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<h2> CHAPTER XII. HUCKLEBERRIES </h2>
<p>There was a great clashing of tin pails, much running to and fro, and
frequent demands for something to eat, one August afternoon, for the boys
were going huckleberrying, and made as much stir about it as if they were
setting out to find the North West Passage.</p>
<p>“Now, my lads, get off as quietly as you can, for Rob is safely out of the
way, and won't see you,” said Mrs. Bhaer, as she tied Daisy's
broad-brimmed hat, and settled the great blue pinafore in which she had
enveloped Nan.</p>
<p>But the plan did not succeed, for Rob had heard the bustle, decided to go,
and prepared himself, without a thought of disappointment. The troop was
just getting under way when the little man came marching downstairs with
his best hat on, a bright tin pail in his hand, and a face beaming with
satisfaction.</p>
<p>“Oh, dear! now we shall have a scene,” sighed Mrs. Bhaer, who found her
eldest son very hard to manage at times.</p>
<p>“I'm all ready,” said Rob, and took his place in the ranks with such
perfect unconsciousness of his mistake, that it really was very hard to
undeceive him.</p>
<p>“It's too far for you, my love; stay and take care of me, for I shall be
all alone,” began his mother.</p>
<p>“You've got Teddy. I'm a big boy, so I can go; you said I might when I was
bigger, and I am now,” persisted Rob, with a cloud beginning to dim the
brightness of his happy face.</p>
<p>“We are going up to the great pasture, and it's ever so far; we don't want
you tagging on,” cried Jack, who did not admire the little boys.</p>
<p>“I won't tag, I'll run and keep up. O Mamma! let me go! I want to fill my
new pail, and I'll bring 'em all to you. Please, please, I will be good!”
prayed Robby, looking up at his mother, so grieved and disappointed that
her heart began to fail her.</p>
<p>“But, my deary, you'll get so tired and hot you won't have a good time.
Wait till I go, and then we will stay all day, and pick as many berries as
you want.”</p>
<p>“You never do go, you are so busy, and I'm tired of waiting. I'd rather go
and get the berries for you all myself. I love to pick 'em, and I want to
fill my new pail dreffly,” sobbed Rob.</p>
<p>The pathetic sight of great tears tinkling into the dear new pail, and
threatening to fill it with salt water instead of huckleberries, touched
all the ladies present. His mother patted the weeper on his back; Daisy
offered to stay home with him; and Nan said, in her decided way,</p>
<p>“Let him come; I'll take care of him.”</p>
<p>“If Franz was going I wouldn't mind, for he is very careful; but he is
haying with the father, and I'm not sure about the rest of you,” began
Mrs. Bhaer.</p>
<p>“It's so far,” put in Jack.</p>
<p>“I'd carry him if I was going wish I was,” said Dan, with a sigh.</p>
<p>“Thank you, dear, but you must take care of your foot. I wish I could go.
Stop a minute, I think I can manage it after all;” and Mrs. Bhaer ran out
to the steps, waving her apron wildly.</p>
<p>Silas was just driving away in the hay-cart, but turned back, and agreed
at once, when Mrs. Jo proposed that he should take the whole party to the
pasture, and go for them at five o'clock.</p>
<p>“It will delay your work a little, but never mind; we will pay you in
huckleberry pies,” said Mrs. Jo, knowing Silas's weak point.</p>
<p>His rough, brown face brightened up, and he said, with a cheery “Haw!
haw!” “Wal now, Mis' Bhaer, if you go to bribin' of me, I shall give in
right away.”</p>
<p>“Now, boys, I have arranged it so that you can all go,” said Mrs. Bhaer,
running back again, much relieved, for she loved to make them happy, and
always felt miserable when she had disturbed the serenity of her little
sons; for she believed that the small hopes and plans and pleasures of
children should be tenderly respected by grown-up people, and never rudely
thwarted or ridiculed.</p>
<p>“Can I go?” said Dan, delighted.</p>
<p>“I thought especially of you. Be careful, and never mind the berries, but
sit about and enjoy the lovely things which you know how to find all about
you,” answered Mrs. Bhaer, who remembered his kind offer to her boy.</p>
<p>“Me too! me too!” sung Rob, dancing with joy, and clapping his precious
pail and cover like castanets.</p>
<p>“Yes, and Daisy and Nan must take good care of you. Be at the bars at five
o'clock, and Silas will come for you all.”</p>
<p>Robby cast himself upon his mother in a burst of gratitude, promising to
bring her every berry he picked, and not eat one. Then they were all
packed into the hay-cart, and went rattling away, the brightest face among
the dozen being that of Rob, as he sat between his two temporary little
mothers, beaming upon the whole world, and waving his best hat; for his
indulgent mamma had not the heart to bereave him of it, since this was a
gala-day to him.</p>
<p>Such a happy afternoon as they had, in spite of the mishaps which usually
occur on such expeditions! Of course Tommy came to grief, tumbled upon a
hornet's nest and got stung; but being used to woe, he bore the smart
manfully, till Dan suggested the application of damp earth, which much
assuaged the pain. Daisy saw a snake, and flying from it lost half her
berries; but Demi helped her to fill up again, and discussed reptiles most
learnedly the while. Ned fell out of a tree, and split his jacket down the
back, but suffered no other fracture. Emil and Jack established rival
claims to a certain thick patch, and while they were squabbling about it,
Stuffy quickly and quietly stripped the bushes and fled to the protection
of Dan, who was enjoying himself immensely. The crutch was no longer
necessary, and he was delighted to see how strong his foot felt as he
roamed about the great pasture, full of interesting rocks and stumps, with
familiar little creatures in the grass, and well-known insects dancing in
the air.</p>
<p>But of all the adventures that happened on this afternoon that which
befell Nan and Rob was the most exciting, and it long remained one of the
favorite histories of the household. Having explored the country pretty
generally, torn three rents in her frock, and scratched her face in a
barberry-bush, Nan began to pick the berries that shone like big, black
beads on the low, green bushes. Her nimble fingers flew, but still her
basket did not fill up as rapidly as she desired, so she kept wandering
here and there to search for better places, instead of picking contentedly
and steadily as Daisy did. Rob followed Nan, for her energy suited him
better than his cousin's patience, and he too was anxious to have the
biggest and best berries for Marmar.</p>
<p>“I keep putting 'em in, but it don't fill up, and I'm so tired,” said Rob,
pausing a moment to rest his short legs, and beginning to think
huckleberrying was not all his fancy painted it; for the sun blazed, Nan
skipped hither and thither like a grasshopper, and the berries fell out of
his pail almost as fast as he put them in, because, in his struggles with
the bushes, it was often upside-down.</p>
<p>“Last time we came they were ever so much thicker over that wall great
bouncers; and there is a cave there where the boys made a fire. Let's go
and fill our things quick, and then hide in the cave and let the others
find us,” proposed Nan, thirsting for adventures.</p>
<p>Rob consented, and away they went, scrambling over the wall and running
down the sloping fields on the other side, till they were hidden among the
rocks and underbrush. The berries were thick, and at last the pails were
actually full. It was shady and cool down there, and a little spring gave
the thirsty children a refreshing drink out of its mossy cup.</p>
<p>“Now we will go and rest in the cave, and eat our lunch,” said Nan, well
satisfied with her success so far.</p>
<p>“Do you know the way?” asked Rob.</p>
<p>“'Course I do; I've been once, and I always remember. Didn't I go and get
my box all right?”</p>
<p>That convinced Rob, and he followed blindly as Nan led him over stock and
stone, and brought him, after much meandering, to a small recess in the
rock, where the blackened stones showed that fires had been made.</p>
<p>“Now, isn't it nice?” asked Nan, as she took out a bit of
bread-and-butter, rather damaged by being mixed up with nails, fishhooks,
stones and other foreign substances, in the young lady's pocket.</p>
<p>“Yes; do you think they will find us soon?” asked Rob, who found the
shadowy glen rather dull, and began to long for more society.</p>
<p>“No, I don't; because if I hear them, I shall hide, and have fun making
them find me.”</p>
<p>“P'raps they won't come.”</p>
<p>“Don't care; I can get home myself.”</p>
<p>“Is it a great way?” asked Rob, looking at his little stubby boots,
scratched and wet with his long wandering.</p>
<p>“It's six miles, I guess.” Nan's ideas of distance were vague, and her
faith in her own powers great.</p>
<p>“I think we better go now,” suggested Rob, presently.</p>
<p>“I shan't till I have picked over my berries;” and Nan began what seemed
to Rob an endless task.</p>
<p>“Oh, dear! you said you'd take good care of me,” he sighed, as the sun
seemed to drop behind the hill all of a sudden.</p>
<p>“Well I am taking good care of you as hard as I can. Don't be cross,
child; I'll go in a minute,” said Nan, who considered five-year-old Robby
a mere infant compared to herself.</p>
<p>So little Rob sat looking anxiously about him, and waiting patiently, for,
spite of some misgivings, he felt great confidence in Nan.</p>
<p>“I guess it's going to be night pretty soon,” he observed, as if to
himself, as a mosquito bit him, and the frogs in a neighboring marsh began
to pipe up for the evening concert.</p>
<p>“My goodness me! so it is. Come right away this minute, or they will be
gone,” cried Nan, looking up from her work, and suddenly perceiving that
the sun was down.</p>
<p>“I heard a horn about an hour ago; may be they were blowing for us,” said
Rob, trudging after his guide as she scrambled up the steep hill.</p>
<p>“Where was it?” asked Nan, stopping short.</p>
<p>“Over that way;” he pointed with a dirty little finger in an entirely
wrong direction.</p>
<p>“Let's go that way and meet them;” and Nan wheeled about, and began to
trot through the bushes, feeling a trifle anxious, for there were so many
cow-paths all about she could not remember which way they came.</p>
<p>On they went over stock and stone again, pausing now and then to listen
for the horn, which did not blow any more, for it was only the moo of a
cow on her way home.</p>
<p>“I don't remember seeing that pile of stones do you?” asked Nan, as she
sat on a wall to rest a moment and take an observation.</p>
<p>“I don't remember any thing, but I want to go home,” and Rob's voice had a
little tremble in it that made Nan put her arms round him and lift him
gently down, saying, in her most capable way,</p>
<p>“I'm going just as fast as I can, dear. Don't cry, and when we come to the
road, I'll carry you.”</p>
<p>“Where is the road?” and Robby wiped his eyes to look for it.</p>
<p>“Over by that big tree. Don't you know that's the one Ned tumbled out of?”</p>
<p>“So it is. May be they waited for us; I'd like to ride home wouldn't you?”
and Robby brightened up as he plodded along toward the end of the great
pasture.</p>
<p>“No, I'd rather walk,” answered Nan, feeling quite sure that she would be
obliged to do so, and preparing her mind for it.</p>
<p>Another long trudge through the fast-deepening twilight and another
disappointment, for when they reached the tree, they found to their dismay
that it was not the one Ned climbed, and no road anywhere appeared.</p>
<p>“Are we lost?” quavered Rob, clasping his pail in despair.</p>
<p>“Not much. I don't just see which way to go, and I guess we'd better
call.”</p>
<p>So they both shouted till they were hoarse, yet nothing answered but the
frogs in full chorus.</p>
<p>“There is another tall tree over there, perhaps that's the one,” said Nan,
whose heart sunk within her, though she still spoke bravely.</p>
<p>“I don't think I can go any more; my boots are so heavy I can't pull 'em;”
and Robby sat down on a stone quite worn out.</p>
<p>“Then we must stay here all night. I don't care much, if snakes don't
come.”</p>
<p>“I'm frightened of snakes. I can't stay all night. Oh, dear! I don't like
to be lost,” and Rob puckered up his face to cry, when suddenly a thought
occurred to him, and he said, in a tone of perfect confidence,</p>
<p>“Marmar will come and find me she always does; I ain't afraid now.”</p>
<p>“She won't know where we are.”</p>
<p>“She didn't know I was shut up in the ice-house, but she found me. I know
she'll come,” returned Robby, so trustfully, that Nan felt relieved, and
sat down by him, saying, with a remorseful sigh,</p>
<p>“I wish we hadn't run away.”</p>
<p>“You made me; but I don't mind much Marmar will love me just the same,”
answered Rob, clinging to his sheet-anchor when all other hope was gone.</p>
<p>“I'm so hungry. Let's eat our berries,” proposed Nan, after a pause,
during which Rob began to nod.</p>
<p>“So am I, but I can't eat mine, 'cause I told Marmar I'd keep them all for
her.”</p>
<p>“You'll have to eat them if no one comes for us,” said Nan, who felt like
contradicting every thing just then. “If we stay here a great many days,
we shall eat up all the berries in the field, and then we shall starve,”
she added grimly.</p>
<p>“I shall eat sassafras. I know a big tree of it, and Dan told me how
squirrels dig up the roots and eat them, and I love to dig,” returned Rob,
undaunted by the prospect of starvation.</p>
<p>“Yes; and we can catch frogs, and cook them. My father ate some once, and
he said they were nice,” put in Nan, beginning to find a spice of romance
even in being lost in a huckleberry pasture.</p>
<p>“How could we cook frogs? we haven't got any fire.”</p>
<p>“I don't know; next time I'll have matches in my pocket,” said Nan, rather
depressed by this obstacle to the experiment in frog-cookery.</p>
<p>“Couldn't we light a fire with a fire-fly?” asked Rob, hopefully, as he
watched them flitting to and fro like winged sparks.</p>
<p>“Let's try;” and several minutes were pleasantly spent in catching the
flies, and trying to make them kindle a green twig or two. “It's a lie to
call them fire-flies when there isn't a fire in them,” Nan said, throwing
one unhappy insect away with scorn, though it shone its best, and
obligingly walked up and down the twigs to please the innocent little
experimenters.</p>
<p>“Marmar's a good while coming,” said Rob, after another pause, during
which they watched the stars overhead, smelt the sweet fern crushed under
foot, and listened to the crickets' serenade.</p>
<p>“I don't see why God made any night; day is so much pleasanter,” said Nan,
thoughtfully.</p>
<p>“It's to sleep in,” answered Rob, with a yawn.</p>
<p>“Then do go to sleep,” said Nan, pettishly.</p>
<p>“I want my own bed. Oh, I wish I could see Teddy!” cried Rob, painfully
reminded of home by the soft chirp of birds safe in their little nests.</p>
<p>“I don't believe your mother will ever find us,” said Nan, who was
becoming desperate, for she hated patient waiting of any sort. “It's so
dark she won't see us.”</p>
<p>“It was all black in the ice-house, and I was so scared I didn't call her,
but she saw me; and she will see me now, no matter how dark it is,”
returned confiding Rob, standing up to peer into the gloom for the help
which never failed him.</p>
<p>“I see her! I see her!” he cried, and ran as fast as his tired legs would
take him toward a dark figure slowly approaching. Suddenly he stopped,
then turned about, and came stumbling back, screaming in a great panic,</p>
<p>“No, it's a bear, a big black one!” and hid his face in Nan's skirts.</p>
<p>For a moment Nan quailed; ever her courage gave out at the thought of a
real bear, and she was about to turn and flee in great disorder, when a
mild “Moo!” changed her fear to merriment, as she said, laughing,</p>
<p>“It's a cow, Robby! the nice, black cow we saw this afternoon.”</p>
<p>The cow seemed to feel that it was not just the thing to meet two little
people in her pasture after dark, and the amiable beast paused to inquire
into the case. She let them stroke her, and stood regarding them with her
soft eyes so mildly, that Nan, who feared no animal but a bear, was fired
with a desire to milk her.</p>
<p>
“Silas taught me how; and berries and milk would be so nice,” she said,<br/>
emptying the contents of her pail into her hat, and boldly beginning her<br/>
new task, while Rob stood by and repeated, at her command, the poem from<br/>
Mother Goose:<br/>
<br/>
“Cushy cow, bonny, let down your milk,<br/>
Let down your milk to me,<br/>
And I will give you a gown of silk,<br/>
A gown of silk and a silver tee.”<br/></p>
<p>But the immortal rhyme had little effect, for the benevolent cow had
already been milked, and had only half a gill to give the thirsty
children.</p>
<p>“Shoo! get away! you are an old cross patch,” cried Nan, ungratefully, as
she gave up the attempt in despair; and poor Molly walked on with a gentle
gurgle of surprise and reproof.</p>
<p>“Each can have a sip, and then we must take a walk. We shall go to sleep
if we don't; and lost people mustn't sleep. Don't you know how Hannah Lee
in the pretty story slept under the snow and died?”</p>
<p>“But there isn't any snow now, and it's nice and warm,” said Rob, who was
not blessed with as lively a fancy as Nan.</p>
<p>“No matter, we will poke about a little, and call some more; and then, if
nobody comes, we will hide under the bushes, like Hop-'o-my-thumb and his
brothers.”</p>
<p>It was a very short walk, however, for Rob was so sleepy he could not get
on, and tumbled down so often that Nan entirely lost patience, being half
distracted by the responsibility she had taken upon herself.</p>
<p>“If you tumble down again, I'll shake you,” she said, lifting the poor
little man up very kindly as she spoke, for Nan's bark was much worse than
her bite.</p>
<p>“Please don't. It's my boots they keep slipping so;” and Rob manfully
checked the sob just ready to break out, adding, with a plaintive patience
that touched Nan's heart, “If the skeeters didn't bite me so, I could go
to sleep till Marmar comes.”</p>
<p>“Put your head on my lap, and I'll cover you up with my apron; I'm not
afraid of the night,” said Nan, sitting down and trying to persuade
herself that she did not mind the shadow nor the mysterious rustlings all
about her.</p>
<p>“Wake me up when she comes,” said rob, and was fast asleep in five minutes
with his head in Nan's lap under the pinafore.</p>
<p>The little girl sat for some fifteen minutes, staring about her with
anxious eyes, and feeling as if each second was an hour. Then a pale light
began to glimmer over the hill-top and she said to herself,</p>
<p>“I guess the night is over and morning is coming. I'd like to see the sun
rise, so I'll watch, and when it comes up we can find our way right home.”</p>
<p>But before the moon's round face peeped above the hill to destroy her
hope, Nan had fallen asleep, leaning back in a little bower of tall ferns,
and was deep in a mid-summer night's dream of fire-flies and blue aprons,
mountains of huckleberries, and Robby wiping away the tears of a black
cow, who sobbed, “I want to go home! I want to go home!”</p>
<p>While the children were sleeping, peacefully lulled by the drowsy hum of
many neighborly mosquitoes, the family at home were in a great state of
agitation. The hay-cart came at five, and all but Jack, Emil, Nan, and Rob
were at the bars ready for it. Franz drove instead of Silas, and when the
boys told him that the others were going home through the wood, he said,
looking ill-pleased, “They ought to have left Rob to ride, he will be
tired out by the long walk.”</p>
<p>“It's shorter that way, and they will carry him,” said Stuffy, who was in
a hurry for his supper.</p>
<p>“You are sure Nan and Rob went with them?”</p>
<p>“Of course they did; I saw them getting over the wall, and sung out that
it was most five, and Jack called back that they were going the other
way,” explained Tommy.</p>
<p>“Very well, pile in then,” and away rattled the hay-cart with the tired
children and the full pails.</p>
<p>Mrs. Jo looked sober when she heard of the division of the party, and sent
Franz back with Toby to find and bring the little ones home. Supper was
over, and the family sitting about in the cool hall as usual, when Franz
came trotting back, hot, dusty, and anxious.</p>
<p>“Have they come?” he called out when half-way up the avenue.</p>
<p>“No!” and Mrs. Jo flew out of her chair looking so alarmed that every one
jumped up and gathered round Franz.</p>
<p>“I can't find them anywhere,” he began; but the words were hardly spoken
when a loud “Hullo!” startled them all, and the next minute Jack and Emil
came round the house.</p>
<p>“Where are Nan and Rob?” cried Mrs. Jo, clutching Emil in a way that
caused him to think his aunt had suddenly lost her wits.</p>
<p>“I don't know. They came home with the others, didn't they?” he answered,
quickly.</p>
<p>“No; George and Tommy said they went with you.”</p>
<p>“Well, they didn't. Haven't seen them. We took a swim in the pond, and
came by the wood,” said Jack, looking alarmed, as well he might.</p>
<p>“Call Mr. Bhaer, get the lanterns, and tell Silas I want him.”</p>
<p>That was all Mrs. Jo said, but they knew what she meant, and flew to obey
her orders. In ten minutes, Mr. Bhaer and Silas were off to the wood, and
Franz tearing down the road on old Andy to search the great pasture. Mrs.
Jo caught up some food from the table, a little bottle of brandy from the
medicine-closet, took a lantern, and bidding Jack and Emil come with her,
and the rest not stir, she trotted away on Toby, never stopping for hat or
shawl. She heard some one running after her, but said not a word till, as
she paused to call and listen, the light of her lantern shone on Dan's
face.</p>
<p>“You here! I told Jack to come,” she said, half-inclined to send him back,
much as she needed help.</p>
<p>“I wouldn't let him; he and Emil hadn't had any supper, and I wanted to
come more than they did,” he said, taking the lantern from her and smiling
up in her face with the steady look in his eyes that made her feel as if,
boy though he was, she had some one to depend on.</p>
<p>Off she jumped, and ordered him on to Toby, in spite of his pleading to
walk; then they went on again along the dusty, solitary road, stopping
every now and then to call and hearken breathlessly for little voices to
reply.</p>
<p>When they came to the great pasture, other lights were already flitting to
and fro like will-o'-the-wisps, and Mr. Bhaer's voice was heard shouting,
“Nan! Rob! Rob! Nan!” in every part of the field. Silas whistled and
roared, Dan plunged here and there on Toby, who seemed to understand the
case, and went over the roughest places with unusual docility. Often Mrs.
Jo hushed them all, saying, with a sob in her throat, “The noise may
frighten them, let me call; Robby will know my voice;” and then she would
cry out the beloved little name in every tone of tenderness, till the very
echoes whispered it softly, and the winds seemed to waft it willingly; but
still no answer came.</p>
<p>The sky was overcast now, and only brief glimpses of the moon were seen,
heat-lightening darted out of the dark clouds now and then, and a faint
far-off rumble as of thunder told that a summer-storm was brewing.</p>
<p>“O my Robby! my Robby!” mourned poor Mrs. Jo, wandering up and down like a
pale ghost, while Dan kept beside her like a faithful fire-fly. “What
shall I say to Nan's father if she comes to harm? Why did I ever trust my
darling so far away? Fritz, do you hear any thing?” and when a mournful,
“No” came back, she wrung her hands so despairingly that Dan sprung down
from Toby's back, tied the bridle to the bars, and said, in his decided
way,</p>
<p>“They may have gone down the spring I'm going to look.”</p>
<p>He was over the wall and away so fast that she could hardly follow him;
but when she reached the spot, he lowered the lantern and showed her with
joy the marks of little feet in the soft ground about the spring. She fell
down on her knees to examine the tracks, and then sprung up, saying
eagerly,</p>
<p>“Yes; that is the mark of my Robby's little boots! Come this way, they
must have gone on.”</p>
<p>Such a weary search! But now some inexplicable instinct seemed to lead the
anxious mother, for presently Dan uttered a cry, and caught up a little
shining object lying in the path. It was the cover of the new tin pail,
dropped in the first alarm of being lost. Mrs. Jo hugged and kissed it as
if it were a living thing; and when Dan was about to utter a glad shout to
bring the others to the spot, she stopped him, saying, as she hurried on,
“No, let me find them; I let Rob go, and I want to give him back to his
father all myself.”</p>
<p>A little farther on Nan's hat appeared, and after passing the place more
than once, they came at last upon the babes in the wood, both sound
asleep. Dan never forgot the little picture on which the light of his
lantern shone that night. He thought Mrs. Jo would cry out, but she only
whispered, “Hush!” as she softly lifted away the apron, and saw the little
ruddy face below. The berry-stained lips were half-open as the breath came
and went, the yellow hair lay damp on the hot forehead, and both the
chubby hands held fast the little pail still full.</p>
<p>The sight of the childish harvest, treasured through all the troubles of
that night for her, seemed to touch Mrs. Jo to the heart, for suddenly she
gathered up her boy, and began to cry over him, so tenderly, yet so
heartily, that he woke up, and at first seemed bewildered. Then he
remembered, and hugged her close, saying with a laugh of triumph,</p>
<p>“I knew you'd come! O Marmar! I did want you so!” For a moment they kissed
and clung to one another, quite forgetting all the world; for no matter
how lost and soiled and worn-out wandering sons may be, mothers can
forgive and forget every thing as they fold them in their fostering arms.
Happy the son whose faith in his mother remains unchanged, and who,
through all his wanderings, has kept some filial token to repay her brave
and tender love.</p>
<p>Dan meantime picked Nan out of her bush, and, with a gentleness none but
Teddy ever saw in him before, he soothed her first alarm at the sudden
waking, and wiped away her tears; for Nan also began to cry for joy, it
was so good to see a kind face and feel a strong arm round her after what
seemed to her ages of loneliness and fear.</p>
<p>“My poor little girl, don't cry! You are all safe now, and no one shall
say a word of blame to-night,” said Mrs. Jo, taking Nan into her capacious
embrace, and cuddling both children as a hen might gather her lost
chickens under her motherly wings.</p>
<p>“It was my fault; but I am sorry. I tried to take care of him, and I
covered him up and let him sleep, and didn't touch his berries, though I
was so hungry; and I never will do it again truly, never, never,” sobbed
Nan, quite lost in a sea of penitence and thankfulness.</p>
<p>“Call them now, and let us get home,” said Mrs. Jo; and Dan, getting upon
the wall, sent a joyful word “Found!” ringing over the field.</p>
<p>How the wandering lights came dancing from all sides, and gathered round
the little group among the sweet fern bushes! Such a hugging, and kissing,
and talking, and crying, as went on must have amazed the glowworms, and
evidently delighted the mosquitoes, for they hummed frantically, while the
little moths came in flocks to the party, and the frogs croaked as if they
could not express their satisfaction loudly enough.</p>
<p>Then they set out for home, a queer party, for Franz rode on to tell the
news; Dan and Toby led the way; then came Nan in the strong arms of Silas,
who considered her “the smartest little baggage he ever saw,” and teased
her all the way home about her pranks. Mrs. Bhaer would let no one carry
Rob but himself, and the little fellow, refreshed by sleep, sat up, and
chattered gayly, feeling himself a hero, while his mother went beside him
holding on to any pat of his precious little body that came handy, and
never tired of hearing him say, “I knew Marmar would come,” or seeing him
lean down to kiss her, and put a plump berry into her mouth, “'Cause he
picked 'em all for her.”</p>
<p>The moon shone out just as they reached the avenue, and all the boys came
shouting to meet them, so the lost lambs were borne in triumph and safety,
and landed in the dining-room, where the unromantic little things demanded
supper instead of preferring kisses and caresses. They were set down to
bread and milk, while the entire household stood round to gaze upon them.
Nan soon recovered her spirits, and recounted her perils with a relish now
that they were all over. Rob seemed absorbed in his food, but put down his
spoon all of a sudden, and set up a doleful roar.</p>
<p>“My precious, why do you cry?” asked his mother, who still hung over him.</p>
<p>“I'm crying 'cause I was lost,” bawled Rob, trying to squeeze out a tear,
and failing entirely.</p>
<p>“But you are found now. Nan says you didn't cry out in the field, and I
was glad you were such a brave boy.”</p>
<p>“I was so busy being frightened I didn't have any time then. But I want to
cry now, 'cause I don't like to be lost,” explained Rob, struggling with
sleep, emotion, and a mouthful of bread and milk.</p>
<p>The boys set up such a laugh at this funny way of making up for lost time,
that Rob stopped to look at them, and the merriment was so infectious,
that after a surprised stare he burst out into a merry, “Ha, ha!” and beat
his spoon upon the table as if he enjoyed the joke immensely.</p>
<p>“It is ten o'clock; into bed, every man of you,” said Mr. Bhaer, looking
at his watch.</p>
<p>“And, thank Heaven! there will be no empty ones to-night,” added Mrs.
Bhaer, watching, with full eyes, Robby going up in his father's arms, and
Nan escorted by Daisy and Demi, who considered her the most interesting
heroine of their collection.</p>
<p>“Poor Aunt Jo is so tired she ought to be carried up herself,” said gentle
Franz, putting his arm round her as she paused at the stair-foot, looking
quite exhausted by her fright and long walk.</p>
<p>“Let's make an arm-chair,” proposed Tommy.</p>
<p>“No, thank you, my lads; but somebody may lend me a shoulder to lean on,”
answered Mrs. Jo.</p>
<p>“Me! me!” and half-a-dozen jostled one another, all eager to be chosen,
for there was something in the pale motherly face that touched the warm
hearts under the round jackets.</p>
<p>Seeing that they considered it an honor, Mrs. Jo gave it to the one who
had earned it, and nobody grumbled when she put her arm on Dan's broad
shoulder, saying, with a look that made him color up with pride and
pleasure,</p>
<p>“He found the children; so I think he must help me up.”</p>
<p>Dan felt richly rewarded for his evening's work, not only that he was
chosen from all the rest to go proudly up bearing the lamp, but because
Mrs. Jo said heartily, “Good-night, my boy! God bless you!” as he left her
at her door.</p>
<p>“I wish I was your boy,” said Dan, who felt as if danger and trouble had
somehow brought him nearer than ever to her.</p>
<p>“You shall be my oldest son,” and she sealed her promise with a kiss that
made Dan hers entirely.</p>
<p>Little Rob was all right next day, but Nan had a headache, and lay on
Mother Bhaer's sofa with cold-cream upon her scratched face. Her remorse
was quite gone, and she evidently thought being lost rather a fine
amusement. Mrs. Jo was not pleased with this state of things, and had no
desire to have her children led from the paths of virtue, or her pupils
lying round loose in huckleberry fields. So she talked soberly to Nan, and
tried to impress upon her mind the difference between liberty and license,
telling several tales to enforce her lecture. She had not decided how to
punish Nan, but one of these stories suggested a way, and as Mrs. Jo liked
odd penalties, she tried it.</p>
<p>“All children run away,” pleaded Nan, as if it was as natural and
necessary a thing as measles or hooping cough.</p>
<p>“Not all, and some who do run away don't get found again,” answered Mrs.
Jo.</p>
<p>“Didn't you do it yourself?” asked Nan, whose keen little eyes saw some
traces of a kindred spirit in the serious lady who was sewing so morally
before her.</p>
<p>Mrs. Jo laughed, and owned that she did.</p>
<p>“Tell about it,” demanded Nan, feeling that she was getting the upper hand
in the discussion.</p>
<p>Mrs. Jo saw that, and sobered down at once, saying, with a remorseful
shake of the head,</p>
<p>“I did it a good many times, and led my poor mother rather a hard life
with my pranks, till she cured me.”</p>
<p>“How?” and Nan sat up with a face full of interest.</p>
<p>“I had a new pair of shoes once, and wanted to show them; so, though I was
told not to leave the garden, I ran away and was wandering about all day.
It was in the city, and why I wasn't killed I don't know. Such a time as I
had. I frolicked in the park with dogs, sailed boats in the Back Bay with
strange boys, dined with a little Irish beggar-girl on salt fish and
potatoes, and was found at last fast asleep on a door-step with my arms
round a great dog. It was late in the evening, and I was a dirty as a
little pig, and the new shoes were worn out I had travelled so far.”</p>
<p>“How nice!” cried Nan, looking all ready to go and do it herself.</p>
<p>“It was not nice next day;” and Mrs. Jo tried to keep her eyes from
betraying how much she enjoyed the memory of her early capers.</p>
<p>“Did your mother whip you?” asked Nan, curiously.</p>
<p>“She never whipped me but once, and then she begged my pardon, or I don't
think I ever should have forgiven her, it hurt my feelings so much.”</p>
<p>“Why did she beg your pardon? my father don't.”</p>
<p>“Because, when she had done it, I turned round and said, 'Well, you are
mad yourself, and ought to be whipped as much as me.' She looked at me a
minute, then her anger all died out, and she said, as if ashamed, 'You are
right, Jo, I am angry; and why should I punish you for being in a passion
when I set you such a bad example? Forgive me, dear, and let us try to
help one another in a better way.' I never forgot it, and it did me more
good than a dozen rods.”</p>
<p>Nan sat thoughtfully turning the little cold-cream jar for a minute, and
Mrs. Jo said nothing, but let that idea get well into the busy little mind
that was so quick to see and feel what went on about her.</p>
<p>“I like that,” said Nan, presently, and her face looked less elfish, with
its sharp eyes, inquisitive nose, and mischievous mouth. “What did your
mother do to you when you ran away that time?”</p>
<p>“She tied me to the bed-post with a long string, so that I could not go
out of the room, and there I stayed all day with the little worn-out shoes
hanging up before me to remind me of my fault.”</p>
<p>“I should think that would cure anybody,” cried Nan, who loved her liberty
above all things.</p>
<p>“It did cure me, and I think it will you, so I am going to try it,” said
Mrs. Jo, suddenly taking a ball of strong twine out of a drawer in her
work-table.</p>
<p>Nan looked as if she was decidedly getting the worst of the argument now,
and sat feeling much crestfallen while Mrs. Jo tied one end round her
waist and the other to the arm of the sofa, saying, as she finished,</p>
<p>“I don't like to tie you up like a naughty little dog, but if you don't
remember any better than a dog, I must treat you like one.”</p>
<p>“I'd just as lief be tied up as not I like to play dog;” and Nan put on a
don't-care face, and began to growl and grovel on the floor.</p>
<p>Mrs. Jo took no notice, but leaving a book or two and a handkerchief to
hem, she went away, and left Miss Nan to her own devices. This was not
agreeable, and after sitting a moment she tried to untie the cord. But it
was fastened in the belt of her apron behind, so she began on the knot at
the other end. It soon came loose, and, gathering it up, Nan was about to
get out of the window, when she heard Mrs. Jo say to somebody as she
passed through the hall,</p>
<p>“No, I don't think she will run away now; she is an honorable little girl,
and knows that I do it to help her.”</p>
<p>In a minute, Nan whisked back, tied herself up, and began to sew
violently. Rob came in a moment after, and was so charmed with the new
punishment, that he got a jump-rope and tethered himself to the other arm
of the sofa in the most social manner.</p>
<p>“I got lost too, so I ought to be tied up as much as Nan,” he explained to
his mother when she saw the new captive.</p>
<p>“I'm not sure that you don't deserve a little punishment, for you knew it
was wrong to go far away from the rest.”</p>
<p>“Nan took me,” began Rob, willing to enjoy the novel penalty, but not
willing to take the blame.</p>
<p>“You needn't have gone. You have got a conscience, though you are a little
boy, and you must learn to mind it.”</p>
<p>“Well, my conscience didn't prick me a bit when she said 'Let's get over
the wall,'” answered Rob, quoting one of Demi's expressions.</p>
<p>“Did you stop to see if it did?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Then you cannot tell.”</p>
<p>“I guess it's such a little conscience that it don't prick hard enough for
me to feel it,” added Rob, after thinking the matter over for a minute.</p>
<p>“We must sharpen it up. It's bad to have a dull conscience; so you may
stay here till dinner-time, and talk about it with Nan. I trust you both
not to untie yourselves till I say the word.”</p>
<p>“No, we won't,” said both, feeling a certain sense of virtue in helping to
punish themselves.</p>
<p>For an hour they were very good, then they grew tired of one room, and
longed to get out. Never had the hall seemed so inviting; even the little
bedroom acquired a sudden interest, and they would gladly have gone in and
played tent with the curtains of the best bed. The open windows drove them
wild because they could not reach them; and the outer world seemed so
beautiful, they wondered how they ever found the heart to say it was dull.
Nan pined for a race round the lawn, and Rob remembered with dismay that
he had not fed his dog that morning, and wondered what poor Pollux would
do. They watched the clock, and Nan did some nice calculations in minutes
and seconds, while Rob learned to tell all the hours between eight and one
so well that he never forgot them. It was maddening to smell the dinner,
to know that there was to be succotash and huckleberry pudding, and to
feel that they would not be on the spot to secure good helps of both. When
Mary Ann began to set the table, they nearly cut themselves in two trying
to see what meat there was to be; and Nan offered to help her make the
beds, if she would only see that she had “lots of sauce on her pudding.”</p>
<p>When the boys came bursting out of school, they found the children tugging
at their halters like a pair of restive little colts, and were much
edified, as well as amused, by the sequel to the exciting adventures of
the night.</p>
<p>“Untie me now, Marmar; my conscience will prick like a pin next time, I
know it will,” said Rob, as the bell rang, and Teddy came to look at him
with sorrowful surprise.</p>
<p>“We shall see,” answered his mother, setting him free. He took a good run
down the hall, back through the dining-room, and brought up beside Nan,
quite beaming with virtuous satisfaction.</p>
<p>“I'll bring her dinner to her, may I?” he asked, pitying his
fellow-captive.</p>
<p>“That's my kind little son! Yes, pull out the table, and get a chair;” and
Mrs. Jo hurried away to quell the ardor of the others, who were always in
a raging state of hunger at noon.</p>
<p>Nan ate alone, and spent a long afternoon attached to the sofa. Mrs. Bhaer
lengthened her bonds so that she could look out of the window; and there
she stood watching the boys play, and all the little summer creatures
enjoying their liberty. Daisy had a picnic for the dolls on the lawn, so
that Nan might see the fun if she could not join in it. Tommy turned his
best somersaults to console her; Demi sat on the steps reading aloud to
himself, which amused Nan a good deal; and Dan brought a little tree-toad
to show her as the most delicate attention in his power.</p>
<p>But nothing atoned for the loss of freedom; and a few hours of confinement
taught Nan how precious it was. A good many thoughts went through the
little head that lay on the window-sill during the last quiet hour when
all the children went to the brook to see Emil's new ship launched. She
was to have christened it, and had depended on smashing a tiny bottle of
currant-wine over the prow as it was named Josephine in honor of Mrs.
Bhaer. Now she had lost her chance, and Daisy wouldn't do it half so well.
Tears rose to her eyes as she remembered that it was all her own fault;
and she said aloud, addressing a fat bee who was rolling about in the
yellow heart of a rose just under the window,</p>
<p>“If you have run away, you'd better go right home, and tell your mother
you are sorry, and never do so any more.”</p>
<p>“I am glad to hear you give him such good advice, and I think he has taken
it,” said Mrs. Jo, smiling, as the bee spread his dusty wings and flew
away.</p>
<p>Nan brushed off a bright drop or two that shone on the window-sill, and
nestled against her friend as she took her on her knee, adding kindly for
she had seen the little drops, and knew what they meant,</p>
<p>“Do you think my mother's cure for running away a good one?”</p>
<p>“Yes, ma'am,” answered Nan, quite subdued by her quiet day.</p>
<p>“I hope I shall not have to try it again.”</p>
<p>“I guess not;” and Nan looked up with such an earnest little face that
Mrs. Jo felt satisfied, and said no more, for she liked to have her
penalties do their own work, and did not spoil the effect by too much
moralizing.</p>
<p>Here Rob appeared, bearing with infinite care what Asia called a “sarcer
pie,” meaning one baked in a saucer.</p>
<p>“It's made out of some of my berries, and I'm going to give you half at
supper-time,” he announced with a flourish.</p>
<p>“What makes you, when I'm so naughty?” asked Nan, meekly.</p>
<p>“Because we got lost together. You ain't going to be naughty again, are
you?”</p>
<p>“Never,” said Nan, with great decision.</p>
<p>“Oh, goody! now let's go and get Mary Ann to cut this for us all ready to
eat; it's 'most tea time;” and Rob beckoned with the delicious little pie.</p>
<p>Nan started to follow, then stopped, and said,</p>
<p>“I forgot, I can't go.”</p>
<p>“Try and see,” said Mrs. Bhaer, who had quietly untied the cord sash while
she had been talking.</p>
<p>Nan saw that she was free, and with one tempestuous kiss to Mrs. Jo, she
was off like a humming-bird, followed by Robby, dribbling huckleberry
juice as he ran.</p>
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