Book 5 1. UNEXPECTED VISITOR Little House On The Prairie By Laura Ingalls Wilder

[Music]

harper children’s audio presents

by the shores of silver lake by laura

ingalls wilder read by cherry jones

unexpected visitor

laura was washing the dishes one morning

when old jack

lying in the sunshine on the doorstep

growled to tell her that someone was

coming

she looked out and saw a buggy crossing

the gravelly forward of plum creek

ma she said it’s a strange woman coming

ma

sighed she was ashamed of the untidy

house

and so was laura but ma was too weak

and laura was too tired and they were

too sad to care very much

mary and carrie and baby grace and ma

had all had scarlet fever

the nelsons across the creek had had it

too so there had been no one to help

paul and laura

the doctor had to come every day pog did

not know how he could pay the bill

far worst of all the fever had settled

in mary’s eyes

and mary was blind she was able to sit

up now

wrapped in quilts and ma’s old hickory

rocking chair

all that long time week after week when

she could still see a little

but less every day she had never cried

now she could not see even the brightest

light anymore

she was still patient and brave

her beautiful golden hair was gone paw

had shaved it close because of the fever

and her poor shorn head looked like a

boy’s

her blue eyes were still beautiful but

they did not know what was before them

and mary herself could never look

through them again to tell laura what

she was thinking without saying a word

who can it be at this hour in the

morning mary wondered

turning her ear toward the sound of the

buggy

it’s a strange woman alone in a buggy

she’s wearing a brown sun bonnet

and driving a bay horse laura answered

paw had said that she must be eyes for

mary

can you think of anything for dinner ma

asked

she meant for a company dinner if the

woman stayed till dinner time

there was bread and molasses and

potatoes

that was all this was spring time too

early for garden vegetables

the cow was dry and the hens had not yet

begun to lay their summer eggs

only a few small fish were left in plum

creek

even the little cottontail rabbits had

been hunted until they were scarce

pod did not like a country so old and

worn out that the hunting was poor

he wanted to go west for two years he

had wanted to go west

and take a homestead but ma did not want

to leave the settled country

and there was no money pie had made only

two poor wheat crops since the

grasshoppers came

he had barely been able to keep out of

debt and now there was the doctor’s bill

laura answered moss stoutly what’s good

enough for us

is good enough for anybody the buggy

stopped

and the strange woman sat in it looking

at laura

and ma in the doorway she was a pretty

woman

in her neat brown print dress and

sunbonnet

laura felt ashamed of her own bare feet

and limp dress and

uncombed braids then ma said slowly

why dosia

i wondered if you’d know me the woman

said

a good deal of water has gone under the

bridge since you folks left wisconsin

she was the pretty aunt docilla who had

worn the dress with buttons that looked

like blackberries

long ago at the sugaring off dance at

grandpa’s house in the big woods of

wisconsin

she was married now she had married a

widower with two children

her husband was a contractor working on

the new railroad in the west

aunt docea was driving alone in the

buggy all the way from wisconsin to the

railroad camps in dakota territory

she had come by to see if paul would go

with her her husband

uncle hai wanted a good man to be store

keeper

book keeper and time keeper and paul

could have the job

it pays fifty dollars a month charles

she said

a kind of tightness smoothed out of

paw’s thin cheeks

and his blue eyes lighted up he said

slowly

seems like i can draw a good pay while

i’m looking for that homestead caroline

ma still did not want to go west she

looked around the kitchen at carrie and

at laura standing there with grace in

her arms

charles i don’t know she said

it does seem providential fifty dollars

a month

but we’re settled here we’ve got the

farm

listen to reason caroline paul pleaded

we can get 160 acres out west just by

living on it

and the lands as good as this or better

if uncle sam’s willing to give us a farm

in place of the one he drove us off of

in indian territory

i say let’s take it the hunting’s good

in the west

a man can get all the meat he wants

lara wanted so much to go that she could

hardly keep from speaking

how could we go now ma asked with mary

not strong enough to travel

now that’s so said paul that’s a fact

then he asked aunt dorcia

the job wouldn’t wait no aunt torcia

said

no charles hi is in need of a man right

now

you have to take it or leave it it’s

fifty dollars a month caroline said paw

and a homestead it seemed a long time

before ma

said gently well charles

you must do as you think best

i’ll take it dosia paul got up and

clapped on his hat

where there’s a will there’s a way i’ll

go see nelson

laura was so excited that she could

hardly do the housework properly

aunt docea helped and while they worked

she told the news from wisconsin

her sister aunt ruby was married and had

two boys and a beautiful little baby

girl named

dolly vardon uncle george was a

lumberjack

logging on the mississippi uncle henry’s

folks were all well

and charlie was turning out better than

had been expected

considering how uncle henry had spared

the rod and spoiled that child

grandpa and grandma were still living in

the old place their big log

house they could afford a frame house

now

but grandpa declared that good sound oak

logs made better walls than

thin sod boards even black susan the cat

that laura and mary had left behind when

they rode away from their little log

house in the woods

was still living there the little log

house had changed hands several times

and now it was a corn crib but nothing

would persuade that cat to live anywhere

else

she went right on living in the corn

crib sleek

and plump from rats she caught and there

was hardly a family in

all that country that didn’t have one of

her kittens

they were all good mousers big eared and

long tailed like black susan

dinner was ready in the swept neat house

when paw came back

he had sold the farm nelson was paying

200

cash for it and paul was jubilant

that’ll square up all we owe and leave a

little something over

he said how’s that caroline

i hope it’s for the best charles ma

replied

but how wait till i tell you

i’ve got it all figured out paul told

her

i’ll go on with docea tomorrow morning

you and the girl stay here till mary

gets well and strong

say a couple of months nelson’s agreed

to haul our stuff to the depot

and you’ll all come out on the train

laura stared at him so did carrie and ma

mary said on the train

they had never thought of traveling on

the train

laura knew of course the people did

travel on trains

the trains were often wrecked and the

people killed

she was not exactly afraid but she was

excited

carrie’s eyes were big and scared in her

peaked little face

they had seen the train rushing across

the prairie with

long rolling puffs of black smoke

streaming back from the engine

they heard its roar and its wild clear

whistle

horses ran away if the driver could not

hold them when they saw a train coming

ma said in her quiet way i’m sure we

will manage nicely

with laura and carrie to help me