[For the Sake of the School by Angela Brazil]@TWC D-Link bookFor the Sake of the School CHAPTER XVIII 28/31
"I think I was off my head.
I might have known it wasn't--couldn't be possible; you are you--the one girl I've been trying to copy ever since I came here." "You've quite as much to forgive me, dear, and I beg your pardon.
I'm so glad it's all straight and square now." "You darling! I don't mind telling you it was Tootie who gave me those chocolates." "Didn't you buy them from the cake-woman ?" "I never bought anything from her.
I didn't join the cake club." "Then how did she get hold of your New Zealand brooch? She showed it to me." "Why, I'd swopped that brooch with Tootie for a penknife ages ago.
We're always swopping our things in IV B." "The whole business seems to have been a comedy of errors," said Ulyth. "Some mischievous Puck threw dust in our eyes and blinded us to the truth." After all, it was the juniors that suffered most, for Miss Teddington, who had been very angry at the whole affair, turned the vials of her wrath upon them, and took them to task for their illicit traffic in cakes.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|