Six Little Bunkers at Cowboy Jack's
ment for only a few hours in a Pullman car had made them very restless. It was impossible for them always to keep quiet, and the
iate how difficult it was for the six to be always on their best behavior. And the passengers co
nkers almost from the very moment they had boarded the
of children and they are go
nnoy him. He was a very fat man, and the car was sometimes too warm for him, and he was always complaining to th
e suited him at all! Mun Bun and Margy made friends with almost everybody in the car but the fat man. He would not even look at
id the fat ma
. He could not understand it at all. He looked at the fat man i
d soberly, "do y
candy that is good for you now
Pep'mint for ache," and he rubbed himself
ded his mother anxiously. "Ar
hat Mother Bunker sometimes gave it to him when he had pain, he said
addy Bunker, who had noted th
ry politely if he needed "pep'mint."
! You are a
a subdued way, for he was not used to being treated
nt into the smoking room while his own berth was being made up, and when he came back to the berths, daddy
un Bun. The boys in the upper berth had been asleep for
mething had awakened him or not, Russ lay straining his ears to catch a repetition of
red, nudging the boy next t
was, as the children say, "for keeps." Russ had to punch him
t morning?" m
ght in his ear. "That ma
tell daddy about it, Russ Bunker. Don't you tell me. I
it," admitted Russ, shak
ne?" repeated Laddie, his doubt gro
f. And if he says he's being m
ime Laddie hearing as well as Russ the moaning of
you?" gasped Russ. "I'm-
ng with you," Laddie cried. "I don't wan
ot and dropped down behind the curtain. Laddie was right behind him, and in fac
ace which spelled safety to their disturbed imagi
-r-r
squawked when Jerry Simms grabbed it by the
ered Laddie, tugging at Russ's pajama jac
ed into the narrow aisle of the sleeping car. The first thing he saw was the colored porter, his cap on awry, his eyes rolling so that their whites were
er!" whispered
mur-murdered?" s
he was going to do the mur
er. The colored man crept nearer, nearer-and then suddenly he snatched away the
e lay on his back with his knees up, his face very red, his eyes tightly
fat passenger by the shoulder. "I suah 'nough thunk somebody was bein' choked t
red around. He saw the face of the porter at last
Must have been dreaming
ays, you bettah have a car by yo'self. For yo' ain't goin' to
open their curtains and ask questions of the porter. The fat man grabbed h
s stool and going back to his place. "Ain't nobody kil
again till broad daylight. They had to tell the other little Bunkers before breakfast about what h
ainy day at home was no great cross for the children to bear. There was always the attic to play in. But on the train, w
d of the train was reduced until, by the middle of the forenoon, it seemed only to creep along. The c
on clotheslines, like Norah's washlines? Why
ther no peace at all. And the other children were interested in the possibility that
ly steaming through a deep cut in the wooded hills when, of a sudden, the brakes were applied and the train ca
Here's the washout!"
ut of the door, M
e door was open. Daddy got up and went with the children, all cl
m a hole, or a washout as the children had imagined that to be,
Werewolf
Romance
Romance
Romance
Werewolf
Modern