Keineth
d Billy. "I broke my fishing rod and I've lost my knife and Jim
l superiority with which Billy treated all girls made Keineth very shy with him. She wished they might be better friends, for she felt very sure that it would be great fun to share with him the exciting
swered teasingly, "Well, we were going to hike to-day," Billy explained, too dol
r. "Just see what I found!" She ran toward them, h
, taking it from her. "It's--why, jimin
nt that i
dren cried, looki
ed to scold about Rex
some bushes. He felt troubled--he remembered that he had left the shoes out on
asked Keineth, s
use I'd just as soon wear these old ones as not--what d' I ca
trial--" Peggy
p it a secret we'd give
o tell! She can'
secret! You
"not a word! You just cross your hearts that you w
y went off then in search of some amusement of his
upon the kitchen door and reported with great indignation that "jes' while her back was turned a minute th
h--not my own leg, but a leg of lamb!" wept the other,
children. No one knew. Keineth and Peggy exchanged tr
" Mrs. Lee went on. "Probably this is just th
e flowers terribly,"
he anxious look
s Billy will keep a closer
er says Pilot's a valuable dog," he told them. "And
," Mrs. Le
ng Pilot seale
nda, he came running across the lawn and triumphantly d
oh!" scre
's pond!" cried P
hing." Keineth lif
, who, with Mrs. Lee, had come down the steps from
straw," said Mrs. Lee ster
-they swim round and he thinks t
h wondering, disappointed eyes. He had felt so very proud of his
ied Alice, "we weren't going to tel
face upon Alice. "We'll never, never, never tell anyth
w it first," A
r! And I'd just as soon wear my old shoe
nd will be an expense. By the time we have paid the Clarks for their lamb and the Sawyers for their go
can take it out
do not like to make you unhappy, but we must get rid of the dog. Please say no more
turned an angry shoulder upon Alice. Billy blinked his eyes very fast to clear them of the tears that had gathered in spite of himself, threw hi
ry for the little girl standing at a little distance irresolutely swinging a croquet mallet. "It was her secret, an
unny nature could not long carry a grudge of any kind. She had made a solemn vow, too, that she would ne
can have red and play last,