"I want to come!" cried Trouble, as he saw his brother and sister starting out with their skates on straps over their shoulders.
"Oh, no! You"re too little!" said his mother. "You must stay with me."
But Trouble did not wish to do that, and cried until Nora came in and said he might help her bake a cake. This pleased the little fellow, who, if he were given a piece of dough, not too sticky, to play with, had a fine time imagining he was making pies or a cake.
So Ted and Janet hurried off to the pond and were soon skating away with other boys and girls of their own age and size.
"Come on, now, let"s race!" cried Ted, after a bit. "I"ll get to the other side of the pond "fore you do, Jan!"
"No, you won"t!" she exclaimed, and the Curlytops started off on their race, the others watching.
For a while Ted was ahead, and then, whether it was because she was a better skater or because her skates were sharper, Jan pa.s.sed her brother. He tried to catch up to her but could not.
And then, when Jan was about twenty feet ahead of Teddy and in the middle of the pond, the ice suddenly began to crack.
"Look out! Come on back! You"ll go through!" cried Tom Taylor.
"Oh, she"s in now!" screamed Lola.
And, as Lola spoke, Jan went through the ice into the black water beneath.
"Skate to sh.o.r.e! Skate to sh.o.r.e!" called Tom to the others. "Get off the ice or you"ll go in, too!"
The other children did as he said, and it was well that they did, for the ice was now cracking in all directions from the big hole in the middle, through which Janet had gone down.
Teddy, who was skating as hard as he could, could not stop himself at once, but went on, straight for the hole through which his sister had slipped.
"Stop! Stop!" yelled Tom, waving his hands at Ted. "Stop!"
Ted tried to, digging the back point of his skate into the ice as he had seen other skaters do when they wanted to stop quickly. But he was going too fast to come to a halt soon enough, and it looked as though he, also, would go into the water.
"Fall down and slide! Fall down!" cried a bigger boy who had come over to see if his own little brother was all right on the pond.
Ted understood what this boy meant. By falling down on the ice and sliding, he would not go as fast, and he might stop before he got to the hole where the black water looked so cold and wet.
Flinging his feet from under him Ted dropped full length on the frozen pond, but still he felt himself sliding toward the hole. He could see Janet now. She was trying to stand up and she was crying and sobbing.
CHAPTER X
THANKSGIVING
"Look out, Teddy! Look out, or you"ll fall in same as I did!"
This is what Janet Martin called to her brother as she saw him sliding toward her when she was in the pond where she had broken through the ice. She stopped crying and shivering from the icy water long enough to say that.
"Stop, Teddy! Stop!" she shouted.
"I"m tryin" to!" he answered. He pressed hard with his mittened hands on the smooth ice on which he had thrown himself. It was very slippery. He was sliding ahead feet first and he could lift up his head and look at his sister.
Luckily the water was not deep in the pond--hardly over Janet"s knees--and when she had fallen through the ice she had managed to stand up. Her feet, with the skates still on them, were down in the soft mud and ooze of the pond, the bottom of which had not frozen.
"I can"t stop!" yelled Teddy, and it did seem as though he would go into the water also. But he stopped just in time, far enough away from the hole to prevent his going through the ice, which had cracked in three or more places.
"Crawl back to sh.o.r.e!" yelled the big boy, named Ford Henderson, who had come to look after his own little brother, whom he found safe. "Crawl back to sh.o.r.e, Curlytop. Don"t stand up, or you might fall down where the ice is thin and crack a hole in it. Crawl back to sh.o.r.e!"
"But I want to help Janet!" said Teddy, who was almost ready to cry himself, since he saw in what plight his sister Janet now was.
"I"ll get her out!" called Ford.
Then, while Teddy slowly crawled back over the ice, which every now and then cracked a little, as if the whole frozen top of the pond were going to fall in, Ford, the big boy, not in the least minding his feet getting wet, ran to where Janet stood up in the hole. Ford broke through the ice also, but as he was quite tall the water did not even come to his knees.
"Don"t cry. You"ll be all right soon," said Ford in a kind voice to the little girl. "I"ll take you home!"
Then, being strong, he lifted her up in his arms, skates and all, and, with the mud and water dripping from her feet while his own were soaking wet, the big boy ran toward the Martin home with Janet.
"You come along, too, Curlytop!" called Ford to Teddy. "If I bring in your sister, all wet from having fallen through the ice, your mother will be afraid you are drowned. Come along!"
So Teddy, quickly taking off his skates, Tom Taylor helping him, ran along beside Ford, who was carrying Janet. The other boys and girls who had run from the cracking ice in time to get off before they broke through, followed, so there was quite a procession coming toward the Martin house. Mrs. Martin, looking out of the window, saw it and, seeing Jan being carried by the big boy, guessed at once what had happened.
"Oh, my goodness!" she cried to Nora. "Jan has fallen through the ice.
She"ll be soaking wet and cold. Get some hot water ready, and I"ll bring some blankets to warm. She must be given a hot bath and put to bed in warm clothes. Maybe Teddy is wet, too, or some of the others. Hurry, Nora!"
And Nora hurried as she never had before, so that by the time Ford had set Jan down in a chair by the stove in the kitchen and had helped Mrs.
Martin take off her wet skates and shoes, the water was ready and Janet was given a hot foot bath.
"You must dry yourself, Ford," said Mrs. Martin. "I can"t thank you enough for saving my little girl!"
"Oh, she was all right," answered Ford. "She stood up herself, because the water wasn"t deep, and I just lifted her out of the mud. Ted did well, too, for he stopped himself from going into the hole."
"I was going to get Janet out," Teddy answered.
"I knew you would be a brave little boy when your sister was in danger,"
said Mrs. Martin. "Now here is some hot milk for you, Janet, and I guess you"re old enough to have a little coffee, Ford. It will keep you from catching cold I hope."
"Couldn"t he have some bread and jam with it, Mother?" asked Janet, as she sipped her warm drink. "Maybe he"s hungry."
"Maybe he is!" laughed Mrs. Martin.
"Oh, don"t bother!" exclaimed Ford.
But Mrs. Martin got it ready and Ford ate the bread and jam as though he liked it. So did Ted, and then Nora took some cookies out to the boys and girls from the pond who had gathered in front of the Martin home to talk about Janet"s having gone through the ice and of how Ford had pulled her out of the mud.
Altogether there was a great deal of excitement, and many people in town talked about the Curlytops that night when the boys and girls went to their homes with the news.