After a little tramping around in the snow he found Ruth's
sled where she had left it. No one had touched it.
Sunny Boy came running back to Nelson and Ruth, dragging the sled, and
just as he came up to them he heard Ruth say: "I'll go home by myself,
then."
"You can't!" scolded Nelson. "Mother said you musn't cross streets
without me. And I'm not going home as soon as I get here. I want to
coast. You'll have to wait till I've had some fun."
Ruth was crying now and her little nose was red from the cold. She
looked so forlorn and uncomfortable that Sunny Boy's kind heart felt
sorry for her. He was anxious to coast and he hated to go home before
he had had any good times with his new sled, but he did not want Ruth
to cry.
"I'll go home with you," he said. "You sit on the sled and I'll pull
you."'
"Gee, will you take her home?" asked Nelson, in surprise. "That's
great! And then you can come back and we'll have packs of fun."
"All right," said Sunny Boy, though he was quite sure he couldn't come
back. It would be half-past eleven, he knew, before he could get home
and leave Ruth and come back to Court Hill; and Mother had said he must
stop coasting at half-past eleven. So, you see, he was really very
kind and good to take Ruth home and give up his own coasting fun to
make her happier.
Ruth sat down on her sled and held fast to Sunny Boy's sled, and he
pulled her all the way home, though she was a fat little girl and
pretty heavy for one boy to pull.
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