<h2><SPAN name="XX" id="XX"></SPAN>XX</h2>
<h3>A LONG JOURNEY</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">By sunrise</span> Miss Kitty Cat had trotted at
least a mile along the road that passed the
peddler's house. She wanted to get a safe
distance away before the family got up
and turned loose the dog that had barked
the night before, when she arrived.</p>
<p>Miss Kitty remembered clearly that the
wagon had been climbing a long hill before
it turned into the peddler's dooryard. So
without hesitating she started <i>down</i> the
road. She knew that in that direction lay
Pleasant Valley—and her home at Farmer
Green's.</p>
<p>Having put the first mile of her journey<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_91" id="p_91"></SPAN></span>
behind her, Miss Kitty stopped beside a
little brook and drank her fill of cool,
sweet water. She was very thirsty, because
she hadn't had a drink since the
evening before.</p>
<p>A pretty wood stretched beyond the
brook, tempting Miss Kitty Cat to explore
it. At that hour of the morning there
were many birds twittering among the
trees. And spry chipmunks were frisking
about in search of their breakfast.
Miss Kitty Cat just naturally began to
think of her own breakfast.</p>
<p>"If I were at home, Mrs. Green would
be setting a saucer of milk on the woodshed
steps about this time," she murmured.
"But now I must shift for myself."</p>
<p>Luckily Miss Kitty was quite able to
find something to eat, as a surprised
meadow mouse soon discovered.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_92" id="p_92"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>After breakfasting, Miss Kitty lingered
a while to tease the birds, who scolded her
shrilly, calling her a tramp and telling her
to get out of their woods.</p>
<p>Of course Miss Kitty had to stay there
for a time after that, to let the birds know
that they couldn't frighten her away.
She scared them almost out of their wits
by threatening to climb up where their
nests were. But she didn't do more than
sharpen her claws against a tree-trunk.
That alone was enough to throw them into
a panic.</p>
<p>At last, after she had bothered the birds
quite enough, Miss Kitty Cat set off for
Pleasant Valley once more. Sometimes
she travelled through fields; sometimes she
jogged along the roads; sometimes she
jumped to the top of a stone wall and used
that for a highway. And always when
she heard the creak and rattle of a wagon,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_93" id="p_93"></SPAN></span>
as the sun rose higher and higher, she
crept into the bushes and hid until she had
the road to herself again.</p>
<p>If Miss Kitty hadn't been homesick she
would have thought her adventure a great
lark. But somehow she couldn't get Mrs.
Green's house out of her mind. Especially
the thought of the kitchen, with its
delicious odors of seven-layer cakes baking
in the oven, and doughnuts frying on
top of the range, made Miss Kitty's nose
twitch. And her own particular warm
spot under the range, where she basked
away long hours! When she recalled that
it was no wonder that her pace quickened.</p>
<p>Perhaps Miss Kitty Cat herself couldn't
have told exactly how she knew the way
back to Farmer Green's place. No doubt
she wouldn't have told, had she known;
for she was one of the kind that keep such
things to themselves. She never even<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_94" id="p_94"></SPAN></span>
explained to old dog Spot, afterward,
where she spent the three nights that she
was away from the farm.</p>
<p>Anyhow, Miss Kitty Cat kept plodding
along. And one afternoon when she came
out of a patch of woods on a hill-top, she
saw something looming right ahead of her
that looked familiar.</p>
<p>It was Blue Mountain. And she knew
that on the other side of it lay Pleasant
Valley—and her home at Farmer Green's.</p>
<hr class="chapter" />
<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_95" id="p_95"></SPAN></span></p>
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