Six Little Bunkers at Mammy June's Part 1
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Six Little Bunkers at Mammy June's.
by Laura Lee Hope.
CHAPTER I
AN ESKIMO IGLOO
"How could William get the croup that way?" Violet asked with much emphasis.
Of course, Vi was always asking questions--so many questions, indeed, that it was often impossible for her elders to answer them all; and certainly Rose and Russ Bunker, who were putting together a "cut-up"
puzzle on the table, could not be bothered by Vi's insistence.
"I don't see how he could have got the croup that way," repeated the smaller girl. There were six of the little Bunkers, and Vi and Laddie were twins. She said to Laddie, who was looking on at the puzzle making: "Do you know how William did it, Laddie?"
Laddie, whose real name wasn't "Laddie" at all, but Fillmore Bunker, shook his head decidedly.
"I don't know," he told his twin sister. "Not unless it is a riddle: 'How did William get the croup?'"
"He hasn't got the croup," put in Rose, for just a moment giving the twins her attention.
"Why--ee!" cried Vi. "Aunt Jo said he had!"
"She didn't," returned Rose rather shortly and not at all politely.
"She did so!" rejoined Vi instantly, for although she and Rose loved each other very much they were not always in agreement. Vi's gray eyes snapped she was so vexed. "Aunt Jo said that a window got broke in--in the neu-ral-gi-a and William had to drive a long way yesterday and the wind blew on him and he got the croup."
"Was that the way of it?" said Laddie, thoughtfully. "Wait a minute, Vi.
I've most got it----"
"You're not going to have the croup!" declared his twin. "You never had it! But I have had the croup, and I didn't catch it the way William did."
"No-o," admitted Laddie. "But--but I'm catching a new riddle if you'd only wait a minute for me to get it straight."
"Pooh!" said Vi. "Who cares anything about your old riddle? Br-r-r! it's cold in this room. Maybe we'll all get the croup if we can't have a better fire."
"It isn't the croup you mean, Vi," put in Rose again, but without stopping to explain to her smaller sister where and how she was wrong about William's illness.
"Say, Russ, why don't the steampipes hum any more?" broke in the voice of Margy, the next to the very littlest Bunker, who was playing with that latter very important person at one of the great windows overlooking the street.
Russ chuckled. He had just put the very last crooked piece of the puzzle into place.
"You don't expect to see humming birds in winter, do you, Margy?" he asked.
"Just the same, winter is the time for steampipes to hum," said Rose, s.h.i.+vering a little. "Oh! See! It's beginning to snow!"
"So 'tis," cried Russ, who was the oldest of the six. "Supposing it should be a blizzard, Rose Bunker?"
"S'posing it should!" repeated his sister, quite as much excited as Russ was at such a prospect.
"Buzzards fly and eat dead things. We saw 'em in Texas at Cowboy Jack's," announced Laddie, forgetting his riddle-making for the moment.
"That is right, Laddie," agreed Rose kindly. "But we're not talking about buzzards, but about blizzards. Blizzards are big snowstorms--bigger than you ever remember, I guess."
"Oh!" said Laddie doubtfully. "Were we talking about--about blizzards?"
"No, we weren't!" exclaimed Vi, almost stamping her foot. "We were talking about William's croup----"
"He hasn't got the croup, I tell you, Vi," Rose said wearily.
"He has. Aunt Jo----"
"In the first place," interrupted Rose quite decidedly, "only children have croup. It isn't a grown-up disease."
This announcement silenced even Violet for the moment. She stared at her older sister, round-eyed.
"Do--do diseases have to grow up, too?" she finally gasped.
"Oh, dear me, Vi Bunker!" exclaimed Rose, "I wish you didn't ask so many questions."
"Why not?" promptly inquired the smaller girl.
"We-ell, it's so hard to answer them," Rose frankly admitted. "Diseases don't grow up, I guess, but folks grow up and leave diseases like croup, and measles, and chicken-pox, behind them."
"And cut fingers and b.u.mps?" asked Laddie, who had almost forgotten the riddle about William's croup that he was striving to make.
But Vi did not forget the croup. One could trust Vi never to forget anything about which she once set out to gather information.
"But how did William catch the croup through a broken window in the neu-ral-gi-a?" she demanded. "When I had croup I got my feet wet first."
"He hasn't got the croup!" Rose cried again, while Russ began to laugh heartily.
"Oh, Vi!" Russ said, "you got it twisted. William caught cold driving Aunt Jo's coupe with the window broken in it. He's got neuralgia from that."
"And isn't there any croup about it?" Laddie demanded rather sadly.
"Then I'll have to start making my riddle all over again."
"Will that be awful hard to do, Laddie?" asked his twin. "Why! making riddles must be worse than having neu-ral-gi-a--or croup."
"Well, it's harder," sighed her brother. "It's easy to catch--Oh! Oh!
Russ! Rose! I got it!"
"You haven't neuralgia, like poor William," announced Rose with confidence.
"Listen!" announced the glowing Laddie. "What is it that's so easy to catch but n.o.body runs after?"
"Huh! is that a riddle?" asked Russ.
Six Little Bunkers at Mammy June's Part 1
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Six Little Bunkers at Mammy June's Part 1 summary
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