The Little House in the Fairy Wood by Ethel Cook Eliot
page 73 of 126 (57%)
page 73 of 126 (57%)
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At his cry all the little windows in the little moss houses opened and
there were the tousled heads of the Forest Children, their eyes blinking sleepily against the gilded morning light. "Thank you, thank you," Ivra cried back to the youngest Forest Child. "Hurry and follow." Before they had gone on their way five minutes more the Forest Children were up with them, tugging at buckles and sandal strings as they ran, begging not to be left behind. Soon they came to Big Pine Hill, a hill deep in the forest with no trees but a giant pine at the top. The Wind Creatures had built a slide there by brushing away the snow and leaving a broad track of shining blue ice. Up under the pine were sleds enough for every one, made all of woven hemlock branches. They needed no runners for the ice was so slippery and the hill so steep _anything_ would go down it fast enough. Ivra's Forest Friends must have worked all the day before to make those sleds--and now her shining face and clasped hands were reward enough. She was the first to try the hill. She threw herself on her sled and down she flashed. At the bottom she tumbled off, and still on her knees shouted up to Eric and the others at the top, "Oh, it's splendid! Come on!" Then the hill was covered with speeding sleds. The Bird Fairies had none of their own, for they were so little they might have come to harm on that hill. But they had just as good a time for all of that, catching rides with the others, clinging to shoulders or heads or feet as it happened. |
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