Part 13 (1/2)

The mother cat had forgotten her children in this moment of panic. The dancing bulldog outside the fence quite crazed her. She ran out on the first limb of the tree, and leaped from it into the next tree. There was a long row of maples here and the frightened Sandy-face went from one to the other like a squirrel.

”She's running away! she's running away!” cried Agnes.

”Where did you get that cat and those kittens, child?” demanded Mrs.

Adams.

”At Mr. Stetson's store,” said Agnes, sadly, as the old cat disappeared.

”She's going back,” said the lady firmly. ”That's where she is going.

A scared cat always will make for home, if she can. And now! what under the canopy are you going to do with that mess of kittens-without a cat to mother them?”

Agnes was stricken dumb for the moment. Tess and Dot were all but in tears. The situation was very complicated indeed, even if the boy had urged his dog away from the gate.

The four little kittens presented a problem to the Corner House girls that was too much for even the ready Agnes to solve. Here were the kittens. The cat had gone back. Agnes had a long scratch on her arm-and it smarted. Tess and Dot were on the verge of tears, while the kittens began to mew and refused to be pacified.

CHAPTER IX

THE VANIs.h.i.+NG KITTENS

”What you'll do with those little tykes, I don't see,” said Mrs.

Adams, who was not much of a comforter, although kind-hearted. ”You'd better take them back to Mr. Stetson, Aggie.”

”No-o. I don't think he'd like that,” said Agnes. ”He told Myra to get rid of them and I promised to take them away and keep them.”

”But that old cat's gone back,” decided the lady.

”I s'pect you'll have to go after her again, Aggie,” said Tess.

”But I won't carry her-loose-in my arms,” declared the bigger girl, with emphasis. ”See what she did to me,” and she displayed the long, inflamed scratch again.

”Put her in a bag, child,” advised Mrs. Adams. ”You little ones come around here to the back stoop and we'll try to make the kittens drink warm milk. They're kind of small, but maybe they're hungry enough to put their tongues into the dish.”

She bustled away with Tess and Dot and the basket of kittens, while Agnes started back along the street toward the grocery store. She had rather lost interest in Sandy-face and her family.

At once Tess and Dot were strongly taken with the possibility of teaching the kittens to drink. Mrs. Adams warmed the milk, poured it into a saucer, and set it down on the top step. Each girl grabbed a kitten and the good lady took the other two.

They thrust the noses of the kittens toward the milk, and immediately the little things backed away, and made great objections to their introduction to this new method of feeding.

The little black one, with the white nose and the spot of white over one eye, got some milk on its whiskers, and immediately sneezed.

”My goodness me!” exclaimed Dot, worriedly, ”I believe this kitten's catching cold. Suppose it has a real _hard_ cold before its mother comes back? What shall we do about it?”

This set Mrs. Adams to laughing so hard that she could scarcely hold her kittens. But she dipped their noses right into the milk, and after they had coughed and sputtered a little, they began to lick their chops and found the warm milk much to their taste.

Only, they did not seem to know how to get at it. They nosed around the edge of the saucer in the most ridiculous way, getting just a wee mite. They found it very good, no doubt, but were unable to discover just where the milk was.

”Did you ever see such particular things?” asked the impatient Mrs.