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    Pippi Goes on Board

    Page 8
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    had to do everything that the leader did.

      "Okay," said Pippi. "That sounds like fun, and it would probably

      be best for me to be the leader."

      She began by climbing up on the laundry roof. To get there she

      first had to climb up on the garden fence and then crawl up the roof

      on her stomach. Pippi and Tommy and Annika had done this so often

      that it was easy for them, but the other children thought it was

      rather difficult. The sailors from the Hoptoad were used to climbing

      up the masts, so they made the roof without any trouble, but it was

      quite an ordeal for Captain Longstocking because he was so fat, and

      besides his grass skirt kept getting caught. He panted and puffed as

      he heaved himself up on the roof.

      "This grass skirt will never be the same again," he said sadly.

      From the laundry roof Pippi jumped down to the ground. Some of the

      smaller children didn't dare do this, but Fridolf was so nice that he

      lifted down all those who were afraid to jump. Then Pippi turned six

      somersaults on the lawn. Everyone did the same, but Captain

      Long-stocking said, "Someone will have to give me a push from behind,

      or I'll never be able to do it."

      Pippi did. She gave him such a big push that once he got started

      he couldn't stop, but rolled like a ball across the lawn and turned

      fourteen somersaults instead of six.

      Then Pippi rushed up the porch steps and into Villa Villekulla,

      climbed out through a window, and, by spreading her legs far apart

      managed to reach a ladder that stood outside. She ran quickly up the

      ladder, jumped onto the roof of Villa Villekulla, ran along the

      ridgepole, jumped up onto the chimney, stood on one leg and crowed

      like a rooster, threw herself down head first into a tree that stood

      near the corner of the house, slid down to the ground, rushed into

      the woodshed, took an ax and chopped a board out of the wall, crept

      through the narrow opening, jumped up on the garden fence, walked

      along the fence for fifty yards, climbed up into an oak, and sat down

      to rest at the very top of the tree.

      Quite a crowd had gathered in the street outside Villa Villekulla,

      and when the people went home they told everyone that they had seen a

      cannibal king standing on one leg on the chimney of Villa Villekulla,

      crowing "Cock-a-doodle-do!" so that you could hear it far and wide.

      Of course no one believed them.

      When Captain Longstocking tried to squeeze himself through the

      narrow opening in the woodshed, the inevitable happened-he stuck and

      couldn't get either out or in. This, of course, broke up the game and

      all the children stood around, watching Fridolf cut Captain

      Longstocking out of the wall.

      "That was a mighty good game," said Captain Long- stocking,

      laughing, when he was free at last. "What are we going to play

      next?"

      "In the good old days on the ship," said Fridolf, "Captain

      Longstocking and Pippi used to have a contest to see which was the

      strongest. It was a lot of fun to watch them."

      "That's a good idea," said Captain Longstocking, "but the trouble

      is that my daughter is getting to be stronger than I."

      Tommy was standing next to Pippi. "Pippi," he whispered, "I was so

      afraid you would climb down into our hiding place in the hollow oak

      when you played Follow the Leader, for I don't want anyone to find

      out about it, even if we never go there again."

      "No, that's our own secret," said Pippi.

      Her father took hold of an iron rod and bent it in the middle as

      if it were made of wax. Pippi took another iron rod and did the

      same.

      "Fiddlesticks!" said Pippi. "I used to amuse myself with these

      simple tricks when I was still in the cradle, just to pass the time

      away."

      Captain Longstocking then lifted off the kitchen door. Fridolf and

      seven of the other sailors stood on the door, and Captain

      Longstocking lifted them high into the air and carried them around

      the lawn ten times.

      It was now quite dark, and Pippi lighted torches here and there.

      They looked very pretty cast a magic glow over the garden.

      "Are you ready?" she said to her father after the tenth trip

      around the garden. He was.

      Then Pippi put the horse on the kitchen door and told Fridolf and

      three other sailors to get on the horse. Each of the sailors held two

      children in htheir arms Fridolf held Tommy and Annika. Then Pippi

      lifted the door and carried it around the lawn twenty-five times. It

      looked splendid in the light of the torches.

      "Well, child, you certainly are stronger than I," said Captain

      Longstocking.

      Afterward everyone sat down on the lawn. Fridolf played his

      accordion and all the other sailors sang the prettiest chanties. The

      children danced to the music. Pippi took two torches in her hands and

      danced more wildly than anyone else.

      The party ended with fireworks. Pippi got lots of rockets and

      pinwheels that lighted up the whole sky. Annika sat on the porch and

      looked on. It was so beautiful, so lovely! She couldn't see the

      roses, but she smelled their fragrance in the dark. How wonderful

      everything would have been if-if-Annika felt as if a cold hand were

      grip ping her heart. Tomorrow-how would it be then, and the whole

      summer vacation, and forever? There would be no more Pippi in Villa

      Villekulla, there would be no Mr. Nilsson, and no horse would stand

      on the porch. No more horseback rides, no more picnics with Pippi, no

      more cozy evenings in the kitchen at Villa Villekulla, no tree with

      soda pop growing in it-well, the tree would of course still be there,

      but Annika had a strong feeling that no more soda pop would grow

      there when Pippi was gone. What would Tommy and she do tomorrow? Play

      croquet, probably. Annika sighed.

      The party was over. All the children thanked Pippi and said

      goodnight. Captain Longstocking went back to the Hoptoad with his

      sailors. He thought that Pippi might just as well come along with

      them, but Pippi wanted to sleep one more night in Villa

      Villekulla.

      "Tomorrow at ten we weigh anchor. Don't forget," cried Captain

      Longstocking as he left.

      Pippi, Tommy, and Annika were alone. They sat on the porch steps

      in the dark, perfectly quiet.

      "You can come here and play, anyway," said Pippi at last. "The key

      will be hanging on a nail beside the door. You can take everything in

      the chest drawers, and if I put a ladder inside the oak you can climb

      down there yourselves, but perhaps there won't be so many soda pops

      growing there-it's not the season for them now."

      "No, Pippi," said Tommy seriously, "we won't come here any

      more."

      "No, never, never," said Annika, and she thought that in the

      future she would close her eyes every time she passed Villa

      Villekulla. Villa Villekulla without Pippi -Annika felt that cold

      hand around her heart again.

      9.

      Pippi Goes Aboard

      PIPPI locked the door of Villa Villekulla carefully and hung the

      key on a nail beside the door; then she lifted the h
    orse down from

      the porch-for the last time, she lifted him down from the porch. Mr.

      Nilsson already sat on her shoulder, looking important. He probably

      understood that something special was going to happen.

      "Well, I guess that's all," said Pippi.

      Tommy and Annika nodded. "Yes, I guess it is."

      "It's still early," said Pippi. "Let's walk; that will take

      longer."

      Tommy and Annika nodded again, but they didn't say anything. Then

      they started walking toward the town, toward the harbor, toward the

      Hoptoad. The horse jogged slowly along behind them.

      Pippi glanced over her shoulder at Villa Villekulla. "Nice little

      place," she said. "No fleas, clean and comfortable, and that's

      probably more than you can say about the clay hut where I'll be

      living in the future." Tommy and Annika said nothing. "If there are

      an awful lot of fleas in my hut," continued Pippi, "I'll train them

      and keep them in a cigar box and play Run, Sheep, Run with them at

      night. I'll tie little bows around their legs, and the two most

      faithful and affectionate fleas I will call Tommy and Annika, and

      they shall sleep with me at night."

      Not even this could make Tommy and Annika more talkative.

      "What on earth is wrong with you?" asked Pippi irritably. "I tell

      you it's dangerous to keep quiet too long. Tongues dry up if you

      don't use them. In Calcutta I once knew a potter who never said a

      word. And once when he wanted to say to me, 'Good-by, dear Pippi,

      happy journey and thanks for your visit,' he opened his mouth and can

      you guess what he said? First he made some horrible faces, for the

      hinges to his mouth had rusted and I had to grease them for him with

      a little sewing-machine oil, and then a sound came out: 'U buy uye

      muy.' I looked in his mouth, and, imagine! there lay his tongue like

      a little wilted leaf, and as long as he lived that potter could never

      say anything but 'U buy uye muy.' It would be awful if the same thing

      should happen to you. Let me see if you can say this better than the

      potter did: 'Happy journey, dear Pippi, and thanks for your visit.'

      Go on try it."

      "Happy journey, dear Pippi, and thanks for your visit," said Tommy

      and Annika obediently.

      "Thank goodness for that," said Pippi. "You certainly gave me a

      scare. If you had said U buy uye muy' I don't know what I would have

      done."

      There was the harbor, there lay the Hoptoad. Captain Longstocking

      stood on deck, shouting out his commands, the sailors ran back and

      forth to make everything ready for their departure. All the people in

      the little town had crowded on the dock to wave good-by to Pippi, and

      here she came with Tommy and Annika and the horse and Mr.

      Nilsson.

      "Here comes Pippi Longstocking! Make way for Pippi Longstocking!"

      cried the crowd and made a path for Pippi to come through.

      Pippi nodded and smiled to the left and the right. Then she took

      up the horse and carried him up the gangplank. The poor animal looked

      around suspiciously, for horses don't care very much for boat

      rides.

      "Well, here you are, my beloved child!" called Captain

      Longstocking and broke off in the middle of a command to embrace

      Pippi. He folded her in his arms, and they hugged each other until

      their ribs cracked.

      Annika had gone around with a lump in her throat all morning, and

      when she saw Pippi lift the horse aboard, the lump loosened. She

      began to cry as she stood there squeezed against a packing case on

      the dock, first quietly and then more and more desperately.

      "Don't bawl!" said Tommy angrily. "You'll shame us in front of all

      the people here."

      The result of this was only to make Annika burst out in a regular

      torrent of tears. She cried so that she shook. Tommy kicked a stone

      so that it rolled across the dock and fell into the water. He really

      would have liked to throw it at the Hoptoad-that mean old boat that

      was going to take Pippi away from them. Really, if no one had been

      looking, Tommy would have liked to cry also, but a boy just couldn't

      let people see him cry. He kicked away another stone.

      Pippi came running down the gangplank and rushed over to Tommy and

      Annika. She took their hands in hers. "Ten minutes left," she

      said.

      Then Annika threw herself across tibe packing case and cried as if

      her heart would break. There were no more stones for Tommy to kick,

      so he clenched his teeth and looked murderous.

      All the children in the little town gathered around Pippi. They

      took out their bird whistles and blew a farewell tune for her. It

      sounded sad beyond words, for it was a very, very mournful tune.

      Annika was crying so hard that she could hardly catch her breath.

      Just then Tommy remembered that he had written a farewell poem for

      Pippi and he pulled out a paper and began to read. It was terrible

      that his voice should shake so.

      "Good-by, dear Pippi, you from us go. You may look high and you

      may look low, But never will you find friends so true As those who

      now say good-by to you."

      "It really rhymed, all of it," said Pippi happily. "I'll learn it

      by heart and recite it for the natives when we sit around the

      campfires at night."

      The children crowded in from all directions to say good-by to

      Pippi. She raised her hand and asked them to be quiet.

      "Children," she said, "hereafter I'll only have little natives to

      play with. I don't know how we'll amuse ourselves; perhaps we'll play

      ball with wild rhinoceroses, and charm snakes, and ride on elephants,

      and have a swing in the coconut palm outside the door. We'll always

      manage to pass the time some way or another." Pippi paused. Both

      Tommy and Annika felt that they hated those native children Pippi

      would play with in the future.

      "But," continued Pippi, "perhaps a day will come during the rainy

      season, a long and dreary day-for even if it is fun to run around

      without your clothes on a rainy day, you can't do more than get wet,

      and when we have got good and wet, perhaps we'll crawl into my native

      clay hut, unless the whole hut has become a mud pile, in which case,

      of course, we'll make mud pies. But if the clay hut is still a clay

      hut, perhaps we'll crawl in there, and the native children will say,

      'Pippi, please tell us a story.' And then I will tell them about a

      little town which lies far, far away in another part of the world,

      and about the children who live there. 'You can't imagine what nice

      kids live there,' I'll say to the native children 'They blow bird

      whistles, and, best of all, they know pluttification.' But then

      perhaps the little native children will become absolutely desperate

      because they don't know any pluttification, and then what shall I do

      with them? Well, if worst comes to worst, I'll take the clay hut to

      pieces and make a mud pile out of it, and then we'll bake mud pies

      and dig ourselves down into the mud way up to our necks. Then it

      would be strange if I couldn't get them to think about something else

      besides pluttificatio
    n. Thanks, all of you, and good-by so much!"

      The children blew a still sadder tune on their bird whistles.

      "Pippi, it's time to come aboard," called Captain

      Longstocking.

      "Aye, aye, Captain," called Pippi. She turned to Tommy and Annika.

      She looked at them.

      How strange her eyes look! thought Tommy his mother had looked

      just like that once when Tommy had been very, very ill.

      Annika lay in a little heap on the packing case Pippi lifted her

      in her arms. "Good-by, Annika, good-by " he whispered. "Don't

      cry."

      Annika threw her arms around Pippi's neck and cried a mournful

      little cry. "Good-by, Pippi"  sobbed.

      Pippi took Tommy's hand and squeezed it hard Thenshe ran up the

      gangplank. A big tear rolled down Tommy's nose. He clenched his

      teeth, but that didn't help; another tear came. He took Annika's

      hand, and they stood there and gazed after Pippi. They could see her

      up on deck, but it is always a little hazy when you try to look

      through tears.

      "Three cheers for Pippi Longstocking!" cried the people on the

      dock.

      "Pull in the gangplank, Fridolf," cried Captain Long- stocking.

      Fridolf did. The Hoptoad was ready for her journey to foreign

      lands.

      Then- "No, Papa Efraim," cried Pippi, "I can't do it, I just can't

      bear to do it!"

      "What is it you can't bear to do?" asked Captain Longstocking.

      "I can't bear to see anyone on God's green earth crying and being

      sorry on account of me-least of all Tommy and Annika. Put out the

      gangplank again. I'm staying in Villa Villekulla."

      Captain Longstocking stood silent for a minute. "Do as you like,"

      he said at last. "You always have done that."

      Pippi nodded. "Yes, I've always done that," she said quietly.

      They hugged each other again, Pippi and her father, so hard that

      their ribs cracked, and they decided that Captain Longstocking should

      come very often to see Pippi in Villa Villekulla.

      "You know, Papa Efraim," said Pippi, "I think it's best for a

      child to have a decent home and not sail around on the sea so much

      and live in native clay huts-don't you think so too?"

      "You're right, as always, my daughter," answered Captain

      Longstocking. "It is certain that you live a more orderly life in

      Villa Villekulla, and that is probably best for little children."

      "Just so," said Pippi. "It's surely best for little children to

      live an orderly life, especially if they can order it

      themselves."

      Pippi said good-by to the sailors on the Hoptoad and hugged her

      Papa Efraim once more. Then she lifted her horse in her strong arms

      and carried him back over the gangplank. The Hoptoad weighed anchor,

      but at the last minute Captain Longstocking remembered something.

      "Pippi!" he cried. "You may need some more gold coins. Here, catch

      this!"

      Then he threw a new suitcase full of gold coins to Pippi, but

      unfortunately the Hoptoad had got too far away, and the suitcase

      didn't reach the dock. Plop! Plop! f The bag sank. A murmur of dismay

      went through the crowd, but then there was another plop! It was Pippi

      diving off the dock. In a few seconds she came up with the suitcase

      in her teeth. Climbing up on the dock, she brushed away a bit of

      seaweed that was caught behind her ear.

      "Well, now I'm as rich as a troll again," she said.

      Things had happened so quickly that Tommy and Annika were

      bewildered. They stood with wide open mouths and stared at Pippi and

      the horse and Mr. Nilsson and the suitcase of gold coins, and the

      Hoptoad in full sail, leaving the harbor.

      "Aren't you-aren't you on the boat?" asked Tommy, unable to

      believe his eyes.

      "Make three guesses," said Pippi and wrung the water out of her

      braids.

      She lifted Tommy and Annika, the suitcase, and Mr. Nilsson all up

     


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