Page 10 of Buddy Jim


 

  BUDDY JIM AND MOLLY COTTON-TAIL

  _The lovely Blackeyed Susans Were nodding drowsily, And the Katy-dids were singing In the old red cherry tree, The dusky, ripe blueberries called An invitation sweet "Come Buddy Jim, come up and see How good we are to eat."_

  Buddy Jim ran around the house to the back porch where Mary the cookwas busy shelling green peas for dinner.

  "I wonder what kind of pie I can have for dessert tonight," she said."The red raspberries are all gone, so Old Bob the gardener says, andI'm tired of pie-plant, aren't you, Buddy?"

  "I was just thinking I would go and get some blueberries," said BuddyJim, "and I'll get some so you can make a pie, if you want me to, Mary."

  "Bless the lad," said Mary the cook, "that will be fine. Wait till Imake you some sandwiches, and find a pail for the berries."

  So with one pocket full of doughnuts and one full of sandwiches and onefull of cookies--(you never can tell _how_ hungry a boy is going to getwhen he is working hard picking berries, so Mary the cook said)--BuddyJim called to Old Dog Sandy and started for the blueberry bushes.

  Old Bob the gardener was very proud of those bushes. He had found themmany years before, bravely growing in the open pasture, just littlewild bushes that had strayed up there from the low places, and he hadtreated them well, and had given them what they liked best to eat,and had taken such good care of them they had grown into a wonderfulblueberry orchard, and the sweet dusky berries were twice as large asany blueberries had ever been before.

  So, Buddy Jim had lots of fun filling his pail with them, and longbefore it was filled he simply could not have eaten a single berrymore, and his face looked just like a little black boy's face.

  Blueberries do stain so! But Buddy could not see his face, and he wouldnot have cared if he _could_ have seen it, he was having so much fun.

  All at once, Old Dog Sandy barked at something. Buddy knew what _that_meant. Sandy had found some Little Neighbor. So he ran quickly. Hewas always afraid that the silly old dog would at some time hurt somelittle helpless creature.

  He found him in a thicket of brakes at the edge of the woods, dancingaround an old stump, barking like mad at Molly Cotton-tail and her twobabies, who were trying to squeeze themselves into a little hollow atthe foot of the stump.

  Molly Cotton-tail was trying to shelter the two little ones with herbody, but she wasn't quite big enough.

  "Sandy," said Buddy, "stop that barking and go and lie down until Icome!"

  Old Dog Sandy trotted off, looking foolish and disgusted, and talkingto himself. He could not understand Buddy! Here he took all thistrouble to hunt up game for him, and every time he got blamed for it.It was no way to _treat_ a dog. He was going to stay at the house afterthis.

  Mary was shelling Peas for Dinner]

  "My!" said Molly Cotton-tail, drawing a long breath, "I'm glad youcalled off that old dog. I thought we were surely done for just beforeyou came. I thank you ever so much, not only for me, but for my poorbabies who are only four weeks old."

  "I am sorry my old dog was so rude," said Buddy. "Somehow he won't stopbarking at the little neighbors. He thinks it's fun!"

  "It may be--for him," said Molly Cotton-tail, "but not for us. Yousee we cannot climb trees, as some animals can, and we do not swim tospeak of, and we have no holes in the ground to dodge into, unless weuse some other person's house, and then we may be running into danger,because the snakes use the old houses of the wood-chucks and gophers,and of course mothers _cannot_ run away and leave their babies--so youcan see it's not very easy being a rabbit."

  "I guess not," said Buddy. "Do you live near here?"

  "My home is right around the corner, under an old log," said MollyCotton-tail. "I have a very nice home, all lined with my last year'scoat, and as comfy as can be. But I brought the children out here tosleep today, it was so pleasant and cool and dim in here. We werehaving such a _good_ nap when your old dog found us."

  "It is so early in the day," said Buddy, "that I don't see how youcould have _needed_ a nap."

  "Oh, but you see," said Molly Cotton-tail, "we work nights and sleepdays!"

  "Why do you do that?" asked Buddy Jim. "Well," said Molly Cotton-tail,"it is so light in the day, and we can see so many things to frightenus--we're not very brave you know--and it's so much fun to come outwhen it's cool and dark to play our games and find our food."

  "It's a funny way to live," said Buddy. "I couldn't find my way aboutin the dark."

  "I suppose we are made differently," said Molly Cotton-tail, "so thatwe can all use the same world; it would be too crowded if we all hadto be out in it at the same time. But if you will excuse me now I willget my children to sleep again, so Goodbye," and she started for thecomfy fur-lined nest under the old log.

  "Goodbye," said Buddy Jim. "I'm glad I met you."

  "Get many blueberries, Buddy?" asked Old Bob the gardener.

  "Lots," answered Buddy. "And Old Dog Sandy scared up Molly Cotton-tailand her two little baby Cotton-tails, in the edge of the woods."

  "That so?" said Old Bob the gardener, "did you see them?"

  "Yes, I did," answered Buddy, "the babies were cute little things.Say, Bob," he went on, "why do people always say that rabbits have nobrains?"

  "I don't know," said Old Bob the gardener, "I've always thought myselfthat Molly Cotton-tail was a pretty bright Little Neighbor."

  "I think so too," said Buddy.

 

 
Elizabeth Gordon's Novels