"But I"d rather have Sallie Malinda!"
"I know, dear, but you can name the new one that."
"Sue"s Teddy"s had lots of adventures," said Bunny. "The hermit took her, and now she"s lost."
"Well, I"m not going to give up yet," said his sister, as she looked carefully along the road.
"But what can have become of Dix?" asked Mrs. Brown. "I can"t understand him."
"Oh, he may have gone off chasing a rabbit or a squirrel," said Mr.
Brown. "Anyhow we"re almost at the bridge, and the spot where we had the engine trouble is not far beyond."
Silently those in the auto looked along the road for a sight of Sue"s Teddy. Then suddenly Bunny said,
"No, he didn"t!"
"Who didn"t what?" asked his father, for Bunny would often make these sudden exclamations.
"Dix didn"t go off chasing a rabbit or a squirrel," said Bunny. "There he comes now--with an elephant, I guess," and the little boy pointed down the road.
There was Dix coming back, and he was half dragging and half carrying something that looked like an animal.
On and on came the dog. He seemed very tired. When he saw the automobile he stopped, dropped what he had in his mouth, and lay down beside it.
Then he began to bark joyfully.
"Oh, it"s my Sallie Malinda! It"s my Teddy bear!" cried Sue. "You dear old Dix! You found Sallie Malinda for me!"
And that is just what had happened, they decided after they had talked it over among themselves. Dix must have been running along behind the auto when he saw Sue"s pet jostled out. Knowing how the little girl loved her Teddy bear he picked it up and began to half drag and half carry it, for, as Mr. Brown had said, the electrical batteries that made the Teddy"s eyes shine, were heavy. Poor Dix had all he could do to drag the Teddy bear, but he would not let go, and the noise made by the auto made it impossible for those in the car to hear his barks, which he must have given.
And so they rode on, paying no attention, but leaving Dix far behind, until Sue discovered the loss of her Teddy bear.
"Oh, you are a dear good dog, and I love you!" cried Sue, hugging the Teddy bear with one arm and Dix with the other. And the dog was plainly overjoyed at being with his friends again.
I suppose the Teddy bear was glad too, but of course she could not even wag her little stub of a tail to show it. However, Sue could make the pet"s eyes gleam, which she did again and again.
Nor was the Teddy bear much damaged by being dragged in the dirt, for the roads were not muddy, and Dix had held her up out of the dust as much as he could.
"Oh, but I"m glad to get my darling Sallie Malinda back!" cried Sue.
"Dix is a good dog," put in Bunny. "He can ride in the auto now, can"t he, Daddy? He must be tired."
"Yes, get him and Splash both in," said Mr. Brown. "I think it is going to rain, and I want to get to the next town where we will stay overnight."
"In a hotel?" asked Bunny.
"No; in our auto, of course."
The dogs were called in, and Dix seemed glad to rest. Then Daddy Brown turned the big car around and once more they were on their way. It began to rain before they reached the town of Welldon, on the edge of which they were to stop for the night.
But the rain did not matter to those in the big moving van, which was like a little house. They had their supper inside, sat reading or playing games by the electric light, and listened to the rain on the roof, for it came down more and more heavily.
"Isn"t it a nice place?" said Bunny to Sue, as they went to bed.
"The bestest ever!" she cried.
It was about the middle of the night that Bunny was awakened by feeling a queer b.u.mping, sliding motion.
"Why," he cried, sitting up in his bunk, "we must be traveling on in the dark! Daddy! Momsie!" he cried. "What are we moving for, when it"s dark?"
"What"s that?" cried Mr. Brown suddenly awakening.
"The automobile is running away!" cried Bunny, and outside they could hear a strange roaring sound amid the patter of the rain.
CHAPTER XI
IN THE FLOOD
For a moment all was confusion inside the big automobile. Mr. and Mrs.
Brown got up and dressed hastily. Bunny and Sue thought little of doing that until Sue, feeling cold around her bare legs, called to her brother:
"Wrap yourself up in a blanket, Bunny, like an Indian."
"What"s going on?" yelled Uncle Tad, from his bunk.
"That"s what we"re trying to find out," said Mr. Brown.
"Seems to me we"re afloat," added Uncle Tad. "We certainly are at sea."
"It does feel so," agreed Daddy Brown, for the automobile was b.u.mping along the roadway, and the motor was not running, either. Something was either pushing or pulling it.
Just then came the howls and whines of the two dogs, Dix and Splash.
They had been left out on the front seat of the car, with big curtains hung in front of them so no rain could splatter on them.
"Oh, something"s the matter with them!" cried Bunny Brown, and in a few minutes he had opened the window back of the seat and let the frantic dogs leap into the auto. They barked joyfully now, and frisked about Bunny and Sue.
With the opening of the window, however, came in a gust of wind and rain that made Mrs. Brown call:
"Children you"ll catch dreadful colds! Get right to bed this instant."
"Oh, Mother, we want to stay up and see what"s going to happen," said Bunny. "Maybe the automobile might tip over."
"And if we were in bed we"d be all upside down and tangled in the clothes," added Sue. "Please let us stay up! We"ll wrap in blankets like Indians."
"Better let them get dressed," said Mr. Brown in a low voice to his wife. "There"s no telling what has happened."