登陆注册
34573400000083

第83章 SOMETHING UNEXPECTED HAPPENS(1)

Uncle went out early the next morning to see what kind of a day it was going to be. There was a reddish gold light over the higher peaks; a light breeze springing up and the branches of the fir trees moved gently to and fro the sun was on its way.

The old man stood and watched the green slopes under the higher peaks gradually growing brighter with the coming day and the dark shadows lifting from the valley, until at first a rosy light filled its hollows, and then the morning gold flooded every height and depth--the sun had risen.

Uncle wheeled the chair out of the shed ready for the coming journey, and then went in to call the children and tell them what a lovely sunrise it was.

Peter came up at this moment. The goats did not gather round him so trustfully as usual, but seemed to avoid him timidly, for Peter had reached a high pitch of anger and bitterness, and was laying about him with his stick very unnecessarily, and where it fell the blow was no light one. For weeks now he had not had Heidi all to himself as formerly. When he came up in the morning the invalid child was always already in her chair and Heidi fully occupied with her. And it was the same thing over again when he came down in the evening. She had not come out with the goats once this summer, and now to-day she was only coming in company with her friend and the chair, and would stick by the latter's side the whole time. It was the thought of this which was ****** him particularly cross this morning. There stood the chair on its high wheels; Peter seemed to see something proud and distainful about it, and he glared at it as at an enemy that had done him harm and was likely to do him more still to-day. He glanced round--there was no sound anywhere, no one to see him. He sprang forward like a wild creature, caught hold of it, and gave it a violent and angry push in the direction of the slope. The chair rolled swiftly forward and in another minute had disappeared.

Peter now sped up the mountain as if on wings, not pausing till he was well in shelter of a large blackberrybush, for he had no wish to be seen by Uncle. But he was anxious to see what had become of the chair, and his bush was well placed for that.

Himself hidden, he could watch what happened below and see what Uncle did without being discovered himself. So he looked, and there he saw his enemy running faster and faster down hill, then it turned head over heels several times, and finally, after one great bound, rolled over and over to its complete destruction.

The pieces flew in every direction--feet, arms, and torn fragments of the padded seat and bolster--and Peter experienced a feeling of such unbounded delight at the sight that he leapt in the air, laughing aloud and stamping for joy; then he took a run round, jumping over bushes on the way, only to return to the same spot and fall into fresh fits of laughter. He was beside himself with satisfaction, for he could see only good results for himself in this disaster to his enemy. Now Heidi's friend would be obliged to go away, for she would have no means of going about, and when Heidi was alone again she would come out with him as in the old days, and everything would go on in the proper way again.

But Peter did not consider, or did not know, that when we do a wrong thing trouble is sure to follow.

Heidi now came running out of the hut and round to the shed.

Grandfather was behind with Clara in his arms. The shed stood wide open, the two loose planks having been taken down, and it was quite light inside. Heidi looked into every corner and ran from one end to the other, and then stood still wondering what could have happened to the chair. Grandfather now came. up.

"How is this, have you wheeled the chair away, Heidi?""I have been looking everywhere for it, grandfather; you said it was standing ready outside," and she again searched each corner of the shed with her eyes.

At that moment the wind, which had risen suddenly, blew open the shed door and sent it banging back against the wall.

"It must have been the wind, grandfather," exclaimed Heidi, and her eyes grew anxious at this sudden discovery. "Oh! if it has blown the chair all the way down to Dorfli we shall not get it back in time, and shall not be able to go.""If it has rolled as far as that it will never come back, for it is in a hundred pieces by now," said the grandfather, going round the corner and looking down. "But it's a curious thing to have happened!" he added as he thought over the matter, for the chair would have had to turn a corner before starting down hill.

"Oh, I am sorry," lamented Clara, "for we shall not be able to go to-day, or perhaps any other day. I shall have to go home, Isuppose, if I have no chair. Oh, I am so sorry, I am so sorry!"But Heidi looked towards her grandfather with her usual expression of confidence.

"Grandfather, you will be able to do something, won't you, so that it need not be as Clara says, and so that she is not obliged to go home?""Well, for the present we will go up the mountain as we had arranged, and then later on we will see what can be done," he answered, much to the children's delight.

He went indoors, fetched out a pile of shawls, and laying them on the sunniest spot he could find set Clara down upon them. Then he fetched the children's morning milk and had out his two goats.

"Why is Peter not here yet?" thought Uncle to himself, for Peter's whistle had not been sounded that morning. The grandfather now took Clara up on one arm, and the shawls on the other.

"Now then we will start," he said; "the goats can come with us."Heidi was pleased at this and walked on after her grandfather with an arm over either of the goats' necks, and the animals were so overjoyed to have her again that they nearly squeezed her flat between them out of sheer affection. When they reached the spot where the goats usually pastured they were surprised to find them already feeding there, climbing about the rocks, and Peter with them, lying his full length on the ground.

"I'll teach you another time to go by like that, you lazy rascal!

What do you mean by it?" Uncle called to him.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 青天神柱

    青天神柱

    传说在整片雪之大陆的最中央有一根非常巨大的神柱,他顶天立地,如果没有这根神柱天都会塌下来,有一天这根神柱突然不见了。
  • 大鹅与铁锅的爱情

    大鹅与铁锅的爱情

    大鹅爱上铁锅如同飞蛾爱上火————————
  • 网游之幽冥盗贼

    网游之幽冥盗贼

    潜伏于阴影之中,随时准备出击。栖身于黑暗之中,弹奏死亡的乐曲。刀尖上的舞者,舞出收割生命的节奏。在我们的眼里,目标永远是一具冰冷的尸体!我们是暗夜里的王者,我们是光明的送葬者!我们将正义踩在脚下。我们是盗贼!从《纪元》到《杀界》,从旧时代到新时代,曾在网络上被誉为第一盗贼的苏逸,他回来了,带着盗贼的信仰,征服这片天地!
  • 萌妃当道:妖孽王爷宠上天

    萌妃当道:妖孽王爷宠上天

    初遇:她掀起袖管,抬起手她就对着这白嫩嫩的手掌心就抽了三下,抽完还挑衅的说道:“怎么样!还傲不傲了!”回归:“哦?本郡主不过几日不在,竟然就有人打主意打到本郡主的男人头上了?”稚嫩的嗓音一落,金銮殿大门现出一个娇俏的身影,美妙绝伦的脸上一双玩味的眼眸扫遍整个大殿,最后定定的落在了那个自己朝思夜想的人儿身上。司马长风猛地回过头,一个飞身上前拥住来人,万千思念终汇成一句话:“柔儿,你回来了。”
  • 超速之魔域归来

    超速之魔域归来

    欢迎来到魔域世界,刹那间主人公无意间身处陌生的世界,他不会知道,这是改变他命运的开始。(这篇小说是我上一篇小说后续发生的故事)
  • 圣仙帝尊

    圣仙帝尊

    天降陨石,星际迷航,灭世魔龙……这是一个修炼灵气的世界,光怪陆离,神秘无尽,有人热血似火山沸腾,有人激情若瀚海汹涌,有人欲望如深渊无止境,亦有人为了成仙,万劫不复……
  • 逆天盟主

    逆天盟主

    一个从葬域走出的少年,肩负着家族覆灭的仇恨,踏着上代天帝走过的脚步,在玄黄世界搅起一番风云。他重整了梅山派,让梅山派再次发扬光大。他身负炼妖奇术,收复万千妖魔精魅。他在地界招兵买马,成为一方霸主。他联合各方势力,成立了逆天盟,只为家族血案讨一个公道。他就是:逆天盟主。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 他的小甜心藏不住啦

    他的小甜心藏不住啦

    一场意外让她失去记忆,奇怪的是任谁都寻不到,五年里,由于脑部的创伤一直昏昏迷迷,迟钝迷糊,所有人都以为她是个白痴, 殊不知,为查出欺辱姐姐的人渣,她一步一步诱导设计陷阱…… 仇人有强大势力撑腰?被嫉妒?被孤立?被刁难?问题都不大,因为大佬背后都有另一个大佬,而她是几位大佬的心尖宠。 他是不婚主义者,独独对她偏爱有加,她把他当哥哥一般的存在,以为他也只是把她当妹妹。 后来,有人追求她,他暗中散播她已名花有主,追求者说等她单身,他眸色一沉,晚上回去,关门关灯。 一个月后,他笑,单身?这辈子想都别想!