of the church, much to the amusement
of Danny and his cronies.

But the deacons and the minister did not like this, for it disturbed
the congregation, and of course it was a wrong thing for Danny to have
done.

Because of that trick, the boys had been forbidden to go up in the
gallery unless their parents were with them. All this Bert thought of
as he stood in the silent church, trying to find out what it was that
Danny had come in about.

“I’ll follow after him as easy as I can,” said Bert to himself. “Maybe
I can watch him. But I mustn’t let him see me.”

Bert wore his rubber boots. So, for that matter, did Danny Rugg, for
the snow was so deep that boots were needed. But Bert walked more
softly in his boots than did Danny, who tramped around in the balcony
as if he did not care who heard him. Bert went on his tiptoes, and the
rubber soles of his boots made very little noise.

Up the balcony stairs the Bobbsey boy followed the other lad. It was
very still and quiet in the church, and the footsteps of Danny echoed
with a strange, hollow sound. On account of the snow covering the
ground outside there was no noise of rattling wagons or trucks, so the
church was even more quiet than usual.

How different it was from Sundays, when the people were coming in or
going out, when the place was lighted, and when there was organ music
and singing.

“I don’t like church on week days,” thought Bert.

But he had come in for a special purpose, and he was going to carry it
out. Step after step he went up to the gallery floor, making no noise.
He could still hear Danny moving about.

At last Bert reached a place where, in the dim light that came through
the stained-glass window, he could see Danny walking along between the
rows of pews.

“He’s right near the broken window,” whispered Bert to himself. “And
he’s looking on the floor for something. I wonder what it is? He can’t
be looking for the broken bits of stained glass, to put them back--they
were picked up long ago. I wonder what it is he’s looking for?”

Danny was certainly looking for something. He bent over and let his
eyes rove about the floor, right under the window that had been broken.
Closely and carefully Danny searched.

Then, almost as if some one had shouted it at him, there came into
Bert’s mind the thought:

“Danny’s looking for his lost birthday ring! It must have slipped
off his finger in one of the snowballs he threw that day of the
first storm. The gold ring stuck in the snowball, and Danny threw
the snowball at the window! The ball broke the glass and came inside
the balcony here. And Danny must know that! He hasn’t found his ring
anywhere else, and he knows it must have been in that snowball!”

The idea excited Bert and made his heart beat faster.

“When the snowball melted,” thought Bert, still watching Danny eagerly,
“the ring would drop out on the floor and stay there. It’s his ring
that Danny’s searching for!”

Bert grew so excited at this thought that he made a sudden movement.
His foot slipped and banged against a pew.

“What’s that?” cried Danny, jumping up. “Who’s there?”

Bert was quick enough to dodge down behind one of the pews, so that
when Danny looked up he saw no one.

But though Danny saw no one, he was frightened because of the noise,
and, not stopping any longer to search for his lost ring, or whatever
it was he was looking for, he darted out of the balcony and down the
stairs, with many a clatter of his rubber boots.

“Say, he’s running like a scared rabbit!” chuckled Bert to himself. “I
wish I dared yell at him, so he’d know who it is that’s looking at him.
But I guess I’d better not. I want to see if his ring is here.”

Pausing not to look back, Danny ran down to the main floor and out of
the side door.

“I hope he doesn’t take my basket of groceries,” thought Bert. But he
remembered he had set it over in a dark corner, where it would not
be likely to be seen. And, as a matter of fact, Danny Rugg was so
frightened that he thought of nothing but taking his own basket of food
and hurrying out of the church.

Bert heard the door slam after the other boy, and then the Bobbsey lad
began to wonder what was the best thing to do.

“If Danny’s ring is there and I find it, I can prove that he threw
the snowball that broke the window,” said Bert to himself. “But even
if I pick up the ring on the balcony floor, Danny might say I found
it somewhere else and put it there. I ought to have some one with me
when I find it--if I do--and whoever’s with me can say I didn’t put it
there. I’ve got to get some one to help me.”

Bert remembered that Mr. Henry Ander, one of the church deacons, a good
and kindly man who was well acquainted with the Bobbsey family, lived
close to the church.

“I’ll go and get Mr. Ander before I look for the ring,” decided Bert.

He started down the balcony stairs, though he was more than anxious to
look for the lost ring, for the finding of that would clear Bert’s name
from the suspicion of having broken the window. But knowing that the
plan he had made was best, Bert kept on.

As he was crossing the dim vestibule on his way to the side door, Bert
heard some one coming in.

“I hope that isn’t Danny coming back!” Bert whispered.

It was not. It was Mr. Shull.

“Well, Bert, what in the world are you doing here?” asked the sexton,
in surprise. “Are you trying to fall down the trapdoor again?”

“No, sir,” answered the boy.

“You couldn’t, very well, anyhow,” went on the janitor. “For the door
is closed.”

“I didn’t come in here for that,” said Bert. “Listen, Mr. Shull. Do you
remember when the church window was broken?”

“I should say I do remember it, Bert! They said you did it, but I have
my doubts of that.”

“I didn’t do it,” said Bert. “But I know who did. It was Danny Rugg,
and I can prove it if I can find his gold ring on the floor. It was in
the snowball he threw, and Danny was in here just now, trying to find
his ring.”

Bert told all that had happened.

“I want to get Mr. Ander,” went on the Bobbsey boy. “If he and you see
me find the ring, you’ll know I didn’t throw that snowball.”

“It’s a good idea, Bert!” exclaimed the sexton. “Go get the deacon, and
we’ll look for the ring together--all three of us.”

Mr. Ander was surprised a few minutes later when Bert, much excited,
poured out the story of the snowball, the broken window, and the lost
ring.

“All right, Bert,” he said at length. “I’ll go with you and look for
the ring. And if we find it, I’ll take it and give it to Mr. Rugg with
Danny there looking on. And I’ll take you with me. We’ll clear you of
the charge of having broken the window.”

A little later the eager, excited boy and the two men, almost as eager
as Bert himself, were looking over the floor beneath the broken window.
The sexton got his electric flashlight and the sharp beams of this
glinted over the floor.

“Look! I see something glittering like gold!” cried Bert, pointing to a
crack under a pew. “See if that’s the ring!”

The sexton focused his light on the object. Mr. Ander took out his
knife, and with the blade of it pried the shining object out of the
crack.

“It’s a gold ring, all right,” he said, holding it up to the light.

“See if it has any initials on it,” suggested Bert.

“Hold the light closer, Mr. Shull,” said the deacon. When this had been
done he slowly said: “It’s got the letters D. R. on it--this ring has.”

“Then it’s Danny Rugg’s ring!” cried Bert. “It was in the snowball that
broke the window. That’s what he was up here looking for! Oh, I’m so
glad we’ve found it!”




                              CHAPTER XXI

                                 FIRE


The deacon, Mr. Ander, and the sexton looked carefully around on the
floor of the balcony near the broken window. They even found some
little slivers of colored glass, for only the larger pieces had been
swept up.

“Danny’s ring certainly came in here, stuck to the snowball he threw
against the window,” decided the deacon. “It’s as plain as if we saw it
happen. And I think, Bert, when I hand this ring to Danny’s father and
tell how it was found--I think Danny will confess just how it happened.
I want you with me when he does, so your name will be cleared.”

“Yes, I’d like to go with you,” Bert said. “But I ought to go home
now. I’ve been away a good while, and maybe Nan might want some of the
groceries I have in the basket downstairs. Nan is home alone with
Flossie and Freddie. Mrs. Pry is sick in bed.”

“Then you’d better go home now,” agreed the deacon when Bert had
further explained how it was the Bobbsey twins were keeping house by
themselves. “This evening after supper I’ll call for you and we’ll take
this ring back to Danny.”

“Do you want me to come along?” asked the sexton. “I’m going to be
pretty busy, keeping up the fires, for it’s going to be a cold night.”

“Yes, it is,” agreed Mr. Ander “No, I don’t believe we need you,
Robert. Two witnesses are enough to prove where the lost ring was
found.”

“All right,” agreed Bert. “I’ll be ready for you after supper.”

It was with a very much lighter heart than he had had on entering the
church that Bert left the edifice. Picking up his basket of groceries
he started for home.

“Say, it is mighty cold!” he murmured as he felt the tingling air nip
his ears and nose. “I’ll have to keep up a good fire in our furnace.
Mrs. Pry has got to be kept warm with her lumbago.”

On leaving the church, Bert looked around for a sight of Danny Rugg,
but that small bully and cheat was not in view, and Bert was glad of it.

“For if he saw me coming out of the church,” reasoned Bert, “he
would guess that I made the noise that scared him away. Now he’ll be
surprised when we hand him his ring.”

Mr. Ander put the gold finger ornament in his pocket and went back
home, planning to go to Bert’s house in the evening. Danny lived not
far from the Bobbsey house.

“I’m glad it can be proved that Bert didn’t break the window,” said the
sexton.

“So am I,” agreed the deacon. “Bert’s a good boy. I never liked to
think that he broke the window. Yet the other boys said he did.”

“Well, Danny never actually said so,” remarked Mr. Shull. “But he kept
quiet about it when he knew that he, himself, had thrown the snowball
that did the damage. It was just as bad as if Danny had said Bert did
it.”

“Just the same,” agreed the deacon.

Bert found Nan and the small twins waiting rather anxiously for him
when he got back.

“Did you get a letter from mother?” asked Nan as soon as the door was
opened.

“No, not yet.”

“Oh, dear! I wonder what’s the matter,” and tears were in Nan’s eyes.

“They’re all right,” declared Bert. “It’s just that the mails are late
on account of the storm. I guess we’ll hear from them by to-morrow.
But, Nan, I’ve got good news!”

“What is it?” she asked. “Did you see Sam and Dinah coming back?”

“No. But maybe they’ll be along soon. But I found Danny’s ring in the
church under the broken window, and that proves he did it,” and the boy
quickly told his sister what had happened.

“Oh, I’m glad of that!” cried Nan. “Danny was mean to keep still and
let it be thought you did it.”

“Yes, he’s a sort of a sneak,” agreed Bert. “But wait until he sees
the deacon and me with his ring! He’ll feel queer then!”

Flossie and Freddie were playing about the house when Bert came back,
and they were delighted when he gave them some sticks of candy he had
bought at the store.

“Aunt Sallie says she feels cold,” reported Nan, when she had taken
a cup of tea and one of the lamb chops Bert had brought up to the
invalid. “Can you make the house any warmer, Bert? You know Doctor
Martin said we must keep her lumbago warm.”

“I’ll turn on the furnace more, shake it down and put a lot of coal
on,” decided the boy. “I’m glad we have plenty of coal in the bin.”

“So am I!” agreed Nan.

Soon the pipes were cracking with the additional heat that Bert turned
on. And though the wind still blew cold outside and though more flakes
of snow began to fall as evening settled down, the Bobbsey twins were
warm and snug.

Of course they were lonesome without their parents, and they surely
wished Dinah and Sam would return. But Bert and Nan, putting aside
their own feelings, amused Flossie and Freddie, so that the small twins
laughed merrily.

“Will you be afraid to stay here while I go out with Mr. Ander a little
while?” asked Bert of his sister, when supper was over.

“Oh, no,” Nan answered. “That is, if you don’t stay too late.”

“I won’t,” he promised. “Only long enough to give Danny back his ring
and see what he has to say.”

A little later the deacon arrived at the Bobbsey house. He went to the
side door and brushed the snow off his boots with a broom that was kept
there for the purpose.

“Is it snowing much?” asked Bert, as he let Mr. Ander in.

“Yes, snowing hard,” was the answer. “I don’t know when we’ve had so
much snow this early in the winter. It keeps up as if it would never
stop. How are you, Nan?” he asked kindly. “And how is the fat fairy and
the big fireman?” he asked, patting Flossie and Freddie.

Fairy and fireman were the pet names Mr. Bobbsey often called his small
twins, and the deacon, being a friend of the family, remembered this.

“I’m all right,” Freddie answered. “Do you think there’ll be a fire
to-night, Mr. Deacon?”

“Mr. Ander--not Mr. Deacon!” corrected Nan.

“Oh, it’s all the same,” laughed the kindly man. “Names don’t mean
anything. But I surely hope there won’t be any fires, little man. The
engines would have hard work getting through the drifts.”

“We got a little kittie out of a snowdrift,” said Flossie. “Bert found
her and she’s named Snowflake. Here she is,” and she picked up the
little cat and put her in the deacon’s lap.

“Say, she’s real cute!” laughed Mr. Ander, who was fond of animals. He
gently rubbed the pussy’s ears and scratched her under her chin, which
she seemed to like very much.

By this time Bert was dressed to go out and he and the deacon started
through the storm to the Rugg home, not far away. Mr. Rugg, who opened
the door, seemed surprised to meet Bert and Mr. Ander.

“Good evening,” greeted the deacon. “Is Danny in?”

“Danny? Yes, I guess so,” answered Mr. Rugg slowly. “Did you want to
see him? Has he been doing anything?”

“Oh, nothing new. And it isn’t such a terrible thing, after all, I
suppose,” replied the deacon. “The worst part of it was keeping quiet
and letting some one else be blamed. Oh, there you are, Danny,” he went
on, as the boy himself came into the room.

No sooner did Danny catch sight of Bert and the deacon than he seemed
to know what was “in the wind,” as the saying is.

Mr. Ander lost no time.

“Is this your ring, Danny?” asked the deacon, holding out on the palm
of his hand the gold circlet.

Before Danny could answer Mr. Rugg stepped forward and took the ring
from the deacon.

“Why, yes, that’s Danny’s ring!” exclaimed the boy’s father. “I bought
it for his birthday. He told me he lost it at school. I guess he did,
for only yesterday I met the principal and he said the ring hadn’t been
found.”

“Well, it’s found now,” said Mr. Ander, with a little smile at Bert.
“And though Danny didn’t exactly lose it at school, it was near there.
That’s your ring, isn’t it, Danny?” he asked.

“Yes--yes, sir,” faltered the boy. “It’s my birthday ring.”

“Don’t you want to know where we found it--where Bert and I found it?”
went on the deacon.

“Yes--yes, sir, I--I guess I do.” Danny’s voice was low.

“Maybe you can guess where we found it,” went on the deacon, while Mr.
Rugg looked curiously at his son and then at the visitors. “I think you
can guess, Danny, but I’m going to tell you.

“Bert and I and Mr. Shull, the sexton, found your ring in the church
balcony, right under the broken stained-glass window. The window was
broken by a snowball thrown through it, Danny. The ring must have been
in the snowball, and when the snow melted the ring fell out on the
floor and into a crack. It has been there ever since. Danny Rugg, were
you in the church this afternoon looking for this lost ring?”

The deacon’s voice was now stern.

Danny hung his head.

“Answer, Danny,” ordered his father. “Is this true?”

“Yes--yes, sir,” mumbled Danny. “I went there to look for my ring. I--I
thought it might have been in the snowball.”

“Did you throw the snowball that broke the church window?” asked Mr.
Rugg in stern tones.

Danny hung his head and was silent.

“Better own up and tell the truth,” said the deacon more gently.

“Oh, I did it! Yes, I did it!” and Danny burst out crying. “I didn’t
mean to, but I broke the window. I was trying to throw over the
church, but my hand slipped and the ball went through the window.

“Then, right after that, I missed my ring. First I thought it had
dropped off. But when it wasn’t found I thought maybe it had stuck to
the snowball and gone inside the church. So I went in to look.

“I went in once before, but I heard a noise and I ran out. That was
when Bert fell down the trapdoor.”

“Is that so, Bert?” asked the deacon.

“Yes, sir,” was the answer. “I didn’t want to say why I went in the
church, though, until I could be sure what Danny wanted in there.”

“And you went into the church the second time, to-day, Danny, did you?”
asked the deacon.

“Yes, sir. I went to see if I could find my ring. And if I found it I
was going to tell that I broke the window--and that it wasn’t Bert.”

“Better late than never,” the deacon said. “Well, I guess Bert is
cleared now.”

“Yes, I’ll tell everything,” sobbed Danny. “I wouldn’t have let it be
thought Bert did it, only Sam said he saw Bert throw the same time I
did, and I thought, maybe, after all, Bert’s ball broke the glass.”

“It didn’t!” exclaimed Bert. “For I only threw my snowball on the
ground.”

Mr. Rugg placed the ring on the table. Danny was still sobbing brokenly
in one corner of the room.

“I am very sorry this has happened,” said Mr. Rugg. “I will punish
Danny for his part in it, and I will pay for the broken window, Mr.
Ander. I will also make Danny get up in front of the whole school and
confess so Bert’s name will be cleared.”

“If you do that and the window is paid for, I think Danny will have
been punished enough,” suggested the deacon. “I don’t believe he will
ever do a thing like this again. Will you, Danny?”

“Oh, no, never! Never! Not as long as I live!” sobbed the boy, and Bert
felt sorry for him.

“Well, this is what we came for, and I’m glad it’s over with,”
announced Mr. Ander. “I’ll trust you to pay for the stained-glass
window, Mr. Rugg, and also see to it that Danny tells the truth as soon
as school opens again.”

“I’ll take care of it,” promised Danny’s father.

Bert waited a moment and then walked over to where his former chum was
standing, sobbing.

“It’s all right, Danny,” said Bert in a low voice. “I don’t mind, now
that it’s known I didn’t do it. I’ll be friends with you again.”

“Tha-thanks,” faltered Danny, and then the hands of the two boys met in
a firm clasp.

“They’ll be better friends than ever,” whispered the deacon to Mr. Rugg.

“I hope so,” said the father. “Danny needs a lesson. I hope he will
profit by this one.”

Nan rejoiced with Bert when he got home and told all that had happened.
The smaller twins had gone to bed, the “sandman” having paid them an
early visit.

Nan went up to see if Mrs. Pry wanted anything, and gave her some of
the medicine the doctor had left for her.

“It’s snowing yet,” Nan said to the old lady.

“What’s that? You say the kitten’s got a fit?” cried Mrs. Pry. “Land
sakes! Well, put it down the cellar!”

“No, no! The kitten hasn’t a fit! I said it was snowing _yet_!” said
Nan loudly.

“Oh! More snow! Seems like it was never going to stop! I do hope the
house keeps warm, for my pains seem to be getting worse.”

Nan was more lonesome than ever that night, wished more for her father
and mother, but she said nothing to Bert about it. She was the first
up the next morning, and she felt a sense of chill as she moved about
dressing.

“Bert! Bert!” she softly called to her brother, so as not to awaken
Flossie and Freddie. “I’m afraid the fire has gone out, Bert, or else
it’s very low. You’d better look after it.”

“I will,” said Bert sleepily as he got out of bed and hastily dressed
to go down cellar. As Nan put the coffee on to boil, so Mrs. Pry could
have an early, hot cup, the girl heard her brother rattling away at the
furnace.

“Fire’s out,” he called up. “But I’ll soon have it going again.”

He piled in wood and lighted the paper, and then, after putting on some
coal, came upstairs.

“It will soon be warm,” he said.

“I hope so!” exclaimed Nan, shivering as she set the table for
breakfast.

Flossie and Freddie were just awakening when Nan carried up Mrs. Pry
some toast and coffee and an egg. The old lady sat up in bed and
suddenly exclaimed:

“Nan, I smell smoke!”

“I guess it’s the toast,” Nan answered. “One slice burned a little.”

“No, it isn’t toast!” insisted Aunt Sallie. “I know the smell of burned
toast! This is burning wood! I hope the chimney isn’t on fire.”

“Oh, no, I guess it isn’t,” replied Nan. “Bert just made up a new fire
in the furnace.”

Just then Freddie cried:

“Oh, look at the smoke! There’s a lot of smoke out in the hall!”

Nan looked out of Mrs. Pry’s room. Truly the hall was filling with a
blue, choking haze.

“It’s a fire!” screamed Flossie. “Bert! Nan! The house is on fire!”

More smoke welled up until Nan and the small twins were choking and
gasping.

“Bert! Bert!” shouted Nan, running down the stairs. “What is the
matter? Is the house on fire?”




                             CHAPTER XXII

                             JUST IN TIME


Bert Bobbsey, who had gone out to clear some of the snow from the side
porch, hurried back into the house just as Nan called to him. He, also,
saw and smelled the smoke. And he heard the cries of fire, not only
shouted by Flossie and Freddie, but also by Mrs. Pry.

The old lady in her excitement, and in spite of the pain in her back,
had gotten out of bed and was hurrying around the room, gathering up
such of her things as she could find.

“Bert! Bert!” cried Nan again. “What is it? Is the house on fire?”

Much as he feared to admit this, Bert began to think it was what had,
most unfortunately, happened.

“Guess I made too much of a blaze in the furnace!” gasped the boy.

Nan saw Bert rushing for the door leading to the cellar.

“Don’t go down there!” she cried.

“I’ve got to! That’s where the fire has started!” he called back. “I’ll
see if I can’t put it out before it gets any worse.”

“No! No!” shouted Nan. “You’ll get burned. If the house is on fire we
must telephone in an alarm. Mother always said to call the engines
first thing! Telephone in the alarm, Bert!”

“I can’t telephone the alarm in, Nan,” he said.

“Why not?”

“The telephone’s broken! I’ll have to run down the street and pull the
box!”

“Can’t you go next door and telephone?” Nan wanted to know. “Oh, of
course you can’t! Oh, it’s getting worse, Bert!”

It surely was--at least the smoke was.

“Get Flossie and Freddie out!” gasped the boy. “And Aunt Sallie! Never
mind the house--let it burn!”

“Oh, Bert Bobbsey! Let our lovely house burn!”

“Well, we can’t put it out, can we? Get Flossie and Freddie out and
Mrs. Pry! I’ll go pull the fire box!”

It seemed the best thing to do. Upstairs ran Nan to the playroom where
Flossie and Freddie were crying, for they were much frightened.

“Come!” called Nan. “We must get out! The house is burning!”

“I’m going to take my dolls!” exclaimed Flossie, catching two or three
of her most cherished ones in her arms.

“And I’m going to take my fire engine!” shouted Freddie. “If it was a
bigger one, maybe it could put out the fire.”

“Don’t stop to pick up any of your toys!” ordered Nan. “But come with
me!”

She caught the children, each by an arm, and fairly pulled them out
into the hall. At the same time she cried:

“Can you get down, Aunt Sallie? The house is on fire!”

“No need to tell me that!” cried the old lady, who seemed suddenly to
forget about her aches and pains. “I can smell smoke, even if I am a
little deaf!”

She hobbled out into the hall, having slipped a warm bathrobe on.
In one hand she carried her shoes, and in the other her half-filled
valise, while under her arms she had bundles of her clothing.

“Land sakes, this is terrible! Driven out in the middle of winter!” she
cried.

As Bert opened the front door to rush down the street to the nearest
fire box he almost fell off the porch in his excitement, for, rushing
up the front walk was--his father!

And behind him came Mrs. Bobbsey!

“Bert! Bert!” cried his father, seeing the smoke. “What has happened?”

“House on fire!” shouted Bert. “I’m going to turn in the alarm!
Telephone’s broke!”

As he swung out of the gate Bert was given a further surprise by
colliding with Sam Johnson, who dropped the valise he was carrying.

“Fo’ de lan’ sakes!” gasped Sam.

The breath was almost knocked out of Bert, but he had a vision of
fat Dinah waddling up the street. At first Bert thought it was all
a dream--his father and mother and Sam and Dinah all coming home at
once and so unexpectedly! But he was soon sure it was no dream, and
certainly the smoke pouring out of the front door was real enough.

“Oh, Sam! The house is on fire!” cried Mrs. Bobbsey. “Where are the
children? Nan! Flossie! Freddie! And where’s Mrs. Pry?”

“They’re coming out!” cried Bert. “You look after them. I’ll get the
engines!”

“Don’t get de engines!” shouted Sam. “Don’t!”

“But the house is on fire!” exclaimed Mr. Bobbsey.

“No it ain’t!” insisted Sam. “I know whut it is. I kin tell by de smell
ob de smoke. It’s de furnace in de cellar. Did you put on wood, Bert?”

“Yes, I just made a new fire!”

“It’s de furnace all right,” said Sam. “You done got de damper turned
de wrong way. It happened to me once. It’s gwine to be aw right in a
minute. De house ain’t on fire. It’s jest de furnace. I’ll fix her!”

He dashed into the house and down the cellar steps. By this time Nan,
with the smaller twins and Aunt Sallie, reached the front steps.

In spite of the cold, a crowd was gathering in the street, attracted by
the smoke, and several men offered to turn in an alarm, but Mr. Bobbsey
told them to wait. In a minute or two Sam came out again, his eyes
running with tears on account of the smoke.

“Dat’s just whut I t’ought it was,” he gasped. “Damper turned de wrong
way. De furnace has stopped smokin’ now, an’ I opened a lot of windows.
We kin go back in de house soon.”

In a little while, they could do so. With the damper properly turned,
the smoke from the new fire in the furnace went up the chimney, as it
should, and through the open windows the smoke in the house soon blew
out.

“Well, my poor dears, what a fright you must have had!” said Mrs.
Bobbsey, holding Flossie and Freddie on her lap while Bert and Nan
stood near. “And all alone, too! We didn’t know until a little while
ago that Sam and Dinah were away. But I suppose Mrs. Pry looked after
you.”

“No, I’m sorry to say, I couldn’t,” said Mrs. Pry, who had by this time
put on a few clothes. “I was taken with the lumbago soon after Dinah
went away, and these children have been keeping house by themselves.
And very well they did it, too!”

“You ought to get back in bed, Aunt Sallie, with your lumbago!” said
Nan. “The doctor said we must keep you warm.”

“Yes, he did, my dear,” said Aunt Sallie, with a smile. “But I never
thought, and I don’t believe he did, either, that you’d make me think
the house was on fire to keep me warm. But I don’t seem to have any
lumbago left. I feel much better. I guess the fright cured me.”

And so it seemed, for Aunt Sallie moved about as well as before she had
had to go to bed.

The Bobbsey twins got over their fright, and the crowd, which had
feared the Bobbsey house was burning, moved away. Sam made the fire
good and hot, without letting it smoke. The house was soon put to
rights again. And once more there were happy, smiling faces.

“But we didn’t know you were coming home,” said Nan to her mother. “Is
Uncle Rossiter better?”

“Yes, he’s all right. We sent you word that we were coming, but I guess
you didn’t get any mail. We had none from you.”

“The storm was too bad,” stated Bert. “And didn’t you know Sam had to
go away and then Dinah had to go after Sam?”

“No, we didn’t know a thing about it,” said Mr. Bobbsey. “Coming home
on the train we saw Sam and Dinah get on at the junction early this
morning, and that was the first we knew they had had to leave.”

Dinah explained that she had found Sam not as sick as at first
reported, and she soon had him “on his feet again,” as she called it.
His brother, too, got better, so there was no need of Sam’s remaining
in the South, and the two faithful servants hurried back as soon as
they could.

“Oh, I’m so glad you’re all back!” exclaimed Nan. “It’s been hard work,
keeping house alone.”

“It must have been, my dear,” said her mother. “You were brave
children. So many things must have happened.”

“There did,” sighed Nan.

“I sat in the biksits!” laughed Flossie.

“And Bert fell off the roof!” said Freddie.

“And the window’s broke!” added Flossie.

Then all the happenings were told, including how Bert found Danny’s
ring in the church.

A few days after that the weather cleared and it grew warmer. School
resumed, and one of the first things done was to make Danny Rugg get
up in front of all the classes and tell that he had broken the window.
Thus was Bert’s name cleared and Sam Todd was made to apologize to him.

“Well, I’m glad this is over,” said the principal. “I congratulate you,
Bert Bobbsey!”

And Bert felt very happy.

“Well, I guess you don’t need me any more,” said Mrs. Pry a few days
later.

“But we hope you’ll come and see us some other time,” said Mrs. Bobbsey.

“What’s that?” exclaimed Aunt Sallie. “Is the kitten hanging on the
line?”

When it was explained to her what Mrs. Bobbsey had said, Aunt Sallie
joined in laughing at her mistake.

And now that we can leave them happy and contented, we shall say
good-bye to the children until we meet them again. An interesting
vacation was to come to them soon, to be called, “The Bobbsey Twins at
Clover Bank.”

As Daddy Bobbsey was leaving for work one morning he smiled to himself,
for he had just heard this conversation:

“Let’s play house!” Freddie had suggested.

“I’ll be Aunt Sallie,” shouted Flossie.

“We’ll not sit in biscuits!” laughed Nan.

“Nor have a fire!” added Bert.


                                THE END




                        THE BOBBSEY TWINS BOOKS

                          _by_ Laura Lee Hope


These are books that charm boys and girls between the ages of three and
ten. Many of the adventures of these famous twins are comical in the
extreme, and all the accidents and incidents that ordinarily happen to
youthful personages happen to these many-sided little mortals.


THE BOBBSEY TWINS

  IN THE COUNTRY
  AT THE SEASHORE
  AT SCHOOL
  AT SNOW LODGE
  ON A HOUSEBOAT
  AT MEADOW BROOK
  AT HOME
  IN A GREAT CITY
  ON BLUEBERRY ISLAND
  ON THE DEEP BLUE SEA
  IN WASHINGTON
  IN THE GREAT WEST
  AT CEDAR CAMP
  AT THE COUNTY FAIR
  CAMPING OUT
  BABY MAY
  KEEPING HOUSE
  AT CLOVERBANK
  AT CHERRY CORNERS
  AND THEIR SCHOOLMATES
  TREASURE HUNTING
  AT SPRUCE LAKE
  WONDERFUL SECRET
  AT THE CIRCUS
  ON AN AIRPLANE TRIP
  SOLVE A MYSTERY
  ON A RANCH
  IN ESKIMO LAND
  IN A RADIO PLAY
  AT WINDMILL COTTAGE
  AT LIGHTHOUSE POINT
  AT INDIAN HOLLOW




                         THE HONEY BUNCH BOOKS

                      _by_ Helen Louise Thorndyke


Honey Bunch is a dainty, thoughtful little girl, and to know her is to
take her to your heart at once. Little girls everywhere will want to
discover what interesting experiences she is having wherever she goes.


HONEY BUNCH:

  JUST A LITTLE GIRL
  HER FIRST VISIT TO THE CITY
  HER FIRST DAYS ON THE FARM
  HER FIRST VISIT TO THE SEASHORE
  HER FIRST LITTLE GARDEN
  HER FIRST DAY IN CAMP
  HER FIRST AUTO TOUR
  HER FIRST TRIP ON THE OCEAN
  HER FIRST TRIP WEST
  HER FIRST SUMMER ON AN ISLAND
  HER FIRST TRIP ON THE GREAT LAKES
  HER FIRST TRIP IN AN AEROPLANE
  HER FIRST VISIT TO THE ZOO
  HER FIRST BIG ADVENTURE
  HER FIRST BIG PARADE
  HER FIRST LITTLE MYSTERY
  HER FIRST LITTLE CIRCUS
  HER FIRST LITTLE TREASURE HUNT
  HER FIRST LITTLE CLUB
  HER FIRST TRIP IN A TRAILER
  HER FIRST TRIP TO A BIG FAIR
  HER FIRST TWIN PLAYMATES


                            GROSSET & DUNLAP
                       _Publishers_     NEW YORK




                     Stories of Fun and Friendship

                            THE MAIDA BOOKS

                         by INEZ HAYNES IRWIN


                          MAIDA’S LITTLE SHOP

In a darling little shop of her own Maida makes many friends with the
school children who buy her fascinating wares.


                         MAIDA’S LITTLE HOUSE

All of her friends spend a happy summer in Maida’s perfect little house
that has everything a child could wish for.


                         MAIDA’S LITTLE SCHOOL

Three delightful grownups come to visit and the children study many
subjects without knowing that they are really “going to school.”


                         MAIDA’S LITTLE ISLAND

Great is the joy of the Big Eight when Maida’s father takes them for a
vacation to _Spectacles_, where exploring the island provides endless
fun and many thrilling adventures.


                          MAIDA’S LITTLE CAMP

High in the Adirondacks the four boys and four girls of the Big Eight
spend a glorious month of fun and discovery.


           GROSSET & DUNLAP:     _Publishers_:     NEW YORK




                       THE LITTLE INDIAN SERIES

                            _by_ David Cory


The beauty of Indian legend--the thrill of Indian adventure--the poetry
of the Indian’s religion, and, above all, the sturdy manhood and the
idealism of the Indian boy will be an inspiration to every child.


  LITTLE INDIAN
  WHITE OTTER
  RED FEATHER
  STAR MAIDEN
  LONE STAR
  RAVEN WING
  HAWK EYE
  CHIPPEWA TRAIL


                            GROSSET & DUNLAP
                       _Publishers_     NEW YORK




Transcriber’s Note:

Words may have multiple spelling variations or inconsistent hyphenation
in the text. These have been left unchanged, as were jargon, dialect,
obsolete and alternative spellings.

Words and phrases in italics are surrounded by underscores, _like
this_. Obvious printing errors, such as partially printed letters
and punctuation, were corrected. Final stops missing at the end of
sentences and abbreviations were added. “You” was changed to “yum”
....“Oh, yum! It’s good!”...





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