The Corner House Girls in a Play - BestLightNovel.com
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"Oh, Aggie, how did you come out?" he asked soberly. "Was Mr. Marks just as hard on you as he could be?"
"I think so," Agnes replied gravely. "We don't just know yet what he means to do. Only in part. But that part is just _awful_!"
"Was the row about Buckham's berries?"
"Yes."
"I thought so. What's he going to do to you? Make you forfeit all the games?"
"No. Maybe something worse than that."
"Worse? What is it?" asked Neale, in wonder.
"He says we none of us can act in that play he told about this morning."
"Huh!" muttered the boy, eyeing Agnes' flushed face and tearful eyes in surprise. "Do you care?"
"Oh, Neale! I _know_ I can act. I love it. I've always been crazy for it. And now, when there's maybe a chance, I am not--going--to--be--let!"
"Goodness! do you really feel so bad about it, Aggie?"
"I--I---- Why, my heart will be just _broken_ if I can't act in _The Carnation Countess_," sobbed the Corner House girl.
"Oh, cricky! Don't turn on the sprinkler again, Aggie," begged Neale, in a panic.
"I--I just can't help it! To think of there being a play acted in this town, and I might be in it!" wailed Agnes. "And now it's just out of my reach! It's too mean for anything, that's what it is!"
She threatened to burst into another flood, and Neale tried to head the tears off by saying:
"Don't cry again, Aggie. Oh, don't! If you won't cry I'll try to find some way of getting you out of the sc.r.a.pe."
"You--you can't, Neale O'Neil!"
"We--ell, I can try."
"And I wouldn't want to get out of it myself unless the other girls escaped punishment, too."
"You're a good little sport, Aggie. I always said so," Neale declared, admiringly. "Say, that reminds me!" he added, suddenly. "Were all the girls up before Mr. Marks?"
"All who went over to Fleeting that day, do you mean?"
"Yes. All that were in that car that broke down."
"Why--yes--I think so."
"Huh!" grunted Neale, thoughtfully.
"All but one anyway."
"Hullo! Who was that?"
"The girl who wasn't in Mr. Marks' office?"
"Yes. Who was missing of that bunch of berry raiders?" and Neale grinned.
"Why--Trix," said Agnes, slowly.
"Ah-ha! I smell a mouse!"
"What do you mean by that, Neale O'Neil?" cried the girl.
"Nothing significant in the fact that our festive Beatrice was not there?"
"No. Why should there be?" demanded Agnes.
"And who do you suppose furnished Mr. Marks with his information and the list of you girls' names?"
"Oh, the farmer!"
"Old Buckham?" cried Neale, startled.
"Yes," said Agnes. "Mr. Marks said so."
Neale looked both surprised and doubtful. "Then why didn't Buckham give in Trix's name, too?"
"Oh, I don't know, Neale. No use in blaming her just because she was lucky enough to escape."
"Oh, that's all right. I'll go to my Lady Beatrice, get down on my s.h.i.+n-bones, and beg her pardon, if I wrongfully suspect her," laughed Neale. "But, I say, Aggie! did Mr. Buckham come to see Mr. Marks about it? Did he say?"
"No. I think Mr. Marks said the farmer wrote."
"_Wrote?_" cried the boy. "Why, I don't believe Bob Buckham _can_ write.
He's a smart enough old fellow, but he never had any schooling. He told me so. He's not a bad sort, either. He must have been awfully mad about those strawberries to hold a grudge so long as this. I worked for him a while, you know, Aggie."
"Oh, so you did, Neale."
"Yes. I don't believe he is the sort who would make so much trouble for a bunch of girls. Somebody must have egged him on," said Neale, gloomily.
"There you go again, Neale," groaned Agnes. "Hinting at Beatrice Severn."
"Well," grinned Neale, "you want me to help you out of your sc.r.a.pe, don't you?"
"At n.o.body else's expense," said Agnes.
"Don't know what to make of it," grumbled Neale. "It looks fishy to me.
Mr. Buckham writing Mr. Marks! I'm going to find out about _that_. Keep up your pluck, Aggie. I'll see what can be done," and Neale, with his cap on the back of his flaxen head and his hands in his pockets, went off whistling.