trees.
âCome on!â said Tom. He waved a hand for Peggy to follow him. âWeâre almost at the river.â
âOkay,â Peggy said. âBut this time Iâll lead the way.â
She pushed past Tom and ran down a trail through the underbrush. They could hear the sound of the river ahead. Peggy emerged from the trees and stopped in surprise. Tom and Amos almost bumped into her.
Usually, there was a wide gravel bank between the trees and the river. But now, the water had crept up over the rocks. It was lapping at a row of sandbags piled at the edge of the trees.
âDo you think itâs going to flood?â Peggy asked.
âNah,â Tom said. âIf the water gets any higher, the sandbags will stop it.â
Each spring, when the snow melted in the mountains, the waters of the Fraser River rose. Two years ago, soldiers back from the Second World War had piled sandbags along the river. The sandbags acted like a dyke, or a low wall, to help keep the water from flooding the farmland.
âI donât know,â Peggy said. She pointed to a spot where a section of sandbags had fallen over and left a gap. âThose sandbags donât look like they could stop much.â
She glanced up at the sun, which was getting lower in the sky.
âIâve got to get home to help with milking,â she said.
âMe too,â said Tom. There was never a holiday from milking.
Reluctantly, Tom turned away from the widening brown river. If there were a flood, what would the Lone Ranger do?
CHAPTER TWO
Milking Time
When they got back to Tomâs house, the cows were already shuffling into the barn for milking. Peggy said goodbye and raced down the driveway. Her familyâs dairy farm was just across the road.
Tom forgot about the river and hurried into the barn. His dad was using a pitchfork to toss hay into the cowsâ feed troughs.
âYouâre late,â Dad said, not looking up. He handed Tom the pitchfork. It was Tomâs job to feed the cows. Tomâs mom and dad did the milking.
Tom stuck the fork into a hay bale. He pulled out some loose hay and dropped it into the next stall. He finished putting out the hay and made sure the cows were settled into their stalls. Then he went to help with the milking.
Dad was bent under a large brown and white cow. He directed streams of milk into a metal pail. When the pail was full, he passed it to Tom. It took all of Tomâs strength to lift the pail. He dumped the milk into the tall metal container used for storing and shipping milk.
The familyâs dairy farm was small. They had ten Guernsey cows and some spring calves. The male calves had already been sold. Three female calves remained with their mothers. The adult cows had to be milked twice a day, early in the morning and before supper. Tomâs parents did all the milking by hand. It took about an hour and a half to finish. When they bought a milking machine, it would be quicker.
It wasnât until the family was sitting around the kitchen table eating supper that Tom remembered the river.
âI went down to the river today with Amos and Peggy,â Tom told his parents.
âSo thatâs why you were late,â said Dad, sounding annoyed. But his mouth quirked sideways. Tom knew he wasnât really mad.
âThe riverâs getting pretty high,â Tom said.
Tomâs mom looked at her husband with concern. âIt wonât rise high enough to flood, will it?â she asked.
âI donât think thereâs anything to worry about,â said Dad. But the smile had left his lips.
CHAPTER THREE
Alarm Call
Tom woke in the middle of the night. Someone was banging on the front door of the house. Amos got up from the floor beside Tomâs bed. He barked twice, then padded out of the room and down the stairs.
Tomâs parents stirred in the next bedroom. Dadâs footsteps followed Amos down the stairs. The front door
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