Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm | Page 4

Kate Douglas Wiggin
'em!
"Well, she's going there, and they're expecting her. Will you keep an
eye on her, please? If she can get out anywhere and get with folks, or
get anybody in to keep her company, she'll do it. Good-by, Rebecca; try
not to get into any mischief, and sit quiet, so you'll look neat an' nice
when you get there. Don't be any trouble to Mr. Cobb. --You see, she's
kind of excited.--We came on the cars from Temperance yesterday,
slept all night at my cousin's, and drove from her house--eight miles it
is--this morning."
"Good-by, mother, don't worry; you know it isn't as if I hadn't traveled
before."
The woman gave a short sardonic laugh and said in an explanatory way
to Mr. Cobb, "She's been to Wareham and stayed over night; that isn't
much to be journey-proud on!"
"It WAS TRAVELING, mother," said the child eagerly and willfully.
"It was leaving the farm, and putting up lunch in a basket, and a little
riding and a little steam cars, and we carried our nightgowns."
"Don't tell the whole village about it, if we did," said the mother,
interrupting the reminiscences of this experienced voyager. "Haven't I
told you before," she whispered, in a last attempt at discipline, "that
you shouldn't talk about night gowns and stockings and--things like that,
in a loud tone of voice, and especially when there's men folks round?"
"I know, mother, I know, and I won't. All I want to say is"--here Mr.
Cobb gave a cluck, slapped the reins, and the horses started sedately on
their daily task--"all I want to say is that it is a journey when"--the
stage was really under way now and Rebecca had to put her head out of

the window over the door in order to finish her sentence--"it IS a
journey when you carry a nightgown!"
The objectionable word, uttered in a high treble, floated back to the
offended ears of Mrs. Randall, who watched the stage out of sight,
gathered up her packages from the bench at the store door, and stepped
into the wagon that had been standing at the hitching-post. As she
turned the horse's head towards home she rose to her feet for a moment,
and shading her eyes with her hand, looked at a cloud of dust in the dim
distance.
"Mirandy'll have her hands full, I guess," she said to herself; "but I
shouldn't wonder if it would be the making of Rebecca."
All this had been half an hour ago, and the sun, the heat, the dust, the
contemplation of errands to be done in the great metropolis of Milltown,
had lulled Mr. Cobb's never active mind into complete oblivion as to
his promise of keeping an eye on Rebecca.
Suddenly he heard a small voice above the rattle and rumble of the
wheels and the creaking of the harness. At first he thought it was a
cricket, a tree toad, or a bird, but having determined the direction from
which it came, he turned his head over his shoulder and saw a small
shape hanging as far out of the window as safety would allow. A long
black braid of hair swung with the motion of the coach; the child held
her hat in one hand and with the other made ineffectual attempts to stab
the driver with her microscopic sunshade.
"Please let me speak!" she called.
Mr. Cobb drew up the horses obediently.
"Does it cost any more to ride up there with you?" she asked. "It's so
slippery and shiny down here, and the stage is so much too big for me,
that I rattle round in it till I'm 'most black and blue. And the windows
are so small I can only see pieces of things, and I've 'most broken my
neck stretching round to find out whether my trunk has fallen off the
back. It's my mother's trunk, and she's very choice of it."
Mr. Cobb waited until this flow of conversation, or more properly
speaking this flood of criticism, had ceased, and then said jocularly:--
"You can come up if you want to; there ain't no extry charge to sit side
o' me." Whereupon he helped her out, "boosted" her up to the front seat,
and resumed his own place.
Rebecca sat down carefully, smoothing her dress under her with

painstaking precision, and putting her sunshade under its extended
folds between the driver and herself. This done she pushed back her hat,
pulled up her darned white cotton gloves, and said delightedly:--
"Oh! this is better! This is like traveling! I am a real passenger now,
and down there I felt like our setting hen when we shut her up in a coop.
I hope we have a long, long ways to go?"
"Oh! we've
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