The Corner House Girls in a Play. Hill Grace Brooks

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didn't hit him for it!"

      A comparison of a doll's dress with his own hair did not please Mr. Sprague much. He shook his now ragged head, from which the lock of hair had been torn so roughly. Billy Bumps considered this a challenge and, lowering his horns, suddenly charged the despoiled prophet.

      "Drat the beast!" yelled Seneca, forgetting his Scriptural language entirely; and leaped into the air just in time to make a passage for Billy Bumps between his long legs.

      Neale, for laughter, could not help.

      Slam! went Billy's horns against the end of the hen-house. Mr. Sprague was not there to catch the goat on the rebound, for, leaving his bag of apples, he rushed for the side gate and got out upon Willow Street without much regard for the order of his going, voicing prophecies this time that had only to do with Billy Bumps' immediate future.

      The disturbance brought Ruth and Agnes running from the house, but only in time to see the wrathful Seneca Sprague, his linen duster flapping behind him, as he disappeared along Willow Street. When Ruth heard about Billy Bumps' banquet, she sent the bag of apples to Seneca Sprague's little shanty which he occupied, down on the river dock.

      "Of all the ridiculous things a goat ever did, that is the most ridiculous!" exclaimed Agnes.

      "There's more than one hair in the butter this time," repeated Neale O'Neil, with laughter.

      "I can't laugh, even at that stale joke," sighed Agnes.

      "What's the matter, Aggie?" demanded Neale. "Have you soured on the world completely?"

      "I feel as though I had," confessed Agnes, her sweet eyes vastly troubled and her red lips in a pout. "What do you think, Neale?"

      "A whole lot of things," returned the boy. "What do you want me to think?"

      "Mr. Smartie! But tell me: Have you heard anything about our basket ball team being set back? Eva told me she'd heard Mr. Marks was dreadfully displeased at something we'd done and that he said we shouldn't win the pennant."

      "Not win the pennant?" cried Neale, aghast. "Why, you girls have got it cinched!"

      "Not if Mr. Marks declares all the games we won last spring forfeited. I think he's too, too mean!" cried Agnes.

      "Oh, he wouldn't do that!" urged Neale.

      "She says he is going to."

      "Eva Larry doesn't always get things straight," said Neale, comfortingly. "But what does he do it for?"

      "I don't know. I'm sure I haven't done anything."

      "Of course not!" chuckled her boy friend, looking at her rather roguishly. "Who was it proposed that raid on old Buckham's strawberry patch that time, coming home from Fleeting?"

      "Oh! he couldn't know about that," cried Agnes, actually turning pale at the suggestion.

      "I don't know," Neale said slowly. "Trix Severn was in your crowd then, and she'd tell anything if she got mad."

      "And she's mad all right," groaned Agnes.

      "I believe she is – with you Corner House girls," added Neale O'Neil.

      "She'd be telling on herself – the mean thing!" snapped Agnes.

      "But she is not on the team. She was along only as a rooter. The electric car broke down alongside of Buckham's strawberry patch. Wasn't that it?"

      "Uh-huh," admitted Agnes. "And the berries did look so tempting."

      "You girls got into Buckham's best berries," chuckled Neale. "I heard he was quite wild about it."

      "We didn't take many. And I really didn't think about it's being stealing," Agnes said slowly. "We just did it for a lark."

      "Of course. 'Didn't mean to' is an old excuse," retorted the boy.

      "Well, Mr. Buckham couldn't have known about it then," cried Agnes. "I don't believe Mr. Marks heard of it through him. If he had, why not before this time, after months have gone by?"

      "I know. It's all blown over and forgotten, when up it pops again. 'Murder will out,' they say. But you girls only murdered a few strawberries. It looks to me," added Neale O'Neil, "as though somebody was trying to get square."

      "Get square with whom?" demanded Agnes.

      "Well – you were all in it, weren't you?"

      "All the team?"

      "Yes."

      "I suppose so. But Trix and some of the others picked and ate quite as many berries as we did. The girls that went over to Fleeting to root for us were all in it, too."

      "I know," Neale said. "If the farmer had been sure who you were, or any of the electric car men had told – Had the car all to yourselves, didn't you?"

      "We girls were the only passengers," said Agnes.

      "Then make up your mind to it," the wise Neale rejoined, "that if Mr. Marks has only recently been told of the raid, some girl has been blabbing. The farmer or the conductor or the motorman would have told at once. They wouldn't have waited until three months and more had passed."

      "Oh dear, Neale! do you think that?"

      "It looks just like a mean girl's trick. Some telltale," returned the boy, in disgust.

      "Trix Severn might do it, I s'pose, because she doesn't like me any more."

      "You remember what Mr. Marks told us all last spring when we grammar grade fellows were let into the high school athletics? He said that one's conduct outside of school would govern the amount of latitude he would allow us in school athletics. I guess he meant you girls, too."

      "He's an awfully strict old thing!" complained Agnes.

      "They tell me," pursued Neale O'Neil, "that once a part of the baseball nine played hookey to go swimming at Ryer's Ford, and Mr. Marks immediately forfeited all the games in the Inter-scholastic League for that year, and so punished the whole school."

      "That's not fair!" exploded Agnes.

      "I don't know whether it is or not. But I know the baseball captain this year was mighty strict with us fellows."

      The topic of the promised punishment of the basket ball team for an old offense was discussed almost as much at the Corner House that evening as was the "lady in gray" and the sovereigns of England.

      Tess kept these last subjects alive, for she was studying the rhyme and would try to recite it to everybody that would listen – including Linda, who scarcely understood ten words of English, and Sandyface and her family, gathered for their supper in the woodshed. Tess was troubled about the closing of the Women's and Children's Hospital, because of its effect upon Mrs. Eland, too.

      "'First William, the Norman,

      Then William, the son;

      Henry, Stephen and – '

      I do hope," ruminated Tess, "that that poor Mrs. Eland won't be turned out of her place. Don't you hope so, Ruthie?"

      "I am sure it would be a calamity if the hospital were closed," agreed the older sister.

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