"We"ll help all we can," Mart promised. "That is, if we"re here, and I don"t see how we can get away, for we haven"t any money to pay our fare on the train."
"That"s my trouble, too," said Mr. Treadwell, with a smile. "I"d offer to help too, if I thought I was going to be here."
"Oh, then we"ll be sure to have a show!" declared Bunny. "You can be General Washington and maybe some soldier, and we"ll pretend you came down to the farm to see us. Then I"ll turn somersaults and Sue can bring me out some cookies to eat, "cause I get hungry when I turn somersaults.
And you can do tricks like those you did in the Opera House," he added to Mart.
"What do you want me to do?" asked Lucile, with a smile.
"Oh, you--you can help Sue bring out the cookies for Mart and me,"
decided Bunny. "And--oh yes--you can sing--those songs you sang in the show we went to see, you know."
"All right, I"ll help all I can--if I"m here," said Lucile.
"Well, suppose we talk a little about the trouble you good theater folks are in," suggested Mr. Brown. "The show Bunny and Sue are going to give can wait for a while. Now what do you want to do--get back to New York, all three of you?"
"Well, New York is the place almost all show people start from," said Mr. Treadwell, "but I don"t know that there"s much use going back there now. All the places in other shows will be taken. If I could get some sort of work here for the winter I"d stay."
"So would I!" declared Mart. "I like to stay in a place two or three weeks at a time, and not have to move to a new town every night, like a circus. Have you any work you could let me do?" he asked Mr. Brown.
"I was going to speak of that," replied the father of Bunny and Sue.
"One of the young men in my office is going on leave, and I could hire you in his place. The wages aren"t very big," he said, "but it would be enough for you to live on and take care of your sister."
"I suppose I could board here in Bellemere," suggested Mart.
"You can stay right here--you and Lucile!" cried Mrs. Brown. "Our house is plenty large enough, and there"s lots of room. Do stay here--at least until you locate your uncle and your aunt."
"That"s very kind of you," said Lucile softly, and she reached over and stroked Sue"s curls.
"Oh, goodie!" cried Bunny, when he understood that his father was going to hire Mart Clayton to work in the office at the dock. "Then you can help us get up the show."
"Well, I"ll do all I can," promised Mart.
"And I"ll help, too," added Lucile.
"If you can find a place for me, Mr. Brown, I"ll make the same promise,"
said Mr. Treadwell. "I don"t care much about going back to New York, and if Mart and Lucile stay here I"d like to stay, too, and sort of look after them. I"ll try to help them find their missing folks."
"I guess I can find work for you," said Mr. Brown. "Do you know anything about the fish or boat business?"
"Very little, I"m afraid. I once worked as a bookkeeper in a piano factory, though, if that would help any," he said.
"Keeping books is just what I want done," said Mr. Brown. "So you can have a place in my office. The man I have is going to leave, and you may take his place. He also has a room with Mr. Winkler and his sister, and you could get board there."
"That suits me all right, and thank you very much," said Mr. Treadwell.
"I"ll send over to Wayville and get what little baggage I have. But will it be all right for me to board at Mr. Winkler"s?" he asked.
"Oh, yes. They"ll be glad to have you."
"And you can see Mr. Winkler"s monkey w.a.n.go and the parrot all the while!" cried Bunny Brown.
"That will be a treat!" laughed Mr. Treadwell.
So it was settled that both Mr. Treadwell and Mart would work for Mr.
Brown. The man who pretended to be George Washington and other great men would board with the old sailor and his sister, while Mart and Lucile would live with the Browns.
"And we"ll have lots of fun!" said Sue to Lucile.
"And will you show me how to make flipflops?" asked Bunny of Mart.
"Yes," answered the boy actor and acrobat, "I will."
While Lucile remained at Mrs. Brown"s house, Mart, with Mr. Brown and the impersonator went over to Wayville to get the baggage of the theatrical folk. Mr. Brown was going to pay the board bills. Bunny and Sue wanted to go also, but their father said:
"I"ll take you along when we go to look at the scenery. You"d only be in the way now, and wouldn"t have a good time."
That night Lucile and Mart stayed at the Brown house, which was to be their home for some time, and Mr. Treadwell went to board with the Winklers.
"And when you come over in the morning tell us all about the monkey and parrot!" begged Bunny, as the actor started for his boarding place that evening.
"I will," was the promise.
"When are we going to get the scenery for our play, Daddy?" asked Bunny Brown, as he and his sister Sue were getting ready for bed that night.
"I"ll take you over to-morrow after school," was the promise. And you can well imagine that the two children could hardly wait for the time to come.
The air was clear and cold, and it seemed as if there would be more snow when Mr. Brown brought around the automobile in which the trip to Wayville was to be made. Bunny and Sue, Lucile and Mart were to sit in the back, while Mr. Brown and Mr. Treadwell sat in front. They were going to the place where the theatrical scenery had been stored since the time the vaudeville troupe had got into trouble.
"I"m glad winter is coming, aren"t you?" asked Bunny of Mart, as they rode along the roads which were still covered with snow from the first storm.
"Well, yes, I like winter," was the answer. "It"s always the best time for the show business--"tisn"t like a circus--that does best in the summer time."
"We had our circus in summer," said Sue. "Now we"re going to have a real theater show in the winter."
The automobile was going down a snowy hill into Wayville, and Mr. Brown had put on the brakes, for, once or twice, the machine had slid from side to side.
"I ought to have chains on the back wheels," said the fish merchant to Mr. Treadwell. "But if I go slowly I guess I"ll be all right. Do you think we need any more scenery than the three sets you spoke of--the barnyard, the orchard and the meadow?"
"No, I think that will be enough," said the actor. "The children only want something simple. You can tell when you see it."
"Can we pick apples in the orchard?" asked Sue.
Before Mr. Treadwell could answer something happened. Mr. Brown turned out to one side of the road to let another automobile pa.s.s, and, a moment later, his machine began sliding to one side at a place where there was a deep gully.
"Oh!" screamed Lucile. "We"re going to upset!"
CHAPTER IX