"Do you deliver things?" asked Sue.
"No, dearie. I can"t afford to have a delivery wagon and a horse, to say nothing of one of those automobiles. And it wouldn"t pay me to hire a boy, even when Philip is away. Sometimes he takes heavy things that are ordered, but mostly folks carry away what they buy. Let"s see, now, how many pounds did you say, Bunny?"
"Five, Mrs. Golden. And please may I scoop it out of the barrel?"
"Well, yes, maybe; if you don"t spill it."
"I won"t spill any!" promised Bunny eagerly. "And may I put it on the scales? You see I"m going to keep a store when I grow up," he went on, "and I"ll want to know how to weigh things on the scales."
"I hope you make more money than I do," sighed Mrs. Golden. "Now be careful of the scoop, dearie!"
Bunny felt quite proud of himself as he leaned down in the sugar barrel and dipped up the sweet, sparkling grains. Mrs. Golden guided his hands as he poured the sugar into the scoop of the scale, and of course she watched to make sure the weight was right, for Bunny was hardly old enough to know that.
But he did it nearly all himself, and he told his father so that evening after supper.
"My! I"ll have to be on the lookout for a vacant place to rent so you and Sue can keep a store during vacation," replied Mr. Brown, laughing.
"Oh, we don"t want to start a store unless Mrs. Golden gets her legacy so she"ll be rich," declared Sue. "If we had a store she wouldn"t sell so much and she"d be sorry."
"Well, maybe that"s so," agreed her father, with a smile. "We"ll wait until we find out about the legacy before we start you and Bunny in the store business. When will Mrs. Golden know about it?"
"When her son Philip comes back. He"s gone to see about the legacy,"
said Bunny.
When they went to bed that night Bunny and Sue talked of what they would do during the long vacation. On account of some business matters, Mr.
Brown could not take his family away that summer until about the middle of August. This left them with a good part of the vacation to spend in Bellemere, and the two children were beginning to plan for their fun.
One of the first things Bunny found to do the next morning--the first morning of the vacation--was to water the garden.
"May I take the hose and sprinkle?" he asked.
"If you don"t get yourself wet through," his mother answered.
"I"ll be careful," Bunny promised.
There was a vegetable garden at the side of the house, a garden which Uncle Tad had made and of which he was very proud. As there had been no rain for some days the garden was in need of water.
The hose was attached to the faucet, for Uncle Tad had been watering the garden the night before, and he had gone away, leaving word that if any one had time to spray more water on the vegetables they should do so, as the ground was very dry.
"I like to water the garden," said Bunny, and he took great delight in directing the stream from the hose over the cabbages, beets and potatoes which were coming up.
After watering for some time Bunny began to feel hungry, as he often did, and started in to ask Mary for some bread and jam. He laid the hose down, with the water still running, but he turned the stream so it would spray on the gra.s.s and not on the garden, so it would not wash out any of the growing things.
Bunny was coming out again, with a large slice of bread and jam, when from the front street he heard a man"s voice crying:
"Here! Look out what you"re doing! Be careful with that hose! You"re soaking me!"
"Oh, oh!" cried Bunny Brown. "Sue must have picked up the hose that I left and squirted water on somebody!"
CHAPTER XIII
HELPING MRS. GOLDEN
Almost dropping his slice of bread and jam, so excited was he, Bunny Brown ran toward the hose. Before he reached it, for it was around the corner of the house, he heard the man"s voice again calling out:
"Here! Stop that I say! Can"t people go along the street without being wet with water from a hose? Pull your hose farther back!"
"Sue! Sue! Don"t do that! Be careful! You"re wetting some one," cried Bunny, as he ran along, not yet seeing the hose. But he could guess what had happened.
Sue, coming along and seeing the hose turned on, with the water spurting out, had picked up the nozzle end and was watering the garden. Only she held the hose so high that the water shot over the high front hedge and was wetting some man pa.s.sing in the street.
That is what Bunny thought. But that is not what had happened.
Just before he turned the corner of the house he heard the man"s voice once more saying:
"Say, isn"t it enough to wet me once? What are you keeping it up for? I am trying to get out of the way, but you follow me. I"m coming in and see about this!"
Something very like trouble seemed about to happen.
"Sue! Sue!" cried Bunny, still thinking his sister was to blame. "Let that hose alone!"
But when he turned the corner of the house and could see the garden, Sue was not in sight. And, stranger still, no one was at the hose. There it lay, still spurting water out on the thick, green gra.s.s.
Who had picked up the nozzle and sprayed the unseen man in the street?
If it was Sue where had she gone?
"Sue! Sue!" called Bunny. "Were you playing with the hose?"
Sue"s head was thrust out of the window of her room upstairs.
"What"s the matter, Bunny?" she asked.
"Oh, you"re up there, are you?" exclaimed the little boy, much surprised. "Were you down here at the hose?"
"No. I"m getting dressed. I haven"t been down in the yard at all yet."
"Then who did it?" thought Bunny. "I wonder----"
But just then a man, who seemed to have been out in a rain storm without an umbrella, came hurrying around the side path. He caught sight of Bunny standing near the hose.
"Look here, my little boy," said the man, trying not to speak angrily, though he was rightfully provoked, "you must be more careful with your hose. You have wet me very much. Does your mother know you are doing this?"
"She--she knows I"m watering the garden," Bunny answered.