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ONE day Cuffy Bear and his
little sister Silkie had been making sand pies. And now, having grown tired of
that, they were squatting down on the ground and had covered their legs with
the clean white sand. Perhaps they would have heaped the sand all over
themselves, if Silkie had not spied her father as he came climbing up the
mountain. When they noticed that he was carrying something they both sprang up
and ran to see what Mr. Bear was bringing home.
Mr. Bear's mouth was
stretched quite wide in what Silkie and Cuffy knew to be his most agreeable
smile. You and I might not have felt so comfortable if we had looked past Mr.
Bear's great white teeth into his big red mouth. But it was different with Cuffy
and Silkie. They saw at once that their father was feeling very pleasant.
"What's that?" Silkie
asked. As for Cuffy, he had not stopped to ask any questions. He was already
smelling of the small white animal his father had, and he poked it gently with
his paw. He had not forgotten about the porcupine. But this strange animal
seemed quite harmless. It was covered with things that looked a little bit like
quills, only they were ever so much shorter and smaller. And Cuffy found that
they were much softer, too, for they did not prick him at all.
"What is it?" This
time it was Cuffy who asked.
"You'll see," Mr.
Bear said again.
"Is it a new kind of
rabbit?" Silkie inquired.
"Euh! A rabbit!" Cuffy laughed.
"Of course it isn't a
rabbit," he said.
"Well — it's white, and
its tail is short —" Silkie began, "and —"
"Its ears are too small," Cuffy told her, "and its tail is all curled up."
"You'll see, children," Mr. Bear said again. "It's a
surprise."
"A surprise!" Cuffy
and Silkie both shouted. They thought that was the name of the — oh! I almost
told what the little animal really was.
Well! As Mr. Bear walked on
toward his house, Cuffy and Silkie ran ahead and burst in upon their mother,
both of them shouting at the top of their voices, "A surprise! A surprise!
Father's bringing home a surprise!"
"Why, Ephraim Bear!"
Mrs. Bear exclaimed, as soon as she saw her husband. "Wherever did you get
that lovely little pig?”
There — now you know what it
was that Mr. Bear had.
"It came from Farmer
Green's, my dear," Mr. Bear said. "I remembered that this was your
birthday, and so I thought I would bring home something 'specially nice, so
that we could have a real feast."
Cuffy and Silkie had never
eaten any pig before. And when there was nothing left of the surprise except a
few bones, Cuffy couldn't help wishing that every day could be a birthday.