Part 9 (2/2)
”Can the little ones come too?” August Stout asked, because he always had to look out for his small brother when there was any danger like fireworks around.
”Yes, and we're goin' to let the girls march in a division by themselves,” Bert told him. ”My sister Nan is going to be captain, and we'll leave all the girls' parts to her.”
”Be sure and bring your flag,” Harry cautioned Jack Hopkins.
”How would the goat wagons do?” Jack asked.
”Fine; we could let Roy and Freddie ride in them,” said Bert. ”Tell any of the other fellows who have goat teams to bring them along too.”
”Eight o'clock sharp at our lane,” Harry told them for the place and time of meeting. Then they went along to finish the arrangements.
”Don't tell the boys,” Nan whispered to Mildred, as they too made their way to Stimpson's.
”Won't they be surprised?” exclaimed Mabel.
”Yes, and I am going to carry a real Betsy Ross flag, one with thirteen stars, you know.”
”Oh, yes, Betsy Ross made the first flag, didn't she?” remarked Mildred, trying to catch up on history.
”We'll have ten big girls,” Nan counted. ”Then with Flossie as Liberty we will want Bessie and Nettie for her a.s.sistants.”
”Attendants,” Mabel corrected, for she had seen a city parade like that once.
It was a busy day for everybody, and when Mr. Bobbsey came up on the train from Lakeport that evening he carried boxes and boxes of fireworks for the boys and girls, and even some for the grown folks too.
The girls could hardly sleep that night, they were so excited over their part, but the boys of course were used to that sort of thing, and only slept sounder with the fun in prospect.
”Are you awake, Bert?” called Harry, so early the next morning that the sun was hardly up yet.
”Yep,” replied the cousin, jumping out of bed and hastily dressing for the firing of the first gun.
The boys crept through the house very quietly, then ran to the barn for their ammunition. Three big giant fire-crackers were placed in the road directly in front of the house.
”Be careful!” whispered Bert; ”they're full of powder.”
But Harry was always careful with fireworks, and when he touched the fuses to the ”cannons” he made away quickly before they exploded.
Bang! Bang! Bang!
”Hurrah!” shouted Freddie, answering the call from his window, ”I'll be right down!”
All the others too were aroused by the first ”guns,” so that in a very short time there were many boys in the road, firing so many kinds of fire-crackers that Meadow Brook resounded like a real war fort under fire.
”Ouch!” yelled Tom Mason, the first one to b.u.m his fingers. ”A sisser caught me right on the thumb.”
But such small accidents were not given much attention, and soon Tom was lighting the little red crackers as merrily as before.
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