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    Pippi in the South Seas

    Page 7
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    glittering and fragrant flowers everywhere.

      Tommy and Annika were by now so brown that there was

      hardly any difference between them and the Kurrekurredutt

      children. And every spot on Pippi's face was covered with

      freckles.

      "This trip will turn out to be a real beauty treatment

      for me," she said gaily.

      "I

      have more freckles and am therefore more beautiful than ever.

      If this keeps up, I shall be irresistible."

      Momo and Moana and all the other

      Kurrekurredutt children already considered

      Pippi irresistible. They had never had such a good

      time before, and they were as fond of Pippi as Tommy and

      Annika were. Of course they were fond of Tommy

      and Annika too, and Tommy and Annika were fond

      of them. So they had a marvelous time together and

      Pippi Leaves Kurrekurredutt Island

      backslash

      107 played and played all day long. Often they

      would go up to the cave to play.

      Pippi had taken blankets there, and when they

      wanted to they could spend the night and be even more comfortable

      than they were the first time. She had also made a rope

      ladder which reached all the way down to the water below the

      cave, and all the children climbed up and down on it and

      swam and splashed to their heart's- delight. Now it

      was perfectly safe to swim. Pippi had blocked

      off a big section with net so that the sharks couldn't

      get in. It was such fun to swim in and out of those

      caves filled with water. Even Tommy and

      Annika had learned to dive for oysters. The first

      pearl that Annika found Was a huge, beautiful

      pink one. She decided to take it home with her and have

      it made into a ring, which she would wear as a souvenir of

      Kurrekurredutt Island.,

      Sina Bahram Sometimes they would play that Pippi was

      Buck trying to get into the cave to steal pearls. Then

      Tommy would pull up the rope ladder and Pippi

      would have to climb up the side of the cliff as best as

      she could. All the children would shout, "Buck is coming,

      Buck is coming!" when she stuck her head into the cave, and they would take turns at poking her in the

      stomach so that she tumbled backward into the sea. Down

      there she splashed around with

      her bare feet sticking out of the water, and the children laughed

      so hard that they almost fell out of the cave.

      When they got tired of being in the cave they would play

      in their bamboo hut. Pippi and the children had built

      it, though of course Pippi had done most of the work.

      It was big and square and made of thin bamboo

      cane, and you could climb around inside it, and on top

      of it too. Next to the hut was a tall cocoanut

      tree. Pippi had hacked steps into it so that you could

      climb all the way to the top. The view was

      wonderful from up there. Between two other cocoanut

      palms Pippi had rigged up a swing of hibiscus

      fiber. It was marvelous, because if you swung as high

      as the swing would go, you could throw yourself out into the air and

      land in the water below.

      Pippi swung so high and flew so far out into the

      water that she said, "One fine day I'll

      probably land in Australia, and then it won't be

      much fun for the one who gets me on the head."

      The children also went on expeditions into the jungle. There

      was a high mountain and a waterfall that cascaded over

      a cliff. Pippi had made up her mind that she

      would like to go down the waterfall in a barrel. She

      brought along one of the barrels from the

      Hoptoad

      and crawled into it. Momo and

      Tommy closed the lid and helped to push the barrel

      over the waterfall. It bounced down with tremendous

      speed and then it broke. All the children saw Pippi

      disappear into the tumbling water, and they didn't think

      they would ever see her again. But all of a sudden she

      dived up and climbed ashore, saying, "They

      certainly go at a fast clip, those water

      barrels."

      The days went by. Soon the rainy season would start

      and then Captain Longstocking would lock himself into his

      hut and brood about life, and he was afraid that

      Pippi wouldn't be happy on Kurrekurredutt

      Island then. More often lately Tommy and Annika

      would find themselves wondering how their mother and father were.

      They were anxious to get home for Christmas. So they

      weren't as sad as you might expect when

      Pippi said one morning, "Tommy and Annika,

      how would you like to go back to Villa Villekulla for a

      while again?"

      Of course, for Momo and Moana and the other

      Kurrekurredutt children it was a sad day when they saw

      Pippi and Tommy and Annika go on board the

      Hoptoad

      for the voyage home. But Pippi promised that they

      would come back often to Kurrekurredutt Island. The

      Kurrekurredutt children had made wreaths of white

      flowers which they hung around the necks of Pippi and

      Tommy and Annika as a

      PippiLeaves Kurrekurredutt Island 1

      farewell gesture. Their song of farewell sounded

      sad as it followed the ship out to sea.

      Captain Longstocking was also standing on the beach. He

      had to stay behind in order to rule. Fri-dolf had

      taken it upon himself to get the children home. Captain

      Longstocking slowly and deliberately blew his

      nose in his big pocket handkerchief as he waved

      good-by. Pippi and Tommy and Annika cried,

      and the tears streamed down their faces as they waved

      to Captain Longstocking and the island children as long as they

      were in sight.

      The

      Hoptoad

      had a fair wind behind her during the whole voyage

      home.

      "We'd better dig out your undershirts in good time before

      we reach the North Sea," said Pippi.

      "What an awful thought," said Tommy and Annika.

      It soon became evident that despite the fair

      wind, the ship wouldn't reach home by Christmas.

      Tommy and Annika were bitterly disappointed when

      they heard it. Just think, no Christmas tree and no

      Christmas presents!

      "Then we could just as well have stayed on

      Kurrekurredutt Island," said Tommy

      angrily.

      Annika thought of her mother and father and knew that she would

      be glad to get home, no matter when. But it

      certainly was sad that they were going

      to miss Christmas. They both felt the same about

      that.

      One dark night at the beginning of January,

      Pippi and Tommy and Annika spotted the lights

      of the little town from afar, twinkling a welcome. They were

      back home again.

      "Well, now we have this trip behind us," said

      Pippi as she walked down the gangplank with her

      horse.

      No one was at the port to meet them because no one had

      known when they would get home. Pippi lifted up

      Tommy and Annika and Mr. Nilsson onto the

      horse and they rode toward Villa Villekulla.


      The poor horse had a hard time. He had to plow his

      way through the snowdrifts piled up in the streets and

      roads. Tommy and Annika stared straight ahead

      into the snow flurry. Soon they would be back with their

      mother and father, and they were suddenly aware how much they had

      missed them.

      In the Settergren house the lights were shining

      invitingly, and through the window they could see Tommy's

      and Annika's mother and father sitting at the dinner table.

      "There are Mother and Father!" said Tommy and he sounded

      so happy and excited.

      But Villa Villekulla lay in complete darkness

      and was covered with snow.

      Pippi Leaves Kurrekurredutt Island

      Annika was terribly unhappy at the thought of

      Pippi's going back there alone. "Please,

      Pippi, won't you stay with us the first night?" she

      asked.

      "Oh, no," said Pippi and jumped down in the snow

      outside the gate. "I have to get some things in order

      at Villa Villekulla."

      She waded through the deep snowdrifts which reached all

      the way up to her stomach. The horse plowed along

      behind her.

      "Yes, but think of how cold it will be in there," said

      Tommy. "It hasn't been heated for such a long

      time."

      "Nonsense," said Pippi. "If the heart is

      warm and beats the way it should, there is no reason

      to be cold."

      Pippi Longstocking

      Doesn't Want to Grow Up

      Oh, how Tommy's and Annika's mother and father

      hugged and kissed their children, and what a wonderful

      supper they prepared for them! Afterward they tucked them

      in, and sat for a long, long time on the edge of their

      beds, listening to the children's tales of all the strange

      things they had experienced on Kurrekurredutt

      Island. They were so happy, all of them. There was

      only one sad thing, and that was not having had any

      Christmas. Tommy and Annika didn't want

      to tell their mother how miserable they were because they had

      missed having a tree and presents, but

      that's the way it was. It seemed so strange to be

      back. It always does when you've been away, and it

      would have been much easier if they could have come home on

      Christmas Eve.

      Tommy and Annika were also sad when they thought of

      Pippi. Now of course she would be home in bed at

      Villa Villekulla with her feet on her

      pillow,

      Pippi Long stocking Doesn't Want to Grow

      Up

      and there was no one there to tuck her in. They made up

      their minds to go to see her as soon as they could the next

      morning.

      But the following day their mother didn't want to let them

      go because she hadn't seen them for such a long time, and

      besides, their grandmother was coming for dinner to welcome the children

      home. Tommy and Annika wondered anxiously

      what Pippi could be doing all day, and when it began

      to get dark they couldn't stand it any longer.

      "Please, Mother, we have to go and see Pippi," said

      Tommy.

      "Yes, run along then," said Mrs. Settergren.

      "But don't stay too long."

      Tommy and Annika ran off.

      When they got to the garden gate of Villa

      Villekulla they stopped and stared in amazement. It

      looked just like a Christmas card. The whole house was

      softly blanketed with snow and there were gleaming lights

      in all the windows. A torch was burning on the veranda

      and shedding its brightness over the snow-covered lawn.

      One path to the veranda was neatly shoveled, so Tommy

      and Annika didn't have to wade through the drifts.

      Just as they were stamping the snow off their feet on the

      veranda, the door opened and there stood Pippi.

      "Merry Christmas!" she said.

      She ushered them into the kitchen. And there was a

      Christmas tree! The lights were lit and seventeen

      sparklers were burning, filling the room with a nice

      smoky smell. The table was set with puddings and hams

      and sausages and all sorts of Christmas

      delicacies-yes, even gingerbread men and birds"

      nests. There was a fire in the stove, and the horse was

      standing at the woodbin, scraping his hoof in a very

      refined way. Mr. Nilsson was bopping back and

      forth among the sparklers in the Christmas tree.

      "He is-supposed to be an angel," said Pippi

      grimly, "but I can't get him to sit still."

      Tommy and Annika just stood there, speechless.

      "Oh, Pippi," said Annika finally,

      "how wonderful! When did you find time to do all this?"

      "Me, I'm the hard-working type," said Pippi.

      Tommy and Annika were suddenly overwhelmed with

      happiness.

      "I think it's just grand to be back in Villa

      Villekulla again," said Tommy.

      They sat down around the table and ate piles of ham

      and pudding and sausage and gingerbread men, and everything

      tasted even better to them than bananas and

      breadfruit.

      "But Pippi, it isn't Christmas at all," said

      Tommy.

      "Yes, sir," said Pippi. "The Villa

      Villekulla al-

      Pippi in the South Seas

      manac is slow. I have to take it to an

      almanac-maker and have it adjusted so that it will run

      properly again."

      "How wonderful," said Annika again. "We

      celebrated Christmas after all-except without

      Christmas presents, of course."

      "That reminds me," said Pippi. "I have hidden your

      Christmas presents. You have to find them yourselves."

      Tommy's and Annika's faces became

      flushed with excitement as they sprang up and started

      hunting. In the woodbin Tommy found a big

      package which was marked "tommy." Inside was a fine

      set of paints. Under the table Annika found a

      package with her name on it, and inside that was a

      pretty red parasol.

      "I

      can take this with me to Kurrekurredutt Island the

      next time we go there," said Annika.

      High up on the hood of the stove were two more

      packages. One contained a small jeep for

      Tommy, and in the other was a set of doll's dishes

      for Annika. A small package was also hanging

      on the horse's tail. In it was a clock for

      Tommy's and Annika's room.

      When they had found all their Christmas presents,

      they gave Pippi big hugs and thanked her over and

      over again. She was standing at the kitchen

      Pippi Longstocking Doesn't Want to Grow

      Up

      window, looking out at all the snow in the garden.

      Tomorrow we'll build a big snow hut," she said.

      "And we'll have lights burning in it at night."

      "Oh, yes, let's," said Annika,

      feeling happier than ever to be home.

      "I'm wondering if we could make a ski slope

      running down from the roof to the snowdrifts below. I'm

      going to teach the horse to ski. But I can't decide

      whether he needs four skis or only two."

      "We're going to have a wonderful time tomorrow," said


      Tommy. "What luck that we came home in the

      middle of Christmas vacation."

      "We're always going to have fun," said Annika.

      "At Villa Villekulla, on

      Kurrekurredutt Island, and everywhere."

      Pippi nodded in agreement. They had crawled up

      on the kitchen table, all three of them. Suddenly a

      dark shadow passed over Tommy's face.

      "I never want to grow up," he said emphatically.

      "I don't either," said Annika.

      "No, that's nothing to wish for, being grown up," said

      Pippi. "Grownups never have any fun. They

      only have a lot of boring work and wear silly-looking

      clothes and have corns and minicipal taxes."

      "It's called

      municipal,""

      said Annika.

      "Well, anyway, it's the same nonsense," said

      Pippi. "And then they're full of

      superstitions and

      120 bar

      Pippi in the South Seas

      all sorts of crazy things. They think that something

      terrible is going to happen if they happen to stick their

      knives in their mouths while they're eating, and things

      like that."

      "And they can't play, either," said Annika.

      "Ugh, how awful to have to grow up."

      "Who says you have to grow up?" said Pippi. "If

      I remember right, I have a few pills somewhere."

      "What sort of pills?" said Tommy.

      "Some very fine pills for people who don't want to grow

      up," said Pippi and jumped down from the table. She

      hunted through closets and drawers and after a while she

      produced something that looked like three yellow peas.

      "Peas!" said Tommy surprised.

      "That's what you think," said Pippi. "These are no

      peas. They are chililug pills and were given to me in

      Rio by an old Indian chief when I happened

      to mention that I wasn't wild about the idea of growing

      up."

      "You mean that those tiny little pills can do it?" said

      Annika skeptically.

      "Absolutely," said Pippi. "But they

      have to be taken in the dark, and then you have to say this:

      Pretty little chililug, I don't want to get

      bug.

      Pippi Longstocking Doesn't Want to Grow

      Up backslash

      "You mean big," said Tommy.

      "If I say "bug" I mean

      "bug,""

      said Pippi. "That's the trick, you see. Most children

      say Trig," and that's the worst thing that can happen.

      Because then you start to grow more then ever. Once there was a

      boy who ate pills like these. He said Trig*

      instead of "bug" and he started growing until it was a

      nightmare- many, many feet every day. It was terrible.

      He was all right as long as he could go around grazing

      under the apple trees, the way a giraffe does.

      But then he got too big and that didn't work any

      longer. When some ladies came to visit and they

      wanted to say, "My, what a nice big boy

      you've grown up to be," they had to shout into a

      megaphone so that he would hear them. All you saw of

      him was his long, skinny legs disappearing up among the

      clouds like two flagpoles. He was never heard of

      after that-oh, yes, once he was. That was

      when he took a lick at the sun and got a blister

      on his tongue. Then he let out such a roar that the

      flowers down on earth wilted. But that was the last

      sign from him--although his legs are probably still wandering

      around down in Rio, making awful mix-ups in the

      traffic."

      "Oh, I wouldn't dare eat one of those pills,"

      said Annika, terrified, In case I might say

      the wrong thing."

      "You won't say the wrong thing," said Pippi re-

      assuringly. "If I thought you'd do that, I wouldn't

      give you one. Because it would be boring to have just your legs

      to play with. Tommy and me and your legs--that would be

      fine company."

      "You won't make a mistake, Annika," said

      Tommy.

      They turned the Christmas tree lights out. The

      kitchen was in complete darkness, except near the

      stove where the fire glowed behind the stove door. ,

      They sat down in silence in a circle in the middle

      of the floor, holding one another by the hand. Pippi

      gave Tommy and Annika each a chililug

      pill. Chills ran up and down their spines. Just

      think, in a second the powerful pill would be down in

      their stomachs, and then they would never have to grow

      up. How marvelous that would be!

      "Now," Pippi whispered.

      "Pretty little chililug, I don't want to get

      bug," they said all together and swallowed their pills.

      The deed was done.

      Pippi turned on the ceiling light. "That's it,"

      she said. "Now we don't have to be grown up and have

      corns and other miseries. Though the pills have been

      lying around in my closet for so long that one can't be

      absolutely sure that all the strength hasn't gone

      out of them. But we have to hope for the best."

      Annika suddenly thought of something. "Oh,

      Pippi Longstocking Doesn't Want to Grow

      Up

      Pippi," she said in alarm, "you were going to be a

      pirate when you grew up."

      "Pshaw, I can be one anyway," said Pippi.

      "I can still become a nasty

     


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