The Camp Fire Girls on the Farm - Or, Bessie King's New Chum by Jane L. Stewart
page 59 of 149 (39%)
page 59 of 149 (39%)
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"I'd do worse than that if I thought I could help Zara, Mr. Jamieson," she said. "Do you know I've got the strangest feeling that she's in trouble? It's just as if I could hear her calling me and as if she were sorry for leaving us, and wanted to be back." Jamieson smiled grimly. "I think the chances are that she's feeling just about that way," he said. "She certainly ought to be--if we're at all near to guessing the people she's gone with. They won't treat her as well as the Mercers, I'll be bound." "That's what I'm afraid of, too," said Bessie. Then thanking him for his promise she made her way to the street, and started to go back to the store where she had left Eleanor. But she was intercepted. And, to her amazement, the person who checked her, as she was walking swiftly along the crowded street, was Jake Hoover. "'Lo, Bessie," he said shamefacedly, as she started with surprise at the sight of him. "Say, you're pretty in them new clothes of your'n. I'd never 'a' known you." "I wish you hadn't, then," said Bessie, with spirit. "I'm through with you, Jake Hoover! You won't have me around home any more, to take the blame for all your wickedness. When things happen now they'll know whose fault it is--and maybe they'll begin to think that you may have done some of the things I used to get punished for, too." |
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