
- 88 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
The Box-Car Children
About this book
Determined to stay together Henry, Jessie, Violet, and Benny sneak off in the middle of the night. Their father has died unexpectedly and they are concerned they will be spilt up or even worse sent off to live with their cruel grandfather. In the forest they find an abandoned box car. Here they make their home and begin a series of grand adventures. The Boxcar Children was made into the motion picture in 2014. The National Education Association named the The Box-Car Children one of its Teachers Top 100 Books for Children and School Library Journal ranked it among the all-time Top 100 Chapter Books for Children. This is a edition contains full color illustrations.
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Yes, you can access The Box-Car Children by Gertrude Chandler Warner in PDF and/or ePUB format. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Publisher
Start Publishing LLCYear
2020eBook ISBN
9781649740571EARNING A LIVING
Henry had all sorts of packages under his arm and in his pockets. But he wouldnāt open them or tell a thing about his adventures until dinner was ready, he said. āJess, youāre a wonder!ā he exclaimed when he saw the dishes and the shelf.
The big kettle was selected, and they all began to pick blueberries as fast as they could, telling Henry meanwhile all about the wonderful dump. At last the tablecloth was spread and Henry unwrapped his parcels before the whole excited family.
āI bought some more brown bread,ā he said, producing the loaves, āand some more milkāin the same little store where I went yesterday. Itās kept by a little old man, and itās called a Delicatessen Shop. He has everything in his store to eat. I bought some dried beef because we can eat it in our fingers. And I bought a big bone for the dog.ā
āHis name is Watch,ā Jess interrupted.
āAll right,ā said Henry, accepting the name. āI bought a bone for Watch.ā
Watch fell on the bone as if he were famished, which indeed he nearly was.
It was a rapturous moment when Jess poured the yellow milk into four cups or bowls, and each child proceeded to crumble the brown bread into it with a liberal scattering of blueberries. And then when they ate it with spoons! Nobody was able to speak a word for several minutes.
Then Henry began slowly to tell his tale.
āI earned a dollar just this morning,ā he began proudly. āI walked along the first shady street I came toānice houses, you know. And there was a fellow out mowing his own lawn. Heās a nice fellow, too, I can tell youāa young doctor.ā Henry paused to chew blissfully.
āHe was pretty hot,ā Henry went on. āAnd just as I came to the gate, his telephone rang. I heard it, and called after him and asked if he didnāt want me to finish up.ā
āAnd he said he did!ā cried Jess.
āYes. He said, āFor goodnessā sake, yes!āā Henry answered smiling. āYou see, he wasnāt used to it. So I mowed the lawn and trimmed the edges, and he said he never had a boy trim it as well as I did. And then he asked me if I wanted a steady job.ā
āO Henry!ā cried Violet and Jess together.
āI told him I did, so he said to come back this afternoon any time I wanted, or tomorrowāhe said he didnāt care just whenāany time.ā
Henry gave his cup a last polish with his spoon and set it down dreamily. āItās a pretty house,ā he went on, āand thereās a big garden behind itāvegetable garden. And an orchard behind thatācherry orchard. You ought to see the cherry trees! Well, when I was trimming the edges near the kitchen door, the cook came and watched me. Sheās a fat Irishwoman.ā Henry laughed at the recollection.
āShe asked me if I liked cookies. Oh, if you had smelled them baking youād have died laughing, Benny. Dee-licious! So I said I did, and she passed me out one, and when she went back I put it in my pocket.ā
āDid she see you?ā asked Jess anxiously.
āOh, no,ā said Henry confidently. āFor I carefully chewed away for a long time on nothing at all.ā
Benny began to look fixedly at Henryās pocket. It certainly was still rather bulgy.
āWhen I went, the doctor paid me a dollar, and the cook gave me this bag.ā
Henry grinned as he tossed the paper bag to Jess. Inside were twelve ginger cookies with scalloped edges, smelling faintly of cinnamon and sugar.
āIām going to keep track of everything I earn and spend,ā said Henry, watching Jess as she handed around the cookies with reverence.
āHow are you going to write without a pencil?ā asked Jess.
āThere are pieces of tailorās chalk in my workbag,ā said Violet.
Henry gave his younger sister a gentle pat, as she returned with her workbag and fished for the chalk.
While the girls rinsed the empty dishes in the brook and stored away the food for supper, Henry was beginning his cash account on the wall of his bedroom. It was never erased, and Henry often now looks at the account with great affection.
Soon the girls came to inspect it. Meanwhile Benny looked on with great delight as Watch tried to bury his bone with only one paw to dig with.
āEarned, $1.00; Cash on hand, $3.85,ā read Jess aloud.
Below, he had written:
| Milk | Ā Ā | .24 |
| Bread | Ā Ā | .10 |
| Bread | Ā Ā | .20 |
| Cheese | Ā Ā | .10 |
| Milk | Ā Ā | .24 |
| Beef | Ā Ā | .20 |
| Bone | Ā Ā | .05 |
| Cloth | Ā Ā | .10 |
āCloth!ā exclaimed Violet. āWhat on earth?ā
Henry laughed a little, and watched her face as he drew out his last package and handed it to her.
āI thought we ought to have a tablecloth,ā he explained. āSo I got a yard at the ten-cent storeābut it isnāt hemmed, of course.ā
With a cry of delight Violet unwrapped the brown cloth with its edge of blue. Her clever fingers were already evening the two ends. She was never so happy as when with a needle.
Henry set off again with a light heart. Here was one sister curled up happily against a big tree, setting tiny stitches into a very straight hem. Here was another sister busily gathering pliant twigs into a bundle for a broom with which to sweep the stray pine needles from the house. And here was Benny, curled up sound asleep on the ground with the dog for a pillow.
It was quite late when Henry returned. In fact, it was nearly seven oāclock, although he didnāt know that. Several treasures had been added in his absence. The broom stood proudly in the corner with a slim stick for a handle. The new tablecloth had been washed and was drying on the line. And Jess, who had decided to wash one garment a day, had begun with Bennyās stockings. When Henry came they were being put on again with much pride by Benny himself. Violet had darned a big hole in each.
This time Henry himself could not wait to tell his sisters what he had. He passed them the package at once, with shining eyes.
āButter!ā cried Jess with a radiant face.
It was butter, cool and sweet. Nobody remembered that they had been a week without tasting either butter or meat when at last they sat down to their royal supper.
āThese are trick spoons,ā explained Henry. āTurn them upside down, and use the handle, and they become knives.ā
They were knives; anyway, they were used to spread the delicious morsels of butter on the brown loaf. With dried beef, and a cookie for dessert, who could ask for better fare? Certainly not the four children, who enjoyed it more than the rarest dainties.
āI washed the doctorās automobile this afternoon,ā Henry related. āThen I washed both piazzas with the hose, and tomorrow Iām going to hoe in the garden. Oh, wouldnāt I love to have a nice cold swim in that brook!ā
Henry was hot and sticky, certainly. He looked with longing eyes at the waterfall as he finished the last crumbs of his supper.
āI wonder if we couldnāt fix up a regular swimming pool,ā he said, half to himself.
āOf course we could,ā replied Violet, as if nothing were too difficult. āJess and I know where there are big logs, and big flat stones.ā
āYou do, hey?ā said Henry staring at his gentle little sister.
āWell, why couldnāt we, Henry?ā struck in Jess. āJust a little below this there is a sort of pool already, only not big enough.ā
āWe sure could!ā cried Henry. āSome day Iāll stay home from work, and weāll see.ā
Nobody realized that Henry had been working only one day in all. Anyway it seemed as if they had always lived in the comfortable home in the freight car, with Henry plying back and forth from the city each day, bringing them new surprises.
Henry went to bed that night with a head full of plans for damming up the brook. He almost shouted when he thought suddenly of Bennyās wheels. He began to plan to make a cart to carry the heavy stones to the brook. And that was when he first noticed that Watch was not asleep. He could see his eyes shining red in the darkness. It must have been around eleven oāclock.
Henry reached over and patted his rough little back. Watch licked the hand, but didnāt close his eyes. Suddenly he began to growl softly.
āSh!ā said Henry to the dog. Now thoroughly startled, he sat up; Jess sat up. They did not hear a sound.
āBetter shut the door,ā breathed Henry. Together they rolled the door very slowly and softly until it was shut.
Still they did not hear anything. But still Watch continued his uneasy growling.
Violet and Benny slumbered on. Jess and Henry sat motionless, with their hearts in their mouths.
āSupposing it was some other tramp,ā whispered Jess, āsomebody else that wanted to sleep here!ā
āWatch would bite āem,ā whispered Henry briefly. Jess never knew what confidence Henry had in the faithful dog.
Then a branch cracked sharply outside, and Watch barked out loud. Jess smothered the dog instantly in her arms. But it had been a bark and it was loud, clear, and unmistakable.
āThat settles it,ā thought Henry. āWhoever it is, knows thereās someone in here.ā And the boy waited with the new broom in his hand, expecting every moment to see the door opened from the outside.
But nothing happened. Nothing at all. The children sat in perfect silence for at least a half hour, and nothing more was heard. Watch sniffed a little when Henry finally rolled the door open again. But he then turned around three times and lay down beside Jess, apparently satisfied at last.
Taking the dogās conduct as a sure guide, Henry composed himself for sleep.
āIt must have been a rabbit or something,ā he said to Jess.
The occupants of the freight car slept peacefully until morning.
AT HOME
Jess and Henry had a short committee meeting next morning before the others awoke. It was agreed that nobody should be allowed to stray off into the woods alone, not even the dog. And with much mystery Henry left some orders with all of them, as to what they should build for him during the morning.
āWhat for?ā asked Benny.
āShanāt tell, old fellow,ā teased Henry. āYou just build it, and youāll see later.ā
So Henry walked briskly through the woods, feeling sure that the noise in the night had been made by a rabbit.
Having no watch, Henry made a slight mistake by appearing at the young doctorās door before eight oāclock. He was just in time to meet the doctor coming in from a night call.
If Henry had not been so eager to begin work, he would have noticed how the young manās dark eyes examined him from head to foot, even to his plastered hair, wet with brook water. It was not the doctor who directed his work, but the doctorās motherāthe sweet-faced Mrs. McAllister, whose heart was centered in her son and her vegetable garden.
Her heart warmed to the boy when she saw how carefully he thinned out the carrots, which had been sadly neglected.
āI have been so busy,ā she declared, āthat I have actually stayed awake nights worrying about these carrots. Thereāsee that?ā She pulled out a fairly good-sized carrot as she spoke. It had to come out, for it was much too near its neighbors. In fact, when Henry had thinned out half a row he had quite a little pile of eatable carrots, each as large as his thumb. When Mrs. McAllister saw Henry deftly pr...
Table of contents
- COVER
- TITLE PAGE
- COPYRIGHT PAGE
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- THE FLIGHT
- THE SECOND NIGHT
- SHELTER
- A NEW HOME
- HOUSEKEEPING
- EARNING A LIVING
- AT HOME
- BUILDING THE DAM
- CHERRY PICKING
- THE RACE
- MORE EDUCATION
- GINSENG
- TROUBLE
- CAUGHT
- A NEW GRANDFATHER
- A UNITED FAMILY
- SAFE