Caddie Woodlawn's Family
Tom said nothing at all.
“Well, how in the name of all the saints do ye think that they came in the hay then?” asked Robert, with flashing eyes. “Do ye think the fairies put them there, maybe, now?”
Here in the living room, with all the family looking on and the familiar blue and white plates on the familiar table, magic seemed to have deserted the three children completely, and Robert’s sarcastic reference to the fairies suddenly put an end to the whole beautiful dream.
“So they was the culprits that meddled with our treat!” drawled Tom Hill. “Robert an’ me was fair vexed that somebody had made off with more than half of the melons we had hid so careful.”
Mr. and Mrs. Woodlawn, Clara, Hetty, and little Minnie had witnessed this scene with looks of the greatest puzzlement on their faces.
“Let’s get this straight,” said Mr. Woodlawn. “Melons in the hay? Fairies? Culprits? I’m afraid I don’t understand.”
“Well, sir,” said Robert, “I don’t know as you know it, but melons will keep a long time if they’re packed in hay in a cool place. So, as there were more melons than could be used or sold, Hill here an’ myself decided we’d bury a goodly number of them and bring them out as a surprise when the melon season was past.”
“I begin to see light,” said Mr. Woodlawn gravely. “And the treasure was discovered by pirates?”
“That’s about the size of it, Mister Woodlawn,” said Robert.
“How many of you children were in on this—this depredation?”
They knew what he meant, even if they had never heard such a big word for it. Solemnly Caddie, Tom, and Warren stepped out and hung their heads.
“We—we thought they were magical melons,” blurted out Tom.
“Magical melons, indade!” said Robert.
“Well, I see only one just solution of this problem,” said Mr. Woodlawn. “Whenever Robert and Tom are kind enough to bring us one of these melon treats, Tom, Caddie, and Warren will have to sit by and watch us enjoying ourselves without participating. Perhaps we can spare them any graver punishment. Does that seem proper, Robert?”
“Yes, sir,” said Robert.
His kind face was already softening for the three culprits of whom he was so fond.
Sorrowfully Caddie set away three clean plates and three clean forks.
“I’m sorry, Robert,” she said, “because I wouldn’t like to rob a friend.”
“There’s just one thing,” said Warren. “You’d ought to give the rinds to the chickens or the cows, because the pigs got all the good of the first ones.”
“Pigs?” said Hetty, with a sniff. “Huh! I guess it was pigs all right!”
“And after this,” said Tom piously as he watched the others sinking their forks into the beautiful red meat of the melons, “after this, I guess, we’d better ask before we eat.”
TWO
A Rare Provider
IT WAS EARLY in the winter of 1863 that Alex McCormick got as far as Dunnville in western Wisconsin with his flock of about a thousand sheep. He had intended going farther west to the open grazing land; but the roads of that time were poor, and suddenly winter had overtaken him before he reached his goal. Snow had fallen in the morning, and now, as evening drew near, a low shaft of sunlight broke through the clouds and made broad golden bands across the snow. Where the shadows fell, the snow looked as blue and tranquil as a summer lake; but it was very cold.
Caddie Woodlawn and her younger brother, Warren, were perched on the rail fence in front of their father’s farm, watching the sunset over the new snow while they waited for supper. Tom, who was two years older than Caddie, stood beside them with his elbows on the top rail, and beside him sat Nero, their dog.
“Red sky at night,
Sailor’s delight,”
Tom said, wagging his head like a weather prophet.
“Yah,” said Warren, “fair, but a lot colder tonight. I’d hate to have to spend the night out on the road.”
“Listen!” said Caddie, holding up a finger. “There’s a funny noise off over the hill. Do you hear something?”
“It sounds like bells,” said Warren. “We didn’t miss any of the cows tonight, did we?”
“No,” said Tom. “Our bells don’t sound like that. Besides, Nero wouldn’t let a cow of ours get lost—even if we did.”
Nero usually wagged his tail appreciatively when his name was mentioned, but now his ears were cocked forward as if he, too, were listening to something far away.
“It’s sheep!” said Caddie after a moment’s pause. “Listen! They’re all saying ‘Baa—baa—baa!’ If it isn’t sheep, I’ll eat my best hat.”
“The one with the feather?” asked Warren incredulously.
“It must be sheep!” said Tom.
Pouring down the road like a slow gray flood came the thousand sheep of Alex McCormick. A couple of shaggy Scotch sheep dogs ran about them, barking and keeping them on the road. They were a sorry-looking lot, tired and thin and crying from the long days of walking, and their master, who rode behind on a lame horse, was not much better. He was a tall Scotsman, his lean face browned like an Indian’s and in startling contrast to his faded blond hair and beard. His eyes were as blue as the shadows on the snow, and they burned strangely in the dark hollows of his hungry-looking face.
“Will ye tell your Daddy I’d like to speak wi’ him?” he called as he came abreast of the three children.
Tom dashed away with a whoop, for Father, and soon the whole Woodlawn household had turned out to witness the curious sight of nearly a thousand weary sheep milling about in the open space before the farm. They had cows and horses and oxen, but none of the pioneer farmers in the valley had yet brought in sheep.
Caddie and Warren stood upon the top rail, balancing themselves precariously and trying to count the sheep. Nero circled about, uncertain whether or not to be friendly with the strange dogs and deeply suspicious of the plaintive bleatings and baaings of the sheep.
Suddenly Caddie hopped off the fence in the midst of the sheep.
“Look, mister! There’s something wrong with this one.”
One of the ewes had dropped down in her tracks and looked as if she might be dying. But Mr. McCormick and Father were deep in conversation and paid no attention to her.
“Here, Caddie! Tom! Warren!” called Father. “We’ve got to help Mr. McCormick find shelter for his sheep tonight. Run to the neighbors and ask them if they can spare some barn or pasture room and come and help us.”
The three children started off across the fields in different directions. As she raced across the light snow toward the Silbernagle farm, Caddie saw tracks ahead of her and, topping the first rise, she saw her little sister Hetty already on her way to tell Lida Silbernagle. Hetty’s bonnet and her red knitted mittens flew behind her by their strings, for Hetty never bothered with her bonnet or mittens when there was news to be spread. So Caddie veered north toward the Bunns’.
In a pioneer community everyone must work together for the common good and, although Alex McCormick was a stranger to them all, the men from the neighboring farms had soon gathered to help him save his weary sheep from the cold. With a great deal of shouting, barking, and bleating the flock was divided into small sections and driven off to different farms, where the sheep could shelter under haystacks or sheds through the cold night.
When the last sheep were being driven off, Caddie remembered the sick ewe and ran to see what had become of her. She still lay where she had fallen, her eyes half closed with weariness, her breath coming so feebly that it seemed as if she scarcely lived at all.
“Oh, look, Mr. McCormick!” called Caddie. “You ought to tend to this one or she’ll be a goner.”
“Hoots!” said the Scotsman. “I’ve no time to waste on a dead one with hundreds of live ones still on their legs and like to freeze to death the night.”
“I’ve got lots of time, if you haven’t, Mr. McCormick,” volunteered Caddie.
“V
erra good,” said the Scotsman. “I’ll give her to ye, lassie, if ye can save her life.”
“Really?” cried Caddie, and then, “It’s a bargain!”
In a moment she had enlisted the services of Tom and Warren, and they were staggering along under the dead weight of the helpless sheep. Their father watched them with a twinkle of amusement in his eye.
“And what are you going to do with that?” he asked.
“It’s nothing but a sick sheep,” said Tom, “but Caddie thinks she can save it.”
“Oh, Father,” cried Caddie, “may I put her in the box stall and give her something to eat? She’s just worn out and starved—that’s all.”
Father nodded and smiled.
“I’ll look around at her later,” he said.
But when Father had time later to visit the box stall, he found Caddie sitting with a lantern beside her ewe and looking very disconsolate.
“Father, I know she’s hungry; but I can’t make her eat. I don’t know what to do.”
Mr. Woodlawn knelt beside the animal and felt her all over for possible injuries. Then he opened her mouth and ran his finger gently over her gums.
“Well, Caddie,” he said, “I guess you’ll have to make her a set of false teeth.”
“False teeth!” echoed Caddie. Then she stuck her own fingers in the ewe’s mouth. “She hasn’t any teeth!” she cried. “No wonder she couldn’t chew hay! Whatever shall we do?”
Mr. Woodlawn looked thoughtfully into his small daughter’s worried face.
“Well,” he said, “it would be quite a task, and I don’t know whether you want to undertake it.”
“Yes, I do,” said Caddie. “Tell me what.”
“Mother has more of those small potatoes than she can use this winter. Get her to cook some of them for you until they are quite soft, and mix them with bran and milk into a mash. I think you can pull your old sheep through on that. But it will be an everyday job, like taking care of a baby. You’ll find it pretty tiresome.”
“Oh! But, Father, it’s better than having her die!”
That evening Mr. McCormick stayed for supper with them. It was not often that they had a stranger from outside as their guest, and their eager faces turned toward him around the lamplit table. Father and Mother at each end of the table, with the six children ranged around; and Robert Ireton, the hired man, and Katie Conroy, the hired girl, there, too—they made an appreciative audience. Mr. McCormick’s tongue, with its rich Scotch burr, was loosened to relate for them the story of his long journey from the East with his sheep. He told how Indians had stolen some and wolves others; how the herdsman he had brought with him had caught a fever and died on the way, and was buried at the edge of an Indian village; how they had forded streams and weathered a tornado.
While the dishes were being cleared away, the Scotsman took Hetty and little Minnie on his knees and told them about the little thatched home in Scotland where he had been born. Then he opened a wallet, which he had inside his buckskin shirt, to show them some treasure which he kept there. They all crowded around to see, and it was only a bit of dried heather which had come from Scotland.
As the stranger talked, Caddie’s mind kept going to the box stall in the barn; and something warm and pleasant sang inside her.
“She ate the potato mash,” she thought. “If I take good care of her she’ll live, and it will be all because of me! I love her more than any pet I’ve got—except, of course, Nero.”
The next day the muddy, trampled place where the sheep had been was white with fresh snow, and Mr. McCormick set out for Dunnville to try to sell as many of his sheep as he could. Winter had overtaken him too soon, and after all his long journey he found himself still far from open grazing land and without sheds or shelter to keep the sheep over the winter. But Dunnville was a small place, and he could sell only a very small part of his huge flock. When he had disposed of all he could, he made an agreement with Mr. Woodlawn and the other farmers that they might keep as many of his sheep as they could feed and shelter over the winter, if they would give him half of the wool and half of the lambs in the spring.
Caddie … looking very disconsolate
“How about mine?” asked Caddie.
Mr. McCormick laughed.
“Nay, lassie,” he said. “You’ve earned the old ewe fair an’ square, and everything that belongs to her.”
The old ewe was on her feet now, and baaing and nuzzling Caddie’s hand whenever Caddie came near her. That was a busy winter for Caddie. Before school in the morning and after school in the evening, there were always mashes of vegetables and bran to be cooked up for Nanny.
“You’ll get tired doing that,” said Tom.
“Nanny!” scoffed Warren. “That’s a name for a goat.”
“No,” said Caddie firmly. “That’s a name for Caddie Woodlawn’s sheep, and you see if I get tired of feeding her!”
When the days began to lengthen and grow warmer toward the end of February, Caddie turned Nanny out during the day with the other sheep. At first she tied a red woolen string about Nanny’s neck; for, even if one loves them, sheep are very much alike, and Caddie did not want to lose her own. But really that was quite unnecessary, for as soon as Nanny saw her coming with a pan of mash and an iron spoon she broke away from the others and made a beeline for Caddie. At night she came to the barn and waited for Caddie to let her in.
One morning in March, when Caddie had risen early to serve Nanny’s breakfast before she went to school, Robert came out of the barn to meet her. She had flung Mother’s shawl on over her pinafore, and the pan of warm mash which she carried steamed cozily in the chill spring air.
For once Robert was neither singing nor whistling at his work, and he looked at Caddie with such a mixture of sorrow and glad tidings on his honest Irish face that Caddie stopped short.
“Something’s happened!” she cried.
“Aye. Faith, an’ you may well say so, Miss Caddie,” said Robert seriously.
Caddie’s heart almost stopped beating for a moment. Something had happened to Nanny! In a daze of apprehension she ran into the barn.
“You’re not to feel too grieved now, mavourneen,” said Robert, coming after her. “You did more for the poor beast than any other body would have done.”
But words meant nothing to Caddie now, for in solemn truth the thin thread of life which she had coaxed along in the sick sheep all winter had finally ebbed away and Nanny was dead. Caddie flung away the pan of mash and knelt down beside the old sheep. She could not speak or make a sound, but the hot tears ran down her cheeks and tasted salty on her lips. Her heart felt ready to burst with sorrow.
“Wurra! Wurra! Wurra!” said Robert sympathetically, leaning over the side of the stall and looking down on them. “But ’tis an ill wind blows nobody good. Why don’t ye look around an’ see the good the ill wind has been a-blowing of you?”
Caddie shook her head, squeezing her eyes tight shut to keep the tears from flowing so fast.
“Look!” he urged again.
Robert had come into the stall and thrust something soft and warm under her hand. The something soft and warm stirred, and a faint small voice said, “Ma-a-a-a!”
“Look!” said Robert. “Its Ma is dead and, faith, if ’tis not a-callin’ you Ma! It knows which side its bread is buttered on.”
Caddie opened her eyes in astonishment. Her tears had suddenly ceased to flow, for Robert had put into her arms something so young and helpless and so lovable that half of her sorrow was already swept away.
“It’s a lamb!” said Caddie, half to herself, and then to Robert, “Is it—Nanny’s?”
“Aye,” said Robert, “it is that. But Nanny was too tired to mother it. ‘Sure an’ ’tis all right for me to go to sleep an’ leave it,’ says Nanny to herself, ‘for Caddie Woodlawn is a rare provider.’”
Caddie wrapped the shawl around her baby and cradled the small shivering creature in her arms.
“Potato mash won’t
do,” she was saying to herself.
“Warm milk is what it needs, and maybe Mother will give me one of Baby Joe’s bottles to make the feeding easier.”
The lamb cuddled warmly and closely against her. “Ma-a-a-a!” it said.
“Oh, yes, I will be!” Caddie whispered back.
THREE
O Gentle Spring!
SPRING IS A WONDERFUL SEASON for ideas. In the spring Caddie’s ideas surged up like the sap in the red twig dogwood and the scrub willow. The rising sap made the willow twigs golden yellow and the dogwood red; Caddie’s ideas made her cheeks glow and her eyes sparkle. She saw the lambs leaping and dancing in the upper pasture, and it seemed that her numerous ideas sprang up also with joyous bounds and curvettings.
Her eyes took in everything in the changing landscape. She saw the arbutus at the edge of the snow, and the skunk cabbage with its solitary, clownish blossom. She saw last year’s cattails standing fuzzy and frayed at the edge of the marsh near the schoolhouse. She saw that they had lost their bright, fresh brown color and that they were swollen with moisture and ready to release their seeds upon the wind. Caddie knew from experience that if you knock old cattails together their downy fuzz flies off like the fur of fighting cats. Something about this whimsical thought made Caddie pause and look again—and one of her bright ideas rose gay and sparkling to the surface of her mind.
That was the year when Miss Parker had first come to teach the Dunnville school for three months in winter and two months in summer. Miss Parker had not yet had her battle with Obediah Jones as to who should rule the schoolroom. Obediah and his brother Ashur were taller than Miss Parker; they were the biggest boys in school, and they never let anybody forget it. That winter the boys of school had taken sides. Some followed the two bullies; others followed Tom and George Custis in opposition to the Jones brothers.
Warren, of course, was on Tom’s side, along with Sam Flusher and Silas Bunn. It did not take long for the girls’ sympathies to be as sharply divided as the boys’, and Caddie, Maggie Bunn, and Jane Flusher formed a sort of ladies’ auxiliary to Tom’s forces—not that they had ever been invited to do so, of course. The boys wanted no hangers-on in petticoats, you may be sure, and any assistance the girls might offer was purely voluntary. For, although Tom, Caddie, and Warren were as thick as hops at home, at school with the other boys Tom had to maintain a decent show of scorn toward women.