<h2 id="c3">CHAPTER III <br/><span class="small">“GET A HORSE!”</span></h2>
<p>“Hello there, Coz!” shouted Nat White, as
Dorothy stepped from the train. “And there’s
Tavia—and well! If it isn’t Bob Niles!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Dorothy, postponing further greetings
until the train should pull out, and Tavia’s
last hand-wave be returned. “We met him coming
up, and he goes to Dalton.”</p>
<p>“Well I’ll be jiggered! And he has Tavia for
company!” exclaimed the young man, who for
years had regarded Tavia as his particular property,
as far as solid friendship was concerned.</p>
<p>“And Tavia has already vowed to be mean to
him,” said Dorothy, as she now pressed her warm
cheek against that of her cousin, the latter’s
being briskly red from the snowy air. “She
would scarcely speak to him on the train.”</p>
<p>“A bad sign,” said Nat, as he helped Dorothy
with her bag. “There are the Blakes. May as
well ask them up; their machine does not seem to
be around.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_25">[25]</div>
<p>The pretty little country station was gay with
holiday arrivals, and among them were many
known to Dorothy and her popular cousin. The
Blakes gladly accepted the invitation to ride over
in the <i>Fire Bird</i>, their auto having somehow missed
them.</p>
<p>“You look—lovely,” Mabel Blake complimented
Dorothy.</p>
<p>“Doesn’t she?” chimed in Mabel’s brother, at
which Dorothy buried her face deeper in her furs.
Nat cranked up; and soon the <i>Fire Bird</i> was on its
way toward the Cedars, the country home of Mrs.
Nathaniel White, and her two sons, Nat and Ned.
Mrs. White was the only sister of Major Dale,
Dorothy’s father, and the Dale family, Dorothy
and her brothers, Joe and little Roger, had lately
made their home with her.</p>
<p>It lacked but a few days of Christmas, and the
snowstorm added much to the beauty of the scene,
while the cold was not so severe as to make the
weather unpleasant. All sorts of happy remembrances
were recalled between the occupants of the
automobile, as it bravely made its way through
drifts and small banks.</p>
<p>“Oh, there’s old Peter!” exclaimed Dorothy,
as a man, his stooped shoulders hidden under a
load of evergreens, trudged along.</p>
<p>“And such a heavy burden,” added Mabel.
“Couldn’t we give him a lift?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_26">[26]</div>
<p>Nat slowed up a little to give the old man more
room in the roadway. “Those Christmas trees
are poor company in a machine,” he said. “I
have tried them before.”</p>
<p>“But it is so hard for him to travel all the way
to the village?” pleaded Dorothy. “We could
put his trees on back, and he could——”</p>
<p>“Sit with you and Mabel?” and Ted Blake
laughed at the idea.</p>
<p>“No, you could do that?” retorted Dorothy,
“and Peter could ride with Nat. Please, Nat——”</p>
<p>“Oh, all right, Coz, if it will make you happy.
I wish, sometimes, I were lame, halt and old
enough—to know.” Whereat he stopped the
machine and insisted on old Peter doing as the
girls had suggested.</p>
<p>It was no easy matter to get the trees, and the
bunches of greens, securely fastened to the back
of the auto, but it was finally accomplished. Peter
was profuse in his thanks, for the greens had been
specially ordered, he said, and he was already late
in delivering them.</p>
<p>“Which way do you go?” asked Nat.</p>
<p>“Out to the Squire’s,” replied Peter. “But
that road is soft, I wouldn’t ask you take it.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I guess we can make it,” proposed Nat.
“The <i>Fire Bird</i> is not quite a locomotive.”</p>
<p>“She goes like a bird, sure enough,” affirmed
Peter. “But that road is full of ditches.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_27">[27]</div>
<p>“We will try them, at any rate,” insisted Nat,
as he turned from the main road to a narrow
stretch of white track that cut through woods and
farm lands.</p>
<p>“If we are fortunate enough not to meet anything,”
said Dorothy. “But I have always been
afraid of a single road, bound with ditches.”</p>
<p>“Of course,” growled Nat, “there comes Terry
with his confounded cows.”</p>
<p>Plowing along, his head down and his whip in
hand came Terry, the half-witted boy who, Winter
and Summer, drove the cows from their field or
barn to the slaughter house. He never raised his
head as Nat tooted the horn, and by the time the
machine was abreast of the drove of cattle, Nat
was obliged to make a quick swerve to avoid striking
the animals.</p>
<p>“Oh!” gasped both Dorothy and Mabel. The
car lunged, then came to a sudden stop, while the
engine still pounded to get ahead.</p>
<p>“Hang the luck!” groaned Nat, vainly trying
to start the car, which was plainly stalled.</p>
<p>“I told you,” commented Peter, inappropriately.
“This here road——”</p>
<p>“Oh, hang the road!” interrupted Nat. “It
was that loon—Terry.”</p>
<p>As the young man spoke Terry passed along as
mutely as if nothing had happened.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_28">[28]</div>
<p>“I’d like to try that whip on him, to see if I
could wake him up,” said Ted, as he leaped out
after Nat to see what could be done to get the car
back on the road.</p>
<p>But it was an impossible task. Pushing, pulling,
prying with fence rails—all efforts left the
big, red car stuck just where it had floundered.</p>
<p>“I know,” spoke Peter, suddenly. “I’ll get
Sanders’s horse.”</p>
<p>“Sanders wouldn’t lend his horse to pull a man
out of a ditch,” said Nat. “I’ve asked him before.”</p>
<p>“That’s where you made a mistake,” replied
Peter. “I won’t ask him,” and he awkwardly
managed to get out of the car, and was soon out
on the road and making his way across the snow-covered
fields.</p>
<p>“We may be tried for horse-stealing next,” remarked
Ted, grimly. “Girls, are you perishing?”</p>
<p>“Not a bit of it,” declared Dorothy. “This
snow is warm rather than cold.”</p>
<p>“My face is burning,” insisted Mabel. “But
I do hope old Sanders does not set his dogs on us.”</p>
<p>“He’s as deaf as a post,” Ted said. “That’s
a blessing—this time, at least.”</p>
<p>“There goes Peter in the barn,” Dorothy remarked.
“He has got that far safely, at any
rate.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_29">[29]</div>
<p>A strained silence followed this announcement.
Yes, Peter had gone into the barn. It seemed
night would come before he could possibly secure
the old horse, and get to the roadway to give the
necessary pull to the stalled <i>Fire Bird</i>. They
waited, eagerly watching the barn door. Finally
it opened. Yes, Peter was coming, leading the
horse.</p>
<p>“Now!” said Peter, standing with an emergency
rope ready, “if only he gets past the
house——”</p>
<p>He stopped. The door of the snow-covered
cottage opened, and there stood the unapproachable
Sanders.</p>
<p>“Oh!” gasped Mabel. “Now we are in for
it!”</p>
<p>“Then,” said Dorothy, “let us be ready for it.
I’ll prepare the defence,” and before they realized
what she was about to do she had selected one of
the very choicest Christmas trees, and with it on
her fur-covered shoulder, actually started up the
box-wood lined walk to where the much-dreaded
Sanders was standing, ready to mete out vengeance
on the man who had dared to enter his barn, and
take from it his horse.</p>
<p>“Oh Mr. Sanders!” called Dorothy. “Have
you that dear little grand-daughter with you?
The pretty one we had at the church affair last
year?”</p>
<p>“You mean Emily?” he drawled. “Yep, she’s
here, but——”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_30">[30]</div>
<p>“Then, you wonder why we have taken your
horse? And why we were stalled here?” The
others could hear her from the roadway. They
could see, also, that Sanders had stopped to listen.
“Now we want Emily to have a Christmas tree,
all her own,” went on Dorothy, “and Peter is
good enough to donate it. But our machine—those
cars are not like horses,” she almost shouted,
as Sanders being deaf, and watching the inexorable
Peter leading his horse away, had cause to
be aroused from his natural surprise. “After all,”
persisted Dorothy, “a horse is the best.”</p>
<p>By this time Peter was outside the big gate.
Sanders made a move as if to follow, when Dorothy
almost dropped the clumsy tree.</p>
<p>“Oh, please take it!” she begged. “I want to
see Emily while they are towing the machine out.
It’s a lucky thing it happened just here, and that
you are kind enough to let us have your horse.”</p>
<p>“Well what do you think of that!” exclaimed
Ted, in a voice loud enough for those near him to
hear. “Of all the clever tricks!”</p>
<p>“Oh, depend on Doro for cleverness,” replied
Nat, proudly. “You just do your part, Ted, and
make this rope fast.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_31">[31]</div>
<p>Mabel stood looking on in speechless surprise.
She saw now that Dorothy and old Sanders were
entering the cottage. Dorothy was first, and the
man, with the Christmas tree, followed close behind
her. The boys with Peter were busy with
rope, horse and auto. Soon they had the necessary
connection made, with Nat at the wheel, and
all were tugging with might and main to get the
<i>Fire Bird</i> free from the ditch.</p>
<p>If there is anything more nerve-racking than
such an attempt, it must be some other attempt at
a balking auto. Would it move, or would it sink
deeper into the mud that lay hidden beneath the
newly-fallen snow?</p>
<p>Nat turned the wheel first this way and then
that. Ted had his weight pressed against the rear
wheel of the machine, while Peter coaxed and led
the horse. Suddenly the old horse, as if desperate,
gave a jerk and pulled the <i>Fire Bird</i> clear out into
the roadway!</p>
<div class="fig">> <ANTIMG src="images/fig1.jpg" alt="SUDDENLY THE OLD HORSE, AS IF DESPERATE, GAVE A JERK AND PULLED THE FIRE BIRD CLEAR." width-obs="500" height-obs="781" /> <p class="center"><span class="small">SUDDENLY THE OLD HORSE, AS IF DESPERATE, GAVE A JERK AND PULLED THE FIRE BIRD CLEAR.</span></p> </div>
<p>“Hurrah!” yelled Ted, bounding through the
snow.</p>
<p>“Great stunt!” corroborated Nat. “Peter,
you are all right!”</p>
<p>“Peter did some,” replied the old man, freeing
the horse from the rope that held him to the machine;
“but that young lady—if she hadn’t kept
Sanders busy—we might all have been arrested
for horse-stealing.”</p>
<p>“She knew his weak spot,” agreed Nat. “That
little Emily seems to be the one weak and soft spot
in old Sanders’s life.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_32">[32]</div>
<p>“I had better go up and see what’s going on,”
suggested Mabel, as everything seemed about in
readiness to start off again.</p>
<p>“Good idea,” assented her brother, “he might
be eating her up.”</p>
<p>Mabel rather timidly found her way up to the
cottage. It was already dusk, but the light of a
dim lamp showed her the way, as it gleamed
through a gloomy window, onto the glistening
snow.</p>
<p>“Won’t it be perfectly lovely, Emily?” she
heard Doro saying, as she saw her with her arms
about a little red-haired girl, both sitting on a sofa,
while Sanders attempted to prop the Christmas
tree up in a corner, bracing it with a wooden chair.
Mabel raised the latch without going through the
formality of knocking. As she entered the room,
all but Dorothy started in surprise.</p>
<p>“This is my friend,” Dorothy hurried to explain,
“it is she who is going to help me trim the
tree up for Emily. We will come to-morrow,”
and she rose to leave. “Mabel will fetch the doll,
Emily. That is, of course, if we can persuade
Santa Claus to give us just the kind we want,”
she tried to correct.</p>
<p>“A baby dolly—with long hair and a white
dress,” Emily ordered. “And I want eyelashes.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_33">[33]</div>
<p>“Perticular,” said Sanders, with a proud look
at the child, who, as the boys had said, made up
the one tender spot in his life. “If her ma’s cold
is better, she is coming up herself.”</p>
<p>“Is she sick?” Emily ventured, glad to be able
to say something intelligent.</p>
<p>“Yep,” replied the old man, sadly. “She’s
been sick a long time. I fetched Emily over this
afternoon in the sleigh.”</p>
<p>“Well, we are so much obliged,” remarked
Dorothy. “And good-bye, Emily. You’ll have
everything ready for Santa Claus; won’t you?”</p>
<p>“I’ve got my parlor set from last year,” said
the child, “and mamma says Santa Claus always
likes to see the other things, to know we took care
of them.”</p>
<p>“Thanks, Sanders,” called Peter, at the window.
“The horse is as good as ever. Don’t sell
him without giving me a chance. I could do something
if I owned a mare like that.”</p>
<p>“All right,” called back Sanders, whose pride
was being played upon. “He might be worse.
Did you put her in the far stall?”</p>
<p>“Just where I got her. And I tell you, Sanders,
even a horse can play at Christmas. Only
for him I never could get those trees to town.”</p>
<p>“And only for Peter,” put in Dorothy, “we
could not have gotten Emily her tree. Now that’s
how a horse can turn Santa Claus. Good-bye, Mr.
Sanders, you may expect us before Christmas.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_34">[34]</div>
<p>And then the two girls followed the chuckling
Peter back to the <i>Fire Bird</i>, where the boys impatiently
awaited them, to complete the delayed
party bound for home, and for the Christmas holidays.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_35">[35]</div>
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