The Wonderful Bed by Gertrude Knevels
page 14 of 128 (10%)
page 14 of 128 (10%)
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and knees any longer, for even Rudolf, who was tallest, could not
touch the arched white roof when he stood up and stretched his arm above his head. He could not see Ann's face clearly, but he could hear her beginning to sniff. "Now, Ann," said he sternly, though in rather a weak voice, "don't you know what this is? This is an adventure." "I don't care," sniffed Ann, "I don't want an adventure. I want to go back--back to Aunt Jane!" And the sniff developed into a flood of tears. "Peter is not crying, and he is only six." This rebuke told on Ann, for she was almost eight. "But what are we go--going to do?" she asked, her sobs decreasing into sniffs again. "We'll just have to go on, I suppose, and see what happens." "Well, I think--I think Aunt Jane ought to be ashamed of herself to put us in such a big bed we could get lost in it!" "Maybe"--came the voice of Peter cheerfully from behind them--"maybe she _wanted_ to lose us, like bad people does kittens." "Peter, don't be silly," ordered Rudolf sternly. "There isn't really anything that can happen to us," he went on, speaking slowly and thoughtfully, "because we all know that we really are in bed. We know we didn't get _out_, so of course we must be _in_." |
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