Read Five Go Off to Camp Online
Authors: Enid Blyton
Tags: #Famous Five (Fictitious Characters), #Action & Adventure, #Juvenile Fiction, #General, #Europe, #Children's Stories, #Holidays & Celebrations, #Mysteries & Detective Stories, #Sports & Recreation, #Adventure Stories, #People & Places, #Nature & the Natural World, #Camping & Outdoor Activities
A dark shape stood looking in at the tent-flap. It gave a little whine.
'Oh, it's you, Timmy. Would you mind not coming and pretending you're a spook-train or something?' said Dick. 'And if you dare to put so much as half a paw on my middle, I'l scare you down the hil with a roar like a man-eating tiger. Go away.'
Timmy put a paw on Julian. Julian yelled out to George. 'George! Cal this dog of yours, wil you? He's just about to turn himself round twenty times on my middle, and curl himself up for the night.'
There was no answer from George. Timmy, feeling that he was not wanted, disappeared. He went back to George and curled himself up on her feet. He put his nose down on his paws and slept.
'Spooky Timmy,' murmured Julian, re-arranging himself. 'Timmy spooky - no, I mean - oh dear, what do I mean?'
'Shut up,' said Dick. 'What with you and Timmy messing about, I can't get - to - sleep!'
But he could and he did - almost before he had finished speaking. Silence fel on the little camp, and nobody noticed when the next train rumbled underground - not even Timmy!
The next day the children were up very early, as early as Mr Luffy, and they all had breakfast together. Mr Luffy had a map of the moorlands, and he studied it carefully after breakfast.
'I think I'll go off for the whole day,' he said to Julian, who was sitting beside him. 'See that little val ey marked here - Crowleg Vale - well, I have heard that there are some of the rarest beetles in Britain to be found there. I think I'l take my gear and go along. What are you four going to do?'
'Five,' said George at once. 'You've forgotten Timmy.'
'So I have. I beg his pardon,' said Mr Luffy, solemnly. 'Well - what are you going to do?'
'We'll go over to the farm and get more food,' said Julian. 'And ask that farm-boy if he's heard the tale of the spook-trains. And perhaps look round the farm and get to know the animals there. I always like a farm.'
'Right,' said Mr Luffy, beginning to light his pipe. 'Don't worry about me if I'm not back til dusk. When I'm bug-hunting I lose count of the time.'
'You're sure you won't get lost?' said Anne, anxiously. She didn't really feel that Mr Luffy could take proper care of himself.
'Oh yes. My right ear always warns me if I'm losing my way,' said Mr Luffy. 'It waggles hard.'
He waggled it at Anne and she laughed. '\ wish you'd tel me how you do that,' she said. 'I'm sure you know. You can't think how thril ed the girls at school would be if I learnt that trick. They'd think it was super.'
Mr Luffy grinned and got up. 'Well, so long,' he said. 'I'm off before Anne makes me give her a lesson in ear-waggles.'
He went off down the slope to his own tent. George and Anne washed-up, while the boys tightened some tent ropes that had come loose, and general y tidied up.
'I suppose it's quite al right leaving everything unguarded like this,' said Anne, anxiously.
'Well, we did yesterday,' said Dick. 'And who's likely to come and take anything up here in this wild and lonely spot, I'd like to know? You don't imagine a spook-train wil come along and bundle everything into its luggage-van, do you, Anne?'
Anne giggled. 'Don't be sil y. I just wondered if we ought to leave Timmy on guard, that's all.'
'Leave Timmy!' said George, amazed. 'You don't real y think I'd leave Timmy behind every time we go off anywhere, Anne? Don't be an idiot.'
'No, I didn't real y think you would,' said Anne. 'Well, I suppose nobody wil come along here. Throw over that tea-cloth, George, if you've finished with it.'
Soon the tea-cloths were hanging over the gorse bushes to dry in the sun. Everything was put away neatly in the tents. Mr Luffy had cal ed a loud goodbye and gone. Now the five were ready to go off to the farm.
Anne took a basket, and gave one to Julian too. 'To bring back the food,' said she. 'Are you ready to go now?'
They set off over the heather, their knees brushing through the honeyed flowers, and sending scores of busy bees into the air. It was a lovely day again, and the children felt free and happy.
They came to the trim little farm. Men were at work in the fields, but Julian did not think they were very industrious. He looked about for the farm-boy.
The boy came out of a shed and whistled to them. 'Hallo! You come for some more eggs? I've col ected quite a lot for you.'
He stared at Anne. 'You didn't come yesterday. What's your name?'
'Anne,' said Anne. 'What's yours?'
'Jock,' said the boy, with a grin. He was rather a nice boy, Anne thought, with straw-coloured hair, blue eyes, and rather a red face which looked very good-tempered.
'Where's your mother?' said Julian. 'Can we get some bread and other things from her today? We ate an awful lot of our food yesterday, and we want to stock up our larder again!'
'She's busy just now in the dairy,' said Jock. 'Are you in a hurry? Come and see my pups.'
They all walked off with him to a shed. In there, right at the end, was a big box lined with straw. A collie dog lay there with five lovely little puppies. She growled at Timmy fiercely, and he backed hurriedly out of the shed. He had met fierce mother-dogs before, and he didn't like them!
The four children exclaimed over the fat little puppies, and Anne took one out very gently. It cuddled into her arms and made funny little whining noises.
'! wish it was mine,' said Anne. 'I should cal it Cuddle.'
'What a frightful name for a dog,' said George scornfully. 'Just the kind of sil y name you would think of, Anne. Let me hold it. Are they all yours, Jock?'
'Yes,' said Jock, proudly. 'The mother's mine, you see. Her name's Biddy.'
Biddy pricked up her ears at her name and looked up at Jock out of bright, alert eyes.
He fondled her silky head.
'I've had her for four years,' he said. 'When we were at Owl Farm, old Farmer Burrows gave her to me when she was eight weeks old.'
'Oh - were you at another farm before this one, then?' asked Anne. 'Have you always lived on a farm? Aren't you lucky!'
'I've only lived on two,' said Jock. 'Owl Farm and this one. Mum and I had to leave Owl Farm when Dad died, and we went to live in a town for a year. I hated that. I was glad when we came here.'
'But I thought your father was here!' said Dick, puzzled.
'That's my stepfather,' said Jock. 'He's no farmer, though!' He looked round and lowered his voice. 'He doesn't know much about farming. It's my mother that tells the men what to do. Stil , he gives her plenty of money to do everything well, and we've got fine machinery and wagons and things. Like to see the dairy? It's slap up-to-date and Mum loves working in it.'
Jock took the four children to the shining, spotless dairy. His mother was at work there with a girl. She nodded and smiled at the children. 'Good morning! Hungry again? I'l pack you up plenty of food when I've finished in the dairy. Would you like to stay and have dinner with my Jock? He's lonely enough here
in the holidays, with no other boy to keep him company.'
'Oh, yes - do let's!' cried Anne, in delight. Td like that. Can we, Ju?'
'Yes. Thank you very much, Mrs - er - Mrs . . .' said Julian.
Tm Mrs Andrews,' said Jock's mother. 'But Jock is Jock Robins - he's the son of my first husband, a farmer. Well, stay to dinner al of you, and I'l see if I can give you a meal that wil keep you going for the rest of the day!'
This sounded good. The four children felt thril ed, and Timmy wagged his tail hard. He liked Mrs Andrews.
'Come on,' saidjqck, joyfully. Til take you al round the farm, into every corner. It's not very big, but we're going to make it the best little farm on the moorlands. My stepfather doesn't seem to take much interest in the work of the farm, but he'sjolly generous when it comes to handing out money to Mum to buy everything she wants.'
It certainly seemed to the children that the machinery on the farm was absolutely up-to-date. They examined the combine, they went into the little cowshed and admired the clean stone floor with white brick walls, they climbed into the red-painted wagons, and they wished they could try the two motor-tractors that stood side by side in a barn.
'You've got plenty of men here to work the farm,' said Julian. 'I shouldn't have thought there was enough for so many to do on this small place.'
'They're not good workers,' said Jock, his face creasing into frowns. 'Mum's always getting wild with them. They just don't know what to do. Dad gives her plenty of men to work the farm, but he
always chooses the wrong ones! They don't seem to like farm-work, and they're always running off to the nearest town whenever they can. There's only one good fel ow and he's old. See him over there? His name's Wil .'
The children looked at Wil . He was working in the little vegetable garden, an old fel ow with a shrivel ed face, a tiny nose and a pair of very blue eyes. They liked the look of him.
'Yes. He looks like a farm-worker,' said Julian. 'The others don't.'
'He won't work with them,' said Jock. 'He just says rude things to them, and cal s them ninnies and idjits.'
'What's an idjit?' asked Anne.
'An idiot, sil y,' said Dick. He walked up to old Wil . 'Good morning,' he said. 'You're very busy. There's always a lot to do on a farm, isn't there?'
The old fel ow looked at Dick out of his very blue eyes, and went on with his work. 'Plenty to do and plenty of folk to do it, and not much done,' he said, in a croaking kind of voice.
'Never thought I'd be put to work with ninnies and idjits. Not ninnies and idjits!'
'There! What did I tel you?' said Jock, with a grin. 'He's always cal ing the other men that, so wejust have to let him work right away from them. Stil , I must say he's about right -
most of the fel ows here don't know the first thing about work on a farm. I wish my stepfather would let us have a few proper workers instead of these fellows.'
'Where's your stepfather?' said Julian, thinking he must be rather peculiar to pour money into a little moorland farm like this, and yet choose the wrong kind of workers.
'He's away for the day,' said Jock. 'Thank goodness!' he added, with a sideways look at the others.
'Why? Don't you like him?' asked Dick.
'He's all right,' said Jock. 'But he's not a farmer, though he makes out he's always wanted to be - and what's more he doesn't like me one bit. I try to like him for Mum's sake.
But I'm always glad when he's out of the way.'
'Your mother's nice,' said George.
'Oh, yes - Mum's grand,' said Jock. 'You don't know what it means to her to have a little farm of her ; own again, and to be able to run it with the proper machinery and al .'
They came to a large barn. The door was locked. 'I told you what was in here before,'
said Jock. 'Lorries! You can peek through that hole here at them. Don't know why my stepfather wanted to buy up so many, but I suppose he got them cheap - he loves to get things cheap and sel them dear! He did say they'd be useful on the farm, to take goods to the market.' i
'Yes - you told us that when we were here yesterday, ' said Dick. 'But you've got heaps of wagons for that!'
'Yes. I reckon they weren't bought for the farm at all, but for holding here til prices went high and he I could make a lot of money,' said Jock, lowering his voice. 'I don't tel Mum that. So long as she gets what she wants for the farm, I'm going to hold my tongue.' i The children were very interested in al this. They wished they could see Mr Andrews. He must be a peculiar sort of fel ow, they thought. Anne tried to | imagine what he was like.
'Big and tal and dark and frowny,' she thought. 'Rather frightening and impatient, and he certainly won't like children. People like that never do.' > They spent a very pleasant morning poking about \ the little farm. They went back to see Biddy the collie [
and her pups. Timmy stood patiently outside the shed, with his tail down. He didn't like George to take so much interest in other dogs.
A bel rang loudly. 'Good! Dinner!' said Jock. 'We'd better wash. We're all filthy. Hope you feel hungry, because I guess Mum's got a super dinner for us.'
'I feel terribly hungry,' said Anne. 'It seems ages since we had breakfast. I've almost forgotten it!'
They all felt the same. They went into the farmhouse and were surprised to find a very nice little bathroom to wash in. Mrs Andrews was there, putting out a clean rol er towel.
'Fine little bathroom, isn't it?' she said. 'My husband had it put in for me. First proper bathroom I've ever had!'
A glorious smel rose up from the kitchen downstairs. 'Come on!' said Jock, seizing the soap. 'Let's hurry. We'll be down in a minute, Mum!'
And they were. Nobody was going to dawdle over washing when a grand meal lay waiting for them downstairs!
They all sat down to dinner. There was a big meat-pie, a cold ham, salad, potatoes in their jackets, and homemade pickles. It really was difficult to know what to choose.
'Have some of both,' said Mrs Andrews, cutting the meat-pie. 'Begin with the pie and go on with the ham. That's the best of living on a farm, you know - you do get plenty to eat.'
After the first course there were plums and thick cream, or jam tarts and the same cream. Everyone tucked in hungrily.
'I've never had such a lovely dinner in my life,' said Anne, at last. 'I wish I could eat some more but I can't. It was super, Mrs Andrews.'
'Smashing,' said Dick. That was his favourite word these holidays. 'Absolutely smashing.'
'Woof,' said Timmy, agreeing. He had had a fine plateful of meaty bones, biscuits and gravy, and he had licked up every crumb and every drop. Now he felt he would like to have a snooze in the sun and not do a thing for the rest of the day.
The children felt rather like that, too. Mrs Andrews handed them a chocolate each and sent them out of doors. 'You go and have a rest now,' she said. 'Talk to Jock. He doesn't get enough company of his own age in the holidays. You can stay on to tea, if you like.'
'Oh, thanks,' said everyone, although they all felt