Seven O\'Clock Stories
SEVEN O'CLOCK STORIES BY ROBERT GORDON ANDERSON TO JEAN AND MALCOLM TO WHOM THESE STORIES WERE FIRST TOLD CONTENTS FIRST NIGHT THE THREE HAPPY CHILDREN
expectin' nobody, as I know of. But in the other direction from
Millbank--Sodd Corners way--I may catch a load, if I'm lucky."
So back he drove, leaving the Conants' traps by the roadside, and Peter
began looking around for Morrison's man. The doors of the house were
fast locked, front and rear. There was no one in the barn or the shed-
like garage, where a rusty looking automobile stood. Peter looked around
the grounds in vain. Then he whistled. Afterward he began bawling out
"Hi, there!" in a voice that echoed lonesomely throughout the mountain
side.
And, at last, when they were all beginning to despair, a boy came
slouching around a corner of the house, from whence no one could guess.
He was whittling a stick and he continued to whittle while he stared at
the unexpected arrivals and slowly advanced. When about fifteen paces
away he halted, with feet planted well apart, and bent his gaze sturdily
on his stick and knife. He was barefooted, dressed in faded blue-jeans
overalls and a rusty gingham shirt--the two united by a strap over one
shoulder--and his head was covered by a broad Scotch golf cap much too
big for him and considerably too warm for the season.
"Come here!" commanded Mr. Conant.
The boy did not move, therefore the lawyer advanced angrily toward him.
"Why didn't you obey me?" he asked.
SEVEN O'CLOCK STORIES BY ROBERT GORDON ANDERSON TO JEAN AND MALCOLM TO WHOM THESE STORIES WERE FIRST TOLD CONTENTS FIRST NIGHT THE THREE HAPPY CHILDREN