And then, land sakes, and a feather pillow; if Buddy Pigg wasn’t fast asleep. Then the kind old June bug sang his song over again, softly, and was about to fly away, when he saw a mosquito going to bite the little guinea pig boy.
And what did that bug do but grab the mosquito and throw him out of the window. And the June bug stayed until he heard Dr. Pigg and his wife coming back, and then he flew away, for he had managed to find the place where he had come in, and crawled out again.
Buddy woke up when his mamma came in his room to see how he was, and he told her all about the June bug, and how kind it had been, and how it had told stories.
“You must have had a lovely dream,” said Mrs. Pigg, but Buddy knew it had actually happened, and wasn’t a dream at all. Now if my typewriter doesn’t fall down and sprain its hair ribbon we’ll next have a story soon about Brighteyes and a bad boy.
[Illustration]
STORY XVI
BRIGHTEYES AND THE BAD BOY
Brighteyes Pigg was coming home from the grocery store one day. She didn’t have much to carry because, you see, her mamma had sent her for only a yeast cake, and, as that wasn’t very large, Matilda put it in her apron pocket.
She was walking along, thinking what a good time she would have when she got home, for Jennie Chipmunk had promised to come over as soon as she got her dishes washed and play house with the little guinea pig girl.
“We’ll have a lovely time,” thought Matilda, who was called Brighteyes for short. “We’ll dress up all our dolls and have a play-party, and maybe mamma will give us real things to eat.”
Well, Brighteyes was thinking so much about the party, and about Jennie Chipmunk, whom she had not seen in some time, that she didn’t pay much attention to anything else. She was going along, hippity-hop, just as Sister Sallie went to the barber shop, when all of a sudden something whizzed right past the nose of Brighteyes and almost hit her.
“My goodness me, sakes alive and a tin dishpan! What’s that?” she exclaimed. “I wonder if it could have been that June bug who told Buddy stories so nicely?”
Then she looked all around and she didn’t see anything of a bug, and she didn’t hear his wings buzzing, so she thought it couldn’t have been him.
Then, bless me! if something more didn’t shoot right past Brighteyes with a whizz and a whozz, making a funny noise, you know. And this time she saw what it was. It was an arrow, the kind that are shot from bows, you understand.
“Oh, the Indians are after me! The Indians are after me!” cried poor Brighteyes in fright, for you see she had read in her school reader about the Indians shooting arrows.
Then the little guinea pig girl started to run, but before she had taken three steps and a half, if another arrow didn’t come whizzing through the bushes at her, and this time it was so close that it just touched her left ear.