儿童英语读物 The Haunted Cabin Mystery CHAPTER 6 Scrambled Eggs(在线收听

Violet woke up just before dawn. She dressed silently, thinking of what would taste the best for breakfast. She decided on French toast with honey.

She took down the egg basket, wishing the sun would come up faster. The minute she stepped outside, things began to happen. The chickens began squawking, and a small dog she’d never seen before darted past her. She gasped as she looked after him. For a minute she was tempted to run back inside until it was light. But that was silly. She’d never been afraid of the dark. What harm could come from a reddish-looking little dog with a plumed tail?

She couldn’t see a thing as she slid her hand into the warm nests and felt for eggs. When she had emptied all the nests, she had eight eggs. She stood still, frowning.

This was curious. Jessie had found fourteen eggs the day before. If the chickens laid eight eggs every day, Jessie should have found a lot more than fourteen eggs. What had happened to the eggs the hens had laid before they got there? Cap said he hadn’t gathered them since he got hurt.

Violet shook her head. This really was a strange place! The other mysteries they’d solved hadn’t been like this. None of these puzzling things seemed to have anything to do with each other.

She was about to leave the henhouse when a low, strange whistle sent an icy shiver up her back. The piercing sound was so close that her breath came short. Was this the same noise Jessie had heard? For the first time Violet was truly scared! Before the sound even died away, something went crashing off into the bushes. It sounded like an animal — a big animal. For a moment, she couldn’t move.

She took a deep breath. As she stepped out into the darkness, she saw something disappearing into the trees. It was still too dark to see it clearly. It looked lumpy and black and was bent over. The funny way it ran made it even scarier. She knew it wasn’t a bear, but she couldn’t think of what else it could be. Whatever it was scared her so much that she forgot all about her basket of eggs and ran for the cabin.

She was almost to the back porch when Cap came around the side of the house on his crutches. Violet must have looked as scared as she felt because he stared at her a minute. Then he said, “Violet, what’s wrong?” Before she could answer, he motioned her to follow him. “Come on, my dear. Come around to the porch with me.”

Violet looked down at her egg basket and gasped. Broken eggs were pouring out between the wires of the basket in a golden stream. “Never mind that,” Cap said impatiently. “Come along with me. You can tend to those eggs later.”

She followed him with a thundering heart. What had she done to make him sound so cross? Once into his chair, he looked up at her, still frowning. “I want to know exactly what scared you out there,” he said in a stern voice. When she couldn’t think of how to answer right away, he went on impatiently. “Was it a whistling?”

She nodded. “An awful whistling, and a red dog, and something running off into the brush.”

He frowned. “The chickens woke me up,” he said. “Did you see anything like a hawk around the henhouse?”

“Only that little red dog,” she told him. She had seen that other thing, but she couldn’t possibly describe it.

“Did it have a sharp nose and a big plume of a tail?”

“I didn’t see its face, but its tail was bushy.”

He sighed. “That was no dog, Violet. That was a fox. Foxes and hawks both rob chicken houses and carry off hens. How many hens do I have out there now?”

“I never thought to count them,” she admitted.

He glanced at the morning light that was flooding into the clearing. “Would you mind going to see how many there are?” he asked. “You won’t be scared, will you?”

She shook her head and ran back to the henhouse. She counted the hens twice to be sure she had the number right.

“Eleven,” she told Cap when she got back to the porch. “All snow white.”

He stared at her. “No red hen at all?”

She shook her head, “All white.”

He sighed. “That’s worse than I feared. When I got hurt, I had eleven white Plymouth Rock hens and a beautiful Rhode Island red hen named Rhoda. She was my special pet, and Doodle’s, too. Although it sounded strange, that whistle we heard may have been a hawk or an eagle.” He shook his head. “We’ll miss poor Rhoda. But thank you, Violet. I’m glad I didn’t risk losing Doodle by leaving him out there. He’s been my best friend since our old dog died. But you still must have found a lot of eggs.”

“Not too many,” she admitted. “Jessie found fourteen yesterday, and I only found eight today.”

He frowned. “That’s not near enough eggs. I tell you, Violet, strange things are going on around here. If you children weren’t such good company, I’d get you into the safety of town if I had to walk you there on these crutches.”

She smiled at him. “We don’t want to go until you’re well. But I’d better see how many of those eggs I ruined.”

Two eggs were completely broken and had spilled out on the ground. Five others were so badly cracked that she had to empty them into a bowl to save them.

Cap’s coffee was ready when Henry came in and looked into the bowl. “Scrambled eggs today?” he asked.

“I cracked these,” Violet told him. She started telling him about the whistle and the running figure. Jessie and Benny came in from the porch to listen.

“That sounds like a dwarf out of a book,” Benny said.

She stared at him. “That’s exactly what it looked like, all dark and hunched over and running in that strange way. All I could think of was a bear, but it wasn’t that big.”

“It woke me up making a scraping noise out there,” Benny said. “I heard the same noise the night we saw that funny light. It comes and goes, then comes and goes again. Remember when we got here, I said maybe the house was haunted.”

Before they could ask Benny any more, Cap appeared.

Henry smiled at him and changed the subject quickly. “You’re just in time for coffee,” he said. “With breakfast coming right up.”

When Cap was settled with his coffee, Henry went back to the stove. “You do the eggs, Violet, and I’ll make French toast,” he said. “Big breakfast for a big day!”

Cap and Benny both groaned when they had finished off plates of buttery scrambled eggs and golden French toast covered with honey. “I’m glad I’m not walking into town with you,” Benny said. “I’m so full I’d have to waddle.”

Cap looked at him. “What’s this about a trip to town?”

“Violet and I need to go to town and call home,” Henry told him. “Grandfather checks with our housekeeper. He’ll get the message and know we’re here and having a fine time.”

Cap shook his head. “No man ever had more thoughtful children than you four. You could ride Pilot into town and back.”

“Could we?” Henry asked. “That would be wonderful!”

“But I want to ride the horse, too,” Benny said.

“Then you go in my place,” Violet said quickly. “I’ll give you the grocery list Jessie and I made.”

“Are you sure you don’t care?” Benny asked, looking concerned.

Violet leaned to touch his shoulder. “I’ll go next time.”

Pilot held very still as Henry put the harness over his head. “He looks happy to be going for a ride,” Violet said. “He’s probably been lonely, too, like Cap.”

Benny crossed the barn floor carrying a saddle blanket when he suddenly fell with a thud and yelped with pain.

“What happened?” Jessie asked, kneeling beside him.

Benny blinked to hold back his tears and hugged his right knee with both arms. “I tripped and fell,” he said.

“No wonder you tripped,” Henry said, kneeling beside him. “A big board has come loose under this hay.”

Benny, up on his feet, stared down at it. “Look, there’s a deep hole underneath it,” he said. The children gathered around to examine the hollow place where the earth had been dug away under the barn floor.

“How could that have happened with the barn all closed up?” Jessie asked. “Holes have to be dug! And they’re dangerous,” she added. “Someone could get hurt.”

“Cap has already,” Benny reminded her.

“But he didn’t fall here in the barn,” Violet reminded him. “He was outside, over by the water trough. He told me.”

“Come look here,” Jessie called. “I found another board loose, and still another one. And all of them were hidden under the hay with big holes dug underneath.”

Henry stood silently for a moment, frowning as he tried to solve the puzzle. “We need to figure out what made these holes.”

“Or who made them,” Benny said, still rubbing his knee.

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