Home > Authors Index > Laura Lee Hope > Bunny Brown and his Sister Sue Giving a Show > This page
Bunny Brown and his Sister Sue Giving a Show, a novel by Laura Lee Hope |
||
Chapter 5. A Cold Little Singer |
||
< Previous |
Table of content |
Next > |
________________________________________________
_ CHAPTER V. A COLD LITTLE SINGER Bunny Brown was so excited in watching to see how the strange boy would climb up and get the monkey that, at first, he paid little attention to what Sue said. The boy by this time was beginning to scramble up the trunk of the tree. Sitting on a branch, high above the lad's head, was Wango the monkey, eating the piece of cake. "It's the very same boy, I know it is!" declared Sue. "What same boy?" asked Sadie West, while the other boys and girls watched the climber. "The same one who was with the little girl that sang songs in the Opera House show. Don't you remember, Bunny?" asked Sue. This time Bunny not only heard what his sister said, but he paid some attention to her. And, noting that the climbing boy was half way up the tree now, Bunny turned to Sue and asked her what she had said. "This is the number three time I told you," she answered, shaking her head. "That's the boy from the show in the Opera House!" Bunny looked closely at the climbing lad. "Why, so it is!" he cried. "Look, Charlie--Harry--that's the acrobat from the show!" The boy in the tree was in plain sight now, over the heads of the crowd, as he made his way upward from limb to limb, and several of Bunny's chums were sure he was the same lad they had seen in the show. "But what's he doing here?" asked Bunny. "Mother read in the paper that the same show we saw here was traveling around and was in Wayville last night. I wonder why that boy is here?" "And where's his sister that sang such funny little songs?" inquired Sadie West. "We'll ask him when he comes down," suggested George Watson, who used to be a mean, tricky boy, making a lot of trouble for Bunny and Sue. But, of late, George had been kinder. Higher and higher, up into the tree went the "show boy," as the children called him. Wango still was perched on the limb of the tree, eating his cake. He did not climb higher or try to leap to another tree, as Jed Winkler said he was afraid his pet might do. Up and up went the boy, and a moment later he was calling in a kind and gentle voice to the monkey and holding out his hands. "Come on, old fellow! Come on down with me!" invited the climbing boy. "They want you down below! Come on!" Whether Wango was tired of his tricks, or whether he had eaten all his cake and thought the only way he could get more was by coming down as he was invited, no one stopped to figure out. At any rate the old sailor's pet gave a friendly little chatter and then advanced until he could perch on the boy's shoulder, which he did, clasping his paws around the lad's neck. "That's the way! Now we'll go down!" said the boy. "He's got him! He's got your monkey, Mr. Winkler!" cried the children standing beneath the tree. "He's a good climber--that boy!" said the old sailor. "He's as good a climber as I used to be when I was on a ship." Down came the boy with the monkey on his shoulder. Of course Wango himself could have climbed down alone had he wished to, but he didn't seem to want to do this--that was the trouble. "There you are!" exclaimed the boy, as he slid to the ground, and walked over to Mr. Winkler, with Wango still perched on his shoulder. "Here's your monkey!" "Much obliged, my boy," said the old sailor. "It was very good of you. Do you--er--do I owe you anything?" and he began to fumble in his pocket as if for money, while Wango jumped from the lad's back to the shoulder of his master. "No, not anything. I did it for fun," was the laughing answer. "I'm used to climbing and that sort of thing. I like it!" "Didn't you used to be in the show that was in the Opera House here last week?" asked Harry Bentley. "Yes," answered the boy, as he put on his coat. "I was with the show." "Why aren't you with it now?" asked Bunny. "And where's your sister--the one that sang?" added Sue. The boy's face turned red, and he seemed to be confused. "Well, we--er--I--that is we left the show," he said. "Maybe I ought to say that the show left us. It 'busted up,' as we say. There wasn't enough money to pay the actors, and so we all had to quit." "That's too bad," said Jed Winkler. "It was a pretty good show, too. But say, my boy, I feel that I owe you something for having gotten my monkey down out of the tree. If you haven't been paid by the show people, perhaps--maybe----" "Oh, no, thank you! I don't take pay for doing things like climbing trees after pet monkeys," was the answer. The boy started to laugh, but he did not get very far with it. "You don't owe me anything. And now I must go and get my sister," he added. "Where did you leave her?" asked Mrs. Newton, one of the ladies who had been in the store when the monkey began "cutting up." "I left her sitting on a bench in the little park down near the river front," answered the boy. "That's a cold place!" exclaimed Mrs. Newton. "Why don't you take her where it's warm?" "Well, to tell you the truth, I don't know where to take her," said the boy. "We just had money enough left to pay our trolley fare from a place called Wayville, where we played last night, to this town. We thought we'd come back here." "To give another show?" asked the hardware man. "No, I guess our show is gone for good," was the boy's answer. "But I sort of liked this place, and so did my sister. I thought I might get work here, at least until I could make money enough to go back to New York." "Got any folks in New York?" asked Mr. Winkler, as he stroked the head of his pet monkey. "Well, no, not exactly folks," replied the show boy, as he brushed some bits of bark from his trousers. "But it's easier to get a place with a show if you're in New York. They all start out from there." "That boy looks to me as though the best place for him, right now, would be at a table with a good meal on it," said Mrs. Newton. "He looks hungry and cold." "He does that," agreed Mrs. Brown, who had followed Bunny and Sue to see that they did not get into mischief. "I'm going to invite him to our house." She stepped up closer to the lad who had got the monkey down out of the tree, and asked: "Wouldn't you like to come home with me and have something to eat?" The boy's face flushed and his eyes brightened. "Thank you," he said. "I really am hungry. I'll be glad to work for a meal. There wasn't money enough for breakfast and car fare too, but I thought there was a better chance for work here than in Wayville, and so my sister and I came on." "And where did you say she was?" asked Mrs. Brown. "I left her sitting in the little park down by the water front, while I came up into the town to look for work. Then I saw the crowd around the tree and----" "Poor little girl!" exclaimed Mrs. Brown. "Now, you two are coming home with me!" she went on. "We'll talk about work later. Come along, my boy. I've got children of my own, and I know what's good for 'em. Take me to where you left your sister. And don't all of you come, or you might bother the poor child," she added, as she saw the crowd about to follow. "I'll tell you all about it later." "Can't we come, Mother?" asked Bunny Brown. "Yes, you and Sue come with me. Mrs. Newton," she went on, turning to a fat lady, "I wish you'd go to my house and start to get something ready for these starved ones to eat. I'll be right along with them." "And I'll take my monkey back home," said Jed Winkler. "My sister might be worried about him," and he smiled as the crowd laughed, for it was well known that Miss Winkler did not like Wango, though she was not unkind to him. "Now show me where your sister is," said Mrs. Brown to the boy, as she walked along with him and her own two children. "By the way, what's your name?" "Mart Clayton," he answered. "That's my real name, but my sister and I sometimes have stage names. Her real one is Lucile." "That's a nice name," said Sue. "I like it better'n mine. Your sister sings, doesn't she?" "Yes," answered the boy. "There she is, now!" he added, pointing to a bench in a little park that was not far from Mr. Brown's boat and fish dock. "The poor, cold little singer!" murmured Mrs. Brown. "I must take care of them both!" When they approached the bench the girl, who was about a year younger than her brother, looked up in surprise. "Did you find any work?" she asked Mart eagerly. "Well, no, not exactly," he answered. The girl seemed much disappointed. "But we're going to eat!" he added. "This lady has invited us to her house. After that I'll have a chance to look around and get a job to earn money to pay her and take us back to New York." "Oh, you are the guests of Bunny and Sue for the meal. Guests don't pay," Mrs. Brown said, smiling at the strangers. "Oh!" exclaimed Lucile. "That is--it's very kind of you," she said. "You poor thing! You're cold!" exclaimed Bunny's mother. "No wonder, sitting here without a jacket! Where's your cloak?" "I--I guess it's with our other baggage," was the girl's answer. "The boarding house kept it because we couldn't pay the bill when the show failed!" and tears came into her eyes. "Never mind! We'll look after you," said motherly Mrs. Brown. "Come along, Bunny and Sue. Mrs. Newton will be at our house by this time." As the five of them started down the street Bunny stopped suddenly. "What's the matter?" asked his mother. "I--I forgot something," he said. "I've got to see Mr. Winkler!" and he started off on a run. _ |