Part 13 (1/2)

Edna's interest was so great that she forgot she was not doing this for herself at all.

”Shall we tell your mother?” asked Edna when Ben had gone, promising that he would attend to the puzzle the very first thing.

”Why--” Nettie hesitated, ”I'd like to have her know and yet I would love dearly to have it for a surprise if we did win. When do you suppose we will know?”

”Not before next Friday, I suppose, but that will be soon enough, won't it?”

”Yes, except that I can scarcely wait to know, and it is hard to keep a secret from your mother that long.”

”Why don't you tell her that you have a secret and that you can't tell her till Friday?”

”I might do that, but then suppose I shouldn't win; we would both be disappointed.”

”What did you tell her just now that we were all doing?”

”I told her we were doing a puzzle, and she said as long as I had done my morning's work I could stay with you. I have still my stockings to darn, but I can do those this afternoon. Mother always lets me do them when I choose; so long as I get them done before Sunday, that is all she asks.”

Edna looked very sympathetic. She did not have to do her stockings nowadays, though she remembered that it had been one of the week's tasks when she was staying with Aunt Elizabeth, and it was one she much disliked. She stayed a little while longer and then returned home, for Dorothy was coming that afternoon and they were both going over to see Margaret to make what Dorothy said was their party call.

The weather was quite mild; already the buds were beginning to swell on the trees, and the crocuses were starting up in the little gra.s.s plot in front of Nettie's home. Edna stopped to look at them as she pa.s.sed out.

She was full of Nettie's secret but she had promised not to tell. She wished Cousin Ben would come back so she could talk it over with him, but he was not to return till late in the day and meantime she must occupy herself and not say a word of what was uppermost in her mind.

She found Celia and Agnes in the library talking earnestly. There was a pleasant aroma of gingerbread pervading the house, and the fire in the open grate looked very cheerful. What a dear place home was, and how glad she was always to get back to it. Agnes held out her hand as she came in. ”Well, chickabiddy,” she said, ”where have you been? You are as rosy as an apple.”

”I've been down to Nettie's. I'm glad I don't have to darn my stockings.”

”Does Nettie have to?”

”Yes, and she has to wash the dishes, too. I did darn my stockings last year, but Katie does them all this year, so I don't even have to be sorry for mother and think of her doing them, for Katie is paid to do them.”

Agnes laughed. ”But I have no doubt you would do them just as cheerfully as Nettie does, if you had to do them.”

”I don't know about the cheerful part, but I wouldn't yell and scream.”

”Let us hope you would not,” said Celia. ”I should hope you knew better than to behave like that.”

”Of course,” said Edna. ”What were you talking about, you two?”

”Shall we tell her, Agnes?” asked Celia.

”Why not? It will soon be talked over by all of us.”

”Well, we were talking of having something very special for the last meeting of the club, after school closes. You see most of the girls go away for the summer, and we shall have to give the club a holiday, too.”

”What nice special thing were you thinking of?”

”We thought if we could have some nice little fairy play and have it out of doors, it would be lovely. We would invite our parents and the teachers and have a real big affair.”

”How perfectly lovely. What is the play?”

”Oh, dear, we haven't come to that yet. We did think some of having 'Alice in Wonderland,' but that has been done so often. We were wis.h.i.+ng for something original.”